Welcome Medical Alumni 1 ntcRcom 6ukc uniueusity mc6ica.l ccntcR VOLUME 20, NUMBER 46 NOVEMBER 16,1973 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Duke Docs Invade Campus This Weekend About 200 doctors and their wives are in town for four days of scientific meetings, social activities and football at the ninth annual Duke University Medical Center Alumni Weekend. Members of the faculty and members of this year's special reunion classes are presenting scientific papers in the hospital Amphitheater all day today. The major social event of the weekend will be a dinner and dance tonight at the Governors Inn in the Research Triangle Park. During the dinner six Distinguished Alumni Awards will be presented and an honorary alumna inducted. Tomorrow's program will include conducted tours of the new Eye Center, class reunions and the Duke-N.C. State football game at Wallace Wade Stadium. In conjunction with the Alumni Weekend, the Department of Psychiatry this week held a dinner and a one-day scientific program in honor of Dr. Ewald W. Busse, chairman of the department for the past 20 years. The guest speaker at the dinner , i''." , /, i III ■V J . ..-/r . .X A r 4 DAVISON BUILDING WATERCOLORS OFFERED FOR S>4/.f—Full-color reproductions of this watercolor of the Davison Building by Medical Artist Bob Blake are being offered for sale at $10 each by the medical center administration. Blake is widely known for. his watercolors, and reproductions of his paintings of Duke Chapel and the Davison Building are among his most popular. The Davison Building painting has been reproduced in full-size, MVi inches by 2OV2 inches, and has been printed on high-quality material suitable for framing. Prints at $10 each (plus 4% tax for North Carolina residents) may be purchased by writing to: Davison Water Color, Box 3701. Busse Portrait Unveiled Psychiatry Head Honored Wednesday night was Dr. Francis J. Braceland, editor of the American Journal of Psychiatry. This was followed by a day-long psychiatry seminar Thursday in the Amphitheater which featured presentations by seven leading psychiatrists from across the nation and one from Norway. At the end of the session, a portrait of Busse was presented to the medical center. The editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Franz Ingelfinger, spoke at the Director's Hour Lecture in the Amphitheater Thursday afternoon. This morning the alumni had an opportunity to have breakfast and make rounds with chairman and staff members of the departments of surgery, medicine, psychiatry, pediatrics, obstetrics-gynecology, ophthalmology, radiology, pathology, anesthesiology and community health sciences. The scientific program this morning was moderated by Dr. William W. Shingleton, professor and chief of the Division of General Surgery and director of Duke's Comprehensive Cancer Center. Dr. D. Bernard Amos, James B. Duke Professor of Immunology and professor of experimental surgery, spoke on "Mechanism of Tumor Cell Destruction." Dr. Darrell D. Bigner, assistant professor of pathology, microbiology and immunology and experimental surgery discussed "What Is the Evidence for Virus in Human Tumor?" And Dr. Harold R. Silberman, associate professor of hematology, spoke on "After 20 Years, Why Do We Still Use Chenrotherapy?" After the morning program the annual luncheon meeting of the Medical Alumni Association was to be held in the Union Ballroom. This afternoon, four Duke alumni are presenting papers. Dr. Richard B. Boren III, a 1953 graduate, is speaking on (Continued on page 3) The chairman of the Department of Psychiatry here for the past 20 years. Dr. Ewald W. Busse, was honored this week at a dinner and scientific program. The guest speaker at the dinner Wednesday night was Dr. Francis J, Braceland, editor of the American Journal of Psychiatry. Thursday a scientific program that included talks by eight leading psychiatrists from the United States and Norway was held in the Amphitheater. The session was climaxed by the presentation of a portrait of Busse to the medical center. The portrait was accepted by Dr. William G. Aniyan, vice president for health affairs. The prograrp in honor of Busse is part of Medical Alumni Weekend at Duke. The university has decided to honor its outstanding leaders while they are still at the peak of their activity rather than waiting for their retirement, and Busse is one of the first individuals to be so honored. Busse's leadership is credited with developing the department here into one of the world's outstanding departments of psychiatry. His leadership ability has been recognized by his selection as president of the American Psychiatric Association and other professional organizations and his appointment as the first J.P. Gibbons Professor of Psychiatry at Duke. The Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, initiated and (Continued on page 2) PSYCH I A TRY •C H A I R M A N HONORED-Dr. Ewald W. Busse, chairman of the Department of Psychiatry here for the past 20 years, was honored this week at a dinner Wednesday night and a day-long scientific program Thursday. The activities in honor of Busse were part of Medical Alumni Weekend program and were climaxed by presentation of a portrait of Busse to the medical center.