|
DukeMed Alumni News
Spring 2007
Submit Your
Class Note To submit your class note and photo online Click Here.
You also may mail notes and photos to Duke Medical Alumni Association, Class Notes,
512 S. Mangum Street, Suite 400, Durham, NC 27701-3973, or e-mail to dukemed@mc.duke.edu.
Note that electronic images must be 300 dpi or higher
resolution. Due to space limitations, we are not always able to publish all the
class notes we receive for a given issue. If you didn’t see yours in this issue,
please look for it the next time. |
|
Peter M. Duvoisin, T’57, MD’60, DC, has been a retired cardiologist since 1999 and is enjoying his time sailing and motorboating
on the rivers and lakes near Chattanooga, Tenn., where he and his wife Jane, N’57, DC, live. The couple also enjoys
skiing in Colorado and traveling to visit with their nine grandchildren.
Robert Green, T’56, MD’60, DC-Century, is an orthopedic surgeon with the Palm Beach Orthopedic Institute in Palm Beach, Fla. He says he enjoys his work and spending time with his family and friends. He and his wife Elizabeth have three sons: Robert, T’88, MD’93, DC, an oncologist in West Palm Beach; David,T’89; and Geoffrey, T’95.
Richard L. Reece, T’56, MD’60, the chairman of the National Association
of Integrated Health Organizations, lives in Old Saybrook, Ct., with his wife Loretta, a graduate of the Massachusetts General School of Nursing, and their French bulldog Paris. Their son, Spencer, is a nationally known poet and soon-to-be-ordained Episcopalian
clergyman. Their son, Carter, works in New York City in the high-end cosmetic industry. Reece’s book, Innovation-Driven Health Care: 34 Concepts for Transformation (Jones and Bartlett, 2007) will be released in March. He also has a blog at http://www.medinnovationblog.blogspot.com.
Harry C. Huneycutt, Jr., MD’61, HS’61-’66, DC, a private practice gynecologist
in Reno, Nev., is practicing half time and traveling and playing golf with his wife Rita. They have four children and four grandchildren and live in Verdi, Nev.
Gordon A. Tripp, MD’61, has been retired from psychiatry and psychoanalysis
since 2002. He and his wife Lisa have two grown sons—Andrew and Mathew—and live in
Sunderland, Mass.
 Kenneth J. Kahn, MD’62, HS’62-’63, and his wife Norma have lived in Costa Rica for the past eight years so they can be near their children and grandchildren. They especially enjoy hiking and exploring hidden places in Costa Rica. Norma is an abstract artist and Ken likes to make video movies
of their trips. They
travel three to four months a year, almost always to new places.
Henry G. Magendantz, MD’62, DC, a private practice gynecologist in Providence, R.I., also is on the clinical faculty at Brown University, Women’s and Infant’s Hospital of Rhode Island. He specializes
in fertility issues such as various forms of super ovulation along with intrauterine
insemination. At the previous two meetings of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine he chaired the luncheon conferences
titled Laparoscopy in the Evaluation of Infertility.
He and his wife Nancy have three grown sons and several grandchildren and live in Lincoln, R.I.
Gail R. Williams, MD’62, a correctional psychiatry consultant, has given eight presentations in the past two years at national correctional medicine meetings. He works in Mississippi and lives with his wife Hannah in Montgomery, Ala.
Mark Entman, MD’63, DC, is completing his 30th year as scientific director
of the DeBakey Heart Center at Baylor College of Medicine and the Methodist
Hospital. He still has an active NIH-approved research lab that he hopes to spend more time in. He is married to Carol Snyder Entman, BSN’66, DC. They have two daughters and two sons-in-law, as well as three grandchildren. They live in Houston, Texas.
Frank K. Sewell, Jr., MD’63, a physician in
Henderson, Ky., is chairman of the Kentucky Medical Society State CME Committee.
He and his wife Joan live in Henderson.
William W. Baxley, Jr., MD’64, HS’68-’71, retired from the field of otolaryngology
in 2002. He and his wife Charlene live in Macon, Ga.
 John M. Harrelson, T’61, MD’64, HS’69-’74, retired from orthopedic surgery at Duke in 2002 and continues to teach in the medical school
Practice Course and in musculoskeletal pathology. He serves as chair of the Institutional Review Board. His wife Lynne died in 2004. In his spare time he enjoys woodworking and visiting his seven grandchildren.
He lives in Durham.
Gerald L. Brown, T’63, MD’67, HS’68-’72, retired in June 2006 as professor of psychiatric medicine and was elected to professor
emeritus status by the Board of Visitors of the University of Virginia. He has a new full-time post-retirement position as staff psychiatrist in the Veteran’s Administration Outpatient Clinic in arrisonburg, Va. He and his wife Sima Peyman
Brown live in Free Union, Va.
Harry A. Gallis, MD’67, HS’67-’68, semi-retired in July 2006. He continues as director of the Charlotte Area Health Education Center in Charlotte, N.C., and is completing his second
year as president of the Alliance for CME. He and his wife Sue have two children—Alex is a chef at Magnolia Grill in Durham, and Sara is finishing a degree in equine technology.
The Gallises live in Cornelius, N.C.
Allen Cato, Jr., T’61, PhD’67, MD’67, is CEO of Cato Research Ltd., a research and development firm that helps pharmaceutical
and biotechnology
companies design
and execute successful development strategies. He says all three of his children are working with him in the company, which is located in Durham. He and his wife Adrian live in
Hillsborough, N.C.
Michael Stuart Levine, MD’67, is a pediatrician in group practice in South Windsor, Conn. He says he enjoys going to work every day and also keeps busy as president of his synagogue. He and his wife Carolyn—an oncology
nurse—have three children. Their oldest daughter is married with two children; their son is writing his PhD thesis and teaching archeology at the University of Colorado;
and their youngest daughter is in her third year of law school. The Levines live in West
Hartford, Conn.
Joseph W. Cook, Jr., T’64, MD’68, HS’68-’69, DC, retired from cardiovascular surgery in November 2006. He and his wife Kathryn, WC’66, DC, live in Charlotte, N.C.
Roger J. Porter, MD’68, DC, is president-elect of the American Society for Experimental Neurologic Therapeutics and is a newly
appointed trustee and chair of the Governance Committee of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.
During his tenure at the National Institutes of Health—from which he retired in 1992—he was an active clinical investigator
in the field of epilepsy, publishing 160 papers and 13 books. He also was vice president and head of clinical pharmacology
at Wyeth Pharmaceuticals
and later became vice president for clinical research before retiring from Wyeth in 2003. He is a previous president of the 3,000-member American
Epilepsy Society and says his most exciting task was creating and chairing the White House committee
on the Decade of the Brain. In 1989 he received the Duke Medial Alumni Association Distinguished Alumnus Award. He now is a private consultant to the pharmaceutical industry
and lives in Devon, Pa. with his wife Candace, WC’68, DC.
C. Bruce Malone III, MD’69, a partner and orthopedic surgeon with the Austin Bone/Joint Clinic in Austin, Texas, has been elected chairman of the board of trustees of the 41,000 member Texas Medical Association, an affiliate board of Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Texas. He and his wife Elizabeth, WC’66, live in Austin.
 Alan H. Meyer, T’65, MD’69, DC, says he and his wife Carolyn are happy and doing well living
in Sacramento, Calif. They have two children—Edward, T’96, is living in New York City; and Mary is living in San Francisco with her husband and daughter Carolina.
|
| |
|