The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 November 1965 — Page 7
LOOK OUT!— A demolition expert holds one of those dolls from Viet Nam, this one sent by a U. S. serviceman to his mother in Philadelphia. All such dolls should be examined by experts, for fear of booby trapping by the Viet Cong.
Foreign News Commentary
By PHIL NEWSOM I'PI Foreign News Analyst The Turks still ruled Palestine when a young man named Green arrived from Poland and took on the name Ben Gurion. It was a name that fitted David Ben Gurion, for he was to go on from there, although the battle for an independent Israel, finally to gain the honorary title, “father of his country.” It had to be with a feeling of regret, therefore, as it must be with the passing of an era of | high adventure that political ' commentators this week were 1 writing an end to the career of j the round-faced man with the halo of white hair who until 1963 dominated the political life of Israel. He had, it was said, become vain and cantankerous and, as many an old man used to pow- : er, convinced that there was no other to take his place. In 1948. Ben Gurion became ' Israel’s first premier and he led I his country successfully against the Arab invasion that followed and again in 1956 when Israel s
army marched into the Sinai against Egypt. And if, at the age of 79, Ben Gurion now is to retire permanently to his Negev Desert kibbutz, it seems unfortunate that he chose as the grounds for his last great battle an issue neither well known nor understood to most Israelis. This w r as “the Lavon affair” and over it he broke with his one-time protege, Israeli Premier Levi Eshkol, broke with the party he helped to found, the Mapai, and went against his owm political principles to found another party which was to fragment still further the already confusing political picture of Israel. In Tuesday s elections, Ben Gurion’s new Rafi party ended far down in the lists with no more than eight or nine members of Israel’s 120-member Knesset or parliament. The Mapai, now’ headed by Eshkol, gained strength and once again emerged as Israel’s strongest single political party. “The Lavon affair” goes back 10 years, and its exact nature
always has been clouded by Is-1 raeli censorship. But in general It involved a James Bond type of espionage against Egypt, clumsily handled and ending with the Egyptian arrest of 13 persons and the execution of two.
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Monday, November 8, 1965
FIGHTING CITY HALL—August L. Sabinske (inset) stands in doorway of his cottage near Lake Michigan, resisting the City of Gary’s efforts to evict him to convert the property into a parking lot. It is 1,000 feet deep and has 300 feet of lake frontage. The city clauns it is the legal owner of the site. Sabinske was born there in 1894, 12 years before Gary was founded, and he claims squatter’s
trait of Britain's Princess Margaret, made in London.
■ / "A v Cellophane tape (used sticky. ; - • side down) often removes cray- ? on marks from carpeting.
ELIZABETH ARDEN DID THIS—Pablo of Elizabeth Arden uses this technique to call attention to the eyes. And it sure does, if you can tear your own eyes away from that hairdo.
4 YOUR HEALTH.
By LC8TEB L. COLEMAN, M.O.
Vaccination Against Polio EACH YEAR we attend a' Many people are confused series of health lectures which about the difference between
are given in our community by the staff of our general hospi-
tal.
We learn a great deal, especially about the new’ things that are going on in medicine. Even though the subject of polio vaccina- ^ tion was thoroughly discussed last year, some of us are still confused about what is the best method of pro tection for members of Dr. Coleman our families that have not yet been vaccinated. Mrs. S.L.S., Maine Dear Mrs. S.: More and more communities all over America are taking advantage of lecture series on health, promoted by hospitals, medical societies and social service organizations. The advantages are great for becoming acquainted with new scientific discoveries and medical advances. Many of these lectures serve to relieve the fears of people who are overly anxious about the mysticism of illness. When they learn of the notable achievements of modem medicine the fears of most people are replaced by a good sense of
hope.
Open discussion after such health lectures for the laity permits clarification of confus-
ing medical problems.
the Salk and the Sabin vaccine. The difference is merely a technical one. The Salk vaccine contains killed polio viruses of three different types. It is given by injection. The first is followed by a second one, six weeks later. The third injection follows in another six weeks. The fourth injection of Salk vaccine is given about six months after the
third.
Sometimes the Salk vaccine is given to infants at the same time that they are immunized against diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus. The Sabin vaccine contains the live virus and is given by mouth. Each dose of the Sabin vaccine affords protection against one virus at a time. The three doses, w’hen complete. protect against the same three types of viruses that are in the Salk vaccine. The live vaccine is modified for complete safety. It is given at the same intervals as the Salk vaccine. Who should be immunized against polio? For reassuring Protection against paralyzing polio be on the safe side and protect all members of the family. Certainly, all infants and children must be vaccinated and given the advantage of this great boon to mankind. All young women and expeet-
As beneficial as these lec-! ^ ™ therS should be protecte <i tures are. they are not meant ; * he va ccme. Even adults to be. and cannot be, a substi-! pas ie ° are not im * tute for the specific advice of mune - and should be vaccinated, the family physician. The choice between Salk and Now. about the problem of' Sabin vaccine should be made
only by the physician adminis-
tering it.
polio vaccination. The brilliant discovery of the Salk vaccine and the Sabin vaccine for the
control of polio is one of the SPEAKING OF YOT'R great medical achievements of HEALTH Symptoms of many the twentieth century. different diseases resemble each These vaccines, like vaccines other H ftn ’t trade symptoms against all other diseases, help | " your friends and neigh-
to build up the body’s defenses ho '‘ s -
against the viruses that cause Dr. Coleman welcomes letters P° lio - from renders, and. while he canBut these vaccines have not not undertake to answer each eradicated the viruses that still one. he will use questions in his can. and do. produce this para- column whenever possible and luzma disease. when they are of general interPoho can be prevented only est. Address your letters to Dr. by proper and complete im- Coleman m mre oj this news-
munisation. i paper.
'Wo-u
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