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The York Dispatch from York, Pennsylvania • 6

Publication:
The York Dispatchi
Location:
York, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE YORK DISPATCH SATURDAY JUNE 17 1972 Thoughts vX niMh) copter crashed in Kontum Province At the time of his death Vann was senior adviser in one of four military regions In a White House ceremony following the funeral President Nixon awarded the Medal of Freedom the nations highest civilian citation to Vann (UPI) JOHN PAUL VANN the third most powerful American serving in Vietnam was buried Friday on the slopes of Arlington National Cemetery Vann who had served more than 10 years in Vietnam in military and civilian capacities was killed last week when his heli represented conservatism and rock the boat There had been nothing in his earlier pronouncements or deliberations as a delegate or board member that portended what he calls his stance His defection could not have come at a worse time for those seeking AMA solidarity A number of doctors had been angered several months before by a decision to raise dues $40 a year to $110 In addition a legal opinion in New York held that it was not mandatory for doctors to belong to the AMA in order to belong to their local cedical society As a result the AMA lost 8000 of its 26000 New York members a severe blow not only to its prestige but to its pocketbook Other states have followed New action Now the AMA represents about two-thirds of eligible physicians as compared to three-fourths in 1961 In recent weeks there has been a vigorous campaign to reenlist the dropouts and some success is expected to be reported in San Francisco Still Quiet Asked why he spoke out Hall said he could not in good conscience keep quiet The AMA establishment has remained discreetly silent about Hall in public statements But its indignation seethes in private conversations Some feel it has been way of avenging some long-held personal grievances arising out of failure of the board of trustees to accept some of his ideas before his presidency Hall also was a strong defender of Dr (Bing) Blas-ingame who was fired by the board from his job as the $100000-a-year executive vice president Hall says the dismissal came on a Sunday morning after the board assured him prior to his departure for Reno the previous day that no action would be taken Hall concedes he no longer is very popular with the AMA officialdom but says he has received more than 600 letters from doctors around the country endorsing his position Hall has not won much support in the house of delegates However some credit his maverick activity for the formation of the council on tong-range planning and development The council is to conduct hearings in the grass roots to determine what changes physicians want in the AMA Hearings were held in Rochester Minn and Milwaukee last month and an opportunity will be given for testimony tomorrow in San Francisco 79 cities in 56 countries announced it would suspend flight operations Monday in view of the protest Announcement of the work stoppage came after what the head of the international pilots federation called an response from United Nations officials to a request that the UN Security Council take tougher steps against air pirates Medicine Advised Of Public Duty (Continued from First Page) and that experiments and programs are seeking to solve health care shortage and distribution problems the truth is that the problems exist and the people arei Division becoming be brigade remaining in declared zone Pettis said public dissatisfac- Strength Cut bailed out and was uninjured by a Navy The Command phaseout from Vietnam 3rd Brigade 1st Air the last full tion with medical care probably is due to higher costs but also results from poor distribution and shortages do not say the Russian system is better but at least they have a system under which the patient knows the point of entry to the medical care Pettis said do not say any country has better medicine than the United States because no country does But other countries apparently have done a better job of distribution and so the people have some place to Chess and Vodka (Continued from First Page) AAIA Losing Strong Hold On Doctors (Continued from First Page) Hall of Reno Nev who says the organization is mismanaged by the board of directors no longer represents the grass roots of American doctors and needs some drastic changes Never has the organization been so bitterly ass ailed by one in a position to know operations from within The result one top official told the Chicago Daily News has been are a house he said now we must try to put it together Thus the convention in San Francisco beginning Sunday becomes one of the most critical in its history Dr Hall will be making his final address as president and indications are he will relentlessly pursue the reforms he urged in his speech at the recent midwinter convention in New Orleans At that time he threw away the text prepared for him by professional speech writers at AMA headquarters and proceeded to tick off the deficiencies in the hierarchy He said there was a morale problem among employes and many had resigned you think for one moment