Page 2 School of Public Health’s re sponsiveness to people’s needs and wants. I don’t know whether this is actual fact or not, but it certainly comes up in every con versation, the School of Public Health’s consciousness of what people want and need, and what not. This is the only school of public health of any size south of the Mason-Dixon Line, if you want to use that as a boundary. Tulane's is a department in its medical school, and most uni tssatsattas UTS SO...F«r i* •U-fiskiMri t*4 tan! NORTH CAROLINA STATE sgfAIB y Special Exhibits & Programs i Championship Rodeo 4 f Exciting Midway 1 1 Harness & Auto Racing i 'SPECIAL: Historical Drama in Firmoriu!" Miracle of ihe forest THE STORY OF N.C. FORESTRY AND FORESTRY PRODUCTS-1963 THEME EXHIBITS RALEIGH, OCT. 14-19,1963 ...you bet I refreshing! I HIGGINS'- vour(scgtts)d( > aler \ October is “Lawn Opportunity Month” I For $2.95 now I we’ll guarantee you I a better lawn I next year We can make this offer because experience has proved over and over that the lawn fertilized in October with Trionized Turf Builder will winter better, green up sooner and be way ahead next ® spring. Take advantage of this once-a-year opportunity. Fertilize your lawn with Turf Builder right now. We guarantee it will give you a better lawn next ye*r or your money back. • H BBESEBHg I ? $7 95 Feeds 2500 sq. ft. Free Parking n y§| JfUimiJ Self Service While You Shop 1 B Or Ask for with Bugging’ Clerk Service —A Talk With Dr. Frederick C. Mays— (Continued from Page 1) versities handle public health schools that way. So there’s a great outreach from this school, over sixteen or eighteen states. We have a number of foreign students here, and three quarters of the enrollment is from out side North Carolina. So we have a tremendous responsibility.” Despite having a more or less academic job, Dr. Mays is still a doctor. He is not a practicing physician in the accepted sense of the word, but he can prac tice. “I’m going to join the local medical society. I have to have a license to practice medicine in North Carolina to do that, and I’m going before the State Board of Medical Examiners Friday to get my license. I had a license to practice when I was at Mich igan, and a license to practice in in Massachusetts when I was at Harvard, and of course I had one in my original state, Mis souri. You give the Board your other licenses, and they write to the Dean of the medical school where -you graduated, and they may consider you qualified to practice medicine on the basis of reciprocity, or they may want to give you a written or an oral examination. North Carolina has a reciprocal agreement with Missouri. If they consider you qualified, what they really want to find out is what kind of a man you are, whether you'll be an asset to the society or a detriment. I keep a license be cause it keeps me in touch. “Whenever we go to Cape Cod for a summer vacntion, which we’ve been doing for the past several years, I always take my doctors’ bag. I remember once, we live a little way back in the woods, and some people nearby were working with a chain saw, and it slipped and a man rip ped open his thigh with it. They were trying to figure out what to do with him, and they came to get me, and I went over and put a pressure bandage on. I made sure he hadn’t opened any big arteries or severed a large nerve, it was just a flesh wound. If he had severed an artery 1 would have had to tie it off. There are other things that are not so dramatic. My daughter and her child are living with us now and I’m their family phy sician except for major things that require hospitalization or something like that. I don't have e narcotics license you have to have a narcotics license to dispense narcotics. It doesn’t come with a license to practice, though you get a narcotics li cense on the basis of having the license to practice. It qualifies you to keep and dispense the addictive narcotics codeine, morphine, and so on. I don’t have a narcotics license because I’m not really a prac ticing physician, and I don’t want to leave myself open to pilfering, or something like that. You know people will use a phy sician sometimes, if they’re ad dicts. You can lose a narcotics license without losing a license to practice'. “When you don’t practice reg ularly you get so you’re not so sharp on some things, but you get sharper on others. A prac ticing physician taking care of sick people is trying to protect an individual from the mass of people. A doctor will overturn practically anything to get a man back on his feet so that he’s functioning again quar antine -a house, remove a man from a house even if he’s need ed there, anything. But in pub lic health the organism you’re dealing with is a whole com munity. You’re trying to protect the mass of the people from an individual —a tubercular who’s spreading his sputum over peo ple’s food or something. The ap proach is just the reverse. Some people say there aren’t enough doctors to take care of the sick people, but there aren’t enough doctors to take