Newspaper Page Text
Page 10
— Griffin Daily News Monday, February 24,1975
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FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Cloudy and colder tonight with slight chance of snow
flurries. Low in the mid 20s. Tomorrow partly cloudy and cold with a high in the mid 40s.
Budget supplement
faces Senate vote
ATLANTA (UPI) - The
state’s s4l million supplemental
appropriations bill for bailing
out state agencies caught short
of funds when this year’s fiscal
budget was computed last year
comes up for a vote today in
the Georgia Senate.
The bill takes center stage
with a warning from Lieutenant
Governor Zell Miller about foot
dragging, since the House is
waiting impatiently to deter
mine how much money will be
in the state’s bank account for
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next fiscal year.
Sen. Paul Broun, D-Athens,
head of the Senate Appropria
tions Committee, said it should
take the Senate about three
hours to get the bill back over
to the House Monday.
From there it will follow its
well-rehearsed annual process
of bouncing back and forth
between Senate and House until
a compromise is reached.
“If there’s going to be anyone
accused of dragging their feet
on this bill, I don’t want it to be
this Senate,’’ said Miller.
Since the Senate version of
the supplemental appropria
tions bill is about $7 million
higher than the House version,
the House will probably refuse
to go along with the Senate
increases and ask the senators
to recede.
That bounces the budget back
to the Senate, where the
members will politely decline to
back away from their amend
ments and name go-betweens to
meet with the chosen seconds
of the House to work out a
compromise.
In the joint conference
committee, the final version of
the budget will be smoothed out
by three senators and three
representatives, and the com
promise goes back to the two
chambers for a “take it or
leave it” vote without amend
ment.
“I don’t think there should be
too much controversy in it,
really,” said Broun.
The supplemental bill is
necessary to cover expenses the
General Assembly could not
have anticipated last year when
it wrote the 1975 fiscal budget.
Even without the vicissitudes of
the Arab oil boycott then in
effect, lowering state tax
receipts, the lawmakers could
Dr. Lamb
% Reader can’t
HKTI catch breath
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Last
winter I started having spells of
not being able to get my breath.
I thought I was dying. It only
happens in the night when I am
asleep. I jump out of bed gasp
ing for my breath and my hus
band hits me on my back
several times. Gradually I start
getting my breath, little by lit
tle.
A few weeks ago I had a terri
ble spell and could not breathe.
I thought I was a goner. That
was the first spell in several
months and about the sixth or
seventh spell in a year.
My family doctor says it may
be from nerves, but 1 don’t
agree with him as it only
happens in my sleep. It’s a
terrible feeling not being able
to get your breath.
Incidentally I am 55 and I
have high blood pressure,
around 170, and I do take nerve
pills.
I would like to know your opi
nion and what you think could
be the cause.
DEAR READER - Your
story sounds like paroxysmal
nocturnal dyspnea. What does
that mean? Recurrent bouts of
not being able to get your
breath at night. And, if it is so,
it is important.
Sometimes it is difficult to
separate this problem from ap
parent breathlessness
associated with anxiety. Oc
casionally a person may have a
nightmare or be anxious, then
awake, and overbreathe, a con
dition called hyperventilation.
However, the symptoms are a
bit different and your doctor
should be able to separate
them.
Small blood clots to the lungs
can cause breathlessness, but
this doesn’t occur repeatedly
just at night. Also nervousness
causing breathlessness usually
doesn’t occur just at night a few
hours after going to sleep.
The classical case of parox
ysmal nocturnal dyspnea is as
Nf Wn V\\y
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State toll
reaches
four
By United Press International
The Georgia State Patrol said
Sunday night at least four
persons had died in weekend
traffic deaths around the state.
Daniel Christopher Dowdy,
30, of Glennville was killed
Friday night when his car left
Highway 196 near Glennville
and ran into a culvert.
Douglas Justice of Sparta
was killed Friday night when a
car taking a curve on the
wrong side of Georgia Highway
22 struck his car head-on about
a mile from Milledgeville.
David Edwards, 27, of Stock
bridge was killed when he
came out of a driveway on
Swan Lake Road on a
motorcycle into the path of a
vehicle Sunday afternoon.
Charles Eddy Turner, 18, of
Macon was killed in a rear-end
collision about five miles south
of Macon on Georgia Highway
247 Sunday morning.
not have budgeted each agency
just what it needed to get
through the current fiscal year.
you described it. The person
will go to bed with no symptoms
at all. Several hours after going
to sleep, the patient will
awaken with the breathless at
tack. As the attack subsides,
the person can lie down again
and go to sleep for the rest of
the night without trouble. Then
when the doctor sees the
patient there is nothing to see
or hear. The lungs are clear and
there is nothing but the story.
