By JOHN HOINSKI Staff Writer When the Redi-Care Medical Centers sprang up in California several years ago, they quickly developed a reputation more suited for a fast-food chain than a health corporation. In fact, they were commonly known as a “Doc in the Box.” Unfortunately, it’s also the sort of reputation that sometimes suggests an exchange in quality for streamlined service. That is not the case in this situation. A privately funded corportion, Redi-Care centers do provide fast service, but they also pro- vide efficient, low-cost quality care with a full-time staff of qualified doctors. Perhaps even more importantly, they ease the burden placed on hospital emer- gency rooms as well as the patients who sometimes must wait for hours before being seen by a physician. “We are sort of a take-off of the emergency room in hospi- tals,” Joe Balavage, of the Back Mountain, administrator of the newly opened Redi-Care center on the corner of Wyoming Ave. and Union Streets, Kingston, said. “Those rooms in a hospital are used for real emergencies, a crisis-type situation. We usually don’t handle that sort of thing here. We service the people who, for example, would go to a hospi- tal to be looked at for a case of wait for a long time before they are seen. Here, people are coming and going in less than a half hour.” Although the center is pre- pared to handle more serious cases, it does not admit anyone into a hospital. “If an abnormal situation does occur, we tell them to notify their physician, or if they don’t Redi-Care staff or have one, we tell them to come back for a consultation and pro- ceed from there,”” Balavage explained. “In a more serious case, like a heart attack, we will attend to them until they can be trans- ported by paramedics to a hospi- tal. But, we are more of a seasonal type of operation. Right now, we are handling a lot of flu cases. In the summer we handle fractures; cuts, bee stings, any minor medical problem.” Another advantage of the Redi- Care center is the low cost of care compared to that of a hospi- tal. Balavage estimates that people can save approximately 50.percent in medical expenses in addition to being treated in a more friendly confine. “When you go into a hospital, you pay for the use of the emer- gency room, the doctor and so on down the line,” Balavage said. ‘But, here you pay one set charge. And, along with getting quicker service, they are also being treated in a friendlier atmosphere. “Here, our staff is oriented ‘toward patients who are not seri- ously ill. But, sometimes in the emergency room in a hospital the staff there can be very busy with a lot of critical situations. Then, when they are just about through for the night someone might walk in with a case of the flu, for instance, and because of the hectic conditions that existed before, the doctors can be a little hard with the patient. They don’t do it on purpose; it’s just the stress of that type of setting,” Balavage continued. “But, here we know what type of people we are dealing with most of the time and our staff is well-prepared.” The center, which operates seven days a week, is open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Currently, it is also providing a free health screen in which a series of approximately 24 tests are run on the blood. Although the facility has only been in existence since the begin- ning of January, the center is already a huge success and no one is happier than Balavage. A former promotion and dis- play worker with Pomeroy’s, he has always had a fascination with medicine. “I worked with Pomeroy’s for several years in the promotions and display department, but I became stagnant. I just wasn’t happy with what I was doing,” the 34-year old Shavertown resi- dent said. “I always had an interest in pre-hospital care, so I got involved with the Kingston Township ambulance service. “After I left Pomeroy’s, I went to Wasserott’s and eventually met a few doctors. Then I became involved in the paramed- ics program which was being taught by Dr. David Perrone. We both began talking and from there, one thing led to another and this is where it ended up.” The Kingston facility, which is also being run by Dr. John Caruno, along with Balavage and Perrine, is equipped with five examination rooms, one x-ray lab and a procedure room. With a full-time staff of 15 