GNA CAMPUS-Former GNA graduate Dr. Stanley Dudrick passed away at 84 in his home in New Hampshire.
Dr. Dudrick, whom the Greater Nanticoke Area High School library is named for, was a well-known physician whose invention of intravenous feeding saved countless lives.
Back in 2013, The GNA Insider interviewed Dr. Dudrick. In that interview, he discussed his fondest memories of Nanticoke High School, his involvement in extracurricular activities, and his accomplishments and honors. He also gave advice for students to follow.
Throughout the interview, Dr. Dudrick’s pride in GNA and his hometown of Nanticoke was evident in his answers to the questions we asked.
Here is a look back at Dr. Stanley Dudrick’s interview with The GNA Insider:
What are your fondest memories of Nanticoke High School?

As a student at Nanticoke, you were involved in many aspects of school life. How did participating in extracurricular activities help prepare you for life after high school?
We were blessed with a wide assortment and variety of extracurricular activities to supplement our formal education in a manner which allowed all of us to pursue interests and challenges outside of the curriculum. This fostered individuality and creativity, coupled with exposure to additional opportunities for leadership and expressions of intellectual, social, musical, and athletic activities and talents. These activities also emphasized the importance of teamwork, cooperation, mutual respect, diversity of ideas, opinions and beliefs, and respect for order, process and the elements of compromise and collaboration in order to achieve mutual goals. We also were imbued with an ethos of service, self- sacrifice for others, responsibility, self- discipline, persistence and resilience which enriched my formal education at NHS and helped significantly to prepare me for the challenges I faced in the outside world. Some of these activities taught me that life itself was a contact sport, and that diligent practice, preparation, conditioning, and courage were requirements for optimal success and survival.
What is the best piece of advice you can give to a student today?

Of all your accomplishments and honors, which are you most proud of and why?
I am most proud of having collaborated with my wife of 55 years, Theresa, in producing six wonderful children and sixteen very special grandchildren. My greatest professional accomplishment has been the basic development and the successful clinical application of Total Parenteral Nutrition, which is the first intravenous feeding technique that allows us to grow babies fed entirely by vein and feed adults virtually for life, if necessary when they cannot eat adequately or at all. This technique has changed the way medicine is practiced forever, has already saved millions of lives worldwide, and is highly likely to enhance or save the lives of countless human beings in the future. I have received multiple awards in recognition of that accomplishment and others related to it, but none mean more to

Click here to read the full interview of Dr. Stanley Dudrick by The GNA Insider.
Click here to read Dr. Stanley Dudrick’s obituary. His full obituary will appear in the Citizens’ Voice on January 23.