Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 25, 1963, Image 14

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MEDFOHD MA
UBUNL. MLDFOHu. OMEGOr-
THURSDAY. APRIL 25. IMS
Mental Treatment Program Needs Are Aired by Doctor
Salem The day that Ore-1 "You improve one patient and I mature enough to be willing ! from federal level. Dr. Ewalt
gonians say "we are willing i two more show up. So you ! to pay for it. 1 points out. President Ken-
mat you spend tne money on do not save money, ine one
this just spend it economi-i you treat may cost you
cally". then a comprehensive
mental treatment program
will sprout and 'grow in
Oregon.
This is the prediction of
thousand dollars to get him
back on his feet and able to
take care of himself. But. if
you put him away in a men
tal hospital, he will cost you
"Vested interests must be
educated, inculcated, and se
cured if good mental treat
ment is to be made available
to all who need it in Oregon
Dr. Jack R. Ewalt, professor i from $15,000 to S17.000 for
of psychiatry of Harvard ! every ten years he lives."
medical school who addressed ; The public must get away
legislators and over 200 lay from magical thinking
people at a recent dinner warned Ewalt.
meeting here sponsored by
the Mental Health Associa
tion of Oregon
Dr. Ewalt's predication is
based on the phenomena)
growth of mental treatment 1
services in his home state.
Massachusetts where he su
perintends the Mental Health !
center. In the past seven I
years mental treatment clin
ics have exploded from 7 to I
26, hospital internees in men
tal health have jumped from
10 to 100, tuberculosis among
hospital patients has been
eradicated, a massive research
program is underway, and
mental treatment is available
everywhere even in prisons,
to those before probation
boards, and entangled with
the courts.
Describes Survey
"In this country, the reser
voir of the untreated mental
ly ill is unfathomable," Mr.
Ewalt admits. He described
a person to person survey he
supervised. Thousands were
asked "Did you ever have so
many troubles you felt you
might have a nervous break
down?" One in four answered
"Yes." Of those answering
"Yes" one in seven sought
help.
"That's the trouble with the
clinic s," Ewalt confessed.
"It is normal for the two,
three and four year olds. It is
not becoming for adults."
When tile public says it
wants competent mental
'resilient, then it must be
nedy's program would estab
lish mental health centers for
all kinds and ages of patients
to get the treatment they
need. It is proposed the fed-
It is up to the people to pres- eral government pay 75 per
sure their legislators, their j cen e costs tne tirst
county and city fathers to ! 'ear; ' he fifth year the
povide the cash for the pro- i clinics would be 100 per cent
grams the people need. locally supported. Experience
"Create only those agen-' shows this is good business,
cies you can adequately staff. Dr. Ewalt recited that in
and keep the programs at , 1948 the Federal government
local level so that the mental- j put up three million dollars
ly ill can be treated and for mental treatment, the
improved in their own coin- j states, one million. By 1963,
munities." he pleaded. the federal ante is between
Financial help may come five and six million, the states
ACQUITTED-Newburgh City Manager Joseph McD. Mitch
ell, accused of taking a S20.000 payoff for a real estate fa
vor, peers into a New Yot court room to see if the jury
is back. When the Supreme Court jury did return, it ac
quitted Mitchell, along with Lawrence Demasi Jr., of
charges that they took a bribe from Stephen and Joseph
Wahrhaftig of Monticello. N.Y., in return for changing
Newburgh's zoning laws to allow construction of an apart
ment house. (UPI)
Reporter Weapon For News Truth
New York-iUPIi-The weapon
that has always conquered
government attempts to man
age news is the competent re
porter, backed all the way by
publishers and editors, the
American Newspaper Publish
ers Association was told to
day. Herbert Brueker. editor of
the Hartford Courant and
newly elected president of the
American Society of News
paper Editors, told the pub
lishers that managed news
was nothing new in this coun-
more to
""Mf,
H
try and elsewhere.
"What comes as a shock is
to find such a concept of
news not only applied here,
but also endorsed officially as
a positive good," he said. "In
deed, that is all that is new
about managed news in this
country today - not the ail
but - instrinctive government
resort to news managing, but
the open defense of it as a
patriotic virtue."