doctors, none of whom have a private practice, one doctor is on duty at all times. The group recently expanded and is now operating a new Redi- Care center in Easton. ROBERT TUPPER Robert T. Tupper, 40, of Angleton, Texas, died January 21 following an accident in Angleton. Surviving are his wife, Gayle; children, Robert and Brenna, at home; brothers, Carl, Mehoopany; James, Trucksville; and Craig, Dallas. Funeral services were held Janu- ary 23 from the Angleton United Methodist Church. : HENRY C. TUCK IV Henry C. Tuck IV, of Dallas, died January 24, victim of a gunshot wound. Surviving are his parents, Henry C. Tuck of Dallas; and the former Janet L. Shaver of ‘Dallas; brothers, Daniel L. Tuck, of Sweet Valley; and Andrew G. Tuck, Dallas Town- ship. Memorial services were held Jan- uary 27 from the Shavertown United Methodist Church, with The Rev. James Wert, pastor, officiating. Interment, Hollenback Cemetery, Wilkes-Barre. ROBERT WILLIAMS Robert L. Williams, 92, of Broad- way Road, RD 1, Sweet Valley, died January 26 in Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, Kingston, following an ill- ness. Surviving are his daughter, Elaine Williams Jones, Sweet Valley; son, Robert L. William Jr., Fanwood, N.J.; sisters, Mrs. Lor- etta Wright and Alica Williams, both of Kingston; Mrs. Dorothy Wasley, Harveys Lake; seven grandchildren; one great-grandson. Funeral services will be held C. Snowdon Funeral Home, 420 Wyoming Ave., Kingston. Inter- ment, Mount Greenwood Cemetery, Trucksville. ADA DAVIS Mrs. Ada M. Davis, 87, formerly of RD 3, Dallas, died January 27 in the Meadows : Nursing Center, Dallas. Surviving are her daughter, Mrs. Elmer Reese, Orange; sons, Robert E., Exeter; James J., Chase; 10 grandchildren; five great-grandchil- dren. Funeral services will be held Jan- uary 30 at a time to be announced from the Harold C. Snowdon Funeral Home, 140 N. Main St., Shavertown. Interment will be in Memorial Shrine Cemetery, Carver- ton. Friends may call today 7 to 9 p.m. ANDREW CHEWEY Andrew M. Chewey Jr., 50, of Hareys Lake, died suddenly Janu- ary 26 in Nesbitt Memorial Hospital, Lifers (Continued from page 1) House where they joined en masse with other ralliers. Among those who supported the demonstrators was President Reagan himself. Speaking via a telephone hook-up between the White House and loud speakers where protestors gathered, Reagan said, “I’m proud to stand with you in the long march for the right to life.” Although the official count esti- mated a crowd of about 37,000, a bit more than half of last year’s total, other reports indicated that the number was closer to 90,000. “It was monstrous,” Carol Sitar of Dallas said. “It was shoulder to shoulder and we met people from all over. We met people from Cali- fornia, Tennessee, Georgia, Louis- iana, there was even a group of about 100 people from Florida who rented a plane for the day and flew down. I don’t know how they deter- mine the size of a crowd, but I thought it was larger than last year.” Sitar, who made the trip for the second time, is also the mother of five children and feels very strongly about the support of human life. ‘Having children, I know what it is to give birth,” she noted. ‘But we are not only destroying unborn babies; we are destroying our- selves. In no way shape or form should life be eliminated.” — JOHN HOINSKI HAVE A SERVICE PROBLEM? Call 675-5211 Mon.-Fri. 8:30 - 5:00 Jean Brutko, circulation mgr WANT TO ADVERTISE? DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEPT. Call 675-5211 Michael Danowski, account executive Betty Bean, account executive Charlot Denmon, account executive Joe Gula, account executive Advertising deadline - Monday 11 a.m. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DEPT. Call 675-5211 Mon.-Fri. 8:30-4:30 Jean Brutko, classified mgr. Classified deadline - Monday 9 p.m. HAVE A NEWS TIP? Call 675-5211 Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00 Dotty Martin, executive editor HAVE A PRESS RELEASE? Mail it to Editor The Dallas Post PO Box 366 Dallas, Pa. 18612 or hand-deliver it to: The Dallas Post 309-415 Plaza Dallas, Pc. 18612 PROBLEM WITH A STORY? It is the policy of The Dallas Post to correct all errors of fact and to clarify any misunderstanding created by arti- cles. Questions should ‘be directed to the News Desk at 675-5211 WANT TO ORDER A PHOTO? Call 675-5211 Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00 Sandy. Sheehan, production mgr. All photos appearing in The Dallas Post that have been taken by a Dallas Post photographer are for purchase. HAVE A QUESTION ON AN INVOICE? Call 675-5211 Mon.