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Page: of 12

Sebsedd i it
© the Nevado County Nugget, Wednesday, Oc!. 29, 1969
New president of hospitals
corporation tells philosphy
DR. JOHN M. RECTOR
"Good health care isthe backbone of our communities -without it we have nothing" is the
announced theme of Dr. John
M. Rector, new president of
Sierra Nevada Miners Hospital Inc,
A native of Nevada City, Dr.
Rector has returned after 27
years of private practice ‘in
San Francisco.
And he is well qualified to
practice. ‘just what he preaches, He has been certified by the
American Board of Pediatrics
and is an emeritus member of
medical staffs of Children's
Hospital, San Francisco; St.
Francis Memorial Hospital, St.
Mary's Hospital, Presbyterian
Hospital, San Francisco Medical Society, San Francisco Pediatrics Society, California Medical Association, American
Medical Association, Northern
California Pediatric Society and
American Academy of Pediatrics,
He is a past president of the
medical staff at St, Mary's Hospital, S.F. Pediatrics Society
and the Northern Calif. Pediatric Society. He also was chief
of pediatrics at St. Francis and
St. Mary's Hospitals where he
served on their advisory councils and executive committees.
Since his return to his home
town in 1962 he has served on
the Western Nevada and Sierra
Counties Health Facilities Planning Council and was elected to
the Sierra Nevada Miners
Hospital Inc, board of directors as a member at large
in 1968,
Dr. Rector, in accepting the
presidency of the hospital's
board of directors made the
following evaluation of the current facilities, local needs and
proposed program of development of the Sierra Nevada and
Miners hospitals:
“There continues to be acritical shortage of acute care hospital beds in our area. This will
intensify as our population
grows,
"To meet this need the
will continue its all out/ effort
to consumate the propo expansion of Sierra Nevada
Memorial Hospital with a target
date for construction to begin
early in 1970, Aside from additional acute care beds, there
will also be new ancillary facilities such as x-ray, laboratory, @mergency service, etc.
The new beds will include such
vitally needed services as a
pediatrics ward for the care of
sick children, improved nursery
and obstetrical facilities and a
sophisticated intensive carecoronary care unit for the critically iil. { ery
"Since Miners Hospital cannot
be feasibly enlarged and meet
various agency standards, the
board of directors has further
‘lected to continue with its present policy of continual upgrading and improving at Miners.
A common misconception. is that
large hospitals, per se, provide
better care. They are only ‘better’ because they are able to
provide more specialized medical and supportive servicevia staff and ultra modern equipment,
"Without a good medical and
dental staff, and/or without staff
support, there is little hope for
a hospital to keep abreast of the
times technically or physically.
By the same token, a hospital
must continue to offer its staff
the best-and most modern facilities available, thus assuring the
patient of the finest professional
care possibie,""
"Both as a physician and as
president of the board of directors I propose to work toward the
ultimate attainment of this goal,"
Dr. Rector concluded.
Theater group
planning play
for school kids
The Community Theater of
Nevada County made plans for
future stageproductions at a
meeting at the Firemen's Room
of the Nevada City Hall.
Discussion centered around
some type of Christmas play
for the children of Nevada City
Elementary School and Seven
Hills. School. This probably
will be held at the Old Nevada
Theater during the afternoon
of Dec. 17 or 18,
‘In addition, plans were discussed for a stage production
during the July 4th celebration
in 1970, "Guys and Dolls" or
"Oklahoma" or a similar type
of musical may, be presented,
Plans were discussed in detail as to how to improve stage
lighting in the theater which will
be handled by Community
Theater Vice President Bill
Barnhart, who has also beenrequested by the Liberal Arts
Commission to investigate
better lighting facilities.
Two new :nembers attended
and have expressed a willingness to help Community Theater in any capacity. They were
Sandra Hoffman (a new resident
from Oakland) and Kathy Jo
Langdon, a local teacher, Richard Willey, a member of the
board was named publicity
chairman. :
Chosen chairmen of various
committees were: Everett Porter, properties; Fred Forsman,
costumes; Pearl Glass, historian. Several others will be
appointed by President Jim Abraham at the next meeting.
