The Key West Citizen Newspaper, March 24, 1953, Page 3

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By SAM DAWSON ~ Use Of Foreign Oil In US. Gets Protest From 2 Groups . NEW YORK .»— The swelling |river of foreign oi! flowing to} these shores is bringing a loud| clamor today from two sources: | Coal mine operators and work- | jers object to the competition of \the foreign fuel. | Small American oil producers |and even big companies who have jonly American vil to peddle are | ;asKing congress to erect quota! jdams against the flood of the 4 |cheaper foreign product. Ist LT. CHARLES J. SAN- CHEZ, Medical Service Com- pany, is spending a forty-day furlough in Key West with his family, following a 15-months’ hitch of overseas duty, six months of which were spent in the combat lines with the 65th Infantry Regiment. Lt, Sanchez is the son of Dr. and Mrs.: Joseph C. anchez, 1112 Varela St. His wife Annelle and two children, Lorna Blanche, 3, and “Terrance Charles, 2, have been making their home there while he was overseas. Born and raised in Key West, Sanchez attended Truman Elementary and Key West High School. He attended college at Gainesville, majoring in pharmacy. Prior to his enlist- ment in the army in October, 1951, he worked at Miami Springs Pharmacy in Miami. After his basic training, he was sent to Korea in December, 1951. For the first seven months he was with the Medical Supply Company, and was transferred then to combat service. He arrived in San Francisco on March 18 and flew directly to Key West, arriving here March 19. Upon completion of the forty-day furlough, he will be assigned to 3441 American Unit, U.S. Army Hospital, Camp Gordon, Georgia. s’ Used | with the 278th Regirnental Combat CAMP pRUM, N. Y. W—Incle- | Team. ment weather barred parachute.| Places of the 1,500 jumpers were jumping out that didn’t stop the |taken by “proxies,” man-sized 82nd Aarne Division’s war | bundles jettisoned trom Air Force games. in tv simulated jumps ,men of |Mne? Troops in the drop * zone the difision’s 3 Parachute ‘Pro» 325th Regimenta vent into action carrying out or- Comba Team established a peri- | 8anizational problems as soon as meter and began skirmishing with | their proxies landed. fF BEES SP NED Tuesey, March 24, 1953 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN USED CAR LOT PHONE 2-5881 RED BRICK GARAGE CORNER SIMONTON and GREENE STREETS TODAY'S SPECIAL .. . SPECIAL Our Loss Is Your Gain! FULL PRICE 1946 BUICK, Sedanette $ 495 1951 HENRY J 1950 STUDEBAKER, Champ. ____. 1095 1947 HUDSON, Sd. 1948 FORD, Fordor - 1948 FORD, Conv. 1950 STUDE., Champ 1946 PLYMOUTH 1947 PLYMOUTH. Tudor 1949 MERCURY, Sport Cp. 1950 CHEVROLET, Station Wagon 1195 Many Others Also The BEST DEAL In The State See Us For The Above Used Cars Carry A | SE. Warranty 6,000 Miles Guarantee Al USED CAR LOT DIAL 2.588) Oil imports now top one million barrels a day, about twice the rate in 1948, according to the In- dependent Petroleum Assn. of America. | American production, mean - |while, is being cut back—Texas next month will allow only a 19- day statewide flow from its wells. Texas has cut protuction in four months out of the last five Small oil companies contend that with production cut back and prices held down by cheap foreign oil, they haven’t the money or in- jcentive to drill wells in search of new oil sources—as defense pro- gram goals call for. | The Association’s import policy {committee is asking Congress to !limit total imports of crude pe- troleum and its products to 10 per cent of the domestic demand dur- ing the same period in the pre- vious year. At the current rate this would cut impcrts by about 300,000 barrels a day. “Seven large Airerican, British and Dutch firms control substan- |tially all of the oil imported into {this country,” an Association spokesman says. ‘Their interest must not be placed before the in- ; terests of this country.” | The importers have their an- {swers to this. One is that they have large sums invested in their overseas oil fields and refiners and that this oil is cheaper be- cause of labor conditions and free- ;dom from conservation laws abroad. They argue that these oil developments have helped to hold ‘back the spread of Communism in those areas. Oil importers also contend that imports are necessary to develop |and maintain this country’s world sources for emergencies. This fits in with a widespread |demand outside oil circles that | United States natural resources be |saved by using up the other fel- |low’s first through imports. To this the Independent’s pres- ident, C. H. Lyons, Shreveport, La., replies that we are develop. Page 3) ing oil fields in the Middle East | which we might be unable to pro- tect if the Russians decided to take them over. Defense plans play a large role in the dispute. The U. S. govern- {ment wants oil reserves in this country built up well above cur. ;rent demand for use if war cuts | off, foreign sources. | Oil companies with no foreign {oil to sell want higher oil prices lif they’re to risk their money on yerarching for more oil here Companies with both domestic | and foreign oil sources say that if they're to put money into drill- ing here, they should be allowed to bring in their cheaper-produced | foreign oil angel! it here to help |pay for building up domestic re- serves Some in the business want the industry to settie its own fig before Congress steps in. Volun tary cut-backs in oi! imports would appease domestic producers. One oilman says it wovld “cause do. mestic production to perk up like desert flowers in a rain.” SMU HAS RARE BIBLE | DALLAS \—One of what is claimed to be the only two known | copies of the large church a of the Geneva Bible is at the Per- kin's School of Theolozy at South, ern Methodist University, here The copy is on loan