Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Brooklyn Daily from Brooklyn, New York • 11

Publication:
Brooklyn Dailyi
Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

iiniinnnmiiiminim The Picture of Health by Robert A. Arens, M.D. InrlnHina Other Vitamins mm Onr food suddIv is made up of About Brooklyn By BERT CLEMENS A nursery school teacher in the Manhattan Beach section of the boro tells this one about one of her young charges. She asked the little. 3-year-old toddler what a dream was.

Junior Miss answered without a moment's hesitation, "A dream is what you think when you're sleeping." Gosh, they grow 'em smart here in Brooklyn! Kathy's Klever Komments Keep Komin' in with this latest one of hers. Kathy Fratus says that no matter what a wife asks her husband, she may rest assured she'll get one of the following seven answers: 1. You know what happened the last time! 2. You must think money grows on trees! 3. My mother never needed it 4.

How do you get yourself into these messes? 5. I think you're much too young for something like that. 6. I think you're much too old for something like that. 7.

You and your bargains! Four Brooklyn secondary school teachers of mathematics, chemistry, physics and biology are enrolled at the National Science Foundation Summer Institute of Science and Mathematics at Union College, Schenectady, New York. The four are Isidore Davis of Manual Training, Emanuel Enoch of William E. Grady, David Schiff of Midwood High and Edward Williams of J.H.S. 96. Barry's Bailiwick By BARRY PAUL Martin Leibowitz, of Bay Ridge says that when he gets his own car he isn't going to upholster it in leather it's fabric for his car.

You can't wipe your hands on leather4. Check Mate Bobby Fischer, 15, Brooklyn's chess champion has been. amazing Russian Grand Chess Masters with his skill while warming up in Moscow for the World Chess Tournament in Yougoslavia. The Erasmus Hall High School teener is now in Belgrade as a guest of Tito's government. After the August tournament, he goes on to Czechoslovakia and then heads back for classes in Brooklyn.

Matter Of Course The Brooklyn Museum, Eastern Parkway, is giving a summer course in painting, sketching and ceramics for young boro people up to the age of 15. Classes will meet one day a week through the summer vacation. Crowning1 Glory The Flatbush Boys' Club is sure giving its boys food for thought and thoughts for food with their series of contests. Last week they crowned a watermelon-eating champ. This week they're going to crown an ice-cream eating champion and next week the crown goes to the lad who drinks the most milk.

Answer Requested Why, oh why, must that New York newspaper use a headline like the following to announce the fact that td a. CO 00 iproteins, carbohydrates (starches and sugars) and fats, and of vita-j mins, minerals and water. Pro-, teins are in meats, milk, cheese, egs, fish and whole-grain cereal. Fruits and vegetables are mostly carbohydrate and are our best source of it. Refined cereals are purely carbohydrate: white flour, corn starch, polished rice, white spaghettis and noodles, flour.

mixes, most breakfast cereals. So are sugars, jams and soft drinks. Eaten alone or to excess, these may raise the blood sugar very fast, much as a double martini does, and then drop it, plunging you into hunger, irritability and even confusion. Proteins are probably a better source of energy because proteins speed up metabolism. Besides the vitamins, vitamins and should be named here.

A is necessary to mucous linings, good vision, healthy skin doctors often prescribe it in capsule form as a supplement. Vitamin should probably by most adults as well as children. So should milk or milk products (besides cheese) be used, for they are almost our only source of calcium. Both calcium and are needed to keep bones and teeth strong. Vitamin is the anti-sterility vitamin but serves many other important purposes.

With the refined grains and hydrogenated vegetable oils of modern day food our supply of in food is stringently cut. Vitamin or ascorbic acid is necessary to healthygums and tissues and to fight infection. Like the vitamins it is water soluble and easily spoiled in cook-; ing. Unlike it can be supplemented daily by standard tablets. If milk and iodized table salt are used, most American diets probably contain enough of the needed minerals and trace ele-: ments.

Any deficits, such as that of iron, should be corrected by your doctort a group of young Russian students are studying the ways of teeners in the USA: "Hey, Elvis, Russians Find The Clarence Taylor, a denizen of Sea Gate, writes in to say that he was having a glass of iced tea in this boro diner-when he saw a fly swimming around in the stuff. He called the counterman over and pointed out the insect, saying: "Hey, what do you call this?" The counterman glanced into the glass and then snorted: "What am I a gypsy tea-leaf reader?" Rockski-Rollski!" I mean, how corny can they really get? Double Or Nothing A teen ager, with the unusual name of Evans Evans is making a hit in the Broadway production of "The Dark At The Top Of The Stairs." She has just complet ed her 250th performance in the play. Remember Talk is cheap. The supply always exceeds the demand. 0 Say, didja know that New York City has a population of about 800 Indians, that most of them are Mohawks and that -practically all of them live in Brooklyn's Red Hook district? Miss Joan Fischer, 855 Ocean Avenue, has financial ly "adopted" Myriam Galyaeff, a six-year old stateless girl now living in France.

Joan took over the support of the unfortunate little child through the good offices of Foster Parents Plan, which has rehabilitated more than 76,000 similar youngsters in the past 30 years. Gosh, but we Brooklynites are SUCH nice people! 0 The Brooklyn Women's Hospital has become the 81st member voluntary hospital to be admitted to the United Hospital Fund. The institution is a non-profit, voluntary special hospital serving boro women and the newborn. It was established in 1914 and maintains 66 beds and 50 bassinets to help keep Brooklyn's population figures on the ascending line. Alvin J.

Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Jacobs, $2,500 Reward Customers of Brooklyn Borough Gas Company We are trying to maintain uninterrupted service without inconvenience to you despite a strike of our employees since Monday morning, June 30. We can continue to provide service without interruption if the striking employees or their sympathizers do not cause damage to our property and equipment or illegally interfere with our operations. On three separate occasions and at different locations, service to our customers has been interrupted.

These illegal actions interfered with the public convenience and safety. A $2,500 reward will be paid to any person who supplies information to the Police or to the Brooklyn Borough Gas Company which leads to the arrest and conviction of anyone causing damage to or interference with the property or equipment of the Brooklyn Borough Gas Company. BROOKLYN BOROUGH GAS COMPANY 817 Neptune Avenue CO 6 5300 444 Jamaica Avenue, Brooklyn, a DuPont Fellow in metallurgical engineering at Ohio Staio University, has accepted a research position at the University of Amster- dam, in the Netherlands. Alvin will receive his Ph.D. from Ohio State next month and will work in the European university under a grant from the Dutch Government.

0 There must have been a lot of mouths watering around City Hall when that trailer-load of Georgia watermelons paid a courtesy visit Council President Abe Stark. Brooklynite Stark received the watermelons on behalf of the Brooklyn Chapter, Association for Mental Health, which will sell the huge fruits to raise money for the promotion of research and services in the field of mental health. The Brooklyn Museum is showing 75 examples of engraved glass of Western Europe from the fine collection of Jerome Strauss. The "exhibition, on the Museum's 4th floor, is part of fabulous collection which Mr. Strauss owns and which" covers 3,500 years of glass- iriaking.

a- ft i i 3 1 9 7 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Brooklyn Daily Archive

Pages Available:
28,992
Years Available:
1956-1969