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4 MEDINA JOURNAL-REGISTER THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1972 Batavia VA Hospital _ Has New Director BATAVIA - A long-time Veterans Administration em- ploye, Anthony A. Hosinski, has been named director of the VA Hospital here, it was announced Wednesday. Hosinski comes to Batavia after serving for over a year as a hospital administration trainee at the Washington Veterans Hospital. t ~ In his first position with the Veterans Administration, Hosinski served as registrar at the VA Hospital in Tomah, Wis., and later served in a similar capacity at the Veterans Ad- ministration Center at Wood, Wis. He later was promoted to the position of area representative of the Medical Administrative Service. in Columbus, Ohio. It was from the latter facility that he was transferred to the Dept. of Medicine and Surgery in Washington where he served the Veterans Administration in many capacities. Hosinski is a veteran of World War II. He, his wife, Alice, and their three youngest children, Mary 14, Anne 12, and Joan 9, will reside in- the director's quarters on the hospital grounds. His five older children live in Maryland. Longshoremen Freed; Strike Still Threatens LONDON (UPI)-Leaders of the British dockworkers union today turned down a proposed solution to the touchy container- ization dispute and voted to . start an official strike Friday, complicating the country's tan- gled labor situation. The nation's ports have already been shut down for five days by an unoffical strike protesting the jailing of five dockers. The men were freed Wednesday but the basic cause of the dispute-the containeriza- tion problem-was still unset- tled. _- The Trades Union Congress (TUC), which represents 10 million workers, voted Wednes- day to call a one-day national strike Monday if the five dockworkers were not freed. Since the men were released, the strike was apparently averted, but some unions asked the . TUC to go ahead with the strike anyway to show orga- nized labor's anger at the government's labor policies. The dockers contend the Jr. Auxiliary Organized At Shelby SHELBY - The new Junior Ladies Ausziliary of Shelby Fire Company met July 18 at 7 p.m. Officers for the year were elected as follows: Miss Linda Bentley, president; Miss Debbie Gay, first vice-president; Miss Robin DuBois, second vice-presi- dent;\ Miss Pam Bentley, sec- retary; Miss Cindy DuBois, treasurer. | Also, Miss Paula Seager, guard; Miss Carol Dingman, chaplain; Miss Lori Bentley, trustee; Miss Becky Bentley and Miss Bonnie Bentley, trustees. This Saturday the girls will help serve a dinner to the par- ents of the junior firemen. The group has decided to meet on the third Tuesday of each month, Miss Carol Dingman was elected as publicity chair- man. A fifty-cent attendance drawing will be featured to bring out the group at meetings. Plans 'were made to share a booth at the 4-H Fair with the junior firemen. Miss Dingman, publicity chair- man stressed that \new mem- bers are welcome, and to be eli- gible one must be related to a member of the Ladies Auxiliary or the Shelby Firemen.\ The meeting was closed with a prayer. FRIDAY ALL YOU CAN EAT containers, which are packed inland and loaded on ships as one unit, are taking their jobs away. Thousands of workers-air- port employes, bus drivers and engineers-who had struck in support of the dockers returned to their jobs today. The Industrial Relations Court released the five dockers from London's Pentonville pri- son after the House of Lords ruled their union, the Transport and General Workers Union (TWGU), should be held accountable under the law for their actions. The men, the first persons imprisoned on the new act, were jailed for defying an order by the Industrial Relations Court to cease illegal picketing of container depots. The Lords also reimposed a $137,000 fine on the TGWU for its members' failure to comply with the court order. The decision overturned a ruling by the High Court absolving the union from the fine, imposed by the Industrial Relations. Court. Walkouts in support of the imprisoned dockers during the week brought the nation's ports to a near-total standstill and halted the production of nation- ally circulated newspapers. Strikes grounded most flights Wednesday at London's Heath- row Airport and halted bus service in the city. | Almanac By United Press International Today is Thursday, July 27, the 209th day of 