A26-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 25, 1996 Equine Medical Center: Comprehensive Teaching, Research, Service (Continued from Page A 1) relax and he falls asleep against the pads. The medical team swings into action. The padded partition swivels back. TTie wall opens, exposing the operating area. In frantic gentleness, the attendents tug their half-ton patient onto the gurney that is positioned in the operating room ready to receive the horse, who is oblivious to all the activity around him. When ready, the gurney is wheeled into operating position. Medical machines start Flood lights are positioned. A light blue drape is placed over the patient Sanitary gloves are sleeved over each hoof. The leg with the splinter that needs to be removed is secured. lodine covers the wounded area. A safety razor is used to shave the hair around the wound. And thus, another of the nearly 200 operations that are done each The patient Is coaxed Foals receive round-the-clock attention from medical staff and volunteers who work at the Center tor the experi ence and the love of horses. month are ready to commence at the Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center in Leesburg. Va. What started as a dream 11 years ago has now become one of the premier medical establishments for the nation’s equine industry. A $4 miDirni gift from the late Mrs. Marion duPont Scott and a dona tion of 200 acres of land by the Westmoreland Davis Memorial Foundation made the center possi ble. In addition, $2.2 million from private sources was raised to fund equipment acquisition. The Equine Medical Center serves as the Leesburg campus of the Virginia-Maryland RegionalTtol lege of Veterinary Medicine. It is part of a comprehensive veterinary teaching, research, and service program based at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg. Va., and the Avrum Gudelsky Veterinary Center at the University of Maryland at College Park. Into the padded holding area. Tugging the half-ton, sleeping patient onto the gurney requires effort. Dr. Fred Fregin was given the task of developing the center when it was only the building. At the time, there was no staff, no equip ment, and no money to secure either. And there was no clientele. After serving on the staff at New Bolton Center at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia for 17 years and then several years at Cornell University in Ithaca, N. Y., Dr. Fregin heard about a possible position at the new equine center. Thinking he might like to devote himself full time to the care of horses, he applied for a position on the stair. In the first interview, he was given the opportunity to mastermind the development of both the center and the center’s programs. How do you convince estab lished vetemarians to come and take a chance oh something that exists only in the dreams of those who foresaw the potential? Dr. Fregin has just the winning person ality and pursuasive approaches to get the job done. ‘The most exciting thing about the Center is that is is a true public/ (Turn to Pago A3O) D'- masterminded the development of tho Marlon cfuPont Scott Equina Medical Cantor In Leesburg, Virginia. A portrait In oil of Marlon duPont Scott that jSXXStSSTJ!! ■*! lo y fn ? ,#fl - *o* h#r ,#mou# horM Bamaahlp that In 1938 ms the first American-bred and owned horse to win the Grand National Steeplechase at Aintrae, England, is ahown in the large oil painting. Getting ready to remove a large splinter.