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The Ithaca Journal from Ithaca, New York • Page 16

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Ithaca, New York
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16
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16 ITHACA JOURNAL Saturday. June 30, 1973 Mce Haber Hair Transplants Work Ufti 7P With The Stars Medically Speajungj By SAM ORLOFF Gannett News Service BALDIES: The hair transplant operation is reliable. But the reason it often fails is poor planning snd bad technique, sayd Dr. C. M.

Monell of the UCLA School of Medicine, a specialist in head and neck surgery. He attributes failures to doctors who neglect to take into account just how many "punch grafts" will be needed to cover the bald area (20 per square or more and only after psychological counseling. Twenty-four girls treated this way were one -y ft inch 1 and who try to use grafts formation a computer can dig-that are too big (those larger est. and then the computer to 2 1 2 inches shorter than their Prfclcd Wv EYha. Retinitis pigmentosa is a disease which the vie- tim's field of vision contracts as the retina hardens, becomes pigmented, and atrophies.

The University of Oregon's Dr. Rob- ert Hill has found a promising ueduneiii: a soiuuon cauea DMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide). He treated 10 patients who had shown a year-by-year loss of DIET: The pancreas, which lies mostly undet the cover of the stnmarh is a Hnal-nnrnnsP gland: it performs a digestive function and it is also concerned with rhpmirai rnntml nf snuar in thp hnriv Whpn it heromps inflamed (pancreatitis), diet can be a serious problem. At Mon- Goldie Hawn partially shed her comedy image as she opened her new night club act in Las cgas, this week. Goldie known for her comedy and dancing, put on a harem outfit and turned singer as part of her performance.

Movie Review Moore Successful As New 'Bond' or missing teeth show up as varying patterns of dark and light. Dr. Shapiro's machine translates these patterns into in- prints out information about what it reads on the individual x-rav film. IMPOTENCE: Loss of sexual power by the male can stem from a number of sources, a few physical but very few), and mostly emotional. Hospital Physician magazine reports that some Michigan urologists been treating temporary impotence by giving patients six hormone shots six weeks apart and telling them not to worry and achieving an 80 per cent success rate.

Whether the cure lasts is not known. SIZE: Using combinations of hormones. Dr. Marvin Ralison of the University of Utah has been "shortening" girls who might grow to more than six feet. The hormones accelerate puberty, thus speeding attainment of final height.

Since the treatment is risky, Dr. Rawlin-son takes patients whose projected height is 5 feet, 10 inches man men don survive 1. Similarly, grafts several inches long produce poor results. The technique has great promise, he says, while admitting that many patients suffered emotional and physical scars from the poor re suits. In such transplants, small tufts of skin and hair are taken from the back of the neck and replanted in the bald area.

The transplanted hair grows longer and, eventually, covers it. TEETH: Mass screenings for specific ailments are nothing new. But mass screenings for dental decay? At Philadelphia's Drexel University, Mr. Mark Shapiro has developed a way to use a computer to screen 1,500 patients an hour: a fast dentist can check only about 50 an hour. The way it works is that a technician takes one x-ray of each only about 50 an hour.

The way it works is that a technician takes one x-ray of each patient's mouth. Decaved, filled, He has already achieved some victories at the movie's outset, A C.I. A. agent is murdered in New Orleans in the middle of a Dixieland funeral, a British agent is sent to his Maker at the U.N. in New York, and another, in a voodoo rite on St.

Monique. Before the world's agents can be depleted, sends James to investigate, first through Harlem, where the action culminates in the evil "Fillet de Soul," a chain of bars Kananga Horoscope Carroll Righter For Monday treal General Hospital, doctors nave since performed, ac-devised an elemental diet cons- cording to Dr. N. A. Papanico-isting of arrino acids, simple laou of Salonika.

He told the sugars, and vitamins and min- Medical Tribune the first opera-erals which they administered tron was successful in that the to six patients suffering from Patient nw has normal sexual complicated pancreatitis who function one year later, were unable to tolerate normal ANALYSIS: About 40 per cent food. All but one tolerated the of ne women who enter general new diet and recovered. hospitals for inpatient psychiat- SMOKING: There's no escape treatment are there for de-from the effects of smoking, pressive disorders. Only about even for non-smokers, in 17 Per of the men received smoke-filled rooms. British re- this diagnosis.

That's the finding searchers placed 12 non-smok- of the American Hospital Asso-ers in a small unvxla8 go ciation, which surveyed nearly room with 7 cigarette smokers 60fl-000 patients discharged over and two cigar smokers for 52 to a one-year period. More white 104 minutes. The smokers women suffered from depression puffed away (80 cigarettes and than non-whites: 43.4 to 22.5 per two cigars), creating concentra- cations of about 38 parts of carbon DIET: What with so many monoxide per million parts of people trying different diets, a air. Blood samples were taken majr medical publication has to d( ermine the amount of car- felt impelled to advise doctors ben absorbed in brea- about caring for vegetarians, hing. The result: the nonsmok- The Medical Letter says that ers took in about as much as there is no convincing evidence the smokers.

The increase of that complete vegetarians who CO in the blood was small, but down enough calories differ sufficient to suggest that there from meat-eaters in the preval-may be long-term health conse- ence of coronary heart disease quences from what the scien- or other complications of ather-tists cal negative smoking. osclerosis. It says, however, WARNING: Darvon is the that those diets which exclude trade name for proposcypehen milk products provide virtually hydrochloride, one of the most Vitamin B12 and can result frequently prescribed pain kill- in anemia and degeneration of ers in the U.S. its side-effects the spinal cord. Similarly, seri-and toxicity are much lower ous nutritional deficiencies can than codeine or other narcotic resu't from diets made up analgesics (Darvon is a syn- wholly of cereals.

Doctors are thetic non-narcotic). However, advised to prescribe Vitamin scientists at the University of B12 and encourage the drinking Texas have studied 41 deaths of milk and the eating of over the past two years involv- cheese. sight and achieved extremely good results in one and fair results in nine. Previousoy, there was no known treatment. With DMSO, none of the 10 deteriorated during the year of medication.

SURGERY: Rather than un- ueiidne exploratory surgery in diagnosing lung problems, doc- tors may someday use a high- speed, hand-held pneumatic drill to remove enough tissue for study. This procedure is called trephine lung biopsy. The hollow trephine is inserted into a small incision and bores into the lung at 15.OOO revolutions per minute. while the method is not ad visa- ble for all patients, surgeons wh0 have tried it sav it offers great possibilities. HISTORY: For the record, wnat is probably the world's fjrst known vaginal transplant has been performed in Greece.

The Pent was a young wife whose genital characteristics were undeveloped. The donor was ner widowed mother who, coinciaemauy, required surgery for uterine prolapse, a condition consisting of the protrusion of uterus tnrougn me vaginal 11 mi 1 wal inree similar operations mux Positively LasUNights opens 8 PM I CHILDREN UMDER 12 FREE! I FROM THE JUNGLE TO THE 4 HE'S THE GREATEST! 19:00 12:25 TECHNICOLOR C0NWAY, ww.VINCENLw.AM0S H2nd ALL FAMILY FILM! int. win THE KDEATCCT THE DEADLIEST lakes Car Drive-In DUSK TO DAWN SHOW ONE NIGHT July 3 5 X-Rated Movies all on one Explosive Program! 1-3 In The Attic, 2-3 In The Cellar, 3 -The Swappers, 4-99 Women, S-Two Centlemen Sharing. tntirt Program in Color ft wait' DISNEYraJ LLVfl IF I first printed close to a year ago that Anthony Perkins and Berry Berenson, the younger sister 0f model-jet setter Marisa. were having a thing, Then Berry began denying it to other reporters.

"Tony and I are incr tvionHs che'H av nr worcjs to that effect. Well. sometimes friends get bored and piav together Now Anthony Perkins is becoming a father Dv the lovely Berry, Will the couple, who've been living together in New York for more than a year, eet married1 We're taking one decision at a time," says Tony, who's 41 and has never taken the marital plunge. "We love each other. We're very happy about the baby.

We'll see what happens." What's been happening for Tony, apart from fatherhood, is co-wnung me sueciiyw. Herb Ross' "The Last of Sheila with composer Stephen Sondheim: directing some summer stock productions back East: and starring in "Molly. Gid and Me" with Beau Bridges for director Sidney Lumet. which is in the can. So Tony IS taking one thing at a time and waiting for TWO new releases.

the film and his offspring. Sneaking of twos, first it was Mary Rowan Lawford. Dan's daughter, who walked out on ner newlywed (20 months i husband Peter, and filed for divorce. Now insiders tell me that Olivia Hussey took leave of her husband. Dino Martin.

Jr. Olivia left for New York this week with her managers. Rudy Altobelli and Stuart Cohen, as planned but she took her new baby with her. And she may go to Europe from there. A check with manager Altobelli drew silence, then laughter, then the sound of Altobelli brushing his teeth.

"(The brushing) is what I feel about the whole thing." said Rudy. He added obscurely. "Listen, any news is good news." Paramount's Evans has signed Marcel Marceau. the marvelous mime, for William Castel's production "Shock!" Marceau, who'll be making his U.S. film debut, plays a deaf mute puppeteer in the chiller.

The movie's the first in Castle's multi-picture contract with Paramount It Couldn't Happen-to-Nicer Guys Herbert Schlosser. who was beloved while V. P. for NBC programming in Los Angeles, moves up from executive vice president. NBC network, to NOW PLAYING NOTE- MAT.

TODAY-SUN. AT 1:00 P.M. EVE. SHOWS AT ORE as 1. JAMES BOND LIVE AND.

LETD1E I4 BUITN. I open to the public 3 i A 79:30 1.25 Mi ATE Los Angeles Times Service p. esidern on July 2. Herb and his Judy continue to live in New York, as TV presidents must: but their daughter. Lynn, will be back to L.

A. at USC this fall. Don Durgin. now president of the network, takes over a major new- post as executive V. P.

of the company. NBC Gigha. an island off the west coast of Scotland, has been on the market since January for roughly $1.3 million but not to Mick Jagger. Mick helicoptered in to look at the 2.500-acre isle which belongs to the widow of Sir James Horlick. the late malted milk scion.

Greta Garbo no sooner left our midst she was staying with Gayelord Hauser then the rumors began about the lady who likes to be alone. Someone (not mei wrote that Garbo was in Sweden, and someone else not me reported she had an operation for cata racts. Does it matter? It does to Garbo. She sends me word, through a friend, that she's in New York. and that her eyes are as perfect as ever Quote of the week, from Nor- wegian-turned-Hollvwood star Liv Ullmann rorty Larats nave no plans to live in Hollywood.

I must make my roots in Oslo. where life is austere. I mean. life is so easy in Hollywood. If I staved there, I'd end up as a bunny ner." and marry Hugh Hef- TONIGHT TUESDAY, TM THEY TAUGHT MORE THAN THEY LEARNED! "YOUNG GRADUATES" SEASON OPENS JULY 2 EVAMARIE SAINT in SUMMER AND SMOKE by Tennessee Williams also starring RONNYCOX directed by JEFFREY HAYDEN For Tickets and performance information call: Rothchild's Dept.

store NOW Tuls" EVES. AT 7:15 9:05 P.M. MATINEE SAT. SUN. 2 P.M.

mat' tin A PtTU PtlfCTr9M "Rim tmr I JI .11 Jill nun tue THRU EVES. AT 7:30 9:10 P.M. "THE GODFATHER" gave you urrer you couldn't refuse EVENING SHOWS DAILY 7:104 9:05 P.M. iiiUlj'jyiaMiJjyuij'j fimsi FAT GARRETT AND BI1LT TRIM HOUf THRU TUES. EVENING SHOWS ONLY Complete Shows at 7:00 8:15 "KAY" Shown al 7:00 9:20 Plus IMPACT' Shown at 8: 15 p.m.

Only IN COLOR RATED NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED a i urn Do something nice for mate. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jane. 20) Tackle those responsibilities with greater enthusiasm and they are soon behind you. and you gain benefits.

Once your work is done, be happy with attachment. Avoid one who does not reallv like you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) A more cooperative attitude toward others is wise as well as less demanding, especially with partners who are important to you.

Get into that civic work that pleases you. Avoid one who argues. PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Get busy and make your surroundings more delightful and use more modern system If operating in your business.

Be sure to talk over plans with an undersranding co-worker. Make the future much brighter. IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY he or she will be one of those delightful young people with so much charm that everyone will want to spoil this child, so teach your fine offspring early to stand on own two feet. Then the life becomes a most productive and intelligent one instead of one that is hardly inspiring. Be sure also to encourage your child a good deal, give a pat on the back when deserved.

The public life can be excellent here, whether male or female. Spiritual training early. "The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to YOU! Carroll Righter's Individual Forecast for your sign for July is now ready. For your copy send your birthdate and $1 to Carroil Righter Forecast (name of newspaper i. Box 629.

Hollywood. Calif. 90028. has set up by which he can dis pose of his heroin, and then be tween New Orleans and the sur rounding bayous, and St. Monique (actually filmed in Jamaica.) There are chases aplenty a beaut of one involving motor-boats in, out, and through the bayous and another in which James drives a double decker bus under a low bridge, slicing away the upper deck as he does, and stilliacother in a lake filled with alligators and crocodiles.

There's something for everyone. If Jane Seymour is a bit pallid as Solitaire, the heroine of the piece, a seeress who can tell the future from Tarot cards but whose powers vanish when her virginity goes, and it goes, Ya-phet Kotto is faine as Doctor Kananga, as is Julius W. Harris as his Number Two man. And Geoffrey Holder as the cackling voodoo priest Baron Samedi, and Clifton James as a stupid Louisiana sheriff are even better. This is perfect warm weather entertainment.

Go to it! Violence Billy shooting it out or loving it up with somebody or other, then five minutes of Pat, grimly on his trail, killing more somebodies or other. Equal time. From time to time they are observed rather sadly by Bob Dylan, who acts as a dusty Greek chorus of disenchantment named "Alias," and whose songs are sung by him on the track. It is a desultory affair in which good actors like Jason Robards. who plays the Governor of New Mexico and author of "Ben Hur," General Lew Wallace, get to utter such choice Wurlitzer dialogue as "I do hope you enjoy these New Mexico evenings.

They have a fabulous melancholy to them." This' 1 suPPose- is to inform the Peasants tnat tne man is a uTitai" inrt enn rnonl; nrottir But at that, at least he has more to do than such other good actors as Katv Jurado. Richard Jaeckel, JackElam, Chill Wills, Emilio Fernandez and Slim Pickens, who simply and briefly block the beautiful scenery, the one thing Peckinpah has carefully directed. Baron Has 'Ironside' Role Chief Ironside Raymond Burr) investigates a murder attempt which occurs during a Dartv on the palatial estate of a magazine editor, in NBC-TV's "Ironside" Thursday (9-10 when powerful Wayne Dorian (Sandy Baron), the darling of ambitious models, narrowly escapes death from a sniper. Ironside finds many people with a motive to eliminate Dorian Live and Let Die" is plaving al the State Theater It is rated Ki all admitted, parental guidance suggested By BERNARD DREW Gannett News Service We may as well admit it. The James Bond movies have been among the major moviegoing pleasures from the.

mid-Sixties on. beginning with "Dr. No" and "From Russia With Love" (still the best of them of late the pleasures had become somewhat diluted. "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" was fine but it lacked Sean and though Connery was back in "Diamonds Are Forever," that ran out of story halfway through the movie. So it's a pleasure to be able to report that 007 is back in high style in "Live and Let Die." one of the earliest and best of-the Ian Fleming novels, and that Roger Moore is a more than adequate substitute for Connery.

In -fact he. is handsomer and cooler than Connery, and supercilious to the point of almost being snide, but actually that is the way Fleming wrote Bond, being a somewhat supercilious aristocrat himself with no great love for the common people. As an old devotee of the original novels, Moore seems exactly right. The story, which Tom Man-kiewicz has faithfully adapted, and Guy Hamilton directed with snap, crackle and pop, involves the nefarious scheme of Doctor Kananga. an evil black man of St.

Monique in the Caribbean, to take over the world by turning its inhabitants into a race of dope fiends. Movie Revieiv Plenty of "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" is playing at the Strand Theater It is rated restricted, persons under 17 not admitted without accompanying parent or adult guardian By BERNARD DREW Gannett News Service Sam Peckinpah has tried hard (or maybe not so hard) to embody some of the characteristics that made his "The Wild Bunch" so good in 1969 into "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid." which is just out. But more than the chronological four years have passed, violence is no longer innovative, we have had the inevitable duel between crabbed age and youth. And while we could accept desperadoes in 1913 (the time of "The Wild as moribund anachronisms more to be pitied than censured, we would have to know more' about the relationship between Pat and Billy in 1881, when violence was the water you drank, than Peckinpah vouchsafes us in this curious movie. To be sure, violence is there in abundance.

In which Peckinpah success is it not? It was muted in "The Ballad of Cable Hogue" and almost absent in "Junior Bonner," and both died the death of dogs, and not "Straw Dogs," which made a mint. So Peckinpah has learned his lesson, there seems to be a killing every five minutes in "Pat Garrett," but who is killing whom and why, are rather fuzzy and of minor consid- eration. Pat Garrett, played sternly by James Coburn, crosses over to the other side of the law be- cause he is getting old, and so he becomes a sheriff with the avowed intention of ringing in his best friend and comrade Billy the Kid. who is 21 and played like a tired 30 by Kris Kristofferson. "It feels like times have changed," Pat tells his young friend turned enemy for no logical -motivation other than the convenience of scriptwriter Rudolf Wurlitzer.

"Times, not me," smiles the doomed Billv. There follows the jailing of Billy in a New Mexico jail, his escape and pursuit by Pat into Mexico. It is all precise and $iathematical3' Five minutes of ing Darvon. Ten died from taking too much of it and 12 died after taking it in combination with alcohol, the scientists said. Dr.

W. Q. Stumer, writing in the Journal of the American Medical Association, believes doctors should be especially cautious in prescribing it to younger patients. Five of the cases involved girls under 20 who overdosed with the drug. One of the Most Highly Acclaimed Movies of SATYAJIT RAY MAHANAGAR (In Bengali with English Subtitles) with Anif Chatterjee and Madhabi Mubherjeeat Goldwin Smith 'D' Hall (Cornell Univ.) on Saturday, June 30, 1973 at 7:30 P.M.

Admission: S1.2S SING ALONG SONG BOOK GENERAL TENDENCIES: A beautiful day and evening to get out in the world of social and romantic activity and to be with those who bring you the greatest amount of joy. You are able to gain the goodwill of those who have resourceful and ingenious ways and to build up your vitality so you can work and plav harder, better. ARIES (Mar. 21 to' Apr. 19) You can do the things that you most enjoy today and can make this a memorable day.

p.m. Being more complimentary with mate can bring much more happiness with him or her. Do something constructive about that home problem. TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Spend some time improving your home and making life there with kin more pleasurable.

Put those new ideas to work that can start a fine uptrend in your life. Take it easy tonight. GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Get into the amusing hobbies that appeal and plan travel matters wisely. Shop, do errands, keep appointments on time that are important. Doing something kind for those who are deserving is wise.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Sit down with persons who have fine financial structure and ask them for ideas and advice to improve your own. Improve your budget so it is more workable. Get into the activities that add to your happiness. LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) You are very charming now and can make a fine impression on others and gain the special favors you want from them.

Out to the group meetings that help you add to present roster of friends. Think constructivelv. VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Instead of fussing and fuming over little things, get out and look into important outlets that bring real success in the future.

Confer with a specialist in your field. Know how to advance more quickly in that. too. LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct.

22) Contact that good friend who understands you, state your aims of a social nature, and improve your position in that important realm. Know what you most desire in the future. Take steps along such lines. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov.

21) Any public work you do now can be very profitable in one way or another. Look around for the gadgets that can assist you in making your work easier and more profitable. Do nothing foolish. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec.

21) You want to get into new interests, which is fine provided you are careful. But think big for big results. You have a clever new associate who should be cultivated now. A AM A A khfc AM Ml BANJO BANDS YourMoters Pantalgohs Serving daily from P.M. Reservations: 273-2240 STONE HOUSE INN 1457 E.

SHORE DR. KM AM IF he Arcade iv friday-Saturday Isteilen 132 W. State St. Ithaca, N.Y. Proudly Presents The Bernie Milton Band SATURDAY.

JUNE 30 8:30 P.M. TO 11 :30 P.M. ADMISSION $1.50 A 1919 ft LhrmJm.m 4 rwr Joe's Restaurant 602 W. Buffalo St. Will Be Closed Until Thursday July 1 2 sundfty julu i heltn nevjfncSr) gym 1 students ifZ dthzrs.

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About The Ithaca Journal Archive

Pages Available:
784,128
Years Available:
1914-2024