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VOLUME 18, NUMBER 40
OCTOBER 22, 1971
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
II Faculty Changes Announced
1
OFFICIAL HANDSHAKE—Dr. Carl Eisdorfer, center, director of Duke's Center for
the Study of Aging and Human Development, is congratulated by John D. Twiname,
administrator of the Social and Rehabilitation Service of the Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare, on Dr. Eisdorfer's appointment to the national Advisory
Committee on Older Americans. At left is John B. Martin, U.S. commissioner and
special assistant to the President for aging, who was a recent visitor to Duke.(photo
courtesy of Department of HEW)
Richard Hayes Named To Position
In Hospital’s Development Office
Richard B. Hayes, corporate relations
officer for Duke University's Office of
Development for the past two years, has
been named assistant director of
development for health affairs.
Mr. Hayes' appointment, making him
responsible for fund raising and
development at the Medical Center, was
announced by Director of Development
J. David Ross.
The assistant directorship for health
affairs previously was held by Wiliam G.
(Gerry) Hancock, who has joined the
campaign staff of gubernatorial candidate
Sen. Hargrove Bowles.
A native of Sanford, Mr. Hayes
received a bachelor's degree in business ^
administration at the University of North
(continued on page four)
MR. HAYES
Three Duke Medical Center
departments have added new members to
their faculties and promoted others.
The appointments and promotions, 11
in all, were announced earlier this month
by Duke Provost Frederic N. Cleaveland
for the departments of pediatrics,
psychiatry, and radiology.
Two men were promoted to full
professor, while one other was named
associate professor and the rest became
assistant professors.
The two full professors are Dr. Jack K.
Goodrich, director of the division of
nuclear medicine in the Department of
Radiology, and Dr. F. Stanley Porter, a
hematologist in the Department of
Pediatrics.
Dr. Goodrich, a graduate of the
University of Tennessee School of
Medicine, has been on the Duke faculty
as an associate professor since 1965.
He did postgraduate study at
Methodist Hospital in Memphis and at the
Alton Ochsner Medical Foundation in
New Orleans. Prior to his appointment at
Duke, Dr. Goodrich was on the faculty of
the University of Mississippi School of
Medicine.
Dr. Porter, a graduate of Princeton
University and the Johns Hopkins School
of Medicine, came to Duke in 1964 as an
associate professor.
Following an internship and residency
at Johns Hopkins, he did a two-year
fellowship in hematology at Children's
Hospital in Boston. He had previously
been on the faculty at Harvard Medical
School and the University of Arkansas
Medical Center.
Promoted to associate professor in the
Department of Pediatrics was Dr. John F.
Griffith, who retains a post as assistant
professor of medicine.
A native of Canada, Dr. Griffith
received both his undergraduate and
medical education at the University of
Saskatchewan. After an internship and
(continued on page two)