1972 with 157 to follow. © - The moon is between its full phase and last quarter. The morning stars are Venus and Satum. , ~ The evening stars are Mercu- ry, Mars and Jupiter. Those born on this date are under the sign of Leo. French novelist Alexander Dumas was born July 27, 1824. On this day in history: In 1789, the U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs was esta- blished, later to become known as the State Department. In 1909, Orville Wright set a world record by staying aloft in a plane for one hour, 12 minutes and 40 seconds. In 1953, after two years and 17 days of negotiations, the war in Korea was declared at an end. In 1954, Britain and Egypt agreed on terms ending the 72- {32:21 British control of the Suez EVERY - < FAMILY NIGHT T Grants Umbrella of Vaiues Yates Board Okays Election District Aide LYNDONVILLE Mrs. Dianna Robertson was named an inspector of election in District No. 1 in the Township of Yates at the July meeting of the Town Board. She replaces Mrs. Geraldine Kage, who declined the: appointment which was made at a previous meeting. A maximum security lock set has been ordered for the new main entrance door of the Town Hall from the Sargent Lock Company. The responsibility of all keys to the Town Hall will be with the Town Clerk, Lawrence Brown. All keys shall be signed out and signed in by the person using said key. No keys are to be passed on to new officers or officials without following this procedure. Lost or misplaced keys will be replaced through the Clerk for a $5 deposit of replacement key. All town officials and groups and organizations regularly using the building will receive keys. A resolution passed by the Board stated that, \Any person or group found misusing keys shall lose the privilege of possession. f Mrs. Jean R. Hyndman, librarian of Yates Community Library sent a letter of the list of trustees elected at the annual Library - meeting. - Millard Smythe, president; Robert Willgens, - secretary-treasurer; trustees, Miss Alethe Brown, Mrs. Crystal Billingsley, Donald Herry, Mrs. Katherine Connor and Mrs. Carolyn Whipple. An agreement between Henry Hannon, superintendent of Orleans - County - Highway Department and Town of Yates Superintendent Wilbur E. Bayne was signed for snow and ice control on county roads between the townships for a 5-year period of 1972-1977. The next board meeting will be Aug. 11 at 7 p.m. at the Town Hall. Anyone interested is welcome to the regular Town Board meeting, states Super- visor Everett Johnson. Physicians Board - Says No Clinic For Acupuncture ALBANY, N. Y. (UPD) - A state board of physicians has pricked the bubble of hope for a New York City doctor who wanted to open the nation's first acupuncture clinic. The Board for Medicine an- nounced Wednesday it would not permit such clinics, because the ancient Chinese treatment of in- serting pins into the body was still an \experimental proced- ure\ in the West. The board said, however, it might permit acupuncture re- search in medical schools or teaching hospitals. The board, a panel of 23 phy- sicians concerned with profes- sional conduct of medicine, ex- plained why it closed the clinic which Dr. Arnold Benson and five Chinese technicians opera- ted in a medical building on Manhattan's East Side for the week of July 12-19. \Acupuncture is not an accepted medical procedure in the State of New York at the present time,\ the board said. The board said it considers acupuncture on humans as \an experimental procedure which falls within the practice of medicine, and hence, can be performed lawfully in New York State only by or under the direct supervision of a physician licensed in this state, and in an institution appropriate for hu- man research. \The board recognizes the need for, and desires to encou- rage, further research in the techniques, mechanisms, of ac- tion, and uses of acupuncture. \However because acupunc- ture is considered at this time strictly as an investigational procedure, it should be perform- ed only in medical centers and teaching hospitals having com- mittees on human research, which will provide the necessary | peer review of protocols and a appropriate monitoring of such _ studies.