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Lima Linda University
a Linda. Calif. 92354
Return Requested
LIBRARY
LOMA LINDA UNIVERSITY
LOMA LIN* A, CALIF. 9235^
BULK RATE
U. S. POSTAGE
PAID
Loma Linda, Calif.
Permit No. 6
Non- profit Organization
Vol. 4. No. 7 Wednesday, March 29, ( 1976
Staff photo
ELI LILLY AND COMPANY sales representatives Glenn Rickart
and Douglas B. Pew present a $ 5,000 check to University president
Godfrey T. Anderson, PhD, for use in the new Medical Center.
Pharmaceutical Organization
Completes $ 10,000 Donation
The second half of a $ 10,000 gift to Loma Linda University was
presented by representatives of Eli Lilly and Company last week.
University president Godfrey T. Anderson, PhD, accepted the
gift from the pharmaceutical house on behalf of the University.
TJie $ 5,000 gift is for use in the _____________________
new Medical Center.
Douglas B. Pew, sales repre
sentative for the Loma Linda
and Redlands area, and Glenn
Eickard, manager of the east
Los Angeles district, presented
the gift to Dr. Anderson.
Eli Lilly and Company contri
butes certain medical instru-the
health needs of medical and
dental students.
The first half of the $ 10,000
gift was made last April.
ments such as stethoscopes, tun
ing forks, percussion hammers,
and instrument cases to medical
students. In addition they pro
vide gratis pharmaceuticals for
Alumni Association
Elects President
Roy V. Jutzy, MD, assistant
professor of medicine, accepted
the presidency of the School of
Medicine Alumni Association
during the business meeting of
the organization's 35th annual
Alumni Postgraduate Conven
tion March 15.
Also installed at the business
meeting were Ervin E. Nichols,
MD, clinical professor of gyne-cology
and obstetrics, president-elect;
Floyd L. Wergeland, SM
' 32, first vice president; Ernest
J. Braun, MD, associate pro
fessor of radiology, second vice
president; Leland S. Loewen,
MD, instructor in orthopedic
surgery, treasurer; and Chance-ford
A. Mounce, MD, associate
clinical professor of anesthesi-ology.
They will serve one- year
terms as officers of the 3,875-
member organization.
$ 5,000 for Research
In Chest Diseases
A $ 5,000 grant has been
awarded to Loma Linda Uni
versity by the Tuberculosis and
Health Association of Califor
nia, according to John E. Peter-son,
MD, associate dean for re
search affairs.
The grant, allocated for the
1967- 68 school year, will be
used for research and educa
tional programs in chest dis
eases under the direction of
George G. Burton, MD, who
has been appointed assistant
professor of medicine, effective
July 1.
Medical Graduates
Name Dr. Waddell
' Alumnus of Year'
Quick- Action Funder Proposed
For New Recreational Facilities
A project to get additional tennis courts in operation on campus immediately has
been proposed by University officials.
Three of the former play courts located adjacent to the Audiovisual Service build
ing on Stewart Street have been removed to make way for the gymnasium construc
tion now under way.
" We would like to build two .
good quality tennis courts right
now, in the new area assigned
for them by the master plan,"
says Norman J. Woods, dean of
students, " and let the others
wait for a major equipment
campaign sometime in the fall."
Dean Woods is chairman of the
student activities committee. ,__ . ,_ HUf-.-> ™ *"- « >" - m.^ ^,
Funds 90% Raised W* 1^ ^ T , - 9 ™ £ r
The two courts, to be located
directly north of the Audiovisual
building, will cost $ 10,000, ac
cording to contractor's esti
mates. " If the students and
their friends can raise only ten
per cent of this, or $ 1,000, im
mediately," dean Woods ex-plains,"
we can have them going
within a couple of weeks." From
several sources, and in spite of
pressing financial needs of the
new Medical Center, he notes,
the University has agreed to
make $ 9,000 available for this
" hurry- up" project.
Charles E. Winter, PhD, a
member of the activities com
mittee, says that he is in full
support of the proposal, and
adds that other game courts,
primarily volleyball and basket
ball, will be set up inside the
new gymnasium as soon as it is
completed.
Ralph F. Waddell, SM' 36,
medical secretary for the Gen
eral Conference of Seventh- day
Adventists, was named " Alum
nus of the Year," by fellow
graduates at the Alumni Post
graduate Convention banquet
held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel
on March 15.
Dr. Waddell, who resides in
Washington, D. C., was formerly
secretary of the medical and
temperance departments of the
Far Eastern Division of the
General Conference of Seventh-day
Adventists.
He began his service to the
Far East in 1937 as medical
director of the Bangkok Mis
sion Clinic, Bangkok, Thailand.
More recently he received a
doctorate in public health, mak
ing him the second physician in
the Seventh- day Adventist de
nominational employ to have
this degree conferred upon him.
