345 



The Council for Tobacco Reskarch-U.S.A.. Inc. 



Supporting BioMtaJiCAi, Investioation 



Testimony of James F. Glenn. M.D. 

 As Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer 

 of The Council for Tobacco Research -- U.S.A., Inc., I am 

 pleased to be here today at your invitation to testify about 

 the Council's research program. Before describing for you 

 the contributions the Council has made to the progress of 

 scientific knowledge about diseases associated with smoking, 

 I would like to provide some information about myself. 



Personal Background 



I received a Bachelor of Arts Degree in General 

 Science from the University of Rochester in 1950. I then 

 attended Duke University School of Medicine, receiving a 

 Doctor of Medicine degree with honors within three years. 

 From 1952 to 1954, I was trained in general surgery at Peter 

 Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston. After serving in the army 

 as a Captain and Flight Surgeon, I returned to Duke 

 University in 1956, where I was Assistant Resident and then 

 Chief Resident in Urology. 



In 1959, I became an Assistant Professor of 

 Urology at Yale University School of Medicine. From 1961 to 

 1963, I was an Associate Professor of Urology at Bowman Gray 

 School of Medicine. In 1963, I was appointed Professor of 

 Urology and Chief of the Department of Urology at Duke. I 



