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— Griffin Daily News Friday, September 15,1972
Parkwood Cinema I
Tonight 7:30-9:30
A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION
BUTTERFLIES
ARE FREE
Lr*4<_e®H€CKNlT
W G««0T
' •- COIUMS A HCTUMS |PG|
Parkwood Cinema II
Double Feature
7 P.M.
“A COCKEYED
MASTERPIECE!”
— Joseph Morgenstern, Newsweek
2cx.
An Ingo Preminger Production
Color by DE LUXE*
Panavision* g p M
patton
POPULAR PRICES!
DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL
RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT
JT ***
IrTO&L
2o , bCt»iM'F ><>•
GEORGE KARL
C. SCO I T/MALDEN
Sat. Matinee
’’TRUE GRIT”
John Wayne
(G)
Happy Hour
Day Care Center
1305 McArthur Drive
Has Limited Number Os Openings For Children 2-6
Years Os Age. We Are Small, State Licensed, Well
Staffed. A Well Organized Daily Program With Large
Shady, Well Equipped Playground.
For Information Call:
Mrs. Chester Jones, 227-9688.
COPE
"Citizens Organized for a Protected Environment"
NEEDS YOU!
YOU
NEED COPE
As "an ongoing, positive force in shaping of policy as it relates
to the moral climate within our Griffin area”.
For further information at no obligation complete and return the form below to:
COPE
P.O. Box 490
Griffin, Ga. 30223
• •
•
I, the undersigned, age 18 or above, a resident of the :
: immediate Griffin area desire further information about :
: COPE. :
•
• •
; Name •
Mailing Address J
; Phone Number •
• •
• •
* o 000000/o
(Paid Advertisement by Citizens Organized For a Protected Environment)
Americans on way to Hanoi
for release of three POWs
VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI)-
American antiwar activist Da
vid Dellinger appealed to
President Nixon today to ban
the use of freed American
prisoners of war to train other
U.S. pilots lest the practice
jeopardize any future releases
cf American prisoners of war
from North Vietnam.
Dellinger and a delegation of
;
? ; - ' - -
EAST LANSING, Mich.-A 24-year-old drug addict survived
a history-making operation, June 29 in which Dr. Agustin
Abrulu, a heart surgeon at Wayne State University School of
Medicine in Detroit, removed two infected heart valves and
did not replace them with artificial valves, a research forum
of the Michigan Heart Association was told. The operation
makes him the only man in the world with only two of his four
heart valves living according to Dr. Abrulu. A combo
seven other Americans arrived
for an overnight stop before
proceeding to Hanoi Saturday
to accept the release of three
American POWs.
Dellinger said, “If these men
are used to promote, plan and
guide future attacks there will
be an end to releases.”
Asked about rumors of
additional releases of American
Valves removed
from heart
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UPI)— Doctors have saved the
life of a 24-year-old Detroit man
by cutting two infected valves
out of his heart and replacing
them with nothing, a heart
surgeon reported Thursday.
Dr. Agustin Arbulu of the
Wayne State University School
of Medicine, told a Michigan
Heart Association symposium
the man, the first person in
history to live without two of
the heart’s four valves, “today
appears to enjoy normal
health.’’
He said the man, a former
heroin addict whose name is
not being released, "can do all
the normal sedentary things
POWs held in North Vietnam,
Dellinger said “There are no
rumors of further releases. We
were told by the North
Vietnamese that this was a
signal that all prisoners would
be released if there was an end
to all attacks on the Vietna
mese people.”
He said the phrase “all
attacks” referred to a halt to
cutaway diagram released by Wayne State shows in Fig. A
the heart wall cut from the right ventricle so that valves can
be seen controlling the flow of blood from the body (arrows)
through the right atrium, then through the right ventricle and
out to the lungs (at point of curved arrow.) Fig. B shows
similar blood flow even though both valves have been
removed. (UP!)
anyone does" but has been told
not to engage in sports.
The operation was made
necessary when the two valves
became infected with an
antibiotic-resistant bacteria,
pseudomonas, normally found
in the intestines. The heart
infection results when the
bacteria gets on a needle used
by drug addicts and is
inadvertently put into the blood
stream along with the drug.
The needle becomes contamin
ated when addicts do not wash
their hands after going to the
bathroom.
“We tried antibiotics on him
for three months but they did
not work and it became obvious
he was going to die,” Arbulu
said. “We knew a man could
live with one valve cut out, but
he had two infected valves. So
we went to the laboratory to
see if animals could live
without two valves.”
The section of the heart
involved in the operation is the
right section, which pumps
Hood to the lungs where carbon
dioxide is exchanged for
oxygen. Each of the heart’s
four chambers has a valve
which closes when that cham
ber contracts so that the blood
is pushed along.
