Alumni meeting in new center
(Continued from page 1)
Present and Future" by Dr. Roscoe R, (Ike)
Robinson, professor of medicine, associate vice
president and chief executive officer of the
hospital.
9:40 — "Otolaryngology: Concepts and
Concerns 1978" by Dr. William R. Hudson,
professor and chief of the Division of
Otolaryngology.
10:15 — Break
10:35 — "Behavioral Medicine — Psychiatry
for the 80s" by Dr. H. Keith H. Brodie,
professor and chairman of the Department of
Surgery.
11:10 — "What's Happening in
Neurosurgery at Duke" by Dr. Robert H.
Wilkins, professor and chief of the Division of
Neurosurgery.
Afternoon topics
At noon the association will have its annual
luncheon meeting in the Searle Center and in
the afternoon the symposium will continue
with:
1:30 — "Cancer, Calculi and Sex" by Dr.
James F. Glenn, professor and chief of the
Division of Urologic Surgery.
2:05 — "The Department of Anesthesiology
— Its Role in the Medical Center" by Dr. Merel
H. Harmel, professor and chairman of the
Department of Anesthesiology.
2:40 — Break
3 — "Bugs and Drugs; The Continuing
Challenge of Increasing Antibiotic Resistance"
by Dr. Samuel L. Katz, professor and chairman
Dr. Kenneth R. D>ehl. assistant professor of
orthodontics, was elected secretary-treasurer
of the Third District Dental Society of North
Carolina at a meeting held Sept. 29-Oct. 1 in
Myrtle Beach, S.C. Diehl had been third
district editor for the past three years.
of the Department of Pediatrics.
3:35 — "The Spinal Cord Injury Service, or
Orthopaedists and Neurosurgeons Do Talk to
Each Other" by Dr. Frank W. Clippinger,
professor of orthopaedic surgery.
Tomorrow's schedule
Saturday's schedule includes a
Clinicopathological Conference beginning at
9:30 a.m. in the Searle Center. Discussants will
be Dr. David C. Sabiston Jr., professor and
chairman of the Department of Surgery; Dr.
Robert B. Jennings, professor and chairman of
the Department of Pathology; Dr. Charles E.
Putman, professor and chairman of the
Department of Radiology; and Dr. William G.
Aniyan, professor of surgery and vice
president for health affairs.
The afternoon and evening will include the
Duke vs. Wake Forest football game and
reunions for medical classes which graduated
in years ending in "3"or"8,"from 1933-73. Dr.
and Mrs. Ewald W. Busse will give a reception
for alumni and their guests not attending class
reunions.
Officers of the Medical Alumni
Association include Dr. Ralph P. Baker
(M.D. '43) of Newberry, S.C., president;
Dr. W. Scott James Jr. (M.D. '57) of
Atlanta, president-elect; Dr. Jay M. Arena
(M.D. '32), professor of pediatrics at
Duke, secretary-treasurer; and Dr.
William B. Waddell (M.D. '62) of Galax,
Va., past president.
GETTING A HEAD START ON THE HOLIDAYS — Lynn Fondren (left) helps a shopper select an
item at the Duke Surgical Women's booth in the Northgate Charity Bazaar, Oct. 27. In the
background, Tina Beissinger arranges some of the handmade items for sale. Other Duke-related
groups represented at the bazaar were the Kidney Foundation, the Durham-Orange County
Ostomy Association and the American Cancer Society. IPIwlo hy Inn Fried)
Professional news
Dr. John T. Garbutt, assistant professor of
medicine, will be a guest faculty member fora
Southern Medical Association (SMA)
postgraduate course in Atlanta. He is
secretary-elect of the SMA gastroenterology
section.
Dr. Galen W. Quinn, professor of
orthodontics, was elected a fellow of the
American College of Dentists, during an Oct.
21 meeting in Anaheim, Calif.
Dr. Rebecca H. Buckley, professor of
pediatrics and associate professor of
immunology, was installed as president of the
Southeastern Allergy Association during an
October meeting in Sea Island, Ga. She also is
president-elect of the American Academy of
Allergy.
Buckley was a program participant during a
Pediatric Immunology Meeting in Santa
Barbara, Calif., Oct. 16-20, arrd served as co
director of an American Medical Association
Course on Allergy and Immunology, given in
Asheville, Oct. 22.
This past Wednesday, she was a lecturer in a
Post-graduate Course in Allergy and
Immunology at the Cleveland (Ohio) Clinic
Foundation.
Later this fall, Buckley will be a program
participant at the National Institutes of Health
Asthma and Allergic Diseases Center Annual
Workshop in Bethesda, Md , and she will be a
lecturer during a Postgraduate Course on
Immunology, given by the American Academy
of Dermatology in San Francisco.
DR. QUINN
DR. BUCKLEY
Dr. Jennifer Horner, assistant professor of
speech pathology in the Department of
Surgery, presented a paper entitled "Gesture
as a Deblocking Modality in a Severe Aphasic"
at a Clinical Aphasiology Conference in
Keystone Heights, Colo.
This month she will present two papers
during the annual convention of the American
Sptech and Hearing Association in San
Francisco, One is a palilalia case study and the
other deals with "Cognitive Tempo and
Nonverbal Learning in Aphasia,"
Dr. William P. Wilson, professor of
psychiatry, was the author of the cover story in
the July, 1978, issue of Guideposts magazine.
^ Med Student honored for achievements
A fourth-year student in the School of
Medicine has been honored for his
achievements in the classroom and the
community.
FILLING IN — When the McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. contracted witn u>uKe s meuicai art uivision
to do some artwork for an anatomy textbook, it presented a problem. Who could fill in for Bob
Blake, coordinator of medical art, while he did the drawings? The answer was to create a
temporary positkjn which was filled by medical artist Robert Margulies. Margulies began work in
September. He will do medical illustrations, graphs, charts and diagrams and be on call for
sketches of operating room procedures. Margulies has a master's degree in medical art from the
Medical College of Georgia. Blake started devoting his time Sept. 1 to drawing 200 medical
illustrations for the McGraw-Hill textbook, "Atlas of Head and Neck Anatomy." IPIioto hy Parker
Herring I
Club wants RSVP
If you have been invited to the first
annual Quarter Century Club
banquet, please be sure to RSVP so
Employee Relations vv^iil know how
many people to expect.
If you haven't returned your RSVP
card, contact Herb Aikens or Donna
Mooney at 684-2015 or 684-4144.
Those receiving gifts should notify
Employee Relations of their choices
immediately, if they haven't already
done so.
The banquet will be held next
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the Durham
Civic Center.
Wilfred Raine, of Mobile, Ala., has been
awarded a $2,000 fellowship by National
Medical Fellowships, Inc., of New York
City, which grants scholarships to
minority students on the basis of
academic achievement, demonstrated
leadership ability and service to the
community.
A 1975 graduate of Williams College,
Raine has served on the Medical School
Admissions Committee and as an advisor
to minority students at Duke and North
Carolina Central University, During the
last academic year, he was treasurer of
the Student National Medical
Association,
Raine works one night each week in the
Edgemont Community Clinic, a
neighborhood clinic in Durham, and does
active volunteer work through his
church.
Preparing for a career in pediatrics,
Raine has written a series of articles on
childhood poisoning for the Carolina
Times, a Durham weekly newspaper. He
also has prepared several articles for
scientific journals.