-Fri. 9:00-4:30 Peggy Poynton, office mgr SUBSCRIPTION RATES 23c on newsstands every Wednesday: carrier delivory, 25¢ per week. By mail: in Pennsyl- vania, $12 per year; out of state, $14 per year. Published every Wednesday by Pennaprint, Inc. J. Stephen Buckley, publisher, PO Box 366, Dallas, Pa. 18612. Entered at the post office in Dallas, Pa. 18612 as second class matter. Kingston. Surviving are his mother, Eliza- beth Simoson Chewey, of Larks- ville; daughters, Mrs. Terry Danks, Harveys Lake; Mrs. Cheryl Hole- man, Dallas; sons, Andrew M. III and Thomas V., both of Shaver- town; four grandchildren; sister, Mrs. Dolores Tobin, Mountaintop; brother, Thomas, Larksville. Funeral services will be held today at 10 a.m. from the Harold C. Snowdon Funeral Home, 140 N. Main St., Shavertown, with a Mass of Christian Burial at 10:30 a.m. in St. Therese’s Church, Shavertown. Interment will be in St. Vincent’s Cemetery, Larksville. Service "PASTRY DONUTS & OTHER ITEMS 1 COSSBNNCT | TONNNNNC: COBEBESID] 3eenNNc: | CISEMENCT | CSeeNsT | CI80EBeD | (Continued from page 1) Paul Detwiler of Kingston also agrees. ‘It was a tragedy, but I don’t think we should stop explora- tion. We’ve been going on for years and, with all the miles we logged, I think the fatalities are nill com- pared to the people being Killed every day. “Individuals get killed in their cars and nobody cares except for the family involved,” Detwiler con- tinued. ‘‘But just because this includes a nation, it doesn’t make it any more of a tragedy.” “I don’t think we should scrub the program,’ Bob Lynady of Kingston agreed. ‘‘You have to expect things like this to happen once in a while. You're going to have accidents no matter what you do. But, it’s no worse than going out on a high- way. bal Still others believed it was part of the danger that astronauts risk on every mission and it is something we have to accept. “It was a tragic thing, but it was inevitable that it was going to happen someday,” Dorothy Geb- hardt of Brown Manor said. ‘‘Astro- nauts are always facing danger and it is something they also realize. You keep hoping everything will go well, but in the back of your mind, you just never know.” Harry LaBar of Shavertown added, ‘“You’re worried that sooner or later something like this is going to happen, but you have to keep going. Hey, the Blue Angels keep flying, don’t they? But, we have to realize how dangerous all this is. I think Senator (Jake) Garn said he wanted to go up on the Shuttle. Maybe next time we should let him go. 1 The Tuesday morning incident happened so fast and without warn- ing that NASA officials weren’t sure what happened. At first, it was believed that a major malfunction developed when headquarters first a “fireball.” Not even spectators, including the students and parents of McAuliffe, were aware of what happened. Cameras showed the parents of the 37-year-old teacher watching the lif- toff, but when the explosion occurred, the craft was so high above they could not tell what happened. Planes and ships were dispatched to the scene where the shuttle landed in the ocean, but all that could be seen were small chunks of floating debris. Peter R. Fischi to Marline A. and Thomas R. Starrie, Sr., 133 Govier St. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Property - Dallas Twp., 1.902 acres. Donald Hoover to Hoover Farm Cemetery, R.D. 4, Box 302, Dallas, Pa. Property - Lehman Twp. Pearl M. Purvin to Pearl M. Purvin, al, care of Pearl M. Pearl, 184 N. Main St., Shavertown, Pa. Property - Kingston Twp., 2 parcels. Freda M. Graham to Margaret M. Neal A. and White, Box 287 Rt. 29, Lake Silkworth, Pa. Property - Lehman Twp., 42,900. Stanley J. Ray to Virginia Car- penter, al, R.D. 1 Box 180, Harvey’s Lake, Pa. Property - Harvey's Lake. Joseph A. Turpak, ux, to Patricia and James E. Bogdan, ux, Box 519-1 R.D. 1, Demunds Rd, Dallas Twp., Pa. Dallas Twp. 2.96 acres. Anthony Truskowski, ux, to Linda B. Anthony Truskowski, ux, 437 Main St., Dallas, Pa. Property - Dallas, 2 parcels. 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