"-ZEBULON RECORD VOLUME 36. NUMBER 19. ZEBULON. N. C.. JUNE 15. 1961 Dale Beck To Head Summer Rec Program The Zebulon Recreation Com mission met on Monday evening to complete plans for the summer recreation program. The Com mission decided, despite sufficient funds on hand, to go ahead with plans for a 6V2 week program of supervised recreation for the com munity. The commission will begin the summer program on Monday, June 26. Activities will include soft ball in three leagues: Little League, Midget League and Pony League. Also slated for summer activities is a program of basket ball for children and youth, ten nis, horseshoe pitching contest, a street dance and a week of Arts and Crafts. In the drive for funds, President Ray Goodwin reports that some $200.00 had been collected by Tuesday morning. Canvassers were disappointed in that only about $125 was collected in the annual drive on last Friday eve ning. Some $1,000 is needed to carry out the program as outlined, j It is hoped by the Recreation! Commission that the merchants of the town will rally around . the program as well as those citi zens who did not participate in the drive last week but “prom- j ised” donations later. Goodwin; reported that these “promised con- 1 tributions” may be sent to him by mail or brought to him personal ly. The Commission urges 100% citizen participation. In other action of the commis sion, Dale Beck, a physical edu MASS MEETING Every citizen, parent or non-parent, of Wakelon School district is urged to be present tomorrow (Friday) night at 8 o’clock in Wakelon School auditorium for a dis cussion on the consolidation issue. ’’The purpose of this meet ing,” said Attorney Foster D. Finch, “is for informing the citizens of this school district of the present situation and acquainting them with the proposal as submitted by the Wake County Board of Edu cation and our substitute pro posal.” Wakelon School Board Chairman Hartin Hinton said, “There are matters to be dis cussed at this meeting vital to every child, man, and woman in this school district. We urge you to attend and bring your friends.” (See Story on Page 5) National Guard Officers and men of Zebulon’s National Guard unit settled down to training routine Monday at Fort Bragg after convoying in Sunday for their annual two-week sum mer encampment. Jack Potter is captain of the local Guard unit. cation major who attended Camp bell College last year, was employ ed to direct the 6 week summer program. Wakelon school coach Maurice Chapman offered to give free of charge as much time as possible to the summer program. Beck and Chapman will choose, along with Goodwin, the assist ants in the recreation program. Swimming Classes Free swimming classes to mem bers belonging to Zebulon Swim ming Pool Association will be held every Monday and Thursday mornings from 10 to 12 o’clock. These classes are open to both children and adults. Qualified in structors will be teaching the les sons. Identification patches are now available, Crafton Hudson, secre tary of the Association, has an nounced. These patches are to be worn on the swim suits and cost 25c each. They may be gotten at the pool office. Lions Dance Adults need wholesome recrea tion in the summer or else they lapse into lethargy. That’s why Zebulon Lions Club is providing dances to keep old lethargy away, and to provide en tertainment and enjoyment during the summer months. The Lions are sponsoring a dance tomorrow (Friday) night at the club house. This second sum mer social gets underway at 9 o’clock and ends at 1 o’clock, with the Bill Jo Austin combo furnish ing the music. If you dance, attend; if you don’t, attend anyway and just sit back and listen to the music. The LJons promise you it will be an .evening well spent. Former Mayor Dies; Interment Is Here A former mayor and sheriff of the town of Zebulon died Friday, June 1, in Kinston Nursing Home in Fuquay. Burbon Hilliard Richardson, 85, of Wendell was a pioneer of the Zebulon community and served the town as mayor about 1915 or 1916. He is survived by two sons, Vance of Wendell, and B. H., Jr., of Waskom, Texas; seven daugh ters, Mrs. Rudolph Honeycutt of Faison, Mrs. Reese Hardee of Fu quay, Mrs. John Myers of Garner, Mrs. Helen Well of Wendell, Mrs. Pat Starr of Clinton, Mary Rich ardson of Wendell and Mrs. Wil lis Honeycutt of Raleigh; 23 grand children and 17 great grandchil dren; one sister, Mrs. J. W. Sutton of Rocky Mount; and one brother, Fred Richardson of Bailey. Funeral services were held Sun day at 3 p.m. from the Wendell Baptist Church with the Rev. W. H. Vinson, pastor, officiating. Bur ial was in Zebulon Cemetery. The Junior-Senior Banquet was a prelude to a number of social activities that brought down the curtain to the 1960-61 school year. Caught up in the social whirl of these activities were the Wakelon juniors and seniors and their dates. Tommy Phillips and Janie Green are shown at the Lions Build ing during the refreshment hour of the Junior-Senior Banquet. Cancer Society May Set Up Loan Closet System, Sub-Unit Here There is a possibility of a “sub unit” of the Wake County Cancer Society for the communities of Zebulon and Wendell, according to Aaron Lowery, cancer crusade chairman of Zebulon. Lowery said he has heard from the Society headquarters in Ra leigh and they advised they are prepared to work with the two towns in the establishment of a loan closet system would provide such supplies as hospital beds, wheel chairs, portable toilets, and other sickroom items for patients. This Unit, in addition to fur nishing the cotton padding for sur gical dressings, would also like to keep the local Unit, if established,' supplied with educational .mate- i rials which would be useful in j physicians’ offices, dentists’ offices, I for club meetings and school rooms. Mrs. Emma Carr Bivins, in a letter to Lowery said: “As you know, the problem of the chroni cally ill is great. With 11 cancer deaths in Zebulon, and 10 in Wen dell, you can estimate that there are probably upwards of 100 can cer patients in the Zebulon-Wen dell area now. There is now an swer for some of these patients, especially those who must remain at home after treatment, and those unable to afford the great expense