Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 10, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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    1
THE DOCTOR SAYS
February Chosen
As Heart Month
By W. f.. RRAMISTADT,- M.D
Written for
Newspaper Knterprlse Assn.
February is designated as
Hpntt Mnth. But to a person
with heart disease, every month
is heart month. February was
chosen because of Valentine's
Pay, and this ties in with the old
idea that the heart is the center
of tlie emotions.
It is not hard to see how the
old idea got its start. Any strong
emotion will set the heart to rac
ing and pounding. It may not be
the center of the emotions, but
it is violently affected by them
The normal heart rate of a
person at rest is between 72 and
80 beats per minute. This pumps
about five quarts of blood
through the body every minute.
Since the heart continues to beat
whether we are asleep or awake.
it might be asked why this amaz
ing muscle doesn't get tired and
quit. The answer is that after
'each 'ontraction (lasting about a
third of a second, the muscle
rests for about a quarter of a
second. Even when we are doing
strenuous physical exercise, with
both the heart rate and volume
of blood increased, there is a
short pause after each beat.
A reader has asked what the
doctor hears when he listens to
your heart through his stetho
scope. If the heart is normal he
hears a rhythmic double sound
with each beat; the sound if the
closing of the heart valves and
(he sound of the powerful contrac
tion of the ventricles. If there is
a roughening of the valve surface
due to scarring following rheu
matic fever, or if the valves do
not close completely, thus allow
ing some backflow. he will hear a
characteristic murmur.
In children and young adults
he may hear a slight murmur
i really a blurring of the normal
ly sharp heart sounds' that is
not caused by any structural
change in the heart. Such a mur
mur is called a "functional mur
mur" and has no significance. It
is best recognized by the fact that
it disappears when the person who
has it hops up and down a few
times, thus increasing the heart
action.
Infectious diseases may cause
another kind of change, a rough
ening of the outer surface of
the heart. This will cause it to
grate against the chest wall with
each beat and produce what is
known as a "friction rub."
Since the heart is a large mus
cle it needs nourishment just as
does any other muscle. As the
blood is forced from the heart
into the large arterial trunk, the
aorta, a small part of it is forced
into the small arteries that sup
ply the heart's own muscle. These
are the coronary arteries.
As the hardening of the arteries
that starts at birth gradually pro
gresses, the arteries slowly be
come narrower and carry less
blood. When the narrowing reach
es the point where the amount of
blood carried is insufficient for
the heart's needs, coronary heart
disease becomes manifest. If
this is gradual, the heart is em
barrassed only if there is an in
creased physical or emotional de
mand on it. The resulting protest
is the pain of angina pectoris.
If there is a sudden plugging
of a coronary artery by a blood
clot, there is an acute heart at
tack which may or may not prove
falal, depending on the si.e of
the clot and hence the size of!
I he area suddenly deprived of;
blood.
--
THE OWL
HOOTS
By A I, GKISS
A delegation from the Oregon
Tech staff attended the Confer
ence on College Teaching held at
OSU Friday evening and Satur
day. Those who attended the
annual affair were Paul Meier.
Taul Chitwood, Robert Baird.
Tom Sutherland. LeRoy Fisk.
Fred Foulnn and Julian Agcr.
Two olher faculty members. Don
Vhituer and Earl Kuril from
the Division of Allied Arts and
Sciences, received word this
week that they had been accept
ed for participation in a nuclear
reactor theory summer institute
to be held on the UCLA campus
in Iis Angeles this summer. The
four-week session is sMnsored
hy the A S E E. -A E C. 'American
Society of Engineering Education
and Atomic Energy Commission I.
Two of these sessions will be held
this summer: the other at the
I niversity of Wisconsin.
This is distinctive recocniton
for these two faculty members
became only 25 persons are ac
cepted at each of the sessions
from the whole United Stales
Also, only those could qualify
who had attended previous sum
mer orienlatinn programs. Earl
Mended the preliminary session
Court Records
MUNICIPAL COURT
Traffic
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at OSU last summer and Don
participated in a similar program
at Penn Mate t'niversity in the
summer of 1939.
Oregon Tech's versatile (Jene
I-arson, director of admissions
counseling, has received a letter
from one of Oregon's high schools
asking him to present a library
demonstration during National Li
brary Week. The demonstration
will be designed to get students
interested in going into the li
brary and to get them to read
l)ooks. Larsen says that he
will take with him a four-barrel
carburetor from auto tune-up, a
power brake from auto mechan
ics, a handmade gun from gun
smithing, a set of drawing instru
ments from drafting, an oscillo
scope from electronics and a bot
tle of a scar ids i hookworms'. Be
side each display will he a sign
challenging the students to search
tor information. For example, be
side the hookworm display will
bp a sign with the question.