\ _ SPECIAL GOLDEN FRIED FISH FRENCH FRIES, CREAMY |- COLD SLAW - ROLL AND BUTTER: Served 4:00 P.M. to 2:00 P.M. Open 9:30 to 8:00 P.M. MAPLE RIDGE PLAZA _ The committee's chairman, Dr. John H. Morton, a Roches- ter surgeon, added that Tesearch into acupuncture was \most MRS. DALE C. MILLIKEN (The former Lucy Marie LaMartina) (Wm. Covell Photo) Guipure Lace Enhances Gown ALBION _- Baskets of white Joyce McDonald and Miss and pink gladioli withmajestic Suzanne S.wiercynski were daisies decorated St. Joseph's R. bridesmaids. Miss Suzette C. Church for the 7 p.m.LaMartina of Rochester served ceremony - Friday - evening as flower girl. uniting in marriage Miss Lucy MarieLaMartina and Dale C. Milliken. Dale S. Swindon was best man. Ushering duties were performed by William Gates, Thomas United were the daughter of Landauer, Daniel Miller an Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel LaMartina of 2155 Clinton St. and the son of Mrs. Charles Milliken delicate gown of Alan Swindon. - Miss LaMartina chose a pure white, of 315 W. Bank St., and the late polyester organza and scalloped Charles Milliken. cotton Guipure venise lace. Miss Joanne Miceli attended as Presented in marriage by her maid of honor. Miss Patricia father, her A-line gown featured Burgio, Miss Jane Colella, Youth Critical; Awaits New Kidney Miss a high scalloped neckline with sheer yoke, long full sleeves gathered to a ruffle and lace edged redingote effectskirt that swept around to form a venise edged watteau chapel length ain. Tiny rows of venise lace - . tr ATLANTA (UPI)-A 17-year: accented the hem, cuffs, and old youth remained in Critical empire waist of her gown. She condition today following surge chose an organza banded bow ry to remove a transplanted neadpiece to complete her en- kidney his accept. The operation was performed Wednesday on Norman Turner who had been given a kidney from his father, the Rev. body Howard Turner, a Baptist minister,in an earlier operation last month. Spokesmen at Grady Hospital said that it may be months until another kidney which might match the youth's tissue could be found. Turner will be kept alive on a kidney dialysis unit which could cost up to $12,000 a year to operate. Donald Dixon of Grady's kidney center, said Norman's tissue type had been fed into a computer and seven participat- ing hospitals will be checking each timea kidney is donated for transplant to determing if it is a suitable: match for Norman's body. He said if a suitable kidney is found in any of the hospitals along the Eastern Seaboard, it will be flown to Atlanta for immediate transplant. HI LO TEMPERATURES NEW YORK (UPD-The highest temperature reported Wednesday by the National Weather Service excluding Alaska and Hawaii was 113 degrees at Palm Springs, Calif. Today's low was 41 degrees at Reno, Nev. important,\ and that the board \is confident that scientific studies will be pursued prompt- ly in the state of New York and elsewhere in the nation.\ Acupuncture specialists claim to be able, to cure a wide variety of illnesses, and cause a type of anesthesia, by insert- ing fine needles into strategic parts of the body. Tonite thru Sat. Mat. Sat. 2:15 Evenings 7:00-9:00 \It's still the same old story, a fight for love and glory.\ ¥ E, Technicolor® - A Paramount Picture, -\ DLAY TT _ ACAIN, SAAP 7% wouldn't semble with a full cathedral length mantilla edged with the exact same lace of her gown. The bride and groom received their guests at a reception held at the Albion Recreation Center, State St., Albion. we e e aca as a so\ o a 0 a o a a a a 0 \04090 ele - rockets DR. LAWRENCE S. Viets Withdraw _ Economist From Citadel ___ By ALAN DAWSON SAIGON (UPI)-South Viet- namese soldiers today pulled out of the fortress Citadel they stormed in Quang Tri City 'three days ago. South of the city, North Vietnamese troops overran two key links in the defenses of Hue. Military spokesmen said government marines replaced paratroopers today in the battle for Quang Tri city, captured by the North Vietnamese 88 days ago, but efforts to retake the 13-acre Citadel were temporari- ly abandoned when the para- troopers were withdrawn. A U.S. military source said the marines did not try to enter the fortress. He gave no explana- tion. Forty miles south of Quang Tri, U.S. sources said Commu- nists overran Fire Bases Bastogne and Checkmate, two vital links in the defenses of Hue, the country's third largest city 400 miles north of Saigon. U.S. advisers have predicted a North Vietnamese assault on the old imperial capital before Oct. 1. e A Saigon command spokes- man said the paratroops were withdrawn from the Quang Tri fighting and sent to - an undisclosed area for a new operation. The marines who replaced them fought a six-hour battle northeast of the Citadel today, the spokesman said, killing 53 Communists and capturing 32 weapons. He said there was no report of marine casualties. - U.S.