Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 23, 1963, Image 10

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    10 A
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23. 19S3
MEDFOBB MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
5
STARLIFTER ROLLS OUT-A new U.S. Air Force air
craft, the C-141 jet transport "Starlifter" rolls out of a
Lockheed Aircraft Corporation hangar at a ceremony in
Marietta, Ga., Thursday. The ceremonies were attended by
high military officials and the
remote control when Pres. J. F.
in Washington. (UPI)
roll-out" was triggered oy
Kennedy pressed a button
Court Records
Mt-tirnnn MUNICIPAL COURT
Gladyt Irene Jacob, disobeyed
traffic ftianal SlO.
William Wallace Bittle, die
nhAvori traffic tlcnal. SlO.
Lloyd Alan Shrceve, excessive
noise. SlO.
failure
ViO'
to
D1STRK T COURT
Burnell Marvin Ball, overload
tlA.
Wayne Neil Walch, excessive
noise, 5.
William Floyd Griffith,
to stop, S7.50.
John Middleton Pcrnienter,
la t ion of basic rule.
Roy George Pursel. failure
Hod. S5
Elizabeth Mary Thompson, pver-
ftans. S3.
Douglas MacArthur Paddock,
one hcadlisht. S3.
Lauren Leroy Sauer, disobeyed
trm fiien. S15.
Ronald Boyd Thompson, no red
flag on extended load. iu.
Eugene Ray Arnold, overload,
$11
Mite H. Meyer, Improper pass
ing. $20.
Alan Leroy Harris, no operator's
license, $5.
Jerry Ross Conner, no oper.ttor's
license. $5. -
Francis BryonRussell. disobeyed
stop sign, S13.
Jack Lorenzo Retherford, no op
erator's license, $5.
Wayne Da r row Jensen, no op
erator's license. $5.
Harold E.vmard McKay, viola
tion of basic rule, flu.
Mel Rose, disobeyed stop ign,
fl.v
Laurence Joseph Gobcr, no ve
hicle license, $3.
Phoebe Kalhryn Dorland, fail
ure to signal, (13.
Garrett George Stevens, no ve
hicle license, $3.
Mary Belle Burgoyne, no opera
tor's license. $3,
Robert Raymond GHHi, Impro
per clearance lights, SlO.
John Ambrose Bate man, no op
erator's license, $10.
Albert Martial Andre, violation
of basic rule, $23,
Dennis Calvin Cook, violation of
basic rule, $10.
Myrtle Dollie Johnson, violation
of basic rule, $10.
Larry Anthony Rogers, violation
of basic rule, S23.
Robert James Freeman, no op
erator's license. $5.
Graham Prltchard Curry, In
adequate muffler, $10.
Claude Reginald Lawler, allow
ing persons to ride on outside of
vehicle. $13.
Ronnie Lee Mayes Sr., angling
Wilh prohibited methods, $30.
Donald C. Williams, angling
with prohibited methods, $30- ,
Walter Vernon Hubbard, over
load. $21.
Walter James Simons, Improper
pausing, $10.
Glcnna Evon Mason, expired ve
hicle license. $3.
Robert Lowell Hakain, no safe
ty chain. $13.
Thomas William McFadden. dis
nbeved it op sign, $3; hauling logs
during prohibited hours, $10.
Olen Spencer Shields, no opera
tor's license. $3.
George Taylor Rowden, no turn
lisnal device. $3.
Msry jo Batzer, violation of ba
sic rule. $10.
Victor Adolph Royaton, dis
obeyed stop sign. $10.
Lewis LaFacl Bigham, overload.
$88.