"Would it be possible for you to
have these?
I, a r s e n also informs us
that he will begin working with
other state system personnel in
conducting junior high school vis
itations throughout the state
wherever requested. For a num
ber of years the High School-College
flotations Committee has
been visiting high schools giving
information about all of the insti
tutions of higher learning in Ore-
con and giving counseling assis
tance to aid students in selecting
the tpe of higher education pro
gram which best suits their
needt. The junior high visitation
program is carrying the service
further by giving junior high
school students counseling and
'guidance to assist them in select
ing the proper high school pro
gi.im which will in turn prepare,
them het for the ty of post
high school education which will
be mnt valuable to them.
Oregon Tech students have
again selected a local girl to rep
resent the school as a qifeen can
didate in intercollegiate competi-j
turn. Marian Roberts. 18. will be
the queen candidate for the Ore
Cal Skiesla which will h held at
the Vt. Shasta Ski Howl on
March 1 and 2 Miss Robert, a
(rehman in medical technology,
is a tf2 graduate of Kl'HS.
(t-tjk i;s of fv Of
r,r-i s
For Professional
TREE SERVICE
Baker's Nursery
Call TU J JS5J
Y' Dinner
Schedules
Eddie Butler
The program for the Feb. IS
annual VMCA membership meet
ing reads like an all-star review.
The politick dinner will be en
hanced bv the dinner music of
Kddie Butler, a local musician
Recognition will be given to the
new endowment fund trustees
Mrs. R. P. Ellingson Sr., Judge
Donald Piper, Dr. Raymond Tice.
Earl Kent and Andrew Collier
Also to be presented will be the
slate of board directors for the
class of 19B3. Candidates for the
positions are Mai Gellup, A r t
Gerlach, Robert Merger, Wayne
Plaisted, Sam Raymond, John
Sandmeycr and Wilbur Womer.
The speaker slated for the af
fair is Chuck Kujawa, who is
president of the North American
Association of Youth Work Secre
taries of the YMCA which in
cludes the United States and Can
ada. He will discuss the future of
the YMCA in Klamath County.
Although the meeting is pri
marily a membership meeting,
all persons interested in the
YMCA are invited, according to
Jack Douglass, president of the
YMCA Board. The affair will be
a polluck dinner at the YMCA
Building at 6:30 p.m. on Wednes
day. Interested persons are re
quested to phone the YMCA for
information about the polluck.
JFK Warns
Of Disaster
WASHINGTON (UP 1 1 Presi
dent Kennedy has wanted that it
would be "a disaster" if the
NATO alliance split over nuclear
defense and economic policy.
The President told his news
onference Thursday that if Eu
rope and the United States are
unable to work together, "it will
have the most serious repercus
sions for the security of us and
for Western Europe."
Kennedy was asked if he con
sidered French President Charles
de Gaulle's veto of British ad
mission to the Common Market
and De Gaulle's insistence on his
own nuclear deterrent was a fatal
blow to Western unity.
He replied that Britain's fail
ure to gain admission to the eco
nomic community injured the
U.S. policy of an increasingly
stronger and more unified Europe.
For the past 15 years, lie said.
"we supported strongly the Com
mon Market. Euratom, and the
other efforts to provide for more
unified Europe.
"We are still in very stormy
seas and I really think it would
be a mistake for us In be divided
at this time when unity is essen
tial." the President added.
Kennedy said De Gaulle had
been committed to an indepen
dent nuclear force for a number
of vear.s, and that the recent
Nassau pact between the United
States and Britain did not make
him form this policy.
Th Pt-aeirtonl aid Dp Canlle
had indicated he was not "an
admirer of NATO." But. Kennedy
said. "NATO is what keeps the
Atlantic and Europe together.'
T.M (. It S. Prt. OfT. I 1
Republicans Claim Democrats Favor
Tammany Hall Type Politics !n State
"You say the funniest thingsl She doesn't FEEL
like an Iceberg!"
Midland Grangers Hold
Busy Session Feb. 6
Midland Grangers, meeting
Feb. 6 at the grange hall, had a
busy session with Master Louie
Stork and officers presiding.
An impressive memorial service
for Jacqueline Osborn was ex
emplified by Chaplain Mildred
Largent and Ceres, Peg Baldwin,
escorted by Lady Assistant Vir
ginia Scala and Assistant Stew
ard Francis Flowers, accompan
ied by Kathryn Smith.
Dorothy and Bob Pyle were re
instated.
A dance is planned for grangers
and their friends at the Midland
Grange Hall. Saturday, Feb. 16
at 8 p.m. Women should take
sandwiches or dessert for the
polluck.
James Flowers, legislative com
mittee, reported that Midland
Grange and Pomona Grange are
opposed to the proposed zoning.
