Pediatric Research Money Is The Goal Duke Golf Tourney Features Famous Faces Wonder what ever happened to Roger Maris and Perry Como? Want to know why Mike Souchak and Art Wall, Jr. can smack a golf bail better than you can? You can find out for yourself a week from Sunday. That’s when a small army of sports greats, not to mention Davison Clubber Como and master guitarist Chet Atkins, will mass at the Duke Golf Course for the first Duke Hospital Child r-en’s Celebrity Golf Tournament. “There’ll be a visibly known person, plus someone who knows how to play golf, in each foursome,” said Dr. John Griffith, the associate professor of pediatrics and neurology who has spearheaded the event. Six former Blue Devil standouts are among th» notables who’ve agreed to take part: pro basketball players’^ack Marin (’66) and Jeff Mullins (’64), two-time All-American football back “Ace” Parker, former world record sprinter Dr. Dave Sime (’59), and golf pros Souchak (’51) and Wall ntcRcom duke univeusiti) mcdicM ccntcR (’49). They’ll be joined by sportscaster Jim McKay (whose son is a Duke sophomore) and Dr. Frank Bannister, basketball pros Billy Cunningham and John Havlicek, professional golfers Peggy Kirk Bell and Buck Adams, baseball Hall of Fame-ers Luke Appling and Johnny Mize, wrestler “Wahoo” McDaniels, and single season home run king Maris. (Continued on page 3) VOLUME 21, NUMBER 32 AUGUST 30, 1974 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Dr. H. K. Brodie To Head Department of Psychiatry Dr. H. Keith H. Brodie of Stanford University is the new chairman of the Department of Psychiatry. His appointment to the chairmanship and faculty rank of full professor was confirmed last weekend by the University Board of Trustees. Brodie, a facuUy member in the Department of Psychiatry at Stanford, will succeed Dr. Ewald W. Busse who is assuming the position of Director of Medical and Allied Health Education. In addition to his teaching duties at Stanford, Brodie has been program director of the medical school’s General Clinical Research Center. Brodie, who was 35 last Saturday, earned an A.B. degree in chemistry at Princeton in 1961 and was awarded an M.D. degree at Columbia in 1965. He served an internship at Ochsner. Foundation Hospital in New Orleans followed by a residency in psychiatry at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New York. He was clinical associate in the Section of Psychiatry, Laboratory of Clinical Science, of the National Institute of Mental Health for two years prior DR. H. KEITH H. BRODIE to joining the Stanford faculty in 1970. Brodie is a member of the editorial board of “Psychiatry Digest” and he is associate editor of “The American Journal of Psychiatry.” He is a member of numerous professional organizations and currently is chairman of the program committee of the American Psychiatric Association. He has served as a consultant to the federal government on narcotics and drug abuse, and the Secretary ■ of Health Education and Welfare recently appointed him to the National Advisory Council on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. In 1971 Brodie received the first prize award in psychopharmacology from the American Psychological Association, and the following year he was a visiting lecturer at Duke for a symposium on drugs and the aging patient. Among administrative and departmental responsibilities at Stanford, Brodie has been special assistant to the chairman of psychiatry for administration, a member of the department’s administrative and budget committees, premedical advisor and chairman of the Medical School Faculty Senate. Brodie and his wife, Brenda, have three children, a daughter who is 4 and two sons, 2 and one-month old. Brodie was selected after a one-year national search by a Duke faculty committee. “The Department of Psychiatry under Dr. Busse’s leadership since 1953 has evolved into one of the finest units in the country,” Dr. William G. Anlyan, vice president for health affairs, said. “The department has a balanced program of patient care extending into multiple North Carolina communities and Durham County,” (Continued on page 2) FOLLOWING THROUGH - Dr. John Griffith loosens up for the Sept. 8 Duke Hospital Children’s Celebrity Golf Tournament he conceived two years ago. Proceeds from the event, to be held yearly from now on, will be used to support Duke research into childhood diseases. For Bi-Weekly Employees Wage Increases Announced The pay checks for all bi-weekly employees at the medical center will be larger beginning with the pay period that starts Monday. New pay scales that were to have gone into effect Jan. 1 and would have meant increases for many employees have been made effective Sept. 2. In addition, and in recognition of the inflationary pressures that hit everyone’s pocketbook, the Sept. 2 increases are being made for all bi-weekly employees. Many employees received pay increases on July 1. The increases to be received beginning Monday will depend in part on the amount of increase, if any, the employee received at that time or since then. Each bi-weekly employee will receive an increase based on one of the following, depending on which one gives him or her the greater increase: 1. 7 per cent of the employee’s June 30 pay rate, less whatever percentage increase he or she lias received since then. Or . . . 2. 2 Vz per cent of the employee’s June 30 rate regardless of whatever increase he or she might have received since then. Or . . . 3. Whatever amount is needed to bring the employee’s rate up to the new minimum for his or her job. For example, under No. I above: If you have received no wage increase since June 30, you will receive a 7 per cent increase effective Monday. Under No. 2, if you received a 5 per cent increase, for example, on July 1, you will freceive an additional 2Vi per cent of your June 30 rate effective Monday. Under No. 3, you will receive whatever increase is necessary to bring your salary up to the new minimum rate for your position. In none of the cases above may increases be made in excess of the new maximum rate for an employee’s particular position.