1 ! t I
1 I .-?".,J
m e.'jt i-ri l ft
x
WANTED MEN - Their work appeared to
De coming 10 an end Tnursaay, as Scotland
Yard distributed these three pictures of men
wanted in connection with the $7.3-million
mail train robbery. One of them, Charles
Frederick Wilson, 31, center, called a
bookie, was picked up within an hour of
me lime ine pictures appeared in papers
and on TV. The others are James E. White,
43, left, cafe proprietor; and Bruce Rich
ard Reynolds, 41, dealer in cars and an
tiques. (UPI)
Terror of English
Highways Finally
Obtains License
CIltri'lT COURT
Marilyn Gem Prultt VI Douglas
Garv Pruitt. divorce comD aim.
Martha Helh Clark v. Michael
Leu-la Clark, divorce complaint.
Grace J. Kellev va. Clarence J
Kelley. aeparate maintenance
complaint.
MMIHIAGK LICENSE
APPLICATION
Dave Rudolph Hauck. rnule 1.
1. box II. Talent, and Bonnie Jo
SUva. same addreaa.
William Russell Marrlnck and
Carole Anne Lent, both Florence,
Ore
Gary Ronald Burns, route I
box 107B. Gold IHJI. and Linda
Ann Burr. Lampmart rd., box
l7A. Gold Hill.
Stockport, England - IUP11 -
Miss Margaret Hunter, the
66-year-old retired school
teacher who flunked two driv
ing tests and drove several
instructors to distraction, said
today she finally has a li
cense.
But she had to go to Ire
land, which has no driving
test, to get it.
The license is good for one
year and may be the last one
she will ever hold. The Irish
parliament is studying a bill
which would institute driving
tests.
Miss Hunter became some
thing of a public figure last
year when a driving teacher
told her to stop the car in
the middle of a lesson, jump
ed out, cried "This is suicide''
and walked away.
Car Hits Truck
She drove home by herself
-and got a ticket for driving
without supervision.
The next day she talked a
friend into accompanying her
on a drive.
The outing lusted 10a yards
before Miss Hunter struck a
truck, wrecking her car and
getting another traffic ticket.
She refused to appear in
court, maintaining she had
done nothing wrong, was haul
cd in wearing her nightdress,
refused to enter a plea and
was declared guilty.
Undeterred, Miss Hunter
took a driving test, but failed
after making several false
starts, running a red light and
parking three feet from the
curb.
She tried taking more les
sons but found it nearly im
possible to get an instructor
who would stick with her to
the end of the course.
Loves Driving
Miss Hunter went to North
ern Ireland and took another
test but failed again.
She killed the engine at a
crossroads, turned the wrong
way on a one-way street and
got stuck in, a standing line
of taxis.
In order to get an Irish li
cense, she had to take up resi
dence in Ireland, and now
keeps two homes - one in
Dublin and one in Stockport.
She remained coy today
about whether she was actual
ly driving on English roads.
"I am an adequate driver,"
Miss Hunter said. "1 have not
cheated. My Irish license en
titles me lo drive anywhere
in the world, but so far 1 have
not driven on it.
"I love driving." she said
happily. "I could drive all
day."
PHOTOS RULED IMMORAL
Rome -(UPII- Photographs of
actress Kim Novak in the
magazine Exprcsso have been
ruled immoral by the Rome
public prosecutor and all cop
ies of this week's issue have
been confiscated from news
stands. The photographs were
taken from a film Miss Novak
is making in Ireland.
Medical Science Revolution
Reduces General Practitioners
Subscribers
To noort Improper or non
delivery of the Mull Tribune in
Mcdlord. phone 772-K141; Ash
land call at 416 Bridge at., or
phone 482-:wo2: Yrcka, phone
Victory 12-289R before 6:45 p m.
dally and 10:20 a.m. Sunday.
If regular delivery arrives
shortly after you call please
notify nlfice. thus eliminating
special messenger service.
New York (Scientific
American Feature) - The rev
olution in medical science
that has drastically reduced
the number of general prac
titioners during the past three
decades has brought great
changes in the practice of med
icine and is creatiiitj urgent
problems in the organization
of medical care, according to
Osier L. Peterson, visiting
professor and acting chairman
of the Department of Pre
ventive Medicine at the Har
vard Medical School.
