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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1962)
6 D THURSDAY. JUNE 7. 1982 MEDFORD MAIL TKIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON STAR GAXERO 9i MAR. 32 O 3- - 34 -f TAueui APR. 21 (e? MAY 21 OllMM.M MAY 32 JUNE 22 CAHCM JUNE 23 JULY 23 I JULY 24 L, AUl 23 2- 9-2M1 voo AUG. 24 law. 5-3?-3o1 -64-67 -Bj CLAY S- POL1AN- M Yw Doily Activity Guide W l According to the Stan To develop message for Friday, read words corresponding to numbers or your zodiac birth sign. 31 Though 32 All 33 Loot 34 Sincere .15Sw.lt 36 Mom 37 Action 38V,'im 39 for 40 Interfere e2-S0-iS 1 Opposition 2 Smile 3 Good 4 Opttrnitfic 5 Don't oDeede 7 Attitude It And e Today lOAnd 11 Face 12 Cultural 13 Specif U Troubled ISTodoy leTe 17Coll 18 Water. 1 Plant 50 Belt 21 For 22Moy m for 41 Brino erlNor Mln 63 Moire 04 Anticipate Plane ho To o7 Oppoi't'on eiH fcjrtremei 69 Activities 70 Nor 71 Vocation 7? And 73 Reieorch 74 Reto'ti 75Wi!l scoeno ocr.setfe, NOV. 22 Vj) niswsif 54-62-oi 24 Wholesome S4 Reversal 42 Stability 43 Areltearion 44 Teocnmg etfOaewi't 40 Caooerohon 7a Tire 47 Study "ur 48 With 78 And 49 And 79 Travel 50 And SO Piono .11 breeltonf A I Your 52 Unexpected fi?Proore S3 Pleoie "3 Recreorion 25 Bo 26 Steady 27 An 2S Even 29Wntirvj 0 Socio SSConf.aence WTime 57 Don'f 58 Trouble 59 Go eOTo OGooi (g)AJre II. Favored US Bflyorvti l!6 Capoaty fift Effort Pav ) Neutral jen. 23 OCT. JJ 1.14.H.36VV SAGITTAIIUi NOV. DtC 22 15-17-73 26e 143-49-87- -CAriKOIM. DtC 21 f JAri 20 Vv cl.rjLrm.40 m-77-79t0V& AOUAIMS 'AN. 21 3& 20-21 -59-44rC- 47-72-73 PtSCtl MAR 21 't.r 4- 7-ia35fr- 37-41-74 W-J Ffie Medical Roundup OP Emeritus Erairitns ConialUnt In Mayo Clttue profetior of Mayo Clime Utiittr and Tribune I 19C2) HttfUUia 1 Mtdtetoe Resaarch on Deafness One of the things that sad dens me every day is the com ing of many letters from peo- " fi Jf RECEIVES INSTRUCTIONS Chief Deputy Paul Bcttiol, Jackson county sheriff's office, Medford is shown receiving instructions in firearms identification at the Federal Bureau of Investigation laboratory during the 69th session of the FBI national academy. Bettiol to Graduate From FBI Academy Graduation exercises will be held tomorrow In Wash ington, D.C., lot 80 specially selected officers who have completed the 69th session of the Federal Bureau of Invea- tigation's National Academy, according to FBI Director Ji EdKar Hoover, Two southern Oregon law enforcement officers are among the - class members graduating. " They are Undersheriff Lyle C. Dickinson, Douglas county sheriff s office, Roseburg; and Chief Deputy Paul Bettiol, Jackson county sheriff's of fice, Medford. The addition of the gradu ates to the ranks of Academy alumni will bring the total to more than 4,100. The men, who are trained as Instructors and police administrators, will return to their own de partments to use the knowl edge they gained during their training. Addresses Scheduled Members of the graduating class and their guests will hear addresses by Charles L. Bacon, National Commander of the American Legion; Syl vester C. Smith Jr., president elect of the American Bar as sociation; and Deputy Inspec tor Michael J. Codd, New York City police department, president of the graduating class. Diplomas will be presented by Deputy Attorney General Nicholas dcB. Katrenbach. John H. Williams, special agent in charge of the Port land office of the FBI, said residents of this area can be proud of Dickinson and Bet tlol for their successful com pletion of the National Acad emy course. Alaskan Farm Homes Hove Refrigerators Washinglnn-airti- Who said you can't sell refrigerators to Eskimos? uncle Sam reports some two thirds of the farms in Alaska are equipped with home frcciers to withstand Hie long winter nights. The U.S. department of agricul ture reports the percentage of freezers on Alaska's farms ranks it as number seven among the 50 states. BOUND FOR NEW HOMES Miami -lUPt- Twenty Cuban rcfugr-e families will leave Thursday morning for new homes in Philadelphia under the government' refugee re location program. The re location flights, sponsored by P h i 1 a delphia churches and synagogues, are being fi nanced by the federal govern ment to relieve the pressure brought on Miami by the thousands of refugees flood ing into south Florida. The rigorous schedule In cluded a thorough study of all the latest techniques and developments In law enforce ment and their practical ap plication. Previous graduates of the FBI National Academy from this area include; Chief of Police John T. Truett, Rose burg; Chief of Police Charles P. Champlin, Medford: Chief of Police