These episodes commonly oc
cur in people who have some
disease involving the left side of
the heart. High blood pressure
is such a disease. Individuals
with high blood pressure who
begin to have some weakening
of the heart from the overload
of pressure may develop such
attacks.
The actual breathlessness is
caused by the accumulation of a
small amount of fluid in the
lungs after you have been lying
down. An X ray taken im
mediately after the attack may
show diffuse increased fluid in
the lungs. The attacks are
somewhat like a severe
asthmatic attack. Some of the
medicines used in asthmatics
are useful, but some of these
are avoided because of the
associated heart condition.
Often the problem will res
pond to one of the digitalis
medicines. By strengthening
the heart muscle with digitalis
the accumulation of the small
amount of fluid in the lungs
doesn’t occur and the attacks
disappear. Since you already
have high blood pressure I
would certainly give this
serious consideration in view of
your history.
Send your questions to Dr.
Lamb, in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N.Y. 10019. For a copy of Dr.
Lamb’s booklet on cholesterol,
send 50 cents and a long self
addressed stamped envelope to
the same address and ask for
the “Cholesterol” booklet.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
People
By United Press International
.’jar .UMgb
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<. I ®L-4r f
KK ▼ L W
Henry Alexander Susan
I
I Susan applies to Post
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Susan Ford, the President’s
17-year-old daughter, has applied to the Washington Post
for a summer intern >b as a photographer.
Sheila Rabb Weidenfeld, Betty Ford’s press secretary,
| said Sunday that Susan applied for the internship to work
| during July and August more than a month ago. Her
parents “love the idea,” Mrs. Weidenfeld added, although
I she said Susan made the application on her own.
She has been studying photography with Ford’s chief
| photographer David Hume Kennerly.
I
' Writer was depressed
NEW YORK (UPI) — Nobel Laureate Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, despondent that the secret police seized his
| archives, coonsidered suicide in 1965, Time magazine
| reported.
“I was so depressed that I contemplated suicide, for the
| first, and I hope, the last time in my life,” Solzhenitsyn
1 said. Time said the quote came from the author’s latest
g work, “The Calf Butted the Oak,” recently published in
i Russian.
Following the raid, Time said, Solzhenitsyn began to
I microfilm his work and have it transmitted abroad by the
| underground for safekeeping.
I
J Kissinger harshly frank
NEW YORK (UPI) — Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger told Israeli officials recently that America’s
mood favors reduced military assistance, Time Magazine
reports in its current issue.
Time said the secretary was “harshly frank” with
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Defense Minister
Shimon Peres.
“Kissinger stressed the point that the situation in
Washington has changed since Rabin returned home, ’ ’ the
magazine reported. “The U.S. is still committed to Israel,
but the American mood is for reduced military assistance
and for compromise rather than confrontation.”
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Armed Indians
occupy plant
SHIPROCK, N.M.. (UPI) -
The national treasurer of the
American Indian Movement
said he and 20 armed Indians
occupied the Fairchild Corp,
plant in this Navajo reservation
community today, taking two
plant guards into “custody.”
AIM treasurer Larry Ander
son, who said he was a Navajo
from Fort Defiance, Ariz., said
“no force was used” in the
takeover.
“There was no pushing
involved,” he said. “We just
walked in. The guards are in
custody right now and our
people are set up around the
plant.”
He said the Indians were
“pretty well armed.”
Anderson said the occupation
was prompted by demands on
four subjects involving industri
al operations on Navajo land
and health care services.
He said the demands would
be “revised and refined”
following the arrival of un
named “mediators we’re going
to bring in this afternoon” to
take over leadership of the
occupation.
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“We’ve already contacted our
national AIM leaders in St.
Paul, Minn.,” Anderson said.
He said these included AIM
national director Dennis Banks
and Clyde Bellecourt, national
coordinator.
The AIM spokesman said all
members of his group were
Indians.
“Half are from AIM and the
other half are members of the
Navajo Warrior Society,” he
said.
Anderson said the two guards
would be released unharmed
sometime today at which time
“we’ve got people set up to
negotiate for us that are
coming in.” He described the
persons expected to join the
group as “community leaders”
from the reservation and
“traditional tribal leaders.”
He declined to say if they
would include any members of
the tribal council, the elected
Navajo governing body.
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