Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / Oct. 19, 1973, edition 1 / Page 2
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lit Speech Problems Studied At Annual Meeting Here SMILING AND HAPPY AT HALF-CENTURY-Dr. and Mrs. David T. Smith came to join the faculty and staff at the nfiedicai center the year it opened, in 1930. But their association with one another as husband and wife pre-dated that.by seven years. One day last month at the Carolina Inn in Chapel Hill, family and friends joined them to celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary, when this picture was taken. They were married on Sept. 12, 1923, in Greenville, S.C. Dr. Smith, now James B. Duke Professor Emeritus of Miaobiology, headed that department from 1930 until his retirement in 1960. Mrs. Susan Smith joined the staff as an associate in nutrition in 1930 and spent a quarter-century in nutritional research here. (Photo by Waiter E. Shackelford) Speech problems associated with clefts of the lip and palate are the subject of a symposium that started here yesterday and is extending through today. More than 150 professionals from several states who work with cleft lip'and palate children are attending the fifth annual symposium on "Orofacial Anomalies as Related to Speech Disorders." Participants include professionals in special education, speech and hearing, pediatrics, plastic surgery, dentistry, orthodontics, psychology, otolaryngology and vocational rehabilitation. The seminar is being sponsored by the Divisions of Medical Speech Pathology, Orthodontics and Plastic, Maxillofacial-Oral Surgery. Members of the Cleft Lip and Palate Team at Duke and other faculty members from the sponsoring divisions are on the program. The guest speaker yesterday was Dr. Mildred F. Berry, a retired professor and author from Illinois who discussed "Speech and Language Habilitation of the Cleft Palate Child." Topics of discussion include control of dental disease, orthodontic problems, restorative dentistry, hearing problems, language acquisition, hypernasality. Trading Post You may send ads to "Trading Post" Box 3354, Hospital. Ads are printed free, but we do not advertise real estate, personal services or commercial enterprises. Please give your home telephone n^ber. Duke extensions will not be listed. FOR SALE-1965 Plymouth Valiant 4-door, tight body, no rust, six cylinder, straight drive, new clutch, new life time guaranteed shocks, new 14 inch rims with steel belted radiais, new heater hoses, new muffler and pipes, just tuned, radio, $350 firm. Call 383-3879 after 6 p.m. every week day. FOR SALE-Upright piano, antiqued green, $100. Call 596-3778 after 5 p.m. BOOK SALE-Chapel Hill Public Library. Tuesday, Oct. 23 and Wednesday, Oct. 24 11 a.m.-8 p.m. and bargain day Thursday, Oct. 25 11 a.m.-2 p.m. All types of books (10,000 volumes), texts, foreign languages, fiction, paperbacks. FOR SAL E-Refrigerator, apartment size, $10; play pen, $10; child's table and two chairs, $8; large old tent, $10; badmitton set with two nets and sturdy poles, $4; 1969 Yamaha Enduro 250 cc, good condition, $350; and upright piano, $100. Call 682-0835 anytime. WANTED-Frostfree refrigerator. Call 682-0635 anytime. FOR SALE-Apartment size electric stove, four top burners, oven with broiler, good condition, $35. Call 286-3761 after 6 p.m. FOR SALE-Nikor 35 mm with 2.8 lens and case; E-2 extension ring set (Nikon): Two AR-5 speakers; and Pioneer reverb. Call 471-2075. htcttcom is published weekly for Duke University Medical Center employes, faculty, staff, students and friends by the Medical Center's Office of Public Relations, Joe Sigler, director; Miss Yvonne Baskin, medical writer: Miss Annie Kittrell, secretary. Co-Editors DAVID WILLIAMSON DALE MOSES Public Relations Advisory Committee: Sam A. Agnello, audiovisual education; Dr. Robert Anderson Jr., surgery: James L. Bennett Jr., vice president's office: Wayne Gooch, personnel; Dr. Athos Ottolenghi, physiology and pharmacology: Richard Peck, hospital administration; Ms. Julia Taylor, RN, nursing; Dr. Tom C. Vanaman, niicrobiology^and^uTi^^ Calendar (continued) and the laboratories of the Allied Health BIdg. at the VA Hospital. 