Prentiss L. Harrison graduated from the Duke Physician Assistant Program in 1968. He was the first African American physician assistant in the country.
Dr. Ewald W. Busse (standing), director of the Center for the Study of Aging, is shown with medical psychologist Dr. Walter D. Obrist as they study an elderly person’s brain wave patterns recorded by an electroencephalograph.
Elderly volunteers for research conducted by the Duke University Center for the Study of Aging receive thorough physical and mental examinations. Here, a medical scientist is shown as he makes microscopic observations of blood vessels of the eye.
Duke University School of Medicine New Students, January 1944: Ambrose, S.S., Jr.; Blackwell, C.C., Jr.; Branscomb, B.V.; Brooks, W.M.L., Jr.; Browning, J.R.; Burgess, J.R., Jr.; Chandler, J.R.; Clark, S.D.; Clifford, T.C.; Coonrad, R.W.; Crane, H.H.,...
Duke University School of Medicine, New Students September 1960: Alexander, R.H.; Allen, B.L., Jr.; Amstey, M.S.; Anderson, P.A.W.; Barber, W.S.; Barnett, C.F., Jr.; Bell, W.H., II; Bremer, C.C.; Carruth, J.W., Jr.; Chase, N.B.; Cottingham, A.J.;...