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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 20
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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 20

Location:
Bismarck, North Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page 20-Tuesday, August 8, 1972-The BISMARCK TRIBUNE rr I COMPACT REFRIGERATOR fits in narrow spacei small places The Prairie, Endless and Lonely 'A 24J4 wide 28 lb. capacity freezer with side-hinged door Adjustable cold control Pushbutton semiautomatic defrosting Chillermeat keepei Vegetable crisper Deep-shelf storage door with 2 utility trays, egg shelf, enclosed butter keeper Two-tone interior oi White and Avocado Photographs Give Sense Of Feeling By TED QUANRUD Tribune Staff Writer jr. '148 F.O.B. KIRKWOOO PLAZA Model RC10M3 PHILCO The better idea people in refrigerators. A- Earth Brings Happiness I I 1 I To review an art exhibit by a colleague is never an easy task, particularly when that colleague's work has long been a source of admiration for the reviewer.

The photography of Bismarck Tribune veteran Leo LaLonde, as displayed in an exhibit at E'lan Gallery, tells a good deal about Leo himself. The pictures are always introspective, usually humorous, and most are people-oriented. There is a great variety of subject matter in the display portraits, wildlife, action shots and landscapes. Leo has photographed them all superbly. First and foremost, Leo is a "people photographer." His picture of potato farmer Glenn Applegate of Fort Clark is an excellent example of Leo's ability to capture a person on film.

The picture says everything about the situation it's hard work and dirty work, but the harvest looks good. Leo also is a nature photographer, and to see him chasing after a duck in a slough with a long telephoto lens is a sight to behold. The picture of the water bird is this reviewer's favorite example of Leo's nature work. There is something very abstract about the shot, the stark contrast of the water and the shoreline with the almost-silhouetted bird seemingly floating on nothing. It is a very mysterious and very" beautiful picture.

Still another aspect of Leo's work are landscapes. Landscapes in North Dakota do not come easily; there are no spectacular canyons or mountains to guarantee a beautiful photo. Yet, Leo can go just north of Bismarck and take a picture that shows the vastness and loneliness of the prairie. The road in the picture seems to have no end, and only the mailbox in the foreground tells the viewer that people live nearby. Technically, all the pictures are excellent.

Leo never relies on a trick shot or a darkroom gimmick, unless it gives an added significance to a picture. His prints show what he sees, and that is almost always enough. The exhibit will hang at E'lan Gallery through Saturday. Gallery hours are from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

every day. This is an exhibit that should not be missed, particularly if you are interested in photography. The work of Leo LaLonde is an excellent statement of photography as an art, and the photographer as an artist. ft p----iinntl in NCH I COLOR TV PHILCO 1S Diagonal with HI-BRITE picture tube for greater color brilliance deeper, sharper color picture Transistorized Cosmetic Color Circuit for more Qtyjfaj natural, lifelike flesh tones truer color i ecu i3i "Cool-Tron" chassis-transistorized in 27 vital circuits up to final stages of picture amplification Transistorized 82-channel tuning system Illuminated VHFUHF channel indicators $28888 f.o.b. kirkwood plaza Contemporary styling.

Model C4550UWA 18" picture measured diagonally; 180 sq. in. picture PHILCO The better idea people The Swimming Fowl Enchants Us PHILCO 2-D00R NO-FROST 15.8 cu.ft. Refrigerator-Freezer Syphilis Study's Morality Was Queried 6 Years Ago Only 30" wide 1331b. capacity freeier freeier door shelves Adjustable cold control 4 refrigerator shelves, plus half-width shell Deep-shell storage door with shelves Enclosed butter keeper Reversible doors Cantilever adjustable shelves Model RD16A6 You've Got sion was made not to treat any of the participants." Brown wrote Buxtun a letter outlining that decision.

