Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / Jan. 1, 1970, edition 1 / Page 12
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12 4 Women 'Bring Home the Bacon’ Or Is It Turkey? When men and women get together for a sports match, the men are supposed to win, right? Wrong. At least that's the way it was at an old-fashioned turkey shoot held Novem ber 23 by some Medical Center employes and their families. The precision target shooting event was for the birds - seven family-size turkeys to be exact. Although the ladies were outnumbered 21 to 7, they took home four of the seven prizes. The match followed an afternoon of trap shooting for the hunting enthusiasts at the home of Dr. Marvin Rozear, a resident in neurology. The winners included Mrs. William Carter, Mrs. Bruce Goodwin, Mrs. Bruce Shalamon, Mrs. Lauren Helfrich, Dr. John Gallagher, Mr. Jesse Cox and Mr. Bruce Goodwin. Senior Nurses In Army Corps Five seniors in the Duke University School of Nursing were commissioned as second lieutenants in the Army Student Nurse Corps during ceremonies December 1 at WTVD television in Durham. All have been participants in an Army program which provides tuition and a stipend for students planning to join the Army Nurse Corps upon graduation. The new officers are Jay Ellen Barrett of Walpale, Mass.; Susan Maxine Glover, Severna Park, Md.; Marcia Louise Grove, Hickory, N. C.; Kathryn Lee Hinds, Rockville, Md., and Elizabeth Breid King, Minneapolis, Minn. PDC Promotion Mr. William J. Donelan, insurance office supervisor for the Medical Pri vate Diagnostic Clinic, will be promoted to assistant business manager of the clinic effective January 1, 1970. Mr. Donelan joined the Medical PDC staff in April, 1969. He comes to Duke following completion of a B. A. Degree in political science at Wheeling College in Wheeling, W. Va. He also dkJ graduate work in law at the University of North Carolina. Mr. Skolaut With Pharm The former chief of the Clinical Center Pharmacy at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., joins the Duke staff in January on special assignment with hospital pharmacy services. Milton W. Skolaut, who has been at NIH since 1952, explained that his main goal is to integrate the pharmacy and its staff into the Duke concept of total patient care. "We will be talking with doctors and nurses and other staff per sonnel to see what can be done to bring pharmacy services closer to patient care," Mr. Skolaut said. He said that he would also be checking into the feasibility of extending phar macy hours and using more pre-packaged drugs in addition to working on several other suggestions. Mr. Skolaut retired from the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps Nov ember 30 after 17 years as head of the NIH pharmacy department. He served as chief pharmacist at the PHS Hospital in Staten Island, N. Y., from 1949 to 1952. While at NIH, Mr. Skolaut initiated a service for developing drug dosage forms and suitable assays for many investi gational drugs, and also set up a radio pharmaceutical service emphasizing pro duct development and proper controls. He also introduced many other pack aging and administrative innovations to keep the NIH pharmacy in tune with new trends in medicine. In 1963, Mr. Skolaut received the Geigy Pharmaceutical Company Leader- Public Relations Office Box 3354 Duke University Medical Center Durham, North Carolina 27706 Begins Work acy Services MR. SKOLAUT ship Award for his work in the field of hospital pharmacy and was nam^ the 1967 recipient of the Andrew Craigie Award from the Association of Military Surgeons for "imaginative leadership in the science of pharmacy in the federal service." He received a B. S. degree in pharmacy from the University of Texas in 1941 and served his pharmacy internship at The Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. Mr. Skolaut, a native of San Antonio, Tex., is married to the former Rheta Leverett, also a pharmacist, and is the father of two grown children.
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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Jan. 1, 1970, edition 1
12
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