Page 12 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, JULY 28 1976 Naming names necessary part of VD treatment Third of a series A 27-year-old businessman en tered a public health clinic and com plained of the typical symptoms of gonorrhea — a burning sensation when urinating, and a discharge. The attending physician per formed tests for gonorrhea, which proved to be positive, and the pa tient was treated with penicillin. Before the patient left the clinic, a VD contact interviewer told him about the disease he had, its ramifi cations if not properly treated, and the urgent need to refer or bring in sex partners to medical facility for examination. The patient named two sexual contacts, only one of whom could be traced. Tests performed on the contact were positive, and she was appropriately treated. The businessman returned to the clinic three weeks later with the same complaint, and tests for gonorrhea again were positive. Further questioning by the con tact interviewer revealed that the patient was married and was having regular relations with his wife. His previous gonorrhea had “ping- ponged” back to him from his wife, whom he previously had infected. Simultaneous treatment stopped this infectious cycle. Venereal disease epidemiology — the process of seeking out the source and spread of individual infections — has developed into a highly sophisticated science. The contact interviewer’s role is essential to this process, as the above case history demonstrates. The prime goal of the contact interview is to elicit from the patient the names of his sexual contacts, and information that will enable the interviewer to locate those persons rapidly. Most patients respond either by bringing their contacts in for treat ment or by assisting the interviewer in identifying and locating the con tacts. But many are reluctant to ac cept the idea that their steady sex partner could possibly be infected and will only name one-time or occa sional contacts. Therefore, when the patient stops giving names, the interviewer asks specifically for the name of the patient’s steady sex partner. The ignorance, fear, and shame surrounding venereal disease are or- stacles with which the VD contact interviewer must deal constantly. The patient may be nervous, hos tile, unconcerned or uncommunica tive. The interviewer tries to put the patient at ease and to demonstrate his competence and understanding of the patient’s particular problems. At eveiy stage, the patient is reas sured that all of the services available to him are completely confidential and that his sexual partners will be taken care of discreetly and tactfully. The interviewer never assumes that a patient is heterosexual. If an attempt to elicit the names of homosexual contacts is not made, the interviewer may be doing only half of the job. It is a never-ending task, begin ning and ending with the names of infected individuals. Speed is criti cal: There is a direct relationship be tween the speed with which contacts are located and the effectiveness of a VD control program. This is especially true for gonorrhea because this rapidly spreading disease h*s a short incuba tion period (usually 3-5 days), is con tagious througout the course of in fection and can be asymptomatic. Because of the large number of gonorrhea patients and the small number of health workers, patients often are asked to refer personally their contacts to a private physician or a public health clinic. The longer incubation period of syphilis (10-90 days) gives the con tact interviewer adequate time to search out all contacts. A specific blood test for syphilis and a medical history and examination enable health experts to determine how long the patient has had the disease, and when he could have caught as well as spread it. All patients with “early” syphilis — infections of less than one year — are interviewed to elicit the names of those sexual partners who were ex posed during this infectious stage of the disease. For patients with infec tions of more than one year, the steady or marital partner is exam ined and treated. The interviewer must provide the patient with real, logical reasons for giving names of contacts. Most of the best reasons concern the patient’s own well-being, such as the possibil ity that the patient will be re exposed to his sex partners and re infected with