incident to the disease. Working with your own doctors, and with this Unit, it seems to us you have a great opportunity to render specific and meaningful service. You can make that serv ice whatever you wish it to be, developing it along lines the vol unteers themselves dictate.” Possible activities for the Zebu lon-Wendell Service Unit are: Preparation of surgical dress ings for patients. Distribution of dressings. Establishment of loan closet service (these supplies may be donated or purchased). Trans portation service (arrangements to bring individuals to your hospital or Raleigh hospitals for treatment, or the Detection Clinic at Rex.) Patient-visiting service (would need guidance of physicians). Cheer baskets for patients (which ordinarily include some practical items for the sickroom—such as washcloths and tooth brushes, etc.). Lending library for patients (including much inspirational ma terial). One individual in the area with information about the Society—the clinic hours, where to obtain films, etc. (An information Cen ter). Distribution on regular basis through press and radio on avail able facilities. Reporting to Ra leigh office individuals needing help with drugs, etc. A network of such education service units throughout Wake County has been a dream of the Society’s leaders. It is a desire of these leaders to bring the Society much closer to the people and their needs. A Zebulon-Wendell unit would be a “pilot demonstration,” a duplication in that area, and perhaps an improvement on, the service rendered by the Unit of fice in Raleigh which tries, but does not always succeed, in reaching the whole county with complete service. Any such project will be stronger if the interested persons ask for it themselves and if they set it up and maintain it along lines they themselves decide. Although service to patients is important, the Wake County Unit want also to prosecute with in creasing vigor the aim of “sav ing lives.” The preventive edu cation, it has been found, can be better accomplished in conjunc tion with concrete service to peo ple. A corps of busy women help ing patients will, even incidental ly, have a tremendous opportuni ty to answer the questions of the curious and the admiring. The better informed all the Unit’s workers are, the more total the contribution will be to the health and well-being of the two commu nities. Hospital Surgeon's Warm Personality Engenders Trust And Confidence To Patients Two things constitute Dr. Lee Sedwitz’ happiness. Work for his hands, and his family. Dr. Sedwitz, surgeon for the Wendell-Zebulon Hospital, is hap py when he has work for his hands to do. And in his capable hands his patients receive longer, strong er and more wholesome lives. The second necessary thing for his happiness is his family. It is closely knit, full of love and har mony. A happy household with a pretty wife and two handsome children. Dr. Sedwitz is the youngest of three children of Mrs. Alice Sed witz and the late Dr. Samuel Har old Sedwitz. There are two older sisters. His mother now resides in Santa Barbara. Calif. He was born in 1923 in Youngs town, Ohio. His father was a general surgeon there, dying at the age of 46. The younger doc tor recalls how his father’s office was usually always filled with the sick, and how his father minis tered quietly, willingly, working himself to an early death. He bears in mind that his father never asked a patient what he could afford to pay. The patient’s well-being came first. And this is a practice and philosophy the younger doctor is following. Dr. Sedwitz, small of statue, is one of the nicest and most gracious young men ever to immigrate to the town of Zebulon. He said he wasn’t influenced by his father in becoming a doctor. It was while , he was with the Army Medical Corps in Germany during World War II that he became interested in going to medical school. After graduating from the Uni versity of Virginia in 1946 he en rolled in the school’s medical col lege. When he finished medical college he served his internship with George Washington Hospital in Washington, D. C. During his internship at George Washington Hospital, he won an American Cancer Society Fellow ship in cancer surgery at GW. He used this fellowship for work in the cancer clinic there. He spent two more years at GW in advanced surgery. After World War II he took an active reserve commission with the Navy. He had further training in chest surgery when he was sta tioned in San Diego Naval Hos pital. He was chief surgeon of the Naval Hospital in the Philippines, and spent a year in Porto Rico at Municipal Hospital. Following these tenures he was with the Na val Hospital in Japan for two years. He was discharged in April, 1961, w'ith the rank of Lieutenant Commander. Dr. Sedwitz selected Wendell Zebulon Hospital because the sit uation here looked best to him from need standpoint. He could have established a practice in La Jolla, Calif., but that city is filled with surgeons. Here, all his ex pectations have been fulfilled. He spoke highly of the hospital, its facilities, equipment, staff. He said he has not been disappointed in any phase of the workings of the hospital and its personnel. He has the interests of his pa tients at heart. He doesn’t ap prove of the nurse waking pa Dr. Lee Sedwitz . . . Son Keith, 2Vz tients early in the mornings to give them baths, take tempera | tures, etc. Let them sleep, he j says. This is more important 1 than baths, temperatures, back ! rubs. Besides, such procedure is \ for the convenience of the hos pital personnel. Another thing he approves is of | mothers staying with their chil dren who are ill. He says it gives the child confidence, a feeling of security no one else can give. And children patients of his can rest assured their mothers can be with them. Dr. Sedwitz’ warm personality : engenders confidence, trust. He praised his nurses, who he said are grossly underpaid. With his competent staff of nurses he feels ; able to do any type of operation. Before an operation, while he . is scrubbing his hands for the ten minutes that is necessary before an operation, he refreshes his memory of the operation and says sort of a prayer. It is a prayer (Continued on Page 5)