| sources said heavy fighting was under way today in the area around Bastogne and Checkmate, 12 and 13 miles southwest of Hue. One source said Bastogne has changed hands six times since the Communist offensive in South Vietnam began March 30. The sources said - North Vietnamese gunners during the night blasted the two bases plus Fire Bases Birmingham, T-Bone and Lion along the Hue defense line-with more than 3,000 rounds of 122mm artillery, and mortar shells. Another 150-round barrage of mortar and recoilless. rifle fire hit an element of South Vietnam's 54h Regiment a mile from Bastogne but the infantrymen counterattacked and killed 17 Communists at a cost of two government troops dead and six wounded, the Saigon command said. In a separate development, the Saigon command today said 50 South Vietnamese marines were killed north of Quang Tri July 11 in the worst single helicopter crash of the war. A spokesman said Communist gunners downed the chopper in the middle of a North Vietnamese - antiaircraft - em- said 10 Ameri- xx 'o'lfofcfog'azofizczfloh'o xd . LAMB placement. He ete! Physicians Study Acupuncture By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. Dear Dr. Lamb -Is acu- puncture very popular in the United States? Can it be used for all types of opera- tions? Could it be used for a prostate operation? Dear Reader - No, acu- puncture. is not popular in the United States. In fact, it's safe to say that most doctors know almost nothing about it. Certainly this would be true from the standpoint of experience. T here has been an upsurge of interest in this procedure since the President's China trip. Just how successfully it can be used in American medicine will need to await clinical grial by medical investiga-, ors. The old traditional acu- puncture in Chinese medi- cine merely consisted of sticking needles into the body at specified points. It would be difficult to see how this alone would produce enough of an anesthetic re- action to the patient to en- able one to perform major surgery, let alone cure dis- ease. Old Chinese teachings believed that insertions of needles at various points in the body cured all sorts of disease just as a result of . the procedure alone. From the available early | reports by only a few observ- ers it would appear what the 1 Chinese are doing today isn't - traditional acupuncture at all, but in reality the in- serted needle which is sup- posed. to reach a nerve may be connected to an electrical . current. Nerves literally are the body's electrical wire I and whenever you start in- > troducing electrical current along the nerves it is a whole new ball game, not fi just acupuncture. A number of investigators have used electrical anes- - thesia in this country in - the past. Our scientists know . I electrical current introduced into a nerve can relieve pain. Medical World News recently reported the case of Ted Endrzejewski, a 36- year-old Pennsylvanian, who is protected from pain by a s m all electrical current. After a spinal injury he had such severe pain he could not drive a car, have sexual intercourse or even get a night's sleep. Now he can, with the aid of an electrical pack with wires that are in- serted into the spine. When he begins to feel pain he turns a simple dial and elec- tric current stops it. I would suspect there are not going to be many people having prostate operations' under acupuncture right now, but if the use of the more modern techniques with the electrical impulses prove to be effective, then I expect there will be a mad rush on the part of, the American physicians to learn how to use it. In the meantime, if you contem- plate anything «as sensitive as a prostate operation, I would suggest that you let your doctor stick to the old- fashioned, American system of using an anesthetic. Dear Dr. Lamb - D o es plucking the eyebrows cause eancer? _ Dear Reader-No, it won't cause cancer, but an indi- vidual who is prone to have pimples is apt to develop an occasional infection at the base of the hair follicle where the hair is pulled. (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) ._ Do you have questions about the menopause? If so, you'll want to read Dr. Lainb's booklet in which A - he answers your questions about this ~ subject. Send 50 cents to Dr. Lamb, in care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019. Ask for \Menopause\ booklet. cans were wounded in the incident and two are missing. A government spokesman, only hours before today's withdrawal from the Quang Tri Citadel: said the Communists remained in control of the western portion of the 19th Century fortress but that \(North Vietnamese) resistance is weakening every day.