The Loma Linda University
SN Alumni
Homecoming
June 1 is the date for
the School of Nursing
Alumni Association
Homecoming. Keynote
speaker will be Cordelia
P. Reynolds, SN' 24, who
is now visiting many
alumni in mission stations
around the world.
Place: Loma Linda Uni
versity Dining Hall.
Time: 6: 30 p. m.
Classes 1917 and 1942,
the 50th and 25th, respec
tively, will be honored.
— Staff photo
MAKING WAY for the new gymnasium, three of the four courts
are demolished by a bulldozer. A fund raising campaign has been
proposed to construct two new tennis courts.
More Acceptances Listed
For Dentistry, Nursing, Others
One hundred twenty eight acceptances to the School of Den
tistry, School of Nursing, and the School of Health Related Pro
fessions were announced last week by Walter B. Clark, dean of
admissions for the University. In each of these schools there will
be a few more acceptances made ____________________
at the end of the school year, -
the dean states.
School of Medicine alumni
California's largest medical
alumni group held their 35th
Alumni Postgraduate Conven
tion in Los Angeles on March
14, 15, and 16.
— Staff photo
DAVID D. Loge, staff assistant for the University Medical Center,
( left) and John G. McConnell, equipment accounting clerk, verify
code numbers on the first pieces of new furniture shipped to the
Medical Center destined for the School of Nursing offices.
SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY
Students who will enter the
School of Dentistry next Sep
tember are Ernest G. Annofsky,
Jr., Los Angeles; Graham U.
Carey, Angwin; Donald A.
Church, Springfield, Oregon;
Paul L. Conner, Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia; Robert E. Crook, Col-ton.
William W. Dodge III, Santa
Monica; David H. Eichman, Al-hambra;
Irving M. Feldkamp
III, Riverside; Dale G. Fessen-den,
Oshawa, Ontario, Canada;
David A. Fisher, Albuquerque,
New Mexico; Ronald E. Fritz,
Glendale; Ronald E. Gardner,
Fullerton; Charles J. Goodacre,
Villas, New Jersey; Lawrence
D. Hansen, La Sierra.
Harry H. Houston III, Red-lands;
Leslie T. Jacobs, Tal-lahassee,
Florida; Ezbon Jen,
Stockton; Ronald J. Kehney,
Williamsport, Pennsylvania;
Frank W. Kogel, Joshua Tree;
M. Larry Kyle, Berrien Springs,
Michigan; Charles L. Lutz,
Fresno; Martin Manzella, New
Orleans, Louisiana; Myron S.
Mickelson, Jr., Costa Mesa;
Charles B. Millican, Jr., Colton;
J. Gregory Nahorney, Lodi;
David W. Nelson, Downey.
Ronald C. Parker, Riverside;
David B. Pettingell, Loma
Linda; Lawrence P. Reed, Ta-koma
Park, Maryland; Walter
J. Rydzewski, Pasadena; Gunter
Smailus, Los Angeles; Monte A.
Swanberg, Woodland, Washing
ton; Bela B. Toth, Buena Park;
Jack R. Turner, Riverside; Den
nis B. Wade, Huntington Beach;
Robert N. Walls, Redlands;
Wendall A. Williams, Ogdcn,
Utah; and Richard K. Wong,
Sacramento.
SCHOOL OF NURSING
Fifty- five students received
acceptances to the School of
Nursing. They include Leslie C.
Abrams, San Bernardino; Nancy
L. Ammon, Joyce, Washington;
Continued on page 8
' 68 APC Refreshers,
Religious Services
To Be Held Here
The School of Medicine Alum
ni Association voted to hold part
of their annual convention in
Loma Linda next year, states
Roy V. Jutzy, MD, assistant
professor of medicine, and presi
dent of the Alumni Association.
Meeting at the 35th annual
Alumni Postgraduate Conven
tion in Los Angeles, March ID-
16, alumni voted to hold the
refresher courses and weekend
religious services in Loma
Linda. The three- day scientific
assembly program, consisting of
lectures by national authorities
in various fields of medicine,
convention exhibits, and the an
nual banquet will still be held in
Los Angeles, Dr. Jutzy says.
The refresher courses, spon
sored by the University's School
of Medicine, are planned and
taught by School of Medicine
faculty with noted colleagues
in medicine participating as
guest lecturers.
More than 2,400 physicians,
students, and others, attended
the 35th annual convention held
at the Ambassador Hotel in Los
Angeles.
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Dbase record # | Scope1967-v04-07 |
| Title | Scope - Volume 04, Number 07 |
| Description | Scope - Volume 04, Number 07; March 29, 1967 - Typo in the year; printed as 1976 |
| Date Created | March 29, 1967 |
| Digital format | |
| Publisher | Loma Linda University |
| Language | English |
| Rights | Physical rights are retained by the institution. Copyright is retained in accordance with U. S. Copyright laws. |
| Collection | Scope |
| Collection # | Scope1967-v04-07 |
| Date publ to db | 2008-05-29 |
| OCLC number | 639085193 |
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