Grace Stork, juvenile grange
matron, invited adult grangers to
join the Midland Juvenile Grange
Paleoecology
Lab Opened
A modernistic new building,
housing a paleoecology labora
tory, has opened at the Univer
sity of Oregon.
Dr. J. Arnold Sholwcll. associ
ate professor of biology and ge
ology and assistant director of:
the Museum of Natural History,
and his associates are in the proc-
cess of moving furniture and
equipment into the one - story.
4flx50-foot structure which is lo
cated in the physical plant area
acrosj the millrace from the main
campus.
The building was financed by a
S-Hi.ono grant from the National
Science Foundation. In addition
to construction costs, the grant
also covered the cost of a part
of the equipment.
The laboratory will be the site
of an unusual collaborative study
in paleoecology. aimed at recon
structing the total environment
of ancient mammals in the North
ern Great Basin southeastern
Oregon, southern Idaho, and
northwestern Nevada.
as honorary members. Degrees
will be given Feb. 27 at 8 p.m
Youth Chairman Virginia Scala
asked youth members to attend
the meeting to organize another
Midland Grange drill team. For
three years the Midland drill
team has scored first, second and
third in state competition. Pomo
na Youth Chairman Eleanor
Sukraw announced that all com
noting drill teams in the state
will he invited to the state grange
session at Oregon City in June.
Midland Grange has been asked
lo exemplify the Fourth Degree!
and announced that Pomona
would give a prize to the grange
that puis on the best work in de
grees. Poe Valley. Lost River.
Shasta View and Midland grang
es have been asked to do the
first, second, third and fourth de
grees in that order.
A resolution from the Ml. He
bron Grange to Midland Grange
on the deer situation has been ac
cepted and will be sent to Po
mona Grange, the state legisla
ture and the Oregon Fish and
Game Commission.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Youngre. of Riversdale Grange
in Douglas County.
The next Midland Grange meet
ing will be at 8 p.m. Feb. 20
with a no-host polluck.
Scenic Group
Slates Meet
SALEM UPH - The Oregon
Scenic Area Commission will hold
two hearings here Feb. 13.
One concerns three proposed
billboard-free stretches near Sa
lem. The other concerns proposed
changes in the commission's rules
of procedure.
One of the proposed scenic
areas adjoins Highway 18 between
New Grand Ronde and the Van
Duzer Forest Wayside. Another is
between the Willamette River
and the south line of relocated
Highway 22 from Salem to Eola.
The two were sought by the Polk
County Court.
The third, proixised by commis
sion member Thornton Monger of
Portland, also is along Highway
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Sunday, February Id, IS63
PAGE 5-A-
CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE
SACRAMENTO IUPH-A Re
publican legislative leader charged
Friday that Democrats were try
ing to push a "bossism package"
through the 1963 legislature.
Assemblyman Don Mullord, R-
Oakland, repeated the GOP's re
cent claim that the ultimate ob
jective was to bring "Tammany
Hall-type politics into California.
Mullord, the assembly liepubli
an caucus chairman, cited four
legislative proposals by Democrats;
A proposal by Assemblyman
Phillip Burton, D-San Francisco,
to make supervisorial elections
partisan.
Bills introduced by Assembly
men John Knox, D-Richmond, and
Nicholas Petris, D-Oakland, and a
senate joint resolution offered by
Sen. Albert Rodda, D-Sacramen-
to, to remove restrictions on poli
tical activities by civil servants
Petris' "do-it-yourself voter
registration bill.
A proposed constitutional
amendment by Assemblyman Al
lied Song, D-Monterey Park, to
abolish the literacy requirement
for voting entirely.
Mulford said the four proposals
were inspired By purely parti
san motives to legislate the Re
publican party out of business.
"These proposals constitute a
bossism package that should be
ejected," said Mulford. "They are
designed to destroy the two-party
system."
The GOP leader predicted that
many Democrats would join the
Republican legislators in reject
ing the Burton measure.
This bill has the clfect of
placing partly labels on local can
didates and issues that bear no
logical relation to partisanship,"
Mulford said.
He attacked the bills by Knox,
Petris and Rodda on civil servants
as removing the vital protec
tion the civil servant has from
pressure to join partisan activities.
Government workers should he
free from any attempt by over-
zealous officials to 'encourage'
their participation in polities,"
said Mulford.
About Petris' registration bill.
Mulford said: "This bill rings of
partisanship. It would effectively
eliminate the literacy check re
quired by the state consitution
and would permit haphazard and
inaccurate registrations. Several
rounty clerks have told me that
this supermarket approach lo rcg-
islration would result in chaos.
He said the song bill struck at
Hie "basis of democracy" an
informed and responsible citi
zenry, voters snoum ne aoie
lo keep abreast of major issues
and cast an Intelligent ballot for
what they want not for what
some political boss tells them
they want,"-said Mulford.
