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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 18

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE RECORD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1967 A 18 Barriers To Stay Pending Safety Study Spock Testifies For Antiwar Captain Parkway and the Borough was avoided last Friday, when Tonti agreed to postpone the scheduled reopening of the interchange and discuss the question with local officials Monday. Borough officials threatened to put up their own barricades if the interchange is reopened. cordial, although the Borough will oppose removal of the barricades and Tonti said the Parkway officials still want the interchange reopened. A court fight between the Paramns The barriers at I Monday between the Borough Garden State Parkway Inter- Council, policy traffic officials, change 166 will remain in place and D. Louis Tonti, executive until further studies of the director of the Parkway, safety factors have been made.

Mayor Charles E. Reid This is the result of a meeting I described the meeting as refusing to train combat medics has turned into a landmark test of medical privilege In the military. The defense rested yesterday Colombia, S. C. Army prosecutors set out today to refute the defense for Captain Howard B.

Levy, the Army doctor whose court-martial for sional standards should take precedence over military or political considerations. Dr. Peter Bourne, an Army psychiatrist at Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington, told the court tnat unless doctors were allowed to exercise freedom in decisions based on professional ethics, the quality of medical service in the military would decline. Political Medicine C.IMbtlS PARAMUS OPIN DAIIY, INCLUDING SATURDAYS, 10 TO 9:30 nearly 3 weeks after the trial started with testimony by physicians in support of the theory that medical ethics may override Army orders. There is believed to be no military precedent for this defense.

Levy was not called to the stand to testify. J)r. Benjamin spock, nationally known children's doctor and author, who strongly opposes United States involvement in Vietnam, told the 10-man court-martial panel that he believed refusal to train Green Beret medical aid men would be consistent with medical ethics. Spock said he did not know enoush about the role of the ''rfN OAT ADflATATP GBfBELS Bourne, who spent 3 months in a Green Beret camp in Vietnam doing research, said he I opposed the use of medicine for political purposes. "It is generally accepted that 125THYEAR medics to say whether he 1 this is the way it is used in i Vietnam," he said.

Bourne said, however, that he would train them. stops 4'': sunburn pain! THE NEW KNIT IS LATCHED, PLAIDED, AND SLIGHTLY had trained the medics because he felt the good they did outweighed the harm. A top-ranking officer in the Special Forces program testified earlier that the medics used their medical skills in an effort to win over Vietnamese to United States policy. Bourne said the merging or blurring of medical and combat functions might result in medical corpsman losing their immunity from hostilities, one of the generally recognized rules of warfare. Dr.

Louis Lasagna of Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, testified that he would not train medics whose primary duty was fighting, which the defense claims is the role of Green Beret medics. Lasagna said he opposed the concept of combat-soldier medics. The final defense witness was Captain David Travis of Newark, N. a veteran of more than 50 combat missions Beliefs Involved "I think 1 could easily decide it would not be in accord with my beliefs," the tall, gray-haired pediatrician said. Spock testified that his opposition to United States policy would not influence an ethical decision about the training.

His brief testimony apparently was aimed at the prosecution contention, brought out in cross-examination of other witnesses, that Levy was motivated by political views, and not medical ethics. Levy, 30, a Brooklyn, N. dermatologist, is charged with disobeying an order to continue training Green Beret medics of the Special Forces, and with promoting disloyalty of troops by statements and a letter opposing United States policy in Vietnam. Testimony from an array of physicians, both Army doctors and university professors supported the defense claim that a doctor's ethics or moral profes- mim BIASED i 'i; ry Wok It's funneled fastened in Vietnam and a close friend of Levy's. Travis, a Negro, was returned from Vietnam for the yj I HONORS GRANTED F.

D. U. STUDENTS aside with shiny hardware on red, raramel and beige plaid that's lightweight knit wool. Morton Myles designed it for Juenesse, trial. He said that although he had heated arguments with Levy last year at Fort Jackson, he was unswayed by Levy's opposition to the Vietnam war.

Travis said he was fighting for a free society and to protect the American way oi life and a lot of other rights and privileges. Teaneck Students at the evening division of Fairleigh Dickinson University were recently inducted into the school's two scholastic honor societies. Students inducted into Phi it June i I see Zeta Kappa were: Arvidson of Lincoln Park; Wayne Rnsemarv Buzzoni or Tenaflv; Robert Vogue! Sizes 8 to 16. $60 JC, i Iff Stops it faster, more completely than ordinary "first aids" Callahan of West Milford; Nerman Coyle of Fort Lee; Louis DePalma of Ridgefield Park; James Freely of West New York; James Herska of Emerson; Robert Hillermeier of Ridgefield Park; John Kelley of Bloomfield; Stephama Kowadla of Teaneck; William Magoulis of Fair Lawn; Robert Maurer of Emerson; Gary Nelson of River Edge; Florence Pallag of Teaneck; Heinz Sauer of Wappinger Falls, N. Werner Schulz of Ringwood; Ale Statema of Midland Park; and Clair Stegmann of Dumont.

Students inducted into Phi Omega Epsilon were: Frances Cahpin of Harrington Park; William DiComo of Dumont; Edwin Fivehouse of Maywood; Eleanor Judelson of Tenaflv; John Karaffa of Norwood; James O'Brien of Teaneck; Mary Ogle of Englewood; Francis Russian of North Bergen; Edward Rytter of Palisades Park; Stuart Sendell of New Milford; Albert Tennv of Ridgefield Park; and John Watson of Hillsdale. write, phone (201) 843-3000 within delivery area, add 50c for r.o.ds; beyond delivery area, add 75c for shipping and handling. GIMBELS PARAMUS, GARDEN STATE PLAZA, 843-3000 pliable, help prevent ugly peeling. Solarcaine is greaseless, odorless. Won't stain.

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Pages Available:
3,310,441
Years Available:
1898-2024