In the letter, Brown said the decision was made on the basis of the age of the participants in the study. Because massive penicillin therapy, the treatment for syphilis, can cause serious side effects and because it was believed the syphilitic condition of the survivors of the Tuskegee Study was dormant, there would be no treatment, Brown said in a letter. Color Additional F.O.B. Kirkwood Plaza PHILCO The better idea people in refrigerators. Addict Proved Facility in Court NEW YORK (AIM Since January, Charles Ross has successfully defended in four narcotics court cases, apparently undaunted by an addiction to heroin and unencumbered by a law degree.

Ross, 36, of Brooklyn, turned himself in Monday after U.S. Ally. Robert A Morse clwrged him in a complaint with impersonating a lawyer and contempt of court. U.S. Magistrate Max Schiff-nuin acknowledged Ross' legal self assurance during court arguments last April, then ordered the alleged impostor held in $15,000 bail after Ross admitted he was a drug addict.

He was discovered after a law clerk for U.S. District Court Judge Jack Weinstein called Ross about a case and found that no one at the number he gave had ever heard of the man. In addition to winning the four cases, Ross was said to have entered a plea of guilty on behalf of another client charged with sale and possession of narcotics and won him a five-year probationary term. He has been a self-employed title examiner for the past 15 years and the federal government said his legal training was limited to a six-month cor-resDondence course. Twin "Moist Cold VEGETABLE CRISPERSy hands of the PUS' Center for Disease Control in Atlanta.

Buxtun has since left the PI IS and recently graduated from law school. He gave copies of letters he wrote to CDC and CDC's responses to The Associated Press. He said when he first heard about the study, he asked CDC for whatever reports had been done on it. "On reading them I became very concerned because it seemed that the volunteers were not fully informed as to what they had volunteered for and as to what exactly was going to be happening to them," Buxtun said of the participants in the study. "Nobody apparently had concerned themselves with moral or legal issues involved." In the spring of l7, Buxtun said, CDC flew him to Atlanta where he met with four PUS poop.e, including Dr.

William J. Brown, then in charge of the venereal-disease branch at CDC. "The meeting resulted in a standoff," Buxtun said. "They decided I wasn't a madman as they had originally thought and they began thinking in terms of a review of the test. In 1969, as a result of the review, the deci WASHINGTON (AP) Six years ago an employe of the U.S.

Public Health Service questioned the morality of a federal syphilis study in Alabama. The result was an internal inquiry and an official decision to take no action. Peter Huxtun, who worked in the venereal-disease branch of the PUS in San Francisco, said in an interview that he raised the issue in In l9 he was told the experiment had been reviewed and that nothing could be done for the participants in the Tuskegee Study. The Tuskegee Study is a 40-year experiment conducted in Macon County, by the Public Health Service to determine the effects of untreated syphilis. Some 400 black men suffering from the disease in 1932 were enrolled in the experiment and never received any treatment for the disease.

At least seven died as a direct result of untreated syphilis. Even after World War II, when penicillin was known to be an effective cure for syphilis and the drug was readily available, it was denied participants in the experiment. What remains of the Tuskegee Study now, and when Buxtun first started asking questions about it, is in the Something to Worry About; Has it been years since you increased the insurance on your home and contents? Your insurance could be far below what it would cost to replace your home today. If you lost your home tonight, your family might have to go without many things you have always taken for granted. It has happened to others Don't let it happen to you! Insure To Value With FARMERS MUTUAL FIRE LIGHTNING INSURANCE CO.

Driscoll, N. Dak. AFFILIATED WITH GRINNELl MUTUAL REINSURANCE CO. GRINNEU. IOWA In a telephone interview from his home in Atlanta, Brown, who now is retired, confirmed the main points of Buxtun's story.

But he declined to comment on any moral questions concerning the study as a hole or the decision not to administer penicillin to participants in the experiment in the 1940s. "I wasn't even around then," he said. "But I do know hy made the decision we did in 1968 and 1969. When a person has had syphilis as long as the men we were dealing with at that time and the disease has caused no serious side effects, the chances are excellent that it never will.".

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About The Bismarck Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,010,285
Years Available:
1873-2024