KEEPING PARROTT HOSPITAL OPEN COMPLETELY DEPENDENT ON DOCTORS1 COOPERATION by Jack Rider The Lenoir County Board of Commissioners and the Trustees of Parrott Memorial Hospital are making every possible ar rangement to keep the county’s oldest hospital open, until the county’s newest hospital is com pleted but all involved agree that keeping the hospital open is completely dependent on the cooperation of the medical staff of Lenoir Memorial Hospital. All agree that hospitals can not operate without doctors. All agree that the 55 beds of Parrott Hospital are vitally need ed until the new county hospital is completed. , All agree that the new hospit al will not Be in business until " late in 1972, despite promises py construction officials that it will be ready for occupancy by the end of this year. All agree that Dr. Dexter With erington has been placed in a position where he had no pro fessional alternative but to re sign the post he has held at Parrott Hospital for the past sev eral years as chief sturgeon, ad ministrator ahdemergency room attending physician. The death of several veteran staff members of Parrott Hos pital, the decision of others to no longer admit their patients there and the pressures of mod ern medicine all combine to make Witherington’s decision wise and inevitable. > Until its medical staff dwindl ed to its present level of just Witherington and Dr. Clifton West the hospital was operating at a'profit, Respite the fact that its charges were considerable be low those of Lenoir Memorial Hospital. When the county embarked upon a program to build a large new hospital three years ago it was recommended by the North Carolina Medical Care Commis sion and the Duke Endowment that both existing hospitals be closed, and as part of that rec ommendation it was agreed that the county and the Duke En dowment would equally share the purchase of privately owned Parrott Hospital for $300,000 when the new hospital was open ed, or at such a time as the trustees of Parrott Hospital de cided it was detrimental to the financial well-being of the hos pital to keep it opened. ' This latter decision was reach ed on January 20th of this year because reduced patient load at the hospita} had put it in a mon ey losing posture at the time of the year when hospitals or dinarily enjoy their biggest flow of customers. And at the same time the pa tient load of Parrott Hospital was falling to a money-losing lev el patients were either being NUMBER 43 TRENTON, N. C., THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1971 VOLUME xvm Two Killed Saturday Night in Headon Crash Three Miles South of Snow Hill ’ »."? ' : - V Both drivers were killed in the headon crash of a car and a pickup truck 'at 7:05 Saturday night three miles south of Snow Hill on State Road 1002. Robert Creech, 31, of Snow Hill route 3, was driver of the car and Thelbert Joe Hines, 53, of LaGrange route 2, was driv ing a pickup truck. The investigating Highway Patrolman said it was most dif ficult Saturday night to deter mine which vehicle was in the wrong traffic lane at the time of the crash. The matter is still under in vestigation and this twin-tragedy brought the 1971 traffic death toll in Greene County to six. DUNHAM ON NORFOLK Petty Officer Third Class Jim my L. Dunham, ^on of Mrs. Lilia A. Dunham of Route 3, Kinston, is now serving aboard the am phibious assault ship USS Guad alcanal at the Naval Station, Norfolk, Va. Kinston Girl Among Finalists for UNC-G Reynolds Money Two finalists and two alter nates have been name by alum nae committees in each of the 11 districts in North Carolina in the 1971 competition for the Ka tharine Smith Reynolds Schol arships at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Finalists in District One are Margaret Louise Leatherman, the daughter of Rev. and Mrs., Harold Franklin Leatherman of Kinston, and a senior at Graing er High School; and Stephanie Anne Maxon, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Kirby Maxon of Route 2, Havelock, and a se noir at Havelock High School. The first alternate is Emily Perry Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. Ernest Graham John son of Ahoskie, and a senior at HELPING SAND .... An injured skier Is leaded al Amy helicopter ambulance after being hurt near Ft Colo. The Amy helicopter is one of several being use< cities ui ier project MAST (Military Atelstance to Sal Traffic). The project is designed to determine die feasi Six Jones Arrests Jones County Sheriff Brown Yates reports booking six per sons in his office during the past week: Jesse Earl May of Tren route 2 and Thomas Lee Berry of Pollocksville were charged with drunken driving, James Al len Houston of Dover route 2 was charged with drunken driv ing and resisting arrest. Leona Hinton and Baby Ray Julia Jor dan of Pollocksville were ac cused of being public drunk and Charles Roberts of Pollocksville route 1 was charged with tres passing and assault with a dead ly weapon. Divorce, Eviction, Two Small Claims in New Court Cases Jones County Court Clerk Rogers Pollock reports receiv ing four citdl actions in his of fice during the past week, includ ing two small claims suits, one divorce suit and one eviction effort. H. L. Malone Insurance Agen cy of Kinston is suing William