the disease. When the patient understands that what the contact interviewer is asking him to do is in his own best interest, and that of his friends, he is usually willing to cooperate. VD continues to spreadd the best efforts of contactjj viewers and other state a public health workers. Ini cording to figures reported ij local Texas health departs 636,407 patients were scree® VD, 184,498 were admitted(J ical service, and 280,086 weit| tacted by public health wait Aggie, Maggie dolls part of crafts fair KANM offers variety of music Two A&M grads in church work If you are bored by listening to the same song played three times during the hour on your present radio sta tion or if you are disgusted by the many deodorant, burger, and pim ple prevention commercials inter rupting what little music is broad cast, then turn your FM dial to 89.1 and treat your ears to KANM Stu dent Radio. KANM broadcasts 24 hours-a-day over both area cable companies. It is staffed by volunteeers, who work 4-hour shifts, and caters to its listen- MANOR EAST S THEATRES MANOR EAST MALL HAPPY HOUR TILL 7:00 ALL THEATRES 6:20-8:05-9:50 He’s got to face a gunfight once more to live up to his legend once more TO WIN JUST ONE MORE TIME. DINO D£ LAURENT1IS presents A FRANKOV1CH/SELF Producnon JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL IN A SltGF.l FILM THE SHOOTIST’ Co-Sc.irnngRON HOWARD Guesi Si.us |AMLS STEWART RICHARD BOONE |OHN CARRADINE SCATMAN CROTHERS RICHARD LENZ HARRY MORGAN SHEREE NORTH HUGH OBRIAN Music by ELMER BERNSTEIN Screenplay by MILES HOOD SWARTHOUT and SCOTT HALE Based on the novel by GLEN DON SWARTHOUT F’roduced by M | FRANKOVICH and WILLIAM SELF | Directed by DON SIEGEL Technicolor PGrPMBfnuTSUIOAHCt SU66ESTE0 A Paramount Release a i : 10-7:55-9:40 m 6:05-7:45-9:30 GRBZXX CHRISTOPHER CEORCE RICHARD JAECKEL TODD AO 35 ANDREW. ' PRINE auuxx COLOR by Movie Lab Starts Friday You'll be swept cr ay to a Never Land of spectacle : and song! ■ West Screen at Dusk Skyway Twin East Screen at Dusk ‘Inframan’ /0< ~, & < PG > ‘Legend of Hell House’ ‘All the President’s Men’ ‘M.A & S.H.’ ( PG ) Campus us 846-6512 COLLEGE STATION Call For Times >I«AXAA’ is isorxi* : •* ! IX) BLOW YOLR MLVI)! “Unlike 'O' which is soft at the core/THE STORY OF JOANNA’ IS THE REALTHING! YOUNG MEN IN NEED OF A TURN-ON-GO WEST OR EAST TO SEE 'JOANNA',! PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY GERARD DAMIANO, famed for such accomplishments as 'Deep Throat’ and 'The Devil in Miss Jones’.” —Walter Goodman/ NEW YORK TIMES ing audience. station Manager Phil Williams says that the station will play any request, provided the tune is not obscene and it is contained within the station’s music library. The programming at KANM is progressive, which means the lis tener will hear a variety of different types of music. A disc jockey at the station said this will vary according to the music preference of each DJ and the type of requests people make. Electronic ’Letters to the Editor’ will he initiated in the fall, Williams said. A tape recorder will he placed somewhere on campus for students to say what they want to about the station. These comments will be aired every hour on KANM. Williams said that he presently needs DJs to fill vacancies on his programming schedule. He em phasized that persons are needed for the two weeks between the second summer session and the fall semes ter. He said that any person able to work one or more 4-hour shifts diFr- ing these two weeks or dining the fall semester can contact him through the station (846-1612). So, if you’re hungry for good lis tening, tune in to KANM Student Radio, 89.1 on your FM cable. You can eat it with your ears. Texas A&M graduates Notie H. Lansfordjr. and Clyde E. Schulz Jr. have gone to work abroad as South ern Baptist missionaiy journeymen. Schulz is employed as an ag ronomist in Brazil. Lansford went to Kenya as an agricultural teacher. Both are 1976 A&M graduates. Lansford, of Corrizo Springs, and Schulz, from Wharton, were com missioned among 94 new jour neymen last week at Bon Air Baptist Church in Bon Air, Va. Theirs was the largest of 12 groups sent out by the Southern Baptist Convention. Journeymen are college graduates no older than 26 who work for two years alongside career missionaries in specific job assignments overseas. Need an Aggie doll? A crafts fair will