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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 9

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

n. I V. A ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1963 9A $50 Million Plan Outlined for Medical Center VI Continued from Page 1A FVt wv'-lf Iff XI 41 tients never have that feeling of being isolated or abandoned. Although no definite plans have been worked out, Dr.

Anderson said consideration presumably would be given to the use of electronic monitoring systems for patient care. The master plan is the result of three years' planning by the medical center faculty, it was developed by the El-lerbe Co. of St. Paul, one of the nation's leading firms of medical architects. Serving on the faculty committee with Dr.

Anderson 't i iw Ik nn wmim mum ji. iii "nm 1 1 .1 i Phone 5.9100; A Mail Your Order 4 Edwards I Fashion TARGET OF CRITICS-Rep. Wayne L.Hays,D-Ohio, left, stands with Ernest Petinaud, head waiter of the House of Representatives, outside hotel in London prior to visiting House of Commons. (AP Photo) Hayes Raps Furor Over Waiter's Trip LONDON (UPD Rep. Wayne Havs.

D-Ohio. said vester- day there was nothing improper about a headwaiter's ex- pense-paid trip to Europe with a congressional delegation. Hays commented on the Washington furor raised over Ernest Petinaud, headwaiter of the dining room for members of the House of Representatives. He came to Europe with the congressional delegation at government expense as a messenger and page. His expenses amounted to about $200.

"If the anonymous critic in the House of Representa tives would stand up and identify himself and make valid objections, I'll write a check for it (the $200)," Hays said. "We are paying his expenses and that is all." Hays headed the 10-member U.S. delegation to last week's Paris meeting of parliamentarians from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He said Petinaud did "a valuable job" as a liaison man. Other congressmen in the delegation declined comment.

Rep. Leslie Arends, R-I1L, said, "Hays is chairman and he is doing the speaking in this case." Petinaud avoided newsmen by stepping quickly into an elevator at the Hilton Hotel where the delegation is staying. Hays said he normally brings two persons with the delegation, which he has headed for the past nine years. The other this year was Philip Billings, a member of the staff of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Unrest Grows in Chicago; Negroes Store Weapons of facilities that have made the original medical center a model for others throughout the countrv.

(The UR Medical Center was the first in which both the medical school and hospital were integrated in a single facility.) The Dlan will be studied ty medical center faculty over the next several weeks before going to the UR administration and, ultimately, the UR board trustees for ap proval. If the Dlan is approved within the next few months, it is expected that work on an addition to the medical school's Atomic Energy-Project might start next summer. According to thfs highly ten tative timetable, an initial hospital addition and expansion of research facilities might get under way by the spring of 1965. Under the plan, the present Strong Memorial and Municipal hospitals would be converted into classrooms, offices and research laboratories. Dr.

Anderson said studies by three independent engi-needing firms found that it would not be economic to try to modernize the hospitals. The proposed new hospital would feature so-called hos- nital-in-the-round construc tion. There would be units of 25 private and semi-private patient rooms, ringing nurses' station. From the cen tral station, nurses would be able to observe all the pa tients in their rooms, al though the patients would have privacy, separated Dy a oartition. Dr.

Anderson de scribed the plan as "very at tractive," noting that the pa committed to the civil rights fight, two strong Negro voices condemn demonstrations. They belong to Dr. J. H. Jackson, head of the five million member National Baptist Convention, and S.

B. Fuller, wealthy cosmetics manufacturer and newspaper publisher. Both advise Negroes to roll up their sleeves, and go to work. And Fuller contends that Negroes are not discriminated against in employment because of race. My talks with Negroes in the south side, however, found little support for these views and much dissatisfaction with divided leadership.

The lowrer class Negro is confronted with a bewildering array of police, school and welfare agencies, and now sees his leaders as enemies to play off one against the other. Gardens on the tion of health and pestles, said Dr. Drug Research Laboratories, Maspeth, N.Y. He said the hazards had been exaggerated, and "the public should be reassured these chemicals are being ment agencies and industry. This is exactly contrary to fact." NEWS CONFERENCE SET WASHINGTON (UPD Presi- ident Kennedy will hold a news conference at 11 a.m.

Thursday, his first in the morning since March. h.s llll If I I kj 1 1 'f: 0 I I I I II were Dr. Frank W. McKee, associate dean of the medical school; Dr. Leonard Fen-ninger, associate dean of the medical school and medical director of Strong Memorial Hospital; Dr.

J. Lowell Orbi-son, chairman of the Depart-m of Pathology; r. Herbert R. Morgan, chairman of the Department of Microbiology; Dr. Robert L.

Berg, chairman of the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health; LaRoy B. Thompson, vice president and treasurer of the university, and Roger O. Austin, UR architect. Methods of financing the expansion are to be discussed. More than $7 million is already assured.

The UR Medical Center was allocated about $4 million from the Rochester Hospital Fund drive last year, and a month ago the U. S. Public Health Service awarded a grant of $3,172,736 for expansion of research facilities, including a new animal house. Most of the proposed construction would take place just to the north and east of the present buildings. Junta Names 2 To Press War On Viet Cong Continued from Page 1A the most aggressive -minded field commander in South Viet Nam's army.

