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Give Students Trustee Seats, Harris Says By KINGSLEY RUSH 0» Thu Murrkunu MuH An amendment to the Higher Education Act presently pending in Congress could greatly affect placing a student on boards of trustees in American universities and colleges. The amendment expresses the sense of Congress that "students be represented on boards of trustees as full voting members.” The Senate passed the measure on Feb. 29 by a vote of 66-28. It is now awaiting U.S. House of Representatives’ ap-proval- Senator Fred Harris (D„ Oklahoma) authored the amendment which was co-sponsored by Senators Hartke, McGovern, Randolph and Mondale. Harris indicated that the National Student Lobby played •n important role in the Senate passage of the amendment. "This amendment passed the Senate with the lobbying done by the National Student Lobby and the coordination they provided for my staff. I would personally like to thank the NSL for their successful lobbying efforts on my amendment,” Harris said. Layton Olsen, executive director of the NSL, equated the Senate passage of the measure with the increase of young voters since the enfranchisement of 18 year olds. ‘The surprisingly large margin of victory came from a wide spectrum of Democrats and provided a good test of the power of the new 18 year old voter,” he said. Olsen also pointed out that only five of the 33 Senators up for up-election in November voted against the amendment. If the amendment is enacted it would not force schools to add a student to their boards. It is not a mandate, rather it is a suggestion of Congress. However, pressure could be brought to bear on schools to institute the measure by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. It is responsible for the implementation of the Highed Education Act The amendment also encourages schools to allow students to directly or through chosen student representatives, select the student representative who would serve on the board. The recommendation also states that the representative should have full rights and privileges on the board. During debate on the amendment Harris pointed out that students today face many new problems and come from increasingly different backgrounds than in former days. “Yet the major policy-making boards of most colleges and universities still reflect the image of the wealthy white male student of 40 years ago,” he said. Presently 86% of all trustees in America are male and 75% are over 50 years old. Only 1.3% are black. Most are well off. The average trustee has an income of $30,000 and $50,000 a year. A study by Morton Rauh found that, on the average, a trustee has been out of college for 40 years and spends only 85 hours on college business a year. Authored Amendment UNI^ttSlTY^py^y>layed ^portant role Exclusive You have smelled Holsum’s bread, now you can see how it is made, see p. 6. (51 ltrnra ? 3 1972 library Ô/Exclusive Hurricane polls vacationing students on Easter recess plans, see p. 2 Voi. 47 No. 41 Tuesday, March 28,1972 284-4401 Faculty Evaluation Conducted By COLLEEN JOYCE Of TIM HurricaM Staff A faculty evaluation to survey the faculty, their teaching methods and the courses they teach will be conducted the week of April 10 to 15. The evaluation will be available to all UM student* next September to give the students a better idea of the professors and the courses they teach. Unlike other faculty evaluations of preceding years, this evaluation will survey the faculty as well as the students. The last faculty survey published in the fall of 1970, was considered to be a great aid to incoming freshmen, as many had no idea of what college professors were like. The evaluation consisted of ratings on several or all professors from each of the departments. Each evaluation consisted of a short paragraph on the character, teaching technique, and personality of each professor, as well as a grade breakdown on his teaching style, and a rating on the course he was teaching. After the book was published, many professors were pleased with the evaluation, promising they would attempt to correct or maintain many of the established methods or ideas. As in any personal survey there were those who were angered at the results and comments. Norman Levine, co-chairman of the faculty evaluation committee said, “The evaluation is in no way a threat to the professors, the main purpose is to help the students.” The three main goals of the evaluation are: • To aid the instructors In evaluating their present teaching methods, so as to adjust with the changing student. • To stimulate students Into thinking about their educational goals and objectives. • To provide a relevant and factual guide for course and professor selection. rCane The findings of the national commission on marijuana create a wierd feeling, p. 5 Hurricanes win twin