Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News
THE DOCTOR SAYS
ti
No 11l Effects
From ‘Overactive’
By Wayne G. Brandstadt M.D.
.Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Q — I have an overactive
gall baldder. Can you advise
me what to eat and what not
to eat?
A —The only way in which
a gall bladder can be overactive
Is for it to empty more rapidly
than normal. This is not a dis
ease and would have no adverse
effect on your health. No special
diet would be required.
Q —I am a woman 40
and have had attacks of severe
pain in my gall bladder area
for 15 years. They are becoming
more frequent. X rays do not
show any stones. I weigh only
95 pounds and find it hard to
gain weight on a fat free deit.
My doctor says my gall bladder
is working properly and he has
no explanation for my pain.
What would you suggest?
A —All pains in the gall
bladder region do not originate
in the gall bladder. At this dis
tance I can’t make a positive
diagnosis but I have seen many
a woman who blamed her ab
dominal pains on her gall blad
der when the cause was an
irritable colon.
Unless you are allergic to milk
Whales and porpoises have an
acute sense of hearing under
water, says the Miami Seaquar
ium.
A-BAIL TUBS
97c
Newton Building
Supply Company
889 East Solomon Street
ARE HOUSEHOLD CHORES
GETTING YOU DOWN?
DO YOU NEED
HELP!
The Greater Griffin Youth Crusade has Just what you
need. Workers are available all day every day from July 31
to August 6.
We’ll mind your baby, wash your car, walk your dog, iron
your clothes, or even polish your pet elephant’s tusk. You
name the Job and if we possibly can—we’ll do it.
Proceeds will be used to sponsor a city-wide revival, dur
ing the last week in August. The revival is youth sponsored,
but will be for everyone from 6 to 93! Speaker for the revival
will be Gerry Craft, head of Gerry Craft Youth Association
International.
We’ll be glad to do any Job that needs to be done, and our
prices are reasonable. Please help us by letting us help you!
CALL 227-6080
THEY FIGURE IN ANY OFFICE. These new
Underwood-Olivetti adding-figuring ma
chines perform beyond simple addition.
They subtract, give credit balance, multiply,
calculate discounts and percentages, and
print every entry and result on a clear,
*8 permanent tape record. Choose the electric
Q QUANTA, or the manual PRIMA 20. Both are
Q complete, handy and priced right One, for
g sure, can figure profitably in your office,
fij OUANTA ■■ $139.95
E
HENSLEY OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.
121 West Solomon Street Phone 227-4132
Friday, August 4, 1967
7
and milk products you should
find margarine and butter easier
to digest than the fat in meat,
fish and fowl. Keep your stools
firm by avoiding laxatives and
an excess of vegetable and fruit.
Try a little forced feeding for
a few weeks. When you start
to gain weight you will feel
better and your appetite will
improve.
Q —Please explain the terms
sup raventricular tachycardia,
cervical syndrome and dyspnea.
A— Tachycardia is an ab
normally fast heart beat. When
the trouble originates in the
•auricles, it is supraventricular
(above the ventriles). Cervial
syndrome is a condition caused
by irritation of the roots of
the cervical nerves — those that
leave the spinal cord in the
neck region. Dyspnea is difficult
or labored breathing. It has
many causes one of the most
common being heart disease.
Q — An X-ray examination
showed that I have a diverticr
lum of my esophagus. It doesn’t
bother me much except the last
mouthful of food seems to stick
in my throat. My doctor says
it should be removed. What do
you think? Will it become can
cerous?
A— Small outpouchings in the
esophagus are often an incident
ial finding when a person has
an X-ray examination of the
stomach. If they are small and
cause no symptoms, no opera
tion is necessary. They do not
tend to become cancerous. If
they are large enough to pre
vent the food swallowed from
reaching the stomach they
should be removed.
Please send your questions
and comments to Wayne G.
Brandstadt, M.D., in care of
paper. While Dr. Brandstadt
cannot answer indivdual letters
he will answer letters of general
interest in future columns.
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(Griffin Daily News Staff Photo)
It’s CAP Aerial
The picture on page one shows the communications
aerial on top of the Civil Air Patrol building at t h e
Griffin-Spalding Airport. The building is headquarters
for the Griffin unit of CAP and is opposite the
administration and hangar area at the airport.
Senators Shocked
At 'Hate Whitey’
By STEVEN GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UPD—Senate
investigators, shocked by testi
mony the federal government
subsidized a “Hate Whitey”
school in Nashville, today were
clamoring to find out if
antipoverty officials are “subsi
dizing rioters in other cities.”