"Fully half of the private
practitioners in the U.S. today
are specialists, compared with
only 16 per cent in 1931," says
Dr. Peterson. "They are pro
vided with a constantly in
creasing number of active and
specific medications. In the
remarkable interplay of
knowledge, skill, organization
and equipment represented
so dramatically in modern
heart surgery they may with
confidence quite literally take
the patient's life in their
hands. The patient's problem
is how to select and use them;
the pain in the back that he
takes to an orthopedist may
well require the attention of
urologist or cardiologist, and
his mistaken self - diagnosis
may prove costly to health as
well as expensive. Modern
drugs arc occasionally toxic;
they are certainly not home
remedies for casual prescrip
tion or use.
"In the resolution of these
difficult decisions third par
ties have joined the relation
ship of physician and patient.
Because health insurance has
become a major perquisite of
employment - an important
tax-free mode of compensa
tion the Blue Cross and in
surance companies, commis
sioners of insurance, employ
ers and, most important, la
bor unions, are making policy
with respect to medical care.
The insurers require informa
tion about diagnosis, the treat
ment procedure, the number
of patient-visits and similar
items. Unions sponsor studies
of the 'adequacy' and 'qual
ity' of the care purchased for
their members. Lay groups,
such as the Health Insurance
Plan of Greater New York
and the Kaiser Foundation
Medical Care Program in Cal
ifornia, undertake to provide
comprehensive care of high
quality.' In short, many agen
cies including the press seem
lo have developed mixed feel
ings about doctors; the won
derful new developments of
medical science are standard
fare, but the discontent of pa
tients, fee - splitting and un
necessary surgery also pro
vide topics for featured ar
ticles. "The adjustment of medi
cine to its technical growth
has had heavy repercussions
in the profession and in soci
ety. It involves three interre
lated questions; the quality of
medical care-how to make in
creasingly effective medical
care available lo the patient;
the organization of medical
care-how lo organize the in
stilulions necessary to deliver
such care; and the financial
aspect of medical care.
"As to raising the profes
sional standards of doctors,
surveys indicate that good
performance is plainly corre
lated to internship and resi
dency in teaching hospitals
and poor performance to post
graduate experience in non
teaching hospitals. As to or
ganization it is self-evident
that a group of specialists can
provide more and better tech
nical facilities than can the
lone practioner. Even more
than a hospital, a group puts
its members in a goldfish
bowl, in which each physician
carries on his work under the
scrutiny of his fellows. More
over, a group of sufficient
size and diversity can sustain
its own intellectual life and
provide day-to-day education.
Most important from the pa
tient's point of view, the
group provides an internist
who fills the role of personal
physician and whose informed
diagnosis directs the patient
to the specialist.
"With respect to financing
the doctor bill, investigations
show growing popularity for
comprehensive insurance. In
the State of Washington phy
sicians provide a remarkably
all inclusive insurance plan
to cover doctors' bills. The
most' intriguing unanswered
question is why physicians,
who are so concerned about
Government intervention in
health insurance, have not
tried to forestall it by imitat
ing the successful precedents
established by their colleagues
and nongovernmental lay in
stitutions. Even though all the
costs of illness probably
should not be insured, the fact
is that only about a fifth of
personal medical-care expend
itures are now covered. Be
cause the best of medical care,
such as heart-surgery, is often
expensive, our present rather
limited provision for insuring
medical care must be much
improved if the best medical
care is to be available."
Truce Team Reports On Border Crisis
A few scatterea sii"
Jerusalem, Israel -(UPD- An
international truce team put
final touches today on its re
port on the tense Syrian-Israeli
border situation for the
United Nations Security Coun
cil. The frontier area was re
ported quiet for the third con
secutive day, in contrast to
sharp ground and air skir
mishing earlier in the week.
reported Thursday, but there
was no word of any casualties.