baseball tournament, p. 9 UM tennis defeats tough Princeton Team, p. 8 • Lang.. • Belford • Crimmins • Click •Editorials ...4 •eye •Frank & Maud ¿Berger ^ ,...9 Editor Applications Ready All eligible students who are interested in running for Editor, or Associate Editor of Truck or the Hurricane, and Business Manager for all three publications should pick up their applications in the Hurricane Business Office, S-221 of the Student Union, beginning today, March 28, and have them returned by April 26 for incumbents, and April 28 for nonincumbents. Election for Editor and Business Manager will be held on May 3 and for Associate Editor on May 5. Screening of all individual candidates will be held prior to elections, all applicants must be full-time undergraduate students. Goodbye! Today’s issue will be the last until after Spring vacation. The Hurricane hopes everyone has a nice vacation and we will see you again April 14. “OOhlic” Ross, and Dave Smith. In the race for vice-president; Kevin Poeppelman, Dennis DiMaggio, and Alan D. Minuskin are eligible for election. Phil Holtzberg, Joseph King, Ken Cohen, and Joe Bars are entered in the race for treasurer. Chairman Ed Mills ... election commission ‘The election commission found that a total of 12 people who filed for office did not meet the qualifications,” Mills said. Mills said that any decision made by the election commission may be appealed to the Supreme Court. “If our decision Is reversed by the Supreme Court, the candidate’s name, will be placed on the ballot again," Mills said. Each candidate was given “the fairest possible chance," Mills said. The commission's rulings were “totally unbiased and followed a strict adherence to the rules,” Mills added. "For the first time,” Mills told the Hurricane, “candidates for the elections were expected to meet the qualifications in the constitution, and the qualifications were not designed to fit the candidates.” “The candidates were given ample time to come before the commission to discuss their status,” Mills said. Formal campaigning for the election does not begin until after an April 14 meeting between the candidates and the election commission. Absentee ballots will be available in the Student Activities Office until April 17 at 5:00 p.m. They must be returned no later than Tuesday, April 18 at 5:00 p.m. Voting will take place on Wednesday and Thursday, April 19 and 20, from 9 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. Candidates for president of SBG include: Scott Anderson, Sami Burstyn, Vaughn Molden, Oliver Parker, Paul Tumarkin, Mike Evans, Brian Candidates for secretary include Eddi-Ann Rosen, Ralph Crozier, and Ester Rebeca Shapiro The 12 people running for the five available Student Entertainment Committee seats include Mike Mintz, A1 White, Martin Cohen, Jimmie Continued On Page 2 Open Door Sponsors Rap Group By DEBBIE SAMUELSON Ol Thu Hurriesim Stuff Beginning April 13, the Open Door will hold group rap sessions open to all stu-dents and their friends. The sessions will be unstructured and geared to all students. They will not be encounter or sensitivity sessions. The idea for rap sessions came from students and Open Door volunteers and are being organized by Jo Pi-saris, a UM graduate student in the Department of Education who is working with the Open Door for her practicum. “Some students think of the Open Door as a place to come when they have a crisis, and this is certainly an important aspect of the ser-vices we provide. Even though this is our primary purpose we offer a variety of other services and growth experiences for the entire student body,” Rosen said. The rap sessions will b* held weekly at the Open Door, apartment 49K at 8 p.m. The Open Door will close Wednesday for Spring Vacation and reopen Sunday, April 9. 8 Nominees Vie F or Executive SBG Position Save Garbage? Could this be the pf/Sice where old copies of the Hurricane go to die? It is, if students are considerate enough to leave them in specially 'designated areas in the dorms or on —Hurricunu Phot« by BRUCE POSNER campus, where they can be collected and recycled, for future use. The Sewage Treatment plant is the area where such recyclable items as paper and glass bottles are being collected and stored, in an effort to maintain a litter-free campus, and the fight for a better ecology. Ibis Publishes 4Memorabilia9 To Rciise Funds For Future By MARK TARGE A- ill« Nuws Editor For he first time rin 47 years of IBIS history, tb ie UM annual has begun to e xpand its own subsidiary publication. ♦ The new publication. titled “Memorabilia - Recollections of UM” will be publish led this July for sale to UM .alumni, faculty, administration, and interested students an d community residents. Assembled by lfl'72 IBIS Associate Editor Tomy Pas-sarello, the Memorabilia totals 100 pages, and is. the result of extensive