The GOP caucus chairman said
that the "real issue" before the "I am confident that respon
legislature in the democratic pro- sible voters will reject this pack-
posals "is good government ver- age," he said.
were recessed until Monday for
the fifth weekend in a row. They
will begin extensive committee
sus narrow partisanship. Both houses of the legislature 'hearings this week.
On The Record
KLAMATH PAILS
ftlRTHt
BOYS
CARTER Rorn lo Mr. and Mrl. jACk
Carltr In Klumalr, Vftlky Hoipital Fib
7 boy weighing 9 Ibt.. 3' I on.
SMITH Born to Mr. ond Mri Dirroll
Smith In KtomArh Vollty Hotpitil Fb.
boy weighing I Ibl.
TAC.UE Born to Mr. and Mrl. Alvln
Toguo In Klomalh Vullay Hoipltnl Fib.
boy weighing t im. r.t en.
OIRLS
WtFKLV Born to Mr. end Mrl. Phil
lip Wrehly In Klamath Valley Hoipital
Feb. 4 a girl weighing lb., i on.
IH1 SUMMARV
Boyl : 44 Olrlv 4S
Coin Word Explanations Speed Puzzle Solution
EXPLANATIONS ACROSS
3. Theatrical producers try to
avoid a last-minute ADDITION to
the cast before opening since this
would involve additional expens
es. They would almost never have
a last-minute AUDITION before
opening.
7. Lasting RAINS could cause
a financial drain on any com
munity, Lasting RUINS might he
come a financial asset where
they attract tourists.
8. Movie stars seldom have
much lime (or any special or par
ticular FUN since they arc usual
ly short of time. A special FAN
ould be husband or w ile and
receive most of star's spare
time.
9. A man might not under
stand a woman if she approached
him in a strange VEIL that muf
fled her words. He definitely
would not understand a woman
uhn approached him in a strange
VEIN or manner.
10. A visitor who expects to
see cowboys fighting Indians in
the Far West is obviously a
DUPE or someone easily de
ceived, regardless of whether be
is a DUDE (mm the city or some
one from the "country.
IS. Anyone would avoid a dan
gerous RIDE If possible. Some
who participate in a dangerous
RITE or ceremony do so willing
Iv and do not try to avoid it
is Dealing with a MUTE nr
dumb person, requires patience to
understand him A MULE often
olfers no resistance at all and
requires no patience.
17. Sampling for maple syrup,
a tapper might take a little SAP.
He would not always SIP or
taste it in order to sample it.
19. THIN sisters often wear the
same clothes il they alternate
0:N
I Id !a n ni i iTh
T i n sj in e nj A
JX
S'A
D E
Tim: i in! jo u:t ri i It
Ihem with each olher. TWIN sis
ters could be of a very different
build and not he able to wear
each other's clothes.
20. A wise man dors not try to
OUTFIT his wile sinre most wom
en prefer to select tlieir own
lothes If he were wise, a man
micht have to OUTWIT his wile
under certain conditions.
EXPLANATIONS DOWN
I. A GHOVE or small wood Is
a good plae to look for flow
ers. A GRAVE nr excavation
would not be a good place lo
look for flowers.
2. Teaching political science
calls for a CIVIC altitude or one
that pertains to citizenship. It
does not necessitate a CIVIL nr
polite attitude on the part of the
teacher to impart a knowledge
of political science.
3. AS is a word meaning: to
I he same extent.
. A DEFT or skillful aerialist
might perform with an inexperi
enced partner who merely han
dled props He would not have
to he DAFT or crazy lo perform
with such a partner.
5 A little TENDER or small
boat could provide safety for
ship-wrecked sailors. A little TIN
DER or inflammable material
micht provide heal or cooking
(ucl. hut it would not necessarily
provide safety.
fi A criminal might he identi
fied by his NAPE or neck carry
ing a birthmark. He would not be
likely to give or us his right
NAME for identification.
II. A gallant knight would not
neglect an important QUEST or
search assigned lo him. He might
neglect an important GUEST if
an unexpected emergency arose.
12. A judge could be Influenced
by a TERSE or succinct witness
who omitted detail. He would not
be influenced by a TENSE wit
ness since he knows that this is a
condition of most witnesses.
14. A local IDIOM or form of
expression would seem strange
to an outsider. A local IDIOT
would seem strange to anyone.
13. A college that expects a
great deal often EXCELS in lis
teaching. Since it expects a great
deal, it only accepts the best and,
therefore, seldom EXPELS.
18. An honorable PACT or
agreement is usually respected
hy most people. An honorable
PAST is usually forgotten if one's
present is dishonorable.
People Read
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