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Show November 11, 1966 THE EUREKA (UTAH) REPORTER Page Four and Mrs. Hank Bates last a made trip to Nevadavisited where they Thursday, Lehmans Caves, and visited at Baker, and took a look around the old town of Oseola. Mr. 0 Mr .and Mrs. A. B. Webb and two children of Wendover spent four days here last week at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abe Webb. Other family members here for the I at St. Marys of the Wasatch week- Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coombs of Pleasant Grove, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Farnsworth of Santa-qui- n and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Roach of Payson, were in town Monday evening, attending the Eastern Star meeting. Bill Dean returned home on Sunday after being confined to the Holy Cross Hospital in Salt Lake where he was treated for an ear infection. His many friends are wishing him continued improvement. ITS ALREADY TWENTY BELOW IN DETROIT. As the nation looks ahead to winter, cold weather has arrived already Inc. in the Engineering and Research Center of at Detroit. Anticipating winter. Sue Ward visits the centers cold room to see a tractor being tested at 20 below zero. Such tests are routine for MF to ensure that tractors function properly under all weather conditions. Tractors go through dozens of electronic, mechanical, torture track and field test checks before being OKd by company engineers. n THE NATIONS TOP TELEVISION PROGRAMS AND BEST MOVIES ON XSl TELEVISION, THURSDAY, NOV. 10 6:00 Gilligans Island 6:30 My Three Sons 7:00 ADVISE A CONSENT; Henry Fonda, Waller Medical school changes urged care: Teaching hospitals must set up models in which to make a functional analysis- of medical care procedures and redefine roles of those engaged in health professions. Medical schools must become involved in solving the problem of providing total care for a community or a population - rather than fragmenting their efforts. Their might be cooperative programs with educational and social agencies to attack on a unified basis the medical-social problems of depressed schools and parent universities can bring about these studies and modifications in existing health care services, he said. Pidgeon Gunsmoke Jackie Gleason Show Channel 5 News MIDNIGHT LACE, Doris Day, Rex Harrison CHANNEL TUESDAY, NOV. 15 6:00 Rifleman 6:30 Red Skelton 7:30 Petticoat Junction 8:00 Daktari 9:00 Clown Alley with Red Skelton spending, NAM president says 8:00 9:00 10:00 10:30 - Reduce federal The role of the hospital as a health center should be rede- When a policy dispute left fined in terms of community the town of Hodgenville, Ky. need. Further, there might be, without police, Mayor C. P. a study of how best to plan Thurman directed traffic at a hospital facilities on a regional .downtown intersection. The basis. lYmayor kept things going until the Intellectual and physnly help came from the sheriffs ical resources of the medicalLJoffice and State Police. Hank Katchant iness and pleasure. Sunday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vem Nevers were Mr. and Mrs. Whitford Bate of Provo, Mrs. Joseph Stokes and two daughters of Orem and Tom Griffiths, Provo. Substantial reduction of federal spending is the most effective tool now available to combat inflation, W. P. Gullan-de- r, president of the National Association of Manufacturers, told the Senate Finance Committee recently. This may not be the easiest approach, but it can be the most fruitful one, he said. The NAM head called upon the Congress and the President to cut federal spending as as much as posquickly and sible, noting that the nation has arrived at a point where there is no workable alternative left. Domestic spending Federal outlays for purposes other than national defense rose by 11.5 per cent between the first half of 1965 and the first half of 1966, he pointed out. Neither the increasing cost of conducting military operations in Vietnam, nor the fact that our economy has been pressing against the ceiling of its productive potential, seems to have restrained the rising tide of civilian spending by the federal government during the past two years. We are glad to see that the President made expenditure reduction a major part of his program for meeting the present economic situation, the NAM president said. THE MENACE and daughters, Janet and Pam made a trip to Provo on Tuesday, where they combined bus- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fagley and daughter of Salt Lake were in town last Sunday, when Mr. Fagley conducted the Sunday morning services at the Methodist Church. American Medical Colleges. Robert H. Ebert, MD, dean of the Harvard Medical School, warned that medical schools now are in a precarious position. Their major support is from b'ological research, they have been unable to respond to national manpower needs, and they seem isolated from the community,' he said. Changes needed: Dr. Ebert said the medical education system must be reexamined and modified to fit the modem needs. In the past we have talked much about 'roles of doctors the generalist vs. the specialist without paying much attention to the kind of system in which they are supposed to work. Perhaps we should spend time defining workable systems before we define roles, Dr. Ebert said. He suggested these steps as poss:ble ways of solving pressing social problems of health 1. Mr. and Mrs.. Lynn Brady al said speakers at the annual meeting of the Association of i in Salt Lake, spent the end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Fitch, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Clare Van Aus-dof Kearns and Miss Rose Ann Ferris of Salt Lake, spent the weekend here at the home of Mrs. Van Ausdals and Rose Anns parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ferris. A reorientation of emphasis is needed if medical schools and continuing medical education are to play a meaningful role in providing health care services, that began July Miss Jane Fitch, a student weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wilde and family of Massey-Ferguso- Congress completed action and sent to President Johnson a bill authorizing $100 million for the Peace Corps. This will keep the Peace Corps operating in 1967 in the fiscal year 9:45 Channel 5 News 10:30 Boxing: Griffith vs. Archer 11:30 BRIGHT VICTORY, Arthur Kennedy, Peggy Dow FRIDAY, NOV. 1 1 6:00 Rifleman 6:30 Hogans Heroes 7:00 Wild, Wild West 8:00 MAJOR DUNDEE, Charlton Heston, Richard Harris i 1 SUNDAY NOV. 13 5:00 Lassie 5:30 Its About Time 6:00 Ed Sullivan Show 7:00 Garry Moore Show 8:00 Candid Camera 8:30 Whats My Line? 9:00 Secret Agent 10:00 Channel 5 News 10:30 CBS Reports 1 1 :30 David Susskind: 10:00 Channel 5 News 10:30 THE SELLOUT, Walter Pidgeon, Paula Raymond MONDAY, NOV. 14 6:00 Run, Buddy, Run 6:30 Lucy Show 7:00 Andy Griffith 7:30 Family Affair 8:00 Open End WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1 6 6:00 Death Valley Days 6:30 Beverly Hillbillies 7:00 Green Acres 7:30 Gomer Pyie-US- MC 8:00 i I RIDE VAQUERO, Robert Taylor, Ava Gardner JAILHOUSE ROCK, Elvis Presley D 10:15 Channel 5 News 11:00 Untouchables 12:00 Herb Jepko Show D SATURDAY, NOV. fl 5:30 Lost In Space n . 12 6:30 Pistols N Petticoats 10:00 Channel 5 News 10:30 BYU Football Highlights 11:00 TAKE THE HIGH GROUND, Richard Widmark, Karl Malden 9:30 Jean Arthur Show 10:00 Channel 5 News 10:35 Channel 5 Newscap 11:00 THE LADY GAMBLES, Barbara Stanwyck, I Stephen McNally FOUNTAIN AMERICA'S MO. 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