that 535 Dearborn i St (Chicago address of AMA national headquarters) has a thousand hearts that beat as one you may take my word for it that it Membership Lags Membership in the AMA is dropping he said Finances are in bad shape Advertising has dropped in publications Credibility is being lost not only with' the public but with the profession The craggy-faced 65-year-old surgeon went on to indict the AMA as having no attraction for young doctors for tolerating inefficiency and for playing cutthroat politics at the top The policy-making house of delegates is organized in a way that prevents young doctors from getting into it he said Members must first go through indoctrination by a series of lesser positions in state delegations and national committees before they reach a position of influence As a result there is no delegate under age 40 ac cording to study Hie president says that in his travels around the country he has talked to thousands of physicians to community leaders government officials hospital administrators and others in the health care field I am disturbed by what I hear and see and I am more convinced than ever that we need a basic review of our organizational structure Our house of medicine is in need of some He calls for a return to the basic objectives of the science and art of medicine and the betterment of public health are fearul we are getting off he reports have been placing more and more emphasis on legislation and politics and relatively less on scientific and medical Less Stunning The nature of Dr criticism was perhaps less stunning than the fact that it was he who made it He had always been believed to be a party wheelhorse faithful to the AMA right or wrong He had come up through the ranks served a total of 24 years as a member of the house of delegates a member and then chairman of the board of trustees and finally as president He was picked over three other candidates one a liberal because it was believed that he didn't think you- (Continued from Page 5) other day for an initial detailed briefing on the arms control agreements signed with the Russians it was an event be- cause Kissinger was to be the star witness For an hour he beguiled the legislators with an analysis of the agreements a chronology of their history and the military-political-diplomatic arguments for supporting them Even so dour and persistent administration critic as Sen Fulbright called the Kissinger presentation extra ordinarily thorough and Kissinger handled the questions with assurance of a man confident that he knew his case better than his inquisitors Inasmuch as the President reiterated that Kissinger would not be permitted to testify before the committees in the halls of Congress an assertion of the protective cloak of a congressman asked if Kissinger would be available for consultations Obligingly Kissinger said he would discuss aspects of the treaty and interim agreement any time individually or in groups within the limits imposed by the President A purr of satisfaction rolled through the room As if his geopolitical and romantic labors coupled with his travels as a presidential emissary were not enough to engage his time and energy Kissinger has turned up at political meetings in support of senators up for reelection His latest political sortie was in behalf of Maryland Republican Charles Me Mathias a liberal senator who has opposed the President on several critical issues: The former Harvard professor is in short putting on a rentarkable show Not everyone at the White House is delighted witH the attention he gets and if he fehould stumble or falter thefe are those who will not shrink from trying to cut him off at the knees But as long as he serves the President with such virtuoso skill he can pile his laundry up in a corner gallivant about with Jill St John exchange banter with Soviet Defense Minister Marshall Grefchko and proclaim jokingly that he is trying to make the world safe for Persian belly-daiicers without too much worry of being toppled from the pinnacle he occupied with such relish and gusto Whatnot KContinued from Page 5) good conduct ribbon a honorable discharge a purple heaj-t medal a piece of shrapnel sorqewhere in his knee Ajt 22 heaven is two lumps of gladness in his the day he gets the first paycheck on his lifetime job the day the right giri proves at the altar she really meant yes At 25 heaven is the fearful day he fcoes to work with a smaller firm that pays less at the start but offers bigger opportunities and discovers he likes the new place After that heaven begins to conjie more slowly At 26 it is the day he moves into a house of his -own and -gets a property tax Tp list but a few more: At 40 it is being told by an orthodontist that the last of his three children have have his teeth straightened At 47 ft is kissing his first grandchild At 65 it is a gold watch a farewell letter from his boss and time to watch more sunsets At 72 it is celebrating his golden wedding anniversary still with the same old girl At 75 it is listening to a preacher at the funeral of a friend and feeling smugly that his own preacher will do a better job over him An at 80 heaven well heaven is where he has been for three years now