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— Key Wester Visits Here 3g : | im which it was stated that science 3 Citizen Staff Photo ATTORNEY A. B. BETHENCOURT (left), a former Key Wester now residing in Miami, greets Julio Cabanas, president of the San Carlos Institute. As president of the Cireulo de Cubana, a Guban-American Cultural group in Miami, Bethencourt has been {mspecting the facilities of the San Carlos Institute and con- ferring on-the details of a plan for the gathering of relief sup- iBLIND NEWSBOY I MAKES REGULAR RUN Specializing Doctor Dearth | i weekday by@ Man who can’t read | them or even See his customers. | MIAML (#—Speciaiizati blamed Tuesday for thhe. siortage Esco Dill, 56 and -blind for 18} ton, makes his rounds with 2| BY STANLEY JOHNSON —or apparent shottage — of doc- tors. German shepherd guide dog named | UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. —| Linda. ; 7 : <4 | Nationalist China's Foreign Minis- } : 5 Each moraing since June 1 they | yeh. ck \ The Southern Medical Associa- | 1.0 cot out with a bundle of copies iter George K. C. Yeb charged! tion in convention here heard a/of the pecatir Herald. Thurs. that “Stalin and his Com-} Panel discussion on specialization | Dill collects on Saturdays. He | Munist stooges do not really want a | keeps the accounts in his head. | truce” in Korea and called on the He makes deliveries on Sunday, | Uy. N. to declare communism a rach ‘Al alae ok too, and on . my the itinerary ir. Paul Williamson, director of | of man and dog takes one of its the general practice clinic of the | most unusual turns. University of Tennessee College of |. They pass. the church every Medicine at Memphis, said the ap- | weekday. But the dog never makes Parent shortage of doctors would |, move toward it. be almost entirely eliminated if On ccna mornings Dill says: pate = ee were in| «tina, let's so . church.” x jeneral practice. And Linda leads the way to the The present ratio is about .70 | church. general practicioners to 30 specia- lists where a ratio of 85 general practicioners would give the nation better medical care,” said Dr. Wil- liamson. in medicine is. vitally important but nevertheless overemphasized. security. Making his country’s major pol- icy address to the U. N.’s 6-nation General Assembly, Yeh said the Chinese Reds have suffered such huge casualties that the Peiping government does not dare to face its people “empty-handed.” Although it is commonly as- sumed that only the question of sending home prisoners is holding up a truce, Yeh declared, the fun- damental problem is that the Reds do not want a truce unless it will | “solidify and strengthen the ranks of world communism.” Yeh pointed out that some dele- said 49 per cent of hospitals bar the general practicioner from treat- ing patients he sends to them. Twenty-nine per cent of the doc- Dr. William H. Anderson,.Boon-|tors in the South control 71 per ville, Miss., called the family doc- | cent of the hospital beds, said Dr. tor the chief enemy. of cancer, but | Anderson. Ci'nese Nationalist Foreign Minister Challenges Stalin’s Views On Korean Peace Talks | gations have ‘sought ‘to solve the} jthreat to the world’s peace and | 8 repatriation problem through trans- fer of prisoners to the care of neu- tral countries. But, hé said. this might turn out to be only a de- layed manner of forcibly. sending | home those Communist -prisoners | 0. The Communists, Yeh said, could be expected to put “direct and in- direct pressure” on the prisoners once they were temporarily in their neutral refuges. Yeh also lashed world commu- nism for infiltrating and taking advantage of national freedom movements throughout the world. He recalled that China had strug- gled for years to free itself from colonialism and expressed his country’s sympathy for similar movements in other areas. But, he warned, those countries should be on their guard lest the Reds use $ | Friday, November 14, 1952... THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ~ Page 7 3-WAY SLEEPING PILL | LOS ANGELES (# — There’s a new. sleeping pill on the market that knoeks you out. keeps you out ‘for eight hours, and then wakes | ; You up. { ‘The pill with the built-in alarm { clock feature has three layers of | \different drugs. The first layer isi nembutal, which induces sleep the second, butabarbital sodium, whicb maintains it, and the core is dexe- drine,. which rings the bell in your} brain after eight hours. | The pills are on display at the |who have said they don’t want to | California Academy of General Practice Convention. They must be | obtained by prescription. pursue their own nefarious de- signs,” Yeh charged that Soviet Russia has substituted “‘satellization” for the imperialism of the past and as- serted that the Communist regime in Peiping “is as completely a So- viet puppet as the Communist re- gime in North Korea.”