m Jmg ntcucom duke univcRsity mc6icM ccntcR VOLUME 20, NUMBER 13 March 30, 1973 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA fei Board of Visitors Meets For Progress Reports THE SEELEY G. MUDD BUILDING—Jhh is the artist's concept of the Seeley G. Mudd Building, the medical center's new medical library and communications center, now under construction. A ceremony to unveil the building's cornerstone will be held adjacent to the construction site at 5:15 p.m. today. Set For 5:15 Today Cornerstone Ceremonies Mark Library Construction A ceremony to unveil the cornerstone of the Seeley G. Mudd Building, the medical center's new library and communications center now under construction, will be held at 5:15 p.m. today adjacent to the construction site. The building site is marked by the tall skeleton of a construction crane on the west side of the Bell Building. The cornerstone ceremony will be conducted on a portion of what used to be the ravine parking lot directly behind Bell Building. A representative of The Seeley G. Mudd Fund of Los Angeles, which gave $1.5 million toward the library's construction, will be here and will speak briefly at the ceremony. He is Robert D. Fisher, chairman of the fund. Others scheduled to take part in the ceremony are Dr. William G. Aniyan, vice president for health affairs; Duke Hospital Chaplain J. White Iddings; Duke President Terry Sanford; and Mrs. Mary Semans, representing the University Board of Trustees. Also attending will be the medical center's 17-member Board of Visitors, which is meeting here in its annual session today. (See story at right.) At the time of its grant to Duke last fall. The Seeley G. Mudd Fund has provided grants totaling $12,150,000 for eight college and university buildings. The late Dr. Seeley G. Mudd of San Marino, Calif., created the foundation in his will. The fund is to be expended during the decade of the 70s for buildings at privately endowed colleges and universities throughout the country. It is estimated that more than $40 million will be disbursed in that time. Dr. Mudd was graduated with honors from Harvard Medical School in 1924. For 17 years he was engaged in research in radiation and X-ray therapy at Caltech and also served as dean of the School of Medicine at the University of Southern California. He died in 1968. The medical library to be named for Dr. Mudd will cost $5.3 million. It will be a five-story building containing 91,000 gross square feet. Its 10 miles of shelves will be sufficient to store 270,000 volumes, and it will have seating space for 500 readers, compared with space for 90 in the existing library facilities in the basement of the Davison Building. Construction time is two years. The medical center's Board of Visitors is meeting in its annual session here today to hear reports of progress in a variety of areas including medical, nursing and allied health education, cancer research and future expansion of the medical center. The board also will attend cornerstone ceremonies for the Seeley G. Mudd Building, the new medical library and communications center, at 5:15 p.m. today. (See story and picture at left.) The Board of Visitors is a 17-member body appointed by Duke to provide an annual review of programs and developments here and to supply guidance for future improvement. The membership is wide-ranging, representing not only medicine, nursing and other health professions but also other academic disciplines, private foundations and industry. In an executive session before the general meeting this morning. Dr. William G. Aniyan, vice president for health affairs, will provide a summary of progress made on recommendations by the 1972 Board of Visitors. The general session, in the medical Center Board Room, will begin with a progress report on the School of Nursing by Dean Ruby Wilson and a review of educational programs by Dr. Thomas D. Kinney, director of medical and allied health education. Later in the morning reviews of programs under their administration will be provided by Dr. Jon Jaeger, chairman of the Department of Health Administration; Dr. Robert L. Hill, chairman of the Department of Biochemistry; and Dr. James B. Wyngaarden, chairman of the Department of Medicine. Dr. Wolfgang K. Joklik, chairman of the Department of Microbiology and A SKEPTIC LOOKS AT DONALD—That's a suspicious look little William (Chris) Holland is casting at Donald Duck from the safety of his mother's lap. His mother is Mrs. Janet Holland of Raleigh. Donald Duck, Snow White and Pluto, stars of "Disney on Parade," which was performing in Greensboro, visited with children on the pediatrics wards here last week. (Photo by Dale Moses} Immunology, will tell the board about new cancer programs at the medical center at noon. In the afternoon Dr. Jane Elchlepp, assistant vice president of health affairs for planning, and Dr. Stuart Sessoms, director of Duke Hospital, will report on a study by American Health Facilities on future growth and expansion of the medical center. The afternoon session will conclude with a report on financial management and the hospital information systems by Jeff Steinert, assistant vice president of health affairs for business and finance. The board will meet again in executive session tomorrow morning. Six new members of the board have been appointed during the past year. They are: —Edward H. Benenson, president of the Benenson Management Co., Inc., of New York City. —Dr. John A.D. Cooper, president of the Association of American Medical Colleges in Washington. -Dr. Harry Eagle, associate dean of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Yeshiva University, Bronx, N.Y. -Dr. Loretta Ford, dean of the School of Nursing at the University of Rochester. —Dr. Alexander Leaf, chairman of the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School in Boston. — Mrs. Anne R. Somers, associate professor of community medicine at the Rutgers Medical School in Piscataway, N.J. Chairman of the Board of Visitors is Henry E. Rauch of Greensboro, who also is vice-chairman of the Duke University Board of Trustees. Other members of the Board of Visitors are: — Dr. Kenneth R. Crispell, vice president for health affairs at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. —James R. Felts, Jr., executive director of the Hospital and Child Care Sections of the Duke Endowment in Charlotte. —Dr. John H. Knowles, president of the Rockefeller Foundation in New York City. —Dr. Ben Miller of Columbia, S.C., a university trustee. -Raymond D. Nasher of the Raymond D. Nasher Co. in Dallas, Tex., a university trustee. —Dr. William R. Pitts of Charlotte, a university trustee. —Dr. Frank W. Putnam, professor of molecular biology in the Department of Zoology at Indiana University in Bloomington. —Dr. June S. Rothberg, dean of the Adelphi University School of Nursing in Garden City, N.Y. —Dr. Mitchell W. Spellman, dean of the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School in Los Angeles. — Richard J. Stull, executive vice president of th\e American College of Hospital Administrators in Chicago.