be held this Thursday and Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Memorial Student Center mall. Local artists will be displaying and selling their work, which includes everything from string art and needlepoint to pottery and liquid silver necklaces. There will also be drawings and paintings in the fair. All of the ob jects of art will be handmade by the person selling them. Half of the ar tists are students at A&M. One lady will be selling per sonalized dolls. These are made from a photo of the person to be im mortalized. The artists will capture the person’s personality and even match the clothing. If that doesn’t strike one’s fancy, she is also Aggie and Maggie dolls. Most of the articles in the! be priced between $10and'1 r DID YOU KNOW, JEFF, VETBtij SHOULD COisJSULT THEIR LOCU TELEPHONE DIRECTORY unm US. GOVERNMENT FOR TWER* TO CALL TO [TEACH A VETEP ADMINISTRATION REPRESS ' Yep. 1 AND IN MANY AREAS, TOLL-FREE SPECIAL TELEPHONE SERVICE IS AVAILABLE. 1 For Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 Contact tho n«oro»t VA oWc# ( phon. book) or wrlloi V.t.ro« Admlnl.troBon 771AI. W.lk . PjJ Scholarship awarded 2ACHARIA5 greenhouse COLLEGE STATION’S NEWEST AND MOST UNIQUE CLUB AND GAME PARLOR John M. Weston, 21, of Bryan, was awarded a $500 Ray Y. Gildea Scholarship in conservation for 1976-77 Friday, July 16, during the annual conference of the Texas Council Chapters of the Soil Con servation Society of America. Weston is one of 22 recipients from throughout the nation. The scholarships are provided by Dr. and Mrs. Ray L. Gildea Jr., of Colum bus, Miss., to encourage qualified students to complete their under graduate training and pursue a BIG GEORGE'S BARBECUE 606 Tarrow 846-7412 t Block off University Across from Fed-Mart Owned & Operated by George Bond OPEN 11:00-8:00 Closed Wednesday Aft. & Sunday DINe IN OR ORDERS TO GO career in conservation-related fields. Weston is the son of the Rev. and Mrs. John Weston and is a senior in range science at Texas A&M. He is married and has a son. The student had an early interest in range science and taught conser vation and nature classes at Boy Scout summer camps during his high school years. He currently works part-time on a brush control re search project for the Texas Agricul tural Experiment Station to support his education and family. He also has served as a summer trainee with the Soil Conservation Service of the U. S. Department of Agriculture and hopes to continue work with that agency after graduation, The Soil Conservation Society of America is a private, nonprofit as sociation of professional conser vationists dedicated to advancing the science and art of good land use. It has over 14,500 members in the United States, Canada and 80 foreign countries. The Texas Council of Chapters Conference was held on the A&M campus July 15-17. Texas World Speedway Students need extra Cash? Looking for 200 workers for Saturday, July 31 and Sunday, August 1. For information call: Donald Slater 845-7104 Dorm 3-Rm. 123 Chuck Hybarger 845-6495 Dorm 3-Rm. 328 Don Brogan 845-6495 Dorm 3-Rm. 328 Are your health insurance premiums too high? Interested in low-cost coverage? For an appointment call Jess Burditt III or Phil Gibson, CLU, 822-1550. Buy anyi 1201 HIGHWAY 30, BRIARWOOD APTS. (FORMERLY “THE PENTHOUSEWjj oicom Top of the Tower Texas A&M University Pleasant Dining — Great View serving luncheon buffet 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Each day except Saturday BankAMEbicaro $2.50 DAILY $3.00 SUNDAY Serving soup & sandwich 11.00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Monday - Friday $1.50 plus drink Available Evenings For Special University Banquets Department of Food Service Texas A&M University “Quality First” AUGUST GRADUATES ORDER YOUR GRADUATION PHOTOS OF YOU RECEIVING YOUR DIPLOMA package consists of——' in COLOR 2..,5”x7” PLUS 4 . . .Wallet size the ORIGINAL negative for YOUR own additional reprints 2 .. .gold foil embossed frames with: Centennial Class August ’76 Texas A&M Ha Sa Pe ALL THIS FOR ONLY $6.00 iclip out and mail i NAME: (print) last MAJOR: first JD. No. Ml. DEGREE: PhD (check one) Masters Bachelors. MAIL PHOTOS TO: NAME: (print) ADDRESS: CITY STATE ZIP CODE PURCHASE PRICE TOTAL REMITTANCE ENCLOSED $ MAIL ORDER FORM TO: ECLIPSE PRODUCTIONS P.O. BOX 3089 College Station, Texas 77840