Meetings are held the third
Thursday evening of each month,
usually at the Nevada City Firemen's Room of the City Hall.
Everyone is invited who has any
interest in theater, whether it
be acting, props, stage hands,
or just ordinary interest in what
is going on with one of the
theatrical grotips. © Goes rw eile
PE rie Arne ecm tile eee Oe Raper nm Wey te bli tap 0h ene ee ee <a
. LFF cee BON SS ee tee ee ets
Soren ee Be EE mee eee ag”
Man, as usual, started
most forest fires
The final curtain has fallen
on the 1969 fire season in Tahoe
National Forest and when results
were tallied man, as usual, was
credited with starting the most
fires during the year.
The federal agency fought 123
fires sweeping over 691 acres
in its domain from April 13
until Oct. 15,-when the season
"closed." Sixty five were caused
by man, .and lightning was responsible for the other 58.
However, the greatest acreage
loss came from lightning blazes,
with two of them chalking up a
total of 673 acres, and no measurable loss charged against the
remaining 53 small ones.
Nine man-caused fires blackened 18 acres. The other 56
fires started by humans resulted
in no measurable acreage loss,
The whopper of the 1969 season originated with lightning and
hit near Beckwith Pass Sept.
1. Driven by 40-mile-an-hour
winds, it consumed 670 acres
before it was contained. Six hundred forty acres were in TNF
territory, and flames ate into 30
acres in adjoining Toiyabe National Forest.
The TNF statistics prepared
by, Thomas Beard, fire control
officer, show that last year (the
1968 fire season) 128 fires destroyed 232 acres, Man caused
the lion's share of 67, and lightning was responsible for the
other 61.
Beard recalled that forest
personnel were baffled last year
concerning the cause of five
small fires in the Donner Summit area, They proved to have
been started by a locomotive
engine which "blew up."
He said finding a small piece
of metal in the debris led investigators to believe a crashing jet. airplane: had ignited the
sport fires. An airlines pilot
surveyed the metal, and confirmed probability of a crash,
However, a check revealed no
aircraft had been. reported in
the vicinity at the time. Fire:
detectives pursued the cause and
eventually identified the metal as
part of a turbo from a diesel
‘engine. Beard claims that "it
had never happened before," and
said other agencies andthe railroad were notified,
Beard is inthe midst of making
a summary of a decade of TNF
fire covering the 1960 to 1970
fire seasons, According to his
records there have been an average of 60 man-caused fires
per year during the decade,
The "severity" of fire weather
closely matches how many fires
start. Dpring long, dry and hot
seasons fires start more easily.
The most severe fire year, in
terms of drought conditions, was
1966 when there were 106 mancaused fires. The years 1960,
1964, 1968, and 1969 averaged
64 to 67 fires each year. In 1961,
1962, 1963, 1965, and 1967, called "less severe years," fires
TAHOE NATIONAL FIRE CAMPS then and now -Fire camps are established at all big
averaged from 41 to 58 per year.
There has been some increase
in numbers of fires each-year,
and that has to be due to more
forest visitors, Beard said. This
increase in people in the forest
is about eight per cent over the
decade. However, man-caused
fires have not increased in proportion to the increase of visitors, when annual fire weather
severity is considered.
‘Forest visitors are becoming more aware of the consequences of carelessness,
« Beard's report states:
"We all need to continue efforts. to reduce man-caused
fires, which are the result ofig—
norance. Records show that carless smokers started about 40
‘per cent of these fires; careless
campers 20 per cent; and young
children. about 15 per cent.
These three fire causes offer
the greatest potential to reduce
total fires."
The report continues:
"In the past 10 years on the
Tahoe there have been 600 mancaused fires. Two of these in
1960 became disaster. situations
and 90,000 acres were severely
damaged. Costs were very high,
The fires that start under severe fire weather conditions may
escape the initial attack of firemen, Extreme. damage and costs
can result, Prevention of fires
is well worth the moment of
time it takes to be careful."
1
fires and through the years have progressed from simple tables and stoves to military
installations, At the right it's "grub time” in 1929 at the Chicken Hawk Fire Camp. The i ct
graph below shows a modern fire camp at White Cloud,