and finally decided is a better place to live in rather than just visit 'Good Father Little Bit of a Mother' (Continued from First Page) Every Child Would Like His Parents to a kind of book based on research findings The psychologist said the trouble with many child-raising books is that they are based on theories which have scanty evidence to back them up The central core of both his research and his book is the well-documented observation that babies who are Development derstimulated develop as well as babies with adequate stimulation Just as fathers can enhance an development in important ways so can other things in the environment add to or take away from the chances of realizing his inborn potential according to Salk current research is aimed at finding how things like spending the first few days of life in an incubator or being Young Modem The Young Moderns a recreational club for alumni of the Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults during their afternoon meeting Monday communicated to their teacher Mrs Patricia Mulvany a message they want to convey to their friends and supporters throughout the area The message follows: Friends of York County Monday afternoon group is writing this letter to you in an effort to promote better understanding of the handicapped and to interest other handicapped adults in this area and nonhandicapped volunteers our program Most of the students in our class are able to go out on an average of twice a week and usually these outings are to the Easter Seal center so you can see why the society is important to us we are not at home we are doing many of the things other young adults do Those of us who can walk often help with lawn work and errands Those of us in wheelchairs with great effort and concentration can take care of some of our own needs like keeping chairs clean turning the TV on and off and changing our own records: We often assist our families by watching younger children the whole added up coherhently Tax Republicans charged that the middle class would be hit with a tax to pay for proposals but McGovern asserted that to $20000 income tax increases would be negligible From $20000 to $50000 there would be an appreciable tax increase and the real bite would come above $50000 and for McGovern said that his use of $1000 as the amount of tax credit to be given to each person was illustrative purposes and that his actual proposal as president might be $900 or $100764 instead Republicans also challenged McGovern on the size of budget deficits that might be incurred by his proposals and on which tax loopholes be would abolish and which he would keep No balance sheet in black and white emerged from the exchange but McGovern said that he definitely favors retaining tax breaks for homeowners investors in municipal bonds charitable givers and the disabled Answering charges McGovern said his defense propower destroy every significant target in the Soviet Union and Communist China 10 times over not a surrender McGovern has recommended spending $548 billion in fiscal 1975 The United States currently spends $76 billion and the Brookings Institutio as estimated by projecting current costs that 1975 expenditures will be between $85 billion and $100 billion Angela-Revolution (Continued from First Page) strong enought to free me you can build a movement to protect our community from racist bullets and billy Miss Davis said people have freed me Not the system of justice in the courts Hie black community rallied behind me as a symbol of all of the victims of the expanding movementt of resistance is spreading with lightning speed The potential for organized revolution is greater now than at any other period in she said must find ways to organize a movement to overthrow a criminal capitalist economic and political system that nourishes itself with oppression and The true revolution will be led by black brown and working poeple she said and the reconstruction of history must institute a socialist government and Lenin have provided us with the weapons to transform thte fabrics of our society We must be unmoveable unshakable in our she said have a terrible terrible struggle ahead of she said quietly THE YORK DISPATCH Provides complete news coverage in an accurate and understanding manner Dial 854-1575 for home delivery Also on sale at your favorite Siewsstand Adv ja24-tf helping with the house work such as dusting setting the table signaling the arrival of mail and washing outside windows We all agree that no matter what we do it takes a tremendous amount of effort and upon success provides an -equal amount of pleasure for both us and our families feel that York County through the activities of Easter Seals and the Young Handicapped Club of York County provided us with many experiences and pleasures and we would now like to offer you an opportunity for learning and what we hope could be a Give us a call and come to visit us at our new Easter Seal center when it opens in the fall Young Modems of the York Co Easter Seal 1 On this day in history: In 1928 Amelia Ear hart be- came the first woman to fly across the Atlantic She was a passenger on a plane piloted by Wilmer Stultz from Newfoundland to Wales