Newspapers / InterCom (Durham, N.C.) / March 22, 1974, edition 1 / Page 2
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Four Appointed to Staff 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 number. Duke extensions will not be listed. FOR SALE-1965 set of Collier's Encyclopedias with yearbooks to 1971 and companion set of Children's Classics. All in excellent condition, $75. Also, Lane cedar chest, linht walnut finish, clean design, two years old, excellent condition, $75, and antique gas cook stove, the kind.with tall legs and the oven up on the left side. All parts included and it works well, $25. Call 383-5521 or 286-9562. FOR SALE-Dinette set,—oval table with pecan finish and four floral pattern chairs, adapts well to small dining area, like new, $75. Call 942-4553 after 6 p.m. FOR SALE-Sears best 8,000 BTU window air conditioner, excellent condition and economical to operate, $125. Call 942-4553 after 6 p.m. FOR SALE-Used toys, games, children's furniture. Call 489-3280. WANTED-Furnished houses for visiting faculty members for July and August. Call Mrs. Colton at 489-7598 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE—One youth maple bed, includes rails and spring (no mattress), $15. Call 383-2737 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE—One bar, formica top, padded, excellent condition, $25 or best offer. Call 489-4720 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE-Nikkormat camera, FI.4 lens (50mm), mint condition, with case, $185 or '^nteRcom is published weekly for Duke University Medical Center employees, faculty, staff, students and friends by the Medical Center’s Office of Public Relations, Joe Sigler, director: Miss Annie Kittrell, secretary. Co-Editors DAVID WILLIAMSON DALE MOSES Public flelations 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; Us. Julia Taytor, RN, nursing; Dr. Tom C. Vanaman, microbiology and Immunology. highest bid. Contact Ms. Crosby at 967-3207 after 6 p.m. WANTED TO RENT-Furnished house or apartment from July 1 until Dec. 31, 1974. Contact Dr. Vincent Rogers, 1025 West 8th St., Erie, Pa. 16502. FOR SALE-1969 Camaro, bucket seats, 3-speed, 6-cvcllnder, excellent condition, gets 18.7 miles-per-gallon in the city. Call Roger at 286^1'92. FOR SALE-Authentic Indian traders will be at the Minata International Willow Park Mall on Chapel Hill Blvd. in Durham tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Navajo, Hop! and Zuni jewelry will be sold. FOR SALE-Wedding dress, size 10, floor length with a full skirt, worn only once, new $165, now only $60 or best offer. Call 575*6858 after 6:30 p.m. FOR SALE-Small chest of drawers, desk, wooden cabinet and. other snnall items. Call Sunday between 3 and 5 p.m. or Monday after 6 p.m. 489-5070. FREE-To a good home—two 9-month old kittens, one gray and one black, very friendly and lovable. Call after 5 p.m. weekdays 383-4730. DRUG ADDICTION OPEN HOUSE Anyone interested in discussing a treatment center for drug addicts which will operate,24 hours a day is invited to attend an open house at 705 Kent St. from 2-5 p.m., Sunday, March 24. Employee that you and your supervisor agreed on. Any discretionary holidays that are accumulated must be taken by the end of February of the following year. 'The reason for change in holiday schedules at the medical center is because Duke Hospital must be open around the clock, every day of the year," said Richard Jackson, the university's assistant vice president for personnel. "The rest of the university can close, even for several days at a time, without interrupting patient-care activities. But ,the hospital cannot. Four appointments at the medical center have been announced by University Provost Frederic N. Cleaveland. Appointed to assistant professorships are Dr. James E. Hall, physiology; Dr. Edward W. Holmes, medicine; Dr. Robert David Nebes, medical psychology; and R.T. Conference Begins Tomorrow A regional educational seminar in respiratory therapy featuring several speakers from Duke will be held at Holiday Inn West tomorrow beginning at 9 a.m. Fred Detterman, a respiratory therapist here, is helping arrange the conference, which is sponsored by the N.C. Society for Respiratory Therapy and Respiratory Care, Inc. About 100 participants are expected. The program will include physiology of humidification and aerosolization; administration of humidity and aerosol;, 2,3 Diphosphoglycerate and its action on the Oxyhemoglob in Dissociation Curue; lung lavage; mist tent therapy; and the Aquapak story. Duke speakers will be Dr. Samuel McMahon, Dr. Richard Dixon, Dr. Johannes Kylstra and Dr. Henderson Rourk. Also speaking will be R. Bruce Steinbach, director of respiratory therapy at N.C. Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill, and William J. Beal, educational coordinator of Respiratory Care, Inc. Benjamin Mays Killed In Automobile Mishap A technician in the Division of Audiovisual Education died Saturday night, March 9, from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. Benjamin Thomas Mays, 34, of 2145 Pine Drive in Raleigh had been employed by the division for eight years. He worked in the Medical TV Facility as a projectionist and cameraman. He was killed when his vehicle went out of control and struck a pole by the side of the highway. "Ben was an excellent worker who was always willing to help those who came to him with^a request," said Sam Agnello, director of Audiovisual Education. "He played an integral role in the classroom service activities, and was both well known and well liked by people throughout the medical center," he added. Funeral services were held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday following the accident at Michell Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. William Mills. Burial was in the Montlawn Memorial Park. Flexibility "The n^w schedule," Jackson added, "is designed to allow the hospital to meet staffing responsibilities with less difficulty by spreading the impact of 11 holidays more evenly throughout the year and to permit employees to take days off at times more convenient to them and their families." The only bi-weekly employees not included in the new schedule are those who are in a bargaining unit and whose holiday schedule is set by a union contract Dr. John L Sullivan, psychiatry. Hall received his B.A. degree in 1963 from Pomona College in Claremont, Calif. He obtained his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in physics from the University of California in Riverside. Following military service, Hall joined the Duke staff in 1970 as a postdoctoral research fellow working under Drs. Carver Mead in electrical sciences and Max Delbruck in biology. A native of Winona, Miss., Holmes came to Duke in 1970 as a resident in medicine. He received his B.S. degree from Washington and Lee University in Lexington, Va., and M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia. Prior to his recent appointment, Holmes served as chief medical resident at Duke. A 1965 graduate of Tufts University in Medford, Mass., Nebes received his Ph.D. degree in psychobiology at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena in 1971. He came to Duke in 1970 as a postdoctoral fellow in the Neurosciences Research Program and from 1971-72 served as a psychologist at the Durham Veterans Administration Hospital. Sullivan received his A.B. degree from Duke in 1965 and his M.D. from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Md., in 1969. He served a straight medical internship at Johns Hopkins Hospital and was a resident in psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine in La Jolla. Prior to his appointment at Duke, Sullivan was course lecturer and director of the Psychopharmacology Clinic in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California. Dr. Dees Elected To Academy Post Dr. Susan Dees, professor of pediatrics and chief of the Division of Pediatric Allergy, has been elected vice president of the American Academy of Allergy. She is the first woman to hold a position on the academy's executive committee. A graduate of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and a member of the Duke faculty since 1939, Dr. Dees is author of 58 articles on various subjects pertaining to allergy. She served or) the White House Conference on Children and Youth in 1960 and is a past-president of the N.C. Pediatric Society and the Southeastern Allergy Association. Dr. Dees and her husband. Dr. John Dees, professor of urology, have four children and three grandchildren. DR. SUSAN DEES (Continued from page 1)
InterCom (Durham, N.C.)
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March 22, 1974, edition 1
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