3:30 p.m. Neurosurgery Basic Science Conference, Gerontology BIdg., Rm 4502, Dr. Robinson. 7 p.m. Orthopaedic Bone Pathology Conference, Rm M 312, Dr. Harrelson and Orthopaedic Resident. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Orthopaedic Anatomy and Pathology Conference, Bell BIdg. Friday, October 26 8a.m. Surgical Pathology Microscopic (inference. Residents Rm, Senior Staff. 8 a.m. Orthopaedic Surgery Sound Slide Presentation, Rm 1359. 8:30 a.m. Medicine Endocrine Seminar, Rm 2031, Dr. Lebovitz. 8:30 a.m. Clinical Ob-Gyn Conference, Hart Pavillion, Rm 1319, Dr. Parker. 10:30-11 a.m. Interdenominational Chapel Service, Hospital Chapel. Open to the public. 11 a.m. Ob-Gyn Seminar, Hart Pavillion, Rm 1319, Dr. Brame. Two Head Nurses Named Two new head nurses have been named at the medical center. They are Mrs. Cheryl Mentzer on Hanes Ward and Miss Edith Stephenson in the Recovery Room. A native of Meadville, Pa., Mrs. Mentzer received her nursing diploma from Meadville City Hospital School of Nursing in 1972. Following graduation, she came to Duke as a staff nurse on Hanes, a general medical unit. In her free time, Mrs. Mentzer enjoys the hobby of grooming poodles. Her husband, James, is a graduate student in Canadian history at Duke. Miss Stephenson of Billings, Mont., came to Duke in March of 1973 as a staff nurse in the Recovery Room. She obtained a three-year diploma in 1971 from St. Vincent's in Billings. Prior to her arrival at Duke, she worked as a staff nurse at Columbus Hospital in Great Falls, Mont. Aside from her nursing responsibilities, she enjoys hiking, swimming and sewing. CHERYL MENTZER FOR SALE-Honda CB-100 motorcycle, 1 year old, excellent condition, moving to Oregon, must sell, $300. Call 383-6229. WANTED-Female student needs female roommate, furnished apartment is located very near Duke campus. Call 383-2776 anytime on Saturday and Sunday or before 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday for further information. adenoid and tonsillar tissue and neurological problems in cleft lip and palate children. The annual symposium was started five years ago by Dr. Raymond Massengill Jr., director of medical speech pathology. AOA BANQUET To all faculty, house staff and student members of AOA: If you have no received a letter concerning the annua AOA banquet, please contact Mrs. Carol ■ Hawley, ext. 2033, or Rob Todd, ext. 2517, so your name will be included on the mailing list. t I >\ EDITH STEPHENSON Symposium To Discuss Contemporary Nurse A one-day symposium co-sponsored by the School of Nursing Alumni Association and Sigma Theta Tau, nursing honorary. Beta Epsilon Chapter, will be held on Nov. 7 from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. in the School of Nursing Auditorium. Registration on that day will be from 8:15-9 a.m. ' The symposium is entitled "The Nurse — A Contemporary Woman Coping with Psychological arvJ Social Conflicts." Duke speakers at the symposium include: Dr. Charles Hammond, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology; Dr. J.B. Reckless, associate professor of psychiatry and nursing and head of psychosonratic medicine; Anne Mandetta, lecturer at ths School of Nursing and vice president of Sigma Theta Tau, Beta Epsilon; Dr. Jean O'Barr, director of Career Development and Continuing Education; and Mary Ann Peter, president of the School of Nursing Alumni Association. Pre-registration for the symposium and reservations for the luncheon on Nov. 7 can be made by writing to School of Nursing Symposium, Alumni House, 2138 Campus Drive, Durham, N.C. 27706. The registration fee is $3 for non-dues paying members and guests, $1 for Duke nursing students and no fee for dues-paying alumni and Sigma Theta Tau members. Luncheon reservations are $3.75 per person.
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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Oct. 19, 1973, edition 1
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