With his patient dying,
Arbulus tried the double
removal on five laboratory
dogs. Four of them lived after
going through a two-week crisis
period dealt with by administer
ing large doses of digitalis, a
drug which strengthens the
heart, and diuretics to stimu
late the output of fluids by the
body.
Arbulu performed the opera-
★★★★★★★★
BUSINESS AS USUAL
SUTTON, England (UPI)-
Villagers who feared Sutton
might lose its only pub can
breathe easier, thanks to
London businessman lan An
struther.
Anstruther paid $66,200 for
the 200-year-old pub at an
auction Wednesday and said it
will continue to do business as
usual, saving villagers a three
mile walk to the next village
for their pints of beer.
The villagers had feared the
brewery which owned the pub
might sell it for conversion into
a private home, as it did with
two other pubs in the county.
all American bombing raids
and the withdrawal of all
American military forces.
Dellinger and Cora Weiss
both said it was their intention
to return with the released
POWs as soon as possible—
perhaps within a week—but
said their travel plans have to
depend on safety factors
tion on the patient June 29. The
patient went through the same
two-week crisis period but now
appears to be healthy. His
organs appear to have adjusted
to the change in his body, the
doctor said.
I Here's the latest word in rain gear
DEEP DOMED z fit A
UMBRELLA / ilk
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trimmed
Limit per
navy or
0.10 033 3
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■ i 1111 blii Zl • IJi « 3.11 Jj j v
Firestone Strato-Streak
A full strength, full 4-ply nylon cord B 4
tire...built by the WIDE OVAL tire people!
87K1J16 50131 : .:
blackwalls
’t&B’ 4 tires off your car ....
Fits many jfflt
Comets. Cor. airs. -I*Mt '
Darts Falcons
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.’2 526 25 • 15.75 $29 si st '7- ’ S3OOO ‘22.50 533 50 ‘25.25 S 2 22
= 3 2800 21.00 3125 23.50 '95 X 3175 23.75 35 50 20.75 2<3
-21 r- - M -°® 208 *« : t- 34 75 a *-°® 3900 aa - as 263 ""
29 00 21.75 32 75 24.50 22* aS». 38 00 22.50 42 75 32.00 281 '*
30 75 23.00 34 50 25.00 239 i',’?, -- -- 4750 35.75 301
SX’.t. 33.75 2t2f 38.00 25.00 256 ’A 45.251 27.00 3 16 -
JS'.t, 37 00 27.75 4150 31.25 275 anprices Plusta» andwao«you'car
Drive in TODA Y for fast service! O ways to ■■
Fracod 01 shown of Rrootowo Stow Cornpo*t>»oly pncod o< Farottooo Doetoet o«d or oK 5047X0 »»ohoo» di»o*«r**O *• FafoHowo sf" O charge OS3 — j
Firestone Store Texaco , Service . Cenler
Tom Smith
330 E. Solomon St.
Cor. 6th & Taylor St.
Phone 227-4018
| 29.77 29.77 I
I I
A k Kr.M —
?| SANIRANCISCO IdENVI R I \ Y*'' /-/uiin ®
H \ \J Tr L__7-29.89y g
\ ' I* *Y~TI $
\ tOSANGUES I V
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1 LOWEST TEMPERATURES Vz-v // \
\7f 0R 3 L 0.03 s \j m,am '
50 {7 J 7 60 p* I E GEND
70 RA,N fc*x*x|SNOW
F?// n, „ AIR
70 M SHOWERS >(|OW
Ul‘l WE AT HI R E OTOC AST ® — _J
FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Partly cloudy and continued warm tonight and tomorrow §
with slight chance of showers tomorrow.
BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
And then there’s the story
of the addlepated skunk—he
had no scents.
# ♦ ♦
Hoyt King says he’s
going to cross a tiger with
a canary—and you’d bet
ter listen when that baby
warbles.
♦ ♦ «
One of the most insecure
things to stand on is one’s
dignity.
♦ ♦ ♦
If you think you Know
any good excuses, just try
them out on our boss.
♦ ♦ ♦
A political promise is
based on a premise that
the prospective voter
can’t recall what day of
the week it was yesterday.
Doc, we can’t take it
easy—we’re working too
hard to pay for the advice.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
Re-Opening Friday 9-15-72
Griffin Farm Market
206 N. 9th St.
Due To The Response Os People Not Wanting Us To Close,
We Have Decided To Re-Open. It Is Very Hard For A
Small Business To Be A Success With AU The Giants To
Compete With. We Need Your Support And Business,
Open 7 Days.
Store Hours
8 A.M. to 9 P.M. Mon. Thru Sat.
9 A.M. To 6 P.M. Sun.
Specials This Weekend
10 Lb. Bag
Potatoes 5“
Bananas 10*
Cabbage u. 10*
Tomatoes «. 25*
Yellow
Onions u>. 15*