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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1955)
Monday, September 26. 1955 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE 3EVXS Theyll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo IEAT 777J77777777777777777777T7m WUAV? DID VOU figg TUPM Dl IV AT tub TUEVCouLtttr pun HE'SLEjIVIn'UIM n mp Pirwir i asr junwrup-nfcv IH? WHAT KIMTM SHOULD! HEU? THE WRONG END OF MAtiAGN ' nVfl CAU. PUT IM A THEyCflN TELLAHr "n te b - 7H4T? MESM0ULC4 BROUGHT Hi A LEFT- PttJCH-HrTTER FOR UlM LAST MANAGER HOW TO RIN4B4IXO.0B-, THIS IS MtflNG-CUHCE NOTWIn'- W4KTnS TO IS TUROUGU- ThEy" TALK 84CK vdrrtj. van B4CKTOTHE SKIN'FORrP TO tub Tvsrr- HE4R'EMT4LK RACK TT TUB PIEDMONT LE4SUE-HE TMtrts WM TMERE COMMERCIALS.', HERE-TUEyJMT NEVER WAS PIPE UP AT HOME-1 . any good ADM n ran Q z-xn 77 BEFISIGERATOia A flMn -.FREEZES ' V) Wit BAM 4 ny time, Any where! liiiiii raw Mew 2-Boor CMrigerator Freezer Sensation! SEE IT-TODAY!. The only 2-door refrigerator - freezer that gives easier access to BOTH the freezer and the main food area PLUS. All the Finest Features! 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IFOR YKIE IPADR FAST FREE DELIVERY EVERYWHERE sm IN OUR NEW LOCATION 220 Worth Sartlett Phone 2-4848 Next to Greyhound Bus Depot OPEN WED. NITE W.TIF1 I ILT fi m m 1 1-J I WOtLD KKltTt 1XSUTXP. MaHA6H6 8 REMOTE CONTROL FROM THE LOOSE -CLUB ROOM TUMC4ND4TIP0 THE MAT1PH4T ' 1b REX UPTOH, k S04SCMUVLER BOiB. Ogden Nash, Poet and Video Panelist, Finds Himself Cast in Heady New Role By WILLIAM EWALD United Press Correspondent New York (U.R) Ogden Nash, poet and panelist, con fessed today he has 'gone from verse to better. NaSh, a wry commentator on contemporary manners, gained a fair measure of fame as tne scribbler of such literary bon bons as "I think that I shall nev er see, a billboard lovely as a tree" and "Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker." But since his bespectacled face began blooming on the home screens via ABC-TV' "Masque rade Party," Nash disclosed, he Potential Harm of New 'Wonder Drugs' Physician's Problem By DELOS SMITH United Press Science Writer New York (U.R) Modern drugs are "wonderful" scien tific progress in devising new ones is "rapid" but a major problem of any practicing phy sician is how to recognize "the potential harm" of many of them. This was the sense of an ad dress by Dr. Stuart L. Vaughan of the University of Buffalo School of Medicine at a recent meteing of the Medical Society of the state of New York. It was called to this writer's attention by a medical author ity in connection with the scien tific report of another profes sor Dr. Edgar F. Mauer on the toxic properties of the anti arthritic drug, phenylbutazone. "It is obviousj" said Dr. Vaughan, "that we owe it to our patients to use new drugs when ever the dangers of the disease outweigh the dangers of the drugs. In so doing we must know both .the merits and the dangers of the drugs." Type of Knowledge He said "the type of knowl edge" that the physician needed "concerns , such items as recog nition of the pattern of drug promotion, the relationship of the practicing physician to the pattern, the experimental meth od as employed in use of a new drug, basic principles of blood production and blood cell deple tion, the mechanisms by which drugs may affect normal blood equilibrium, factors determining a drug's toxicity, and the risks, involved in use of a drug." Dr. Mauer, in . his report in the New England Journal of Medicine, said "physician are importuned 1y advertisements and gratuitous reprints to use this drug phenylbutazone In a large variety of conditions." Dr. Vaughan ssftd the "sequence of events" going with a new drug "has a rather definite pattern." From Lab To Revaluation This "pattern," he said, is "Laboratory promise; . limited clinical trial in ailing human beings initial encouraging re sults; banner headlines in the lay press; pharmaceutical fan fare by the drug's manufacturer; rumors of trouble;' definite re ports of .dangerous complica tions; condemnation; revalua tion." , His principal subject was the disorders of the blood which can be induced by drugs. "The list of drugs capable of produc ing toxic changes in blood cells is now an extremly long one," he said, but added that "the tox ic actions of drugs are not all undesirable." Some are "selec tive" and help the patient. In administering drugs, the attitude of physicians should be this: "Our desire to help is as great as the patient's need, yet we realize that whenever we in terfere with the complex inter nal environment of living cells, our capacity to do good is bal anced by a proportional capacity to do harm." Dead line Sunday Clarified la at noon Saturday. 10 a.m Monday for Monday: other da.-n 6:30 oreviouaday has found 4iimself cast in a heady new role. "I have been turned into a personality," said Nash. "That is what TV does to you. I'm now recognized by my candy siore man when I go in to buy , a newspaper. Has Other Advantage It has its other advantages. too, Nash said, not the least im portant of vhich is that his lec ture fees and appearances have increased. . 'Of course," admitted Nash with a solemn blink, "it's not all smooth sailing. For one thing, it costs me about a dollar a day extra in tips you know, a cab driver -wil give you a little ' 'smoosh' and you feel compelled to give him a little extra. "Then, too, there are the auto graph hounds. I don't mind the well-behaved ones. In fact, I feel flattered by them. But I abhor an mose utue juvenile delin quents who descend upon you' and shout 'Who are you? Sign here." e Nash, who came out of Rye, N.Y., by way of Baltimore, be gan cavorting on ."Masquerade Party" about three years ago when he replaced panelist Red Buttons. As a member of the regular panel of experts (all panels on TV are made Up of experts) Nash is called upon to identify celebrities who show up in va riety of curious disguises. Try for Good Time "There is a friendly rivalry on our panel," said Nash. "We try to have a good time all around instead of just proving we're bright" The 53 -year -old versifier spends most of his off-momenta in literary production. One if a narrative poem for children. The Year There Was No Christmas." The other if a grad ual accumulation of verse which he may call, "Exit, Pursued by a Bear." Future TV plans?- "Well," said Nash, "I would kind of like to read verse oa a program of my own. My own verse; of course. However, I think it would have to be a short program don't think anyone would tolerate me for mora than 15 minutes." THE BIG NEW 1956 MERCURYcn tiayTIIUR. , SEPT. 29 v ... -