Brueker's address on "man
aged news" was prepared for
. delivery at the final session
! of ihe 77th annual ANPA
convention in the grand ball
room of the Waldorf-Astoria
hotel.
ft flavors
Cows Often Injured
By Swallowing Metal
Fargo. N.D. - UPI - Since
1 cows don't chew their food
thoroughly, they often swal
' low screws, nails, pins, pieces
; of wire and other bits of met-
al.
These usually end up in the
second stomach, the "honey
; comb." sometimes referred to
i as the "hardware bucket,"
! where they can cause pain
; ful injury or death, aceord
j ing to the North Dakota
j State university rotlege o f
agriculture.
Russia Expected
To Veto Proposal
Geneva -WW- Western dele
gates to the 17-nation disarma
ment conference predicted
nrivatelv tndav that Russia
will reject the latest Anglo-
American nuclear proposals
although they represent a sig
nificant compromise.
They said the proposals ap
peared to reduce Western
demands on the number of
on-site inspections in Soviet
territory but the Russians
probably will stick to their
present limit of "two to three"
inspections a year.
United States and British
ambassadors in Moscow were
understood to have offered
Khrushchev a minimum of 30
international on-site inspec
tions over a period of seven
years.
There was no official con
firmation of the report, which
wnitlH mean a maior reduc
tion in the Western demand of
no less than seven inspections
each year.
Such a reduction would be
in Un with the new Western
thinking in which major reli
ance for policing a test ban
is placed on stations outside
Soviet territory.
Per capita use of paper and
paperboard in the United
, States in 1982 reached a re
I cord high o f about 4 5 0
I pounds, some 13 pounds over
1 1961.
University of Georgia
Negro Student Honored
Athens, Ga. -WPli- Hamilton
Holmes, one of the first Ne
.rnu admitted to the Univer
sity of Georgia, has been elect
ed to the Phi Beta R.appa
honorary society.
The university announced
Wednesday that the pre-medi-cal
student's high academic
standing made him eligible
for the honor.
Holmes was admitted to the
university under court order
in January. 1961.
Columbia River -Spring
Chinook Salmon!
JUMBO PRAWNS
Peeled and Deveined
$159
ib.
HALIBUT 2r
a 79 1 f
Alaska Black Cod Sliced Ib. 49c
Rainbow Trout 4 , 99c
SWORDFISH CATFISH
STEAKS Fresh-Skinned
89b 69
LING GOD
12 or Whole
33
c
Ib
REX SOLE and
SAND
DABS . .. Ib.
59
Fresh Local Grown
Poultry Daily
RANCH EGGS
Grade AASm.
Med 2 d01 69
GIBLETS
From fresh
f ryers
lb,
39
FITTS num mm
over 100 million. What can
communities do now? Train
teachers, ministers, lawyers,
judges, policemen to detect
the symptoms of mental ill
ness. Set up local mental
treatment clinics either as In
dependent units or as depart
ments in public health cen
ters and local hospitals.
"You will get these clinics
when your local mental
health association, your ocal
phychiatrists. psychologists
health association, your local
school people, labor leaders,
management grbups. clergy,
lawyers, judges, make up
their minds about what is
needed and that they are
going to have it," Dr. Ewalt
told an audience representing
almost every section of the
state.
B 5
1. - m -,
Hutchinson, Kan. -
Marian Walters. 11, last Sat
urday won a new bicycle
from the Optimist Club in a
bicycle safety week program.
Tuesday, she fell off the bi
cycle and broke her right leg.
MODERN PEOPLE
I know it's best f
ihe waistline!
k. V ' JV fU . 1.1 : I SJSaavX
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m
OR
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All across the country, more
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READ THESE RULES MAIL YOUR ENTRY TODAY
RULES . . . The Aunt Jemima Select a Pnze
Sweepttako will be held for a limited time
only. All entries must be postmarked by
midnight. May 31, 1963, and received by
June 15, 1963. The drawing for winner!
will be held June 17, 1963. Winners will
be notified by'July 1, 1963.
Fill out your entry blank now. Send it
along with any box top or bag bottom of
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Mix or printed words "Aunt Jemima" on a
plain piece of white paper. Sweepstakes
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Ptease enter me in your Selecta-Prize Sweepstakes.
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131 West Main St.
Phone 773-8497