= He charged that the Chinese Reds had kept. themselves in power by executing 34 million persons | during the past five years, and that millions more have been con- | their nationalist movements ‘“‘to demned to a “‘living death.” Maybe He Needs Sound-Proof Bath NEW YORK w—Young Morton Bloom thinks nothing of singing 14 hours. a day—and. his neighbors think even less of it. In no dulcet tones it all came out in magistrate’s court Thursday, with 10 Queens residents living within a block of 17-year-old Bloom complaining that Ke sang almost every day from 7:30 a. m. to 9:30 at night. “If he could sing,” one com- plainant told Magistrate Charles F. | Murphy, “I wouldn’t mind. He yells jand it .cuts through you like a saw.” Bloom said he sang one song for ja vocal teacher three years ago and was told “I had possibilities.” Murphy, learning that Bloom | often stayed home from high school classes just to sing, told the youth: “There’s a talent scout looking for you—the truant officer.” Murphy decreed that Bloom sing only in the school auditorium or in ithe nearly-soundproof basement of his apartment house—and not for | 14 hours. plies for victims of Hurricane Fox which struck Cuba three weeks ago. The Miami group, which includes a membership made up of more than 50 per cent ex-Key Westers, is conduct- ing a drive similar to the one the San Carlos Institute launched over a week ago. : Lame-Duck Period Difficult For Government And People By ARTHUR EDSON ow cut your running costs (For JAMES MARLOW) WASHINGTON (#—We are in a curipus period of U. S. history. Harry S. Truman is President of the United States even though 33 million voters have said they want a change. And he will continue to be president, with full authority and responsibility, until Dwight D. Eisenhower takes over on Jan. 20. It’s an awkward situation. Any cabinet officer or other ad- ministrator who makes a decision or issues a statement knows he does so on borrowed time. Any diplomat abroad realizes he is speaking for an administration which has had a no-confidence vote by the people. Fortunately, Truman and Eisen- | hower appear to be making the | best of it. At Truman’s invitation, Eisen- hower has named a couple of go- betweens, and doubtless will name more. The transition should be as painless as possible. In the past the problem has been more acute, for two reasons. First, until the 20th Amendment to the Constitution advanced the inauguration date from March 4, the time lag was greater. Second, not all out-going si- dents and presidents-elect™ have displayed such willingness to co- operate as have Truman and Ei- er. Herbert Hoover says in his mem- oirs that he begged Franklin D. Roosevelt to co-operate and that Roosevelt wouldn't. Hoover. thinks this helped accelerate the slide into the depression. Undoubtedly the most critical presidential switch came in 1860 when Lincoln took over from Buchanan, The South was seceding, a nation was crumbling. The head of the Army, Gen. Winfield Scott, said fearfully: “A dog fight now might cause the gutters to run with blood.” Buchanan seemed to be going in eircles. He thought no state had the right to secede, but also that the government had no right to beep it from seceding. He therefore did little or nothing. Lincoln didn’t help him, Buchan- an had invited Lincoln to come to Washington if he wanted to, but a stayed home in Springfield, Some historians feel this period ef indecision may have prolonged the Civil War. There's not much chance that the time lag between election and in- auguration will be shortened soon. ‘The dates can be changed only by another constitutioal amendment. UTO Future Dark For Democrats In Polities By ARTHUR: EDSON (For James Marlow) WASHINGTON # — The Demo- | crats now must begin the tremen- dous job of digging out from a landslide that turned into an ava- lanche. 4 Not since 1928, when Herbert Hoover licked Al Smith, has their political picture looked so bleak. Everywhere they turn they face the election results piled up by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. What happens now? That's the question Gov. Adlai E, Stevenson .and National Demo- cratic Chairman Stephen A. ‘Mitch- ell discussed in a week-end meet- ing in Springfield, Ml, The answers.— if, indeed, -they had any answers—were not made public. But it's obvious that with Frank- lin D., Roosevelt dead and Harry S. Truman retiring, the party needs a leader. Stevenson stays on as head of the party, with the:tough job of trying to keep everyone: pulling together. It won't be casy. For one thing, he has been beaten, always a card- inal sin in politics. For another, he soon steps back into private life and will have no official’ post to help keep him and his party in the spotlight, By contrast, the Republican pic- ture is rosy. In addition to the presidency, the GOP will control the Senate, the House and have 30 of the 48 governors. Yet it takes no particularly acute observer “to” spot some . thorns among the roses. Many of those who voted for Eisenhower undoubtedly will ex- pect him to perform miracles—at a time when problems press in on a president from all sides. If they should. become soon dis- enchanted, it could lead to a Demo- cratic House in the 1954 off-year election. 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