91 COL^o, "Eft S^’ ’ 28^2 2nd Class Postage at Tryon, North Carolina 28782 and additional post offices. Postmaster: send address changes to The Tryon Dail) Bulletin, PO. Box 790. Tryon. N. C. 2«782 THE WORLD’S SMALLEST DAILY NEWSPAPER Founded Jan. 31, 1928 by Seth M. Vining (Consolidated with the Polk County News 1955) Jeffrey A. Byrd, Editor and Publisher The Tryon Daily Bulletin (DSPS 643-360) is published daily except Sat. and Sun. for S35 per year by the Tryon Daily Bulletin, Inc. 106 N. Trade St., P.O. Box 790, Tryon. N.C. 28782 The Tryon Daily Bulletin Phone 859 9151 Printed In the THERMAL BELT of Western North Carolina 20 Pages Today Vol. 65 - No. 162 TRYON. N.C 28782 WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25,1991 200 Per 1 ops The weather Monday, high 82, low 47, hum. 72 percent. Peter Hahn stopped Tuesday morning with a "communica tion" and a comment. The $160 billion dollar figure reported in a conversation between Con gressmen Charles Taylor and Newt Gingrich couldn't be right, he said. Malpractice insurance and related costs couldn't be costing America $160 billion dollars a year, he said. That's half the national defense budget. Well, I wasn't sure if it was or wasn't. So I went to the copy drawer to pull out the original to see if The Bulletin made a typographical error (which rarely occurs anymore!). No, in fact that's what the Congressman's press release said - $160 billion. Well, Congressmen have been known to make typo graphical errors. So, I called Doug Bassett, the LA (legisla tive assistant) who issued the press release for Taylor's office. He looked up the Employee Benefit Research Institute Spe cial Report just issued this month and found that America spent an estimated $676 billion on health care in 1990 - 12.4% (Continued On Back Page) No School On September 30 There will be no school on Monday, September 30, sche duled as a teacher workday. From 8:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. on September 30, Polk County teachers will meet with Dr. Willard Daggett in the library at Tryon High School to begin the curriculum process for grades 6-8. Accident Reported Kathryn Potter of Tryon was charged with unsafe movement after an accident on Pacolet Street in Tryon Monday. Tryon Officer Frankie Greene said Potter backed her 1969 Volkswagon out of her parking space in front of the McCall, McCall & McCall dentist office into the path of a 1988 Ford pick up truck driven by Brad ford Price of Columbus. Greene said no one was hurt, but $750 damage was done to the pick up truck, and $250 damage to the VW. Correction Bobby Foy of Tryon says he was injured in a collision while riding his moped in Columbus last week. While he had no broken bones, Foy said he is out of work with a knee injury and a neck injury. A story Tuesday reported no injuries in that accident. Eloise Johnson Johnson Honored Eloise T. Johnson, Home Economist with the Polk County Cooperative Extension Service, has received the Early Career Award of Excellence by the North Carolina Association of Extension Home Economists. She was recognized for her work with Habitat for Humanity Home Owners Association, working with the Social Ser vices Department to help food commodity recipients become more knowledgeable of ways to use the food they receive, pro grams on the awareness of the abuse problem in Polk County, networking with agencies and organizations to provide educa tional information to county citizens and strengthening the home economics program. Eloise has been working for the Polk County Extension Service a total of nine years. Can St Luke's Help Doctors Prepare For Future Stability? Today we present the fourth and final installment in a series of stories by Claire Wharton on the challenges facing the Thermal Belt medical commu nity. "Medicare is here; it's with us," said St. Luke's Hospital Board Chairman Joe Claud. In fact, Medicare is going to become a major factor in health care everywhere as America's "baby boomers" enter retire ment by the year 2010. And by the time the baby boomers are over 60, there will be a smaller work force footing the bill, said Dr. Richard Tri- firo, a family practitioner in Columbus. However, industries and cor porations in the future will likely balk if the difference between Medicare reimburse ments and high medical charges continue to be passed on to private insurance and self- paying patients, Claud said. In the face of these chal lenges, the tnistees and admin istrators of St. Luke's Hospital have not been idle. In the past five years the hos pital has implemented a geriat ric program, Care Givers, and (Continued On Back Page)