Charles A. Howard. Klamath Falls, and Lt. Archie W. Huff. Klamath Falls. pie who why they have such terrible attacks of Me- A niere'g disease M in which they get very dizzy and perhaps vomit. Some times, an ear specialist ca help, but usu ally he can't do very much One great difficulty is that no one is very sure 01 wnai happens in the inner ears of these people - we cannot una out because people don't die of Meniere's disease, and even when these people die of pneumonia or a heart attack their relatives may not per mit any autopsy. Now, something is being done about this, and all deaf people - or people who have had Meniere's disease - now can do something to neip their fellow sufferers. They can tell their nearest of kin that, when they die, an ear specialist should remove their temporal bone which con tains the hearing mechanism. He should do this right after death and before the body is embalmed. After many such temporal bones have been studied by experts, we doc tors will have a much better understanding of deaf n e s s nd also of Meniere's disease, I write this because I re cently heard of the Temporal Bone Bank Center (Box 146, Faculty Exchange, University of Chicago, Chicago 37, 111.) is presided over by Dr. John R. Lindsay, head of the niversity Department of Otolaryngology (nose and throat diseases). Other such centers can be found at Co lumbia University, (New York) tha Henry Ford Hos pital, (Detroit) the Johns Hop kins Hospital, (Baltimore) the Manhattan Eye and Ear Hos pital, the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary (Boston), in the Cornell University Medical Center in New York Ctiy, in the Tulane School of Medicine in New Orleans, in the U.C.L.A. Medical Center in Los Angeles, in the Uni versity of California Medical Center in San Francisco, in the Florida College of Medi cine at Gainesville, Florida, In the University of Iowa Hospitals in Iowa City, in the Medical School at Ann Arbor, Mich., at the Univer sity of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis, at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and at the White Memorial Hos pital in Los Angeles. Many people write to say they have nerve deafness and no one will try to help them. Not even a hearing aid will help. The damage is in the nerve endings in the inner ear, in the fibers of the ear nerve inai runs to ine Drain, 1 1 or perhaps to the hearing center" in the brain. Many such persons had better try to learn lip reading. Every deaf person who has money to spare would do well to support the Deafness Re search Foundation with of fices at 310 Lexington ave., New York 16, N.Y. Osgood-Schlatter's Disease Quite a few people write saying their child has Osgood Schlatter's disease and they wonder what it is and what can be done for it. Usually, their child has started to com plain of pain just below his knee. In the past, it was one of those diseases the cause of which was largely un known. In a recent number of the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr. Mey er Alpert of the Presbyterian Hospital, New York City, wrote that he doubts if many of the present-day ideas about this disease are correct. He says the condition now considered to be related to some injury involving the lower end of the tendon that runs from the kneecap down a little nodule near the top of the tibia (main bone of the leg). The x-ray films often show one or more of the following changes: 1. A tearing-away of a little piece of bone from the top of the tibia; 2. A small piece of bone the tendon running down from the knee cap; 3. A thick ening of this tendon; and 4. A thickening of the soft tissues in front of the nodule on the pper end of the tibia. All this suggests that, in many cases, the disease is due to an injury and might be cured by expert orthopedist (bone and joint specialist). AFFIRMS U.S. SUPPORT Washington - IUPD - Presi dent Kennedy his sent Presi dent Romulo Betancourt of Venezuela a message of firm support and congratulations for crushing the revolt in his country this week. "rrl 1MB , , ,i,(y i,,,,,,,- jt mill a Authentic , . ' jr,V"m1Zmmw,rT:l,,X rice. --f -I . wiT VjrV - -"Jml Fer new rice mixes from Uncle Ben's! Perfect rice dishes ... easy as boiling water! Perfect Spanish ftfca Dishes That colorful Old World traat of beautifully aaionad rlca with tomatoat and peppers I and onions . . , easy as boiling water! g SimpU Simon CREAM PIES I I New Graham Cracker Crust I I V 2,89V All Flavors S J PillsburyV f Deluxe Cake Mix y 4 -100 J All 41 e Flavors J puLSEiiyiAfis7 fWf Prices Effective Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 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