Senate Republican leader
Everett M. Dirksen, 111., Chalr
ma n James O. Eastland, D-
Miss., of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, and Sen. Hugh
Scott, R-Pa., said they wanted
to question officials of the
poverty program about the
charge.
’’...., yes,” Dirksen said
when asked if he favored
summoning officials from the
Office of Economic Opportunity
(OEO). “We have to find out, if
it’s true, how they got on the
rolls.”
Scott warned that if govern
ment officials testify, the
questioning will not be limited
to the Nashville incident.
Subsidizing Rioters
“We want to find out if they
are subsidizing rioters in other
cities,” Scott said.
Eastland, Dirksen and Scott
are members of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, which is
hearing testimony from police
officials as part of the first
major congressional investiga
tion of this summer’s big city
riots.
Capt. John A. Sorace of
Nashville testifed Thursday that
the OEO award a $7,700 grant
to Fred H. Brooks, Nashville
chairman of the Student Nonvi
olent Coordinating Committee
(SNCC).
Sorace said part of the
federal money was used to
finance a ‘‘liberation school”
where 10-and 11-year-old Negro
youngsters were taught to hate
white people.
R. Sargent Shriver, director
of the OEO, told UPI the local
antipoverty officials in Nash
ville informed him Sorace’s
report was false.
Shriver Denies
‘‘They say the facts in the
case are completely different
from the captain’s story,”
Shriver said. “They say the
local community action agency
there has not financed or had
anything to do with that
(liberation) school.
"According to them, no
antipoverty money has gone to
that school. There is no such
person (as Brooks) on any OEO
payroll there. The record,
according to the local officials,
is that OEO is not involved in
any way,” Shriver said.
But Sorace, recalled to the
witness stand following Shriv
er’s denial, refused to change
his story.
Looking at notes be carried to
the hearing, he said: "I have a
list of salaries. It lists. Fred H.
Brooks as director at S3OO a
month. Fred Brooks is now
driving a station wagon leased
by ’ OEO funds. He started
driving it right after the grant
was made.
“Not only is he a member of
SNCC, but so are half the
student aides,” Sorace said. “It
is almost common knowledge in
our community that SNCC
members have received the
funds to operate those pro
grams.
Major Cities
Flunk Test On
Air Pollution
WASHINGTON (UPI) —
Government experts grading the
nation’s 65 major manufactur
ing centers on the cleanness of
their air have flunked them all.
Pollusion is a threat to health in
every one.
As expected, New York’s air
was graded the dirtiest, with
Chicago a close second and
Philadelphia third. Los Angeles
was ranked fourth but the
standards did not include
photochemical smog that ci-
ty’s most serious pollution
problem.
Cleveland was rated the fifth
dirtiest, followed by Pittsburgh,
Boston, Newark, Detroit and St.
Louis, in that order.
The ratings were issued
Thursday by the National
Center for Air Pollution Control,
an arm of the U.S. Public
Heatlth Service. The report was
a follow-up to an earlier study
that ranked only the 20 largest
manufacturing centers in three
groups according to the severity
of their air pollution problems.
At the other end of the scale
in Thursday’s report were the
10 centers with the least
measured air pollution.
In order of increasingly dirty
air they were High Point-
Greensboro, N.C.; Wichita,
Kan.; Miami, Fla.; Utica-Rome,
N.Y.; San Diego, Calif.; Fort
Worth, Tex.; New Orleans;
Flint, Mich.; Dallas, Tex., and
Lancaster, Pa.
Quirks
By United Press International
CHELMSFORD, England
(UPD—Mrs. Marjorie Welling
ton, 43, a mother of four who
recently won a beer drinking
championship for downing 14
pints at a sitting and averaging
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210 pints a week, was sentenced
to a year in prison Wednesday
. for theft. The judge said she
stole to get money “to live up”
to her title.
EAST LANSING, Mich. (UPD
—Michigan state police said
their Aug. 17 auction of
confiscated or unclaimed items
will include one used barber
pole.
MORRISTOWN, N.J. (UPD—
Morris County prosecutor’s
detectives are growing a plant
in their office, but it’3 not
petunias. It’s a marijuana plant
confiscated in a narcotics raid,
and the detectives are trying t»
keep it alive so that it can ba
used as evidence in aa
upcoming trial.
KLAGENFURT, Austria
(UPD—For the second time, a
low flying airliner blew the roof
off farmer Johann Katholnlg’s
house Wednesday.