\ The paratroopers Wednesday raised their country's flag over the installation but sources . said half of the Citadel was still in Communist hands. The U.S. command said 24 U.S. B52 bombers. dumped more than two million pounds - of explosives on Communist troops and supply dumps. within 14 miles of Quang Tri City overnight. Eight more flights of the big planes unloaded about 1% million pounds of-bombs on suspected North Vietnamese positions around Hue. _ Eastern Has Anti-Hijack Device MIAMI (UPI) - Eastern.Air- lines said Wednesday it has de- veloped an anti - hijack device which makes it impossible to open the rear door of a Boeing 727 jet in flight, while permit- ting the door to open while the plane is on the ground.. Col! Frank Borman, Eastern's senior vice president for opera- tions, said the move will pre- vent hijackers from parachuting from the rear door of 727's as has happened several times in recent months. - ' He said it also will assure that the door can be opened from inside the cabin when the plane reaches the ground. \In an emergency situation, it could be very important that the rear door functions normal- ly on the ground as an addi- tional exit,\ he eaid: Borman said the new device will be actuated automatically in flight by aerodynamic pres- sure. \It will prevent the reai' door [_ - from opening,\ he said. \The - crew cannot override it. They will have absolutely no control over the mechanism in flight.. But on the ground the crew can - open the door from controls in the cabin.\ ' He said the device will be in- stalled on all of Eastern's 7T2T's. + Praises ' By MIKE FEINSILBER | < WASHINGTON (UPI)-Nobel prize-winning economist Paul A. Samuelson congratulated Congress today for producing multibillion-dollardeficitsand urged it not to relax its efforts now. no In testimony prepared for Congress' Joint Economic Com- mittee, Samuelson said deficit spending over the past few years was solely responsible for the healthy state of today's economy, . with - employment rising, unemployment dropping and profits soaring. \Congress has rasponsibly‘ insisted upon budget deficits that <by historical standards would: have been considered large,\ he said, but which have been shown \to: be,. vitally . necessary to turn an anemic expansion into a vigorous one.\ He contrasted the economy's vigor with the sluggish growth of the Eisenhower administra- tion, when, he said, Congress © heeded administration \warning against the excesses of Sodom and Gomorrah\ and trimmed . | government spending. - Samuelson, a professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is one of a number of economists who believes increased government red ink spending is necessary to take up the slack when private spending dries up and the economy dawdles. His advice stood in sharp contrast with a message President Nixon sent to Capitol Hill Wednesday warning that a deficit this year in excess of the one he had proposed would be Hurtful. _. i \The inevitable result would be higher taxes and more income-eating inflation in the ‘forgx of, higher prices,\ Nixon said. > _- ool WRANGLER Comfort Knit SLAX $12.95 . Just arrived in 100% Dac- ron Polyester. Sizes 29 to 44 in assorted lengths and colors. Metz Brothers COOK WHOLESALE : Cooks Catalog Showroom 2 Will Be Closed For Vacations . July 31 to‘Aqg. f .'oooioooooooocpoooooooonOfgoooooooooooo ATTENTION SACRED HEART CLUB MEMBERS AND GUESTS - Sacred Heart Annual Society . N. Gravel Rd. - SUNDAY, JULY 30th at Sacred Heart Club Grounds Starting at 1:00 p.m. ® Roast Beef Dinner served by Sacred Heart Society Beginning at. 12 noon ' Adults $2.75 - Children $1.50 e0e000000000000000000000000000000000000060 Picnic Medina, N.Y. Burglary of your personal property. Paul Garrick, Inc. will loan you an engray- ~ ing tool, to permanently mark your valu- ables with your Social Security Number. A free window sticker, indicating your per- sonal property has been engraved, will also be provided. , Stop at our office to reserve the tool. . PAUL CARRICK, INC. 519 Main St. Medina, New York aassnep -