Israeli farmers in the Hula
valley returned to work.
Gen. Odd Bull of Norway,
commanding the UN trues
team, conferred with Israeli
officials Thursday in a follow
up of his talks with Syrian
Premier Sa ah Bliar m
mascus.
VENDING SUBSIDY
New York - (UPD - When
you buy one of the less pop
ular brands of cigarettes in a
vending machine, the manu
facturer may be subsidizing
the vending machine operator.
The big companies all say
they have to pay subsidies to
get large machine route oper
ators to stock the weaker
brands.
Lowestoft, England -IlIPll-As
Geoffrey Winship, 29, a circus
fire-eater, went to perform his
act Thursday, a helper handed
him gasoline instead of the
usual kerosene. Winship was
hospitalized with a sore mouth 1
and throat. I
DOUBLE CONGRATULATION - Actor
Ernie Borgnine, left, staT of McHale's Navy,
and Joe Flynn, right, who plays Capt.
Binghamton in the series, offer a double
congratulation to Capt. Paul Haver-
korn, U.S.N. Havcrkurn was recently pro
moted lo captain and is from Peoria. III.
He and Borgnine served aboard the U.S.S.
Sylph in the Atlantic from 1943 to 1945.
(UPI)
to the William's
CHUCK
WAGON
RESTAURANT
All You
Can
Eatl
Children Under 12-60c
OPEN Saturday and Sunday
Only 12 Noon 9 p.m.
PHONE 855-1118
$1
OPEN LABOR DAY
TUANV V II w ish to think tht hundreds
I nMII IV 1UU 0f pe0pe who dined ir our Chuck
Wjgon list weekend. We wish to apologue tor having to
dote early, but vour acceptance ol our restaurant was tar
beyond our eipectations. We promise this weekend we
will have ample tor all.
WILLIAM'S
GHOST TOWN
3 Miles Up Sardine Creek. Go Through Gold Hill on Highway 234
and to'low siQns.
JACKSON COUNTY
FAMILY PICNIC
Sunday, August 25
TOUVELLE PARK
All You SKI 00
Can Eat
Children '
6 to 12-SOc
Children Under
6 Ye.ri FREE
EVERYONE WELCOME
Barbequed Beef, Salads, Etc.
Games! Contests! Prizes! Trophies!
Bicycle Race Fidlers Contest
Gold Panning Contest Music
Entertainment
Sponsored by Democratic Central Committee
Pd. Pol. Adv. Charles Crary, Chmn. 4074 5. Pacific, Medford
HAVE TO INSTALL
SEAT BELTS..
To Keep You From Jumping Out of Your
Seat When You Hear the Great Sound of
The "Merri Tones"
Appearing Nightly
With the Sensational and
Beautiful Turkish
"Harem Dancer"
LILLY BADALIAN
in 3 BIG FLOOR SHOWS
EVERY NIGHT in the
BAR OF MUSIC
Make it an
Evening Out. . .
Enjoy dinner in the CANDLE
ROOM . . . Then enjoy 3
great Floor Shows.
NO COVER CHARGE
The price of your favorite
beverage is all you ever pay
which you'd pay anyway.
HOTEL
MEDFORD
Only 2 More Days to Enjoy the
Britt Gardens
USIC and ARTS
STIVAL
1
i A
JOHN TRUDEAU
Musical Director and
Conductor
Saturday
August 24
Is The
Final Day!
Tonight, Thursday, Friday and Saturday
will afford your last opportunity to en
joy delightful music in the beautiful
gardens of the famous old pioneer home
of the Britt family at Jacksonville. Be
sure to make the most of these few days
left. Not only will you thoroughly enjoy
this musical treat but your patronage
will help to make the Festival an annual
affair, enriching the cultural life of all
southern Oregon)
Published in cooperation with the Britt Garden! M
Festival Committee by the ,
ic md Arti
MEDFORDgTRIBUNE
CO