In 1954 the Senate subcommittee investigation! of a clash between the US Army and Sen Joseph McCarthy ended after 36 days and 2 million words of testimony In 1967 Red China announced it had detonated a hydrogen bomb i In 1971 the United States signed an agreement returning Okinawa to Japan 1 At hought for today: British poet Sir John Suckling said are the baggage of life they are troublesome and hinder us in the great march yet we cannot do without Now You Know Los Angeles County contains 77 cities Go to church this weekend Candymakers Students Violence Marks Labor Dispute 5 At Hershey Firm (Continued from First Page) students They were reportedly confronted by striking members of Chocolate Workers Union 6464 of the Bakery and Confectionary Union AFL-CIO An egg was thrown and a fistfight ensued police said i Court Order Ignored -Some 3000 of the unionized workers had been on strike since Thursday in defiance of a US' District Court order aimed at their return A union officer -who declined to give his name said the union was not supporting the walkout Police officers said about 1600 workers were involved in the fracas Some there was no estimate of how i many reportedly roamed through downtown Hershey on a stonethrowing jaunt I State police were alerted but the crowd was dispersed after an hour There was no report of damages to the plant Hie wildcat strike began in the shipping department of the plant which makes the brown-wrapped Hershey Bar candies Workers walked off the job after teir employers told them they had to punch a time card before they went on a break This is a practice throughout the plant according to officials i 'Authentic Hero' (Continued from First Page) embattled Kontum in the coun central highlands In 1962 Vann was assigned to be an adviser in South Vietnam while he was an Army lieu- tenant colonel He quit a promising military career the next year over what he considered too heavy-handed US prosecution of the war He returned to Vietnam in 1965 as a civilian adviser Robert Komer a former head of the US pacification effort in South Vietnam delivered the eulogy to the man he called of the few authentic heroes of a grim unpopular war long a prophet without honor among his own Komer said ended up a widely influential member of the top US advisory able to practice what he so ardently WASHINGTON (UPI)' Nixon awarded the highest civilian citation posthumously to John Paul Vann i The Medal of Freedom was accepted by eldest son John Allen Vann 24 truly noble American a superb leader he stands with Lafayette in that gallery of heroes who have made another-brave cause their the accompanying citation said delivered from a mother who is heavily sedated have on the subsequent ability to learn Although the studies have not progressed far enough to produce findings there already is evidence elsewhere that those kinds of experiences increase the potential and may lay the groundwork for future emotional problems unless counteracted Salk says the period immediately after birth is a critical one for both the mother and baby Keeping the pair as close together as possible immediately after birth instead of separating them as now is done at many hospitals is important he says It may also be possible to enhance a learning ability by enriching his environment immediately after birth he said The enrichment would consist of extra rocking of the baby music and visual stimulation of various kinds Price Controls Stick Dairy Ordered To Halt Milk Discount Sales (Continued from First Page) Milk Board would be introduced before legislation adjourned for the summer Milk Board agreed to grant United Dairy Farmers a hearing to explain why it should be exempt from minimum prices set by the state Hearing Set A hearing for Louden Hill was set for June 21 in Commonwealth Court The injunction was issued by Judge Harry A Kramer Meanwhile the milk retailer must refrain from selling at prices lower than the state-ordered minimum Louden Hill earlier this week started selling milk for 93 cents a gallon and 53 cents a half-gallon in glass containers $103 a gallon and 57 cents a half-gallon in paper containers The regulated prices are $115 a glass gallon and 61 cents a glass half-gallon $119 a gallon and 62 cents a half-gallon for paper containers Shapp spoke to newsmen after meeting with farmer groups and seeking their support for his legislation The governor however was obviously worried about criticism he may receive for fighting United Dairy Farmers and Louden Hill price cuts in court Court Order Eyed To Bar Pilots' Strike (Continued from First Page) however and the Air Transport Association representing US scheduled airlines went into federal court in Washington to request an injunction against the threatened shutdown US District Court Judge George Hart scheduled a hearing today on the airline suit Trans World Airlines obtained a temporary federal court order in New York barring any work stoppage by its pilots A spokesman for nearly 6000 pilots at United Air Lines the largest carrier said those pilots would not participate in planned shutdown Pilots for Braniff International also said they would continue normal domestic service In Tokyo the Japan Airline Pilots