He was annninted rnmmanrlpr n( thp vital an Division. Nguyen Huu Co replaces Gen. Huyhn Van Cao, who was cautious in tactics on orders from the palace, and Phan Van Dong replaces a Huyhn Van Cao appointee. The 7th Division is in an area that includes two rich and heavily populated rice growing areas where the I Communists have made ai major and successful military effort in recent months. Phan Van Dong's leader- shin in this rnntpstoH area may provide an early indica tion whether the junta will i bring about an improvement! in the military situation.

The Mekong delta is a vast flatland where more than half of South Viet Nam's 15 million people live and where most of the country's agricul tural resources are situated. There has been a vast im provement in Viet Cong armament in the delta and a sub sequent increase in guerilla aggressiveness. ihe delta is a traditional area of dissidence. The Ngo Dinh Diem government put comparatively little of its re sources into the region. Recently, with concern mount ing over the military situation there, a third division was moved in.

American field officers are elated over the new appointments. They see it as a chance to begin fighting the war and they believe both men are receptive to Amer ican advice. In addition, mor-! ale among the Vietnamese army has already picked up, the U.S. officers say. VISITOR TO INDIA NEW DELHI fli Gen Paul D.

Adams, newly named commander-in-chief of all U.S. defense activities in the Middle East. South Asia and1 Africa, arrived yesterday! from Karachi for a two-day i visit. He was welcomed by In-; dian Army and Air Force of-i ficers. Daffy Dictionary RACETRACK A place you arrive at with faith and hope, and depart from needing charity.

which resulted in injuries pnd cost us many White friends." DISILLUSIONED and ready to return home, but for lack of a well-paying job there, Williams says: "Hell, they will probably integrate Alabama before they integrate Chicago!" Philip Hauser, a sociologist and demographer at the university, estimates that the Negro population in Chicago has increased 80 per cent during the last two decades, while the total white population remains about the same. I heard no complaints from either lower or upper class Negroes about public accommodations in Chicago. I was personally served and observed many other Negroes being served in hotels, night clubs and restaurants in the loop area. H- X' )( ALTHOUGH many Negro clergymen and other civic leaders are firmly iyl 1 Hanes Hosiery Week Pesticide Peril 'Worst' Backyard Continued jrom Page 1A ghettos and segregated schools. The Negroes claim Mayor Richard Daley has refused to take an official stand against housing discrimination.

But on Sept. 11, the City Council under Daley's control approved an ordinance which prohibits real estate brokers from discriminating. The bill was passed even though some 5,000 housewives and home owners converged on City Hall in protest. WHEN THE BILL was approved, the Chicago Defender, a Negro daily newspaper, heralded the news in a headline which read: "Every Pad Open Dad, in Chicago; Live Anywhere!" Negro leaders say, however, that the bill has "no teeth and the mayor will not do anything about having its proviisons enforced because he is caught in a political vise." They further blame the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The Negroes said they believe "the NAACP's allowing of the mayor to be humiliated at their national convention last summer caused Daley to lose interest in the civil rights issue." IN GENERAL, NEGRO politicians and civil rights leaders have a sophistication about such matters as civil rights.

If they or members of their organization feel Negroes are victims of an injustice, they take recourse in the courts or use their political power to defend their positions. However, there are many Negroes like Hayward Williams, 32, who came here from Mississippi. He talks about the integration battlegrounds of Chicago as though he were discussing World War II or Korea: "We've had Trumbull Park, Rainbow Beach, the Englewood and Lawndale districts. "We were only able to move families into these areas after ugly fights KANSAS CITY UP The backyard gardener was pictured yesterday as the biggest offender in dangerous use of pesticides. lie hasn't been reading labels on insect sprays and other chemical weapons carefully and "unintentionally has been doing more harm to himself and his neighbor" than the farmer who is aware of the hazards, said Dr.

Henry IRRESISTIBLE COLORS H1NES EXTRA ATTENTION TO PROPORTIONED FIT! Hurtig of Canada's Department of Agriculture in Ottawa. "And no farmer would America.s remarkablelo7d hkC IZtL production, the speakers said, pesticide when directions call Wa too much and he knows his crops might have a residue Vet'! LliT 1TTCnamid C-' They and other experts, speaking to the American Public Health Association, took issue with charges that 'i ncnn i -J lien nnrfinti4rt and agricultural chemicals isJ af t0 hUmanibeing neglected by govern- wildlife To wear a pair of Hanes nylons is to love them, for it is absolute sorcery the way they fit and glamorize legs. As fashion important as your costumes, so choose them in various styles. Plain knits. Clear micro meshes.

Acrilan9 stretch nylons. Business, or dress sheers with demi toe. Come, feast your eyes on Hanes Irresistible Colors that reflect the newest costume tones. They re proportioned, so choose the correct length; Short, Medium or Tall. Sizes 82 to 11 1,35 tO 1J5 pi" EDWARDS Hosiery Street Floor; Ridgemont Pittsford and Accidents have occurred in which humans were fatally poisoned and there have been reported instances of damage to wildlife, birds and fish, the speakers said, But chemicals combatting insect and plant diseases have been a major foundation stone.

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