from Sum merfield Roberts, Dallas oil oper- ator, who acquired it 10 years ago. This Bible, printed about 1550, | was a strongly Puritan compiled by the stern John Calvin. The Geneva v n was the Bible of the Pilgrims and | the settlers in Virginia. ref Young Medics Only Flunkies By Health Plan By FRANK CAREY AP Science Reporter ST. LOUIS % — Young family doctors would be just ‘‘flunkies” for under a “group an’s health sion, a committee of fam- ily physicians says And the young doctors would have to answer all the calls in the wee small hours of the night for their specialist colleagues in the group, the committee charges in expressing a somewhat dim view of the “group practice” proposal. In fact, the committee said, such a system could well mean the elimination of ihe family doctor from the Amer scene by dis- couraging young doctors from en- tering general practice. The comments were made in the annual report of the Commission on Legislation and Public Policy of the American Academy of Gen- eral Practice: (AAGP). emy opened its annual yesterday The academy meeting commission siudy of various ade by f the Nation, which was Dr. Paul Magnuson of Chi One of the recommendations of the latter com- mission, now officially dis banded after a year’s work, was that doc- tors, in so far as possible, band themselves into ‘groups’? so that patients could get a kind of one- package treatment from a team in- cluding various kinds of specialists —and also a general practitioner or family doctor. “The Ma: lieves that ideal arrangement, n commission be- practice’ is the Private Cates Is Assigned For Basie Training Pvt. Alton” Kenneth Cates, of Mr nd Mrs. William Cates, William St.. has been as- to Company 22nd lion The acad-! said | the | 1 Commission on} emy commission’s report, “and goes on to state that the solo prac- titioner cannot render comprehen- sive care. “They soften this by saying that \there should be a general prac- ititioner on an equai status with the specialists in the group, but knowing full well the difficulties jthat the general practitioner would jencounter in such a setup, they |have suggested that this is the place for the man who has just |completed his training.... | “Without discounting certain ad- | vantages of group practice, at least for the doctors comprising the group, we believe that it is the quickest and surest way to en- tirely eliminate the family physi- cian...” The report said this would be true “because after making all of the night calls and doing all the ‘flunky’ work for the specialists in the group for a couple of years, the young general practitioner would be thoroughly convinced that ne had chosen the wrong career, and that just any one of the ever- {increasing specialties, in which |there might be an opening, offered \a better life for him.” SPECIAL Complete Electrical i TUNE-UP , \| $5.50 for 6 Cyl. | $6.50 for 8 Cyl. (PLUS PARTS) | Satisfaction | Guaranteed | |] CARBURETOR - GENERATOR BATTERIES - STARTER GENERAL TUNE-UP Murray Auto | Electric 105 Simonton Street DIAL 2-2851 | | KENTUCKY BLENDED $4.62 4/5 QT. 86 PROOF + 51% KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY + 49% MEUTRAL SPIRITS - THE BOURBON DE LUXE COMPARY, LOUISVILLE, KEMTUGKY said the acad- son asic train- | States Army 1 artillervm Private ( will be spe where he will damentals of learn to use and fire infantry weapons and practice Army com bat tactics During the final eight weeks he will be taught artillery techniques and receive training with the 105 mm. howit After completing his basic t ng, he will be re- assi d for duty with an Army artillery unit try training t the fun- ering various Georgetown Opens New MD Clinie WASHINGTON (?) nic de. muscular dystroph wastes away even- scular system nd s and George- fea physical therapy for victims of the disease. The treat n cure, he life Subscrihe to The ( NO MINORS t eight weeks | | | is a non-con- | | aga Poor Little Hill! You're looking at a very discouraged hill! Ever since that ribbon of paving outlined it, it has been a challenge to motor cars. For miles and miles it winds up the side of a mountain; and it has sharp curves, and steep grades that spring out of the curves so a driver can't get a start. Half-way up, there’s a watering place—put there so drivers can stop and refill their radiators. Yes—it has been quite a hill. But not any more! The driver of the car in the picture above took off at the base and sailed nght up to the top—and never gave it 2 thought. You see, he’s driving a 1953 Cadillac—with its great Ingh compression 210-horsepower engine— and its vastly improved Hydra-Matic Drive. . . . We heard recently of two men who drove from Florida to Detroit—in a 1953 Cadillac. The driver had made this trip before—and as they left Knoxville he said to his : “Man, are we going to find a hull Sicwens has and Laegen?” After an hour or so, the passenger said: “Where is the hill?” And the driver said: “Just wait!” So they waited—and presently they saw a sign which read: “Lexington.” The driver was dumbfounded. “I can't understand it!” he said. “There used to ind a hill there—a dig one! 1 know from experience. * s 7 Naturally, this great car gives you more than. the ability to master hills. "% When you float along with a tremendons reserve like this, you have the easiest ride umaginable. It gives you confidence, too—and helps you: to relax—for you know you have the power Pp emergeacy that may arise. It makes the whole car a symphony in motion. In fact, the nde is so smooth and soothing that, not infrequently, passengers sleep as-they ride. Come in and try it for yourself. The car is waiting —and it's an expenence you ought not to forege. MULBERG CHEVROLET CO. Corner Caroline St. & Telegraph Lane PLM ee DIAL 28748

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