Association said it would not take part in the work stoppage Association officials said they had no right to interrupt aii service without government and management approval Flights Suspended In London Friday night spokesman for airline pilots canceled a directive requesting participation in the shutdown The officials said the decision would be left up to individual pilots Meanwhile Swissair serving Command included six bridges 33 trucks 20 surface craft 39 warehouses and 47 pieces of railroad rolling stock damaged 'or destroyed The Command said plane a Navy RF8 Crusader from the carrier Midway was hit by enemy Antiaircraft artillery fire while on a reconnaissance mission near Thanh Hoa The pilot flew the aircraft out to sea rescued helicopter announced the of the Cavalry infantry the war The Command said the move would cut American strength in Vietnam by 2590 troops The disclosure that the brigade was being deactivated came less than 24 hours after the Command announced the start of the pullout of the only other remaining brigade the 196th at Da Nang Sources disclosed earlier that seven Air Force and Marine fighter-bomber squadrons at the Da Nang base had begun shifting their operations to three bases in Thailand One battalion of the 3rd Brigade ands ome helicopter units reportedly will remain behind for the present time as a ready reaction force operating under a regional command and brigade This 500 to 700 remaining southern EXPLO Success First Page) learns to love one participant to accept will love his love will the was a mass 80000-plus Cotton Another the field EXPLO on hand to mass rally filled beyond capacity sitting Graham at how few during the The handling of logistics came off than he said although there were reports that some delegates stood in lines for several hours to get a room or catch a bus or grab a bite to eat people mind a little he smiled Graham said he and the rest of the organization tried to them in six days as much as we could on how to win others to Jesus Christ And it had to be done in utter Graham said it is too early too evaluate the outcome but that it no doubt would have a great impact on churches may cause some of them (churches) to shift their own he said once the young people return home and face their elders in church will be amazed that young people are interested in old time The real test comes now Graham said These people will have to go back home maybe alone and face a father and mother who do not believe the same as they do exclusive Pod-moskovje suburb my family consider we owe Bobby a big barrel of vodka Thanks to him we have South Vietnam a good apartment for the first Spassky said Is a very charming guy His popularity is not politically motivated It comes from real esteem and admiration for Spassky said -Spassky also said much of the American support among fans from chess-crazy South America and Central Europe stems from sheer boredom with traditional Russian domination of the game hegemony of Soviet chess is boring everybody in the West and even some in the Soviet Spassky said The blond blue-eyed Spassky 35 has a wife who works as a technician In a refrigerator plant and two children aged five and 12 Asked if Fischer has any weaknesses the Russian replied he has some very serious weaknesses But ask me what they are because for the time being that is my not as part of the will mean roughly front-line infantrymen in the entire Young People Make Huge (Continued from neighbor until he his said he learns and love Christ he fellow man and this cure the social ills of Each night there gathering in the Bowl seating arena 5000 to 10000 sat on The last night of Graham was again speak at the nightly in the Cotton Bowl its 80000 seating Before the festivities in a large camper bus said he was amazed incidents occurred week SHILOH OBSERVANCES Shiloh Church of the Open Door the Rev David Haines pastor will hold these services on Sunday Sunday school will begin at 9:30 am and worship at 10:30 am The Youth meeting will begin at 6 pm Sunday and worship at 7 pm The mid-week Bible study will be held at 7:30 pm Wednesday WORD-A-DAY By BACH apocryphal (a-poltd-f al) aoJ- OF QUESTIONABLE AUTHORSHIP OR AUTHENTICrryj FALSE CONTERFElT c-rr 0Vlliy 171 by NIA Inc people played tennis Daley Victorious (Continued from First Page) and in their efforts to win the election majority of the delegates seeking unity and fairness offered me their support for the chairmanship Stevenson said mean no disrespect for Mayor Daley when I say that tactics used bn his behalf disrupt the party and frustrate the rising expectations of many for a voice in the conduct of their own He then withdrew from consideration as chairman and later cast his half vote for Daley All that remained was for Daley to sweep aside the light opposition of delegate Mrs Natalie Forman' That proved no tough assignment and the final vote was 133V2 for Daley 25 Vi for Mrs Forman Eleven delegates did not vote Daley then denied that there is division within the delegation no division in Illinois only the media and self-seeking people who want to talk about he said.

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Pages Available:
959,243
Years Available:
1876-2012