Bryant Haddock of Trenton route 1 for $340.39 and Phillip ~H. Komegay also of Trenton route 1 for $264.88 for past due accounts. Louise Ward brought action to evict Harvey Morton and fam ily from a house at Oliver Cross roads due to failure to pay ren tals. ' / Robert Sieker asks a divorce from Cynthia Leigh Sieker, al leging their marriage March 25, 1968 and their separation Feb ruary 1, 1969. Ahoskie High School. The sec ond alternate is Claudia Jean Hardison, daughter of'Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Leon Hardison of Route 1, Williamston, and a senior at WiUiahMton' High School , v turned away or put in hallways of Lenoir Memorial Hospital; the latter being a violation of state laws and good medical practice as well. Repeated conferences between county officials and the trustees and medical staff of Lenoir Me morial Hospital have resulted in no agreement by either the trustees or the medical staff to fully cooperate in keeping the badly needed 55 beds of Parrott Hospital available to the com munity until mid or late 1972. The trustees of Lenoir Mem orial Hospital have hidden be hind a thin veil of excuses, large ly based on either Medical Care Commission or Health, Educa tion and Welfare departmental regulation, pertaining to phy sical plant, staff or administra tive procedures at Parrott Hos pital. They have said Lenoir Memorial would lose its hospital accreditation if it attempted to operate Parrott Hospital as a wing, or as a branch for particu lar kinds of hospital care. The medical staff of Lenoir Memorial has ranged from total ly cooperative attitudes by some doctors, such as the orthopedic surgeons who are using Parrott Hospital, up to absolute refusal by some staff members to even consider using the facilities of Parrott Hospital under any cir cumstances. This week the Lenoir County Board of Commissioners received an opinion of the State Attorney General that expressed the view that it would be legal for the commissioners to spend public funds to underwrite losses of the privately owned Parrott Hospital on an emergency temporary bas is because of the pressing need of the community for these 55 hospital beds. Acting in the light of this opinion the commissioners met Monday with the trustees of Par rott Hospital, who have agreed to hold a special meeting in the immediate future to come up with a plan under which they will continue to operate the hos pital. ' The commissioners and the Parrott Hospital trustees agreed that it would be impractical to keep the hospital with a staff of more than 60 people open for any great period of time un less the medical staff of Lenoir Memorial Hospital would admit patients to the hospital. Trustees of Lenoir Memorial Hospital have also agreed to en force fules against admitting pa tients to hallways except on the most extreme emergencies and only for a brief period. The feeling of the commission ers, as expressed Monday to the Parrott Hospital trustees, is that Continued on page 8 Utility Poles Favorite Targets of North Carolina's Wilder Drivers When it conies to crashing their motor vehicles into fixed ob jects along the streets and high ways of North Carolina, Tar Heel Motorists proved again in 1970 that their favorite targets are utility poles. During the past year, the state’s drivers crashed into about 15 utility poles per day. That’s a total of 5,452 poles and 3,995 trees for the year. Land Transfers Jones County Register of Deeds Bill Parker reports recording the following land transfers in his office during the past week: C. L. Hardee Co., Inc. to Pitt Greene Fertilizer Company 108.31 acres in Beaver Creek undivided interest in 200 ville Township and a one-third undivided interested in 200 acres of the P. J. West lands. From D. E. Taylor to Ella and Robert Humphrey one acre in Chinquapin Towwnship. From Thelma and Milton Har ris, Essie McDaniel, Edna Pearl Hill, Alberta Kornegay and Joseph Lee Hill to Joseph and Joyce Hill two acres in Trenton Township. From Kathryn and Harry Col lins to Harry Collins Jr. one lot in Maysville. From Elma and John Pollock Sign posts were the third most popular target for erring drivers during 1970. A total of 2,373 posts were shattered for an average of about 6.5 posts each day. Fences were fourth in popu larity with an average of bet ter than 4.7 per day and a total of 1,720. The figures were drawn from the 1970 Fixed Object Analysis, compiled by the Driver Educa tion and Accident Records Div ision of the Department of Mo tor Vehicles. Other prime targets for North Carolina drivers were traffic islands, 1,170; bridges, 1,027;; guard rails on shoulders, 593; guard rails on medians, 277; and underpasses, 62. There were 13,227 miscellan eous fixed objects struck in ad dition to the items listed. A total of 29,896 objects were struck during the year for an average of approximately 82 per day. to Joseph Carson Jenkins tracts of eight and 98.6 acres with stipulations that the sellers have right of occupancy of the lands until January 1, 1972 and have the right to cut timber from the lands until January 1, 1973, plus a right-of-way across these lands is reserved to other lands re tained by the sellers. J?**of 5* 101»t Assault Helicopter Eg?!1”* AWwnie DWskm, transport troops of the 502nd I