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SAN FRANCISCO’S traditional skyline is in for major changes. In this twilight shot, some of the first can be seen.
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TRADITIONAL COLUMNS look harmonious next to the
fluted or scored facade of a new building in the finan
cial section, a few blocks from the waterfront. Because
architects have designed new buildings with the adja
cent old ones in mind, the two look compatible.
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PART OF NEW YORK? No, it’s the sort of thing they’re constructing in heretofore
old-fashioned San Francisco. The only apparent opening in the city’s new Insurance
Center Building is a tiny smoke spout on the roof. Actually, the structure has many
windows, but they’re all on the other side. This building is one of dozens along San
Francisco’s startlingly changed waterfront.
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«J^£ E o’ A a G fk CONTRAST is evident when viewing a corner of the Mutual Benefit Life Building, left near Market
Street and the Embarcadero with nearby aged and mellowed structures that are linked with San Francisco’s past
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APARTMENTS, town houses and parks, with built-in supermarkets, boutiques and I
theaters, are part of the new scene down by San Francisco’s waterfront. Elevated 1
walkways enable pedestrians to move from residential to commercial areas.
San Francisco
If you left your heart in San Francisco,
nestled in nostalgia along the city's
famed waterfront, look again—you
might think it's been transplanted. The
City of the Golden Gate is in the
midst of a building boom that is placing
modern structures next to turn-of-the
century architecture. San Franciscans,
however, are not going to lose their
heritage. They are preserving fine old
examples of Victorian houses, churches
and other buildings and new
constructions are designed to blend
with vintage surroundings.
Griffin Daily News
THE DOCTOR SAYS
Once Fastened to Body,
Ticks Hard to Dislodge
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Although only a small pro
portion of wood ticks are in
fected, those that are can
transmit Rocky Mountain
spotted fever (tick-borne ty
phus), tularemia and tick
paralysis. The adult tick is
flat, usually brown and has
eight legs, making it an
arthropod rather than an in
sect, which can claim only
six legs. They are found in
shrubs and wooded areas
and can be acquired through
contact with rabbits and do
mestic animals.
Once a tick has dropped
onto you, it may wander
about for hours looking for a
quiet spot where it can settle
down for a warm blood meal
—its favorite dish. Before it
attaches itself to you it can
be easily brushed off. But
once it has buried its head
in your skin, it is hard to dis
lodge. The longer it is at
tached, the greater the dan
ger that it will transmit
whatever germ or virus it is
carrying at the time.
If you smear grease, tur
pentine, gasoline, ether or
chloroform on it, it will
usually back out in disgust.
If this fails, strike a match,
blow out the flame and apply
the hot end to the rear of the
tick. If you prefer, you may
grab it with a pair of tweez
ers and remove it with a
steady, gradual pull. A sharp
tug may leave the body in
the tweezers and the head in
your skin—a most unfortu
nate development.
When you have succeeded
BRUCE BICSSAT
Broader Student Flareups
Simmer in Viet Impasse
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON (NEA)
The warnings that drifted to this capital weeks ago still
stand: If there is no quick end in sight to the Vietnam war,
the student uprisings on U.S. college campuses this fall will
far outdo the unparalleled turbulence of 1968-69.
The visible prospect would seem to augur, then, for a
serious collision.
Not even the most optimistic prognosticator within the
Nixon administration has ever talked publicly or privately
of getting more than 75,000 to 100,000 U.S. troops out of
Vietnam by the end of 1969. That would still leave a force
of 440,000 or more on the scene.
The Paris peace talks have been totally unproductive.
And if Ho Chi Minh is, as believed here, convinced that
time and U.S. withdrawals are on his side, the negotiations
are not likely to turn fruitful in the months just ahead.
The campuses from September or October on could prove
to be a very grave matter. For if student reaction is, in
fact, sure to intensify, so, too, is the counterreaction.
The dam of hostile antistudent response is just barely be
ing held in Congress and the state legislatures. College
administrators in many instances have stiffened then
backbones and their rules governing campus disturbances.
By every perceivable public opinion gauge, millions of
Americans are fed up with student trouble.
A top Democrat told this reporter he had no doubt the
President was right on target with most Americans when
he delivered his tough “campus revolt” speech in South
Dakota back in May.
There is no clear sign from the White House, however,
that the administration is preparing, in any way of its
own, to deal with an unprecedented flareup in the colleges
this fall.
Nor is anything decisively hopeful emerging from the
rival Democrats on Capitol Hill. Though a few are urging
some kind of preschool-year meeting between top political
figures and responsible student leaders, mostly the Dem
ocratic response is confined to hand-wringing and utter
ances of dark foreboding.
If the dire predictions are fulfilled, the question that will
arise inevitably is just how wide-sweeping the student
involvement will be on the campuses which boil up.
This troubled society, plainly doubting itself and adrift
in a sea of irrationality, tends often to purchase, unthink
ingly, the steadily drummed-out themes of the radicals who
do most to agitate the campus atmosphere.
One of these themes is that any student rebellion carries
with it the prospect (of hope or fear, depending on where
you sit) that the “center mass” of students will be “radi
calized” if the college and community response is in any
way severe—especially if police are brought on campus to
quell a disturbance and arrest participants.
The experience of the 1968-69 year at Harvard and some
other schools indicates that this certainly may be true in
the short run. Entry of police on campus drew many
moderates to the side of radical rebels in sympathetic
action.
The question is whether this permanently “radicalizes”
the moderate sympathizers. If it does not, then the radi
cals’ use of the term Is transparent nonsense. If it does, if
a moderate can be thus quickly and lastingly converted to
radicalism, then being a moderate—at least at college age
—must really mean very little.
Fortune magazine’s June survey of youth opinion sug
gests that the picture of the young moderate’s attitudes and
behavior may be distorted by the fact that the general
college population is still representative of the nation’s
youth (age 17-23) as a whole.
While half of Fortune’s tested college sample accept
classification as either reformers, radical dissidents or
revolutionaries, only three in 10 noncollege youths can be
thus labeled.
But since college students represent just one in every
four Americans 17 to 23, overall only one in 10 youths in
that age span takes the labels reformer-radical-revolution
ary. The rest are moderate or conservative—presumably
not subject to “radicalization.”
GRIFFIN
DAI NEWS
9
in removing the tick, you
should touch the bite with
tincture of iodine, thimerosol
or some other antiseptic,
flame the tweezers and wash
your hands with soap and
water. Much of this proce
dure can be avoided if, when
you go into a tick-infested
area, you wear protective
clothing with elastic at the
ankle, wrist, neck and belt
line and high boots. You
should also spray your cloth
ing with a tick repellent,
such as toluamide (Deet).
These precautions will also
protect you against chiggers.
Q—ln a recent column, you
listed some side effects from
taking drugs of the cortisone
group. I have been taking
prednisone for three years
and it has been a lifesaver,
but now you have me wor
ried.
A—Persons who take these
drugs for a prolonged period
should have a frequent
checkup by the prescribing
doctor and report any un
usual symptoms without de
lay. Many patients avoid
serious trouble while taking
these drugs by holding the
dosage down and not taking
the drug one week out of
every four.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Please send your questions and
comments to Wayne G. Brandstadt,
M.D., in care of this paper. While
Dr. Brandstadt cannot answer indi
vidual letters, he will answer letters
of general interest in future columns.