care of the peo ple’s demand for preventive medicine. More than ever Tiow people are going to doctors for checkups, for examinations for insurance policies, to maintain THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY ' their health. “What are the levels of well ness? This is the World Health Organization's approach. Not, how great is the presence of sickness in a community, but how well is a community, how much are the people working in it, participating in it? There are people now who are going to psychiatrists who years ago would wait until they were rav ing mad, if it ever came to that. Pediatrics is preventive medi cine, though I suppose it starts with obstetrics now you can go to an obstetrician and main tain your health throughout pregnancy and after pregnancy, starting six months before the baby is born. You can pay for it by me month, to make it easier. In pediatrics you’re maintaining the health of the child for the future, you're working with the parents and the grandpardhts— you’ve got a whole range of three genet ations in there, and you’re not really sure what you’re working for. It’s just something out there in front of you that you’re aiming at, some nebulous future healthy man. “1 started out as a practicing pediatrician. I grew up on a farm until I was twelve, and we went to Kansas City for an edu cation, and while I was in Kan sas 1 got into YMCA work. 1 was the boys secretary at a YMCA working my way through medical school. So when the time came for me to decide whether I’d go into general prac tice or specialize, the head of the pediatrics department knew about my YMCA work and ask ed me if I would be interested in being his resident. It seemed the natural thing to do. “One reason 1 liked pediatrics was because of the children’s frankness. It's not that they walk in Mid say, ‘l'm sick and this is where.’ It’s that children don't have preconceived ideas that cloud your diagnosis. Some of them are infants, and they can’t give you any answers at all. But you know, adults often have preconceived ideas. They say, “This is what’s the matter end this is what's good for it, I’ve seen theca things before and I know.’ They don’t delib erately mislead the doctor, but they have their own ideas. Par ents wiii usuaiiy do anything lor a child, if they have faith in the doctor. They’ll do whatever the doctor says. But if you pre scribe for adults, they'll go "home and do what the doctor says if they feel like it, or }f they think he’s right. If they get to feeling better in a few days they won't bother with what the doctor says. But they’ll do anyhing for a child. “Another reason I like pedi atrics is that when a person gets to be thirty or forty he has lim itations, but a child is brand new, a child can do anything, take advantage of any oppor tunity that comes along. A child still has a whole future ahead of it, and you’re starting out fresh.” —Editor— (Continued from Page 1) here and Columbia University. While attending UNC he was a full-time reporter for the Dur ham Herald. Mr. Campbell said the Week ly staff was very happy in its new West Franklin build ing, and that he expected the new and enlarged quarters to enable the paper to improve considerably in coming months. The Weekly’s' reportorial staff consists of woman’s editor Pa quita Fine, book page editor William H. Scarborough, and J. A. C. Dunn. Among the Weekly's regular contributors and columnists are Billy Arthur, Bill Prouty, UNC Sports Pub licity Director Bob Quincy, UNC News Bureau Director Pete Ivey, drama critic John Clayton, and art columnist Ola Maie Foushee. “With our present reportorial, editorial and mechanical staff," Mr. Campbell said, “we feel we have one of the better news papers in North Carolina.” Malm To Speak To NC Section, ACS Dr. John G. Malm of the Ar gonne National Laboratory will speak to the North Carolina Sec tion of the American hemical Society Friday in Chapel Hill. The opening meeting of the so ciety's year will begin at 8 p.m. in Room 207 of Venable Hall. Dr. Malm’s talk will be on “The Chemistry of Xenon and the Per xenates.” Vie the Weekly’s Classified Ads. (^) .. * living is better —School Sale— (Continued from Page-A) w , how the sale would go. The pressure on the Board to take steps to replace the Franklin Street school proper ty. if R should be sold, appear? ed from two sources. One was the Board's architect J selection subcommittee, which said it would recommend a choice of three architects at Hie Board's meeting next month. Mrs. Ross Scroggs, a mem ber of the architect selection committee pointed out that 18 months was not very long to design, plan, and construct a high school. A replacement for the present high school would have to be ready by September of 1965, and Mrs. Scroggs said one architect, consulted as to his interest in the project, had “shuddered visibly” when told the 18-month completion period. Further pressure came via Mr. Tenney, who urged the Board to acquire land for schools by January 1. < “We orlly have one school site now," said Mr. Tenney, “and we’re not sure whether we can use that." The site is the Bennett property south of town, on which the Board has an option. But the option has a time clause in it, not setting a specific tune by which the property must be either bought or the option dropped, but leav ing the matter up to the Board’s “integrity.” "Our integrity may not stretch too much longer,” said Mr. Tenney. He said the present Frank lin Street school buildings “have a lot of mileage left on them,” and mentioned the fact that the University’s Old East Dormi tory" has been standing up there since 1795 and they’ve been turning out students every year.” In eny case Mr. Tenney said, the Board will need a site for at least one new elementary school, which will be necessary regardless of whether the Franklin Street property is sold. I On top of this, Mr. Tenney said he thought the schools should have better playing fields. .“Cariboro Lions Park is a disgrace,” he said. "We shouldn’t be leaning on the Uni versity. We probably have the worst (playing field) situation in the State.” He said the schools should have a football field, a base ball field, tennis courts, and “anything else we can get” by next year. ■ - - ! a I*l 5-T For results that please, use the classified ads. 1 COMAN LUMBER COMPANY 1 „ . and Retail Dealers 1- BUILDING MATERIALS I 1 912Rrai ™s«.. ■ DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA I H I ■ To Our Chapel Hill Customers: 1 ■ „. _ o. rept chapel Hill, expired on I our lea9e on the property on Graha ’ fot . us to serve you good I deserve and expect. 1 ■ Under term s of our “Employee where ■ h ™*Sllde°tith Chapel Hill TelephoM By using this mun- 1 1 SSS- OR.ee ~ your 1 Yours for Better Products I ■ and Courteous Service, 1 1 COMAN LUMBER COMPANY ■ _ CUAPEU UUX - Pete Ivey’s Town & Gown— (Continued from Page 1) men. Counterparts for human physi ological functions may be found in many small animals. A toad frag may be useful in studying the human bladder functions. The human nose, when it gets into trouble, may be helped by labora tory experiments conducted on the sea gull. For the sea gull’s nasal passage tells us much that is useful in studying the nose of homo sapiens. . We can team much of our nerve cells by looking at the squid. The flounder’s kidney offers something that we ought to know about our own kidneys. In some way or another, the kidney specialists can find much about the human muscular contractions and otter functions, by studying sea urchin eggs, rats and other animals. Prof. Forster said: “It Is the unawareness of the practical value of these preparations that pro vokes such gales of derisive laughter when professional know nothings in public office read to their backwoods constituents selected titles of government sponsored research projects to point out the essential silliness of scientists and the irresponsible waste of taxpayers’ money that comes from supporting their friv olities." Pretty strong words, but they are probably justified. Carl Larson, director of pub lic relations at the University of Chicago, wrote a letter to the Chicago Sun-Times recently ask ing for space to reply to a Sun- Times editorial that had held up to the spotlight several topics in volving laboratory research with small animals. Die newspaper had wondered why anybody want ed to find out such trivial things about insignificant animals. Larson took each research topic and the so-called foolish title, and explained in detail how the ex periments had resulted in scien University Florist and Gift Shop tific discoveries, medical find ings that had saved human lives. The object lesson is indicated: Laymen who do not know should ask questions before they pop off about science research. On the other hand, scientists should be able ta interpret that they mean, in simple terms—as Prof. Forster of Dartmouth did here at the kidney research lecture, and as Carl Larson did in the let ters column of the Chicago news paper. You will always be please.' with the results that come from using the Weekly’s classified ads. m. ! •sowAkv. $ -w*-. v \<»>Xvi.\i^spa wise snows II ARC OOIN6 IT t P HOWjJly J*.ikg thr LUCKY LAYAWAY that is! On October 20 we shall put all our lay cards in a box and draw one. The card drawn will be credited with a $5 payment On November 20, the same. Then in December 10 we shall draw a third time. The person whose card is drawn will get the entire lay away purchase free of charges, and any payments made on it will be refunded. That’s our lucky lay away plan. Be wise—shop with us now and take the wear and tear out of Christmas by selecting early from a fresh assortment of hob bies, crafts and selected educational toys—all at wonderful values. BILLY Ml ARTHUR M Eastgate Shopping Center Dfe/VJy Wednesday. October 9, 1^63 MICHAEL ARVID SIEBER Dr. and Mrs. Arvid C. Sieber, formerly of Chapel Hill, an nounce the birth of a son, Mi chael Arvid, on Sept. 29. Dr. and Mrs. Sieber are now residents of Hendersonville. T* _• when Requested COLONIAL ROC CLEANERS Phone 942*2960