research at the Coral Gables Ptublic Library, the UM archj ves, the University’s News Bureau, and many personal interviews with the people who contributed to the f ¡rowth of UM over the court ;e of the past 50 years. Passarello, now the 1973 IBIS editor, is prod ucing the book in order to naise additional funds for the 1973 yearbook. “Among other things, the revenue produced by this new publication should enable us to make extensive use of color reprt iduction in the 1973 yeaibool«,” Passarello said. This year’s yearbook contains no color photographs. The old photos of the Memorabilia trace tk ie history of UM from its day! i in the temporary “Cardboiird College” facilities in thi! Anastasia Building on the‘now defunct North Campus through the difficult years iof the Great Depression on through the ’40’s and '50’s. Memorabilia j Includes photographs from t he days when UM served ai > a national training cente r *or Allied flyers, and of the later influx of returning G.I’s. Memorabilia covers the phenomenal growth of the new Main Campus, and the era of student activism on the UM campus. “Although one of our prime objectives is to pro- Continued On Page 2 By PAUL SWANSON Of Th* Hurrkunu Stuff A total of 60 students have qualified for candidacy in April’s Student Body Government (SBG) elections. The list included eight candidates for president, three candidates for vice-president, four candidates for treasurer, and three candidates for secretary. In deciding the eligibility of each candidate, the commission based its decisions on the qualifications set forth in the SBG Constitution, according to Eddie Mills, election commission chairman. The qualifications specify that each candidate, with the exception of first semester freshmen and transfer students, must have a 2.0 cumulative average, be a full-time student in the semester of candidacy, and have completed no less than 12 credits in the semester preceding candidacy, including incomplètes or courses still being completed. “We disqualified candidates because they didn’t meet the requirements listed in the SBG Constitution,” Mills said. The disqualified candidates for executive office included C. Rhea Warren for president, and Norman Cohen and Eddie Mercer and Pete Soko-loff for vice-president. Grandma Knows Cure By F.J. MIZZLES, JR. Hurrkunu Scluncu Idllur Grandma may still know the best cure for nearly everything. A husband and wife team who are UM interns and a fellow collegue in California have reaffirmed a folk remedy for hiccups. Hiccups are a serious matter, even though they were made light of by the slapstick comedians of the 30’s. Doctors James and Barbara Lankton have encountered people who have had hiccups that lasted from eight hours to two weeks. “No one really knows what causes his hiccups. Some people believe that it might be caused by irritation of the diaphragm (the partition of muscles and tendons between th* chest and abdominal cavities). Others believe it to be the irritation of the pharynx (the throat),” James Lankton, a UM intern at Mount Sinai Hospital said. “Hiccups may also present themselves as manifestations of certain diseases of the liver. What is believed to be hiccups, sometimes may actually be a mild heart attack,” Dr. Lankton said. The Lankton’s first became interested in hiccups when they held a party at their home in Pennsylvania and one of the guests came down with a serious hiccup attack. They tried several clinical cures, which proved to no avail. His wife then suggested sugar and the cure was underway. “After this we did more research into the cure and sent a letter to the editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, in which I said that a simple spoonful of sugar relieves hiccups In eighteen out of twenty cases. They published the letter and over night I was a celebrity,” Dr. Lankton said. Lankton said that Dr. Engelman in California had helped him with a lot of the research and deserved a lot of the credit. “In January, News Week magazine picked up the story on us and folk cures started pouring Into us. It seems that everyone has at least one cure for something. My wife and I and Dr. Engelman may, in the near future, compile a book on folk medicine,” Lankton said. Lankton said that he had some other cures, which —Hurricunu Photo toy BRUCE POSNER A Spoonful Of Sugar Between Hiccups ... may be a cure he had received via the mails, one is for headaches and the other is for nose bleeds. “To stop a headache, especially the throbbing kind, simply massage the body deeply or have someone press on the trapezius muscle with their elbow. The trapezius is the muscle on the shoulder near the neck. This is relatively painful, but in a few seconds the pain will be gone along with the headache,” Lankton said. “To stop a nose bleed from the right nostril, stand up against a wall and extend the right arm over the head until it’s against the wall then try to push through the wall with the arm. The bleeding will stop after several seconds. For the left nostril do the same thing, this time using the left arm,” Lankton said. mmm
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, March 28, 1972 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1972-03-28 |
Coverage Temporal | 1970-1979 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (10 pages) |
Language | eng |
Repository | University of Miami. Library. University Archives |
Collection Title | The Miami Hurricane |
Collection No. | ASU0053 |
Rights | This material is protected by copyright. Copyright is held by the University of Miami. For additional information, please visit: http://merrick.library.miami.edu/digitalprojects/copyright.html |
Standardized Rights Statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Object ID | MHC_19720328 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19720328 |
Digital ID | MHC_19720328_001 |
Full Text | Give Students Trustee Seats, Harris Says By KINGSLEY RUSH 0» Thu Murrkunu MuH An amendment to the Higher Education Act presently pending in Congress could greatly affect placing a student on boards of trustees in American universities and colleges. The amendment expresses the sense of Congress that "students be represented on boards of trustees as full voting members.” The Senate passed the measure on Feb. 29 by a vote of 66-28. It is now awaiting U.S. House of Representatives’ ap-proval- Senator Fred Harris (D„ Oklahoma) authored the amendment which was co-sponsored by Senators Hartke, McGovern, Randolph and Mondale. Harris indicated that the National Student Lobby played •n important role in the Senate passage of the amendment. "This amendment passed the Senate with the lobbying done by the National Student Lobby and the coordination they provided for my staff. I would personally like to thank the NSL for their successful lobbying efforts on my amendment,” Harris said. Layton Olsen, executive director of the NSL, equated the Senate passage of the measure with the increase of young voters since the enfranchisement of 18 year olds. ‘The surprisingly large margin of victory came from a wide spectrum of Democrats and provided a good test of the power of the new 18 year old voter,” he said. Olsen also pointed out that only five of the 33 Senators up for up-election in November voted against the amendment. If the amendment is enacted it would not force schools to add a student to their boards. It is not a mandate, rather it is a suggestion of Congress. However, pressure could be brought to bear on schools to institute the measure by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. It is responsible for the implementation of the Highed Education Act The amendment also encourages schools to allow students to directly or through chosen student representatives, select the student representative who would serve on the board. The recommendation also states that the representative should have full rights and privileges on the board. During debate on the amendment Harris pointed out that students today face many new problems and come from increasingly different backgrounds than in former days. “Yet the major policy-making boards of most colleges and universities still reflect the image of the wealthy white male student of 40 years ago,” he said. Presently 86% of all trustees in America are male and 75% are over 50 years old. Only 1.3% are black. Most are well off. The average trustee has an income of $30,000 and $50,000 a year. A study by Morton Rauh found that, on the average, a trustee has been out of college for 40 years and spends only 85 hours on college business a year. Authored Amendment UNI^ttSlTY^py^y>layed ^portant role Exclusive You have smelled Holsum’s bread, now you can see how it is made, see p. 6. (51 ltrnra ? 3 1972 library Ô/Exclusive Hurricane polls vacationing students on Easter recess plans, see p. 2 Voi. 47 No. 41 Tuesday, March 28,1972 284-4401 Faculty Evaluation Conducted By COLLEEN JOYCE Of TIM HurricaM Staff A faculty evaluation to survey the faculty, their teaching methods and the courses they teach will be conducted the week of April 10 to 15. The evaluation will be available to all UM student* next September to give the students a better idea of the professors and the courses they teach. Unlike other faculty evaluations of preceding years, this evaluation will survey the faculty as well as the students. The last faculty survey published in the fall of 1970, was considered to be a great aid to incoming freshmen, as many had no idea of what college professors were like. The evaluation consisted of ratings on several or all professors from each of the departments. Each evaluation consisted of a short paragraph on the character, teaching technique, and personality of each professor, as well as a grade breakdown on his teaching style, and a rating on the course he was teaching. After the book was published, many professors were pleased with the evaluation, promising they would attempt to correct or maintain many of the established methods or ideas. As in any personal survey there were those who were angered at the results and comments. Norman Levine, co-chairman of the faculty evaluation committee said, “The evaluation is in no way a threat to the professors, the main purpose is to help the students.” The three main goals of the evaluation are: • To aid the instructors In evaluating their present teaching methods, so as to adjust with the changing student. • To stimulate students Into thinking about their educational goals and objectives. • To provide a relevant and factual guide for course and professor selection. rCane The findings of the national commission on marijuana create a wierd feeling, p. 5 Hurricanes win twin baseball tournament, p. 9 UM tennis defeats tough Princeton Team, p. 8 • Lang.. • Belford • Crimmins • Click •Editorials ...4 •eye •Frank & Maud ¿Berger ^ ,...9 Editor Applications Ready All eligible students who are interested in running for Editor, or Associate Editor of Truck or the Hurricane, and Business Manager for all three publications should pick up their applications in the Hurricane Business Office, S-221 of the Student Union, beginning today, March 28, and have them returned by April 26 for incumbents, and April 28 for nonincumbents. Election for Editor and Business Manager will be held on May 3 and for Associate Editor on May 5. Screening of all individual candidates will be held prior to elections, all applicants must be full-time undergraduate students. Goodbye! Today’s issue will be the last until after Spring vacation. The Hurricane hopes everyone has a nice vacation and we will see you again April 14. “OOhlic” Ross, and Dave Smith. In the race for vice-president; Kevin Poeppelman, Dennis DiMaggio, and Alan D. Minuskin are eligible for election. Phil Holtzberg, Joseph King, Ken Cohen, and Joe Bars are entered in the race for treasurer. Chairman Ed Mills ... election commission ‘The election commission found that a total of 12 people who filed for office did not meet the qualifications,” Mills said. Mills said that any decision made by the election commission may be appealed to the Supreme Court. “If our decision Is reversed by the Supreme Court, the candidate’s name, will be placed on the ballot again," Mills said. Each candidate was given “the fairest possible chance," Mills said. The commission's rulings were “totally unbiased and followed a strict adherence to the rules,” Mills added. "For the first time,” Mills told the Hurricane, “candidates for the elections were expected to meet the qualifications in the constitution, and the qualifications were not designed to fit the candidates.” “The candidates were given ample time to come before the commission to discuss their status,” Mills said. Formal campaigning for the election does not begin until after an April 14 meeting between the candidates and the election commission. Absentee ballots will be available in the Student Activities Office until April 17 at 5:00 p.m. They must be returned no later than Tuesday, April 18 at 5:00 p.m. Voting will take place on Wednesday and Thursday, April 19 and 20, from 9 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. Candidates for president of SBG include: Scott Anderson, Sami Burstyn, Vaughn Molden, Oliver Parker, Paul Tumarkin, Mike Evans, Brian Candidates for secretary include Eddi-Ann Rosen, Ralph Crozier, and Ester Rebeca Shapiro The 12 people running for the five available Student Entertainment Committee seats include Mike Mintz, A1 White, Martin Cohen, Jimmie Continued On Page 2 Open Door Sponsors Rap Group By DEBBIE SAMUELSON Ol Thu Hurriesim Stuff Beginning April 13, the Open Door will hold group rap sessions open to all stu-dents and their friends. The sessions will be unstructured and geared to all students. They will not be encounter or sensitivity sessions. The idea for rap sessions came from students and Open Door volunteers and are being organized by Jo Pi-saris, a UM graduate student in the Department of Education who is working with the Open Door for her practicum. “Some students think of the Open Door as a place to come when they have a crisis, and this is certainly an important aspect of the ser-vices we provide. Even though this is our primary purpose we offer a variety of other services and growth experiences for the entire student body,” Rosen said. The rap sessions will b* held weekly at the Open Door, apartment 49K at 8 p.m. The Open Door will close Wednesday for Spring Vacation and reopen Sunday, April 9. 8 Nominees Vie F or Executive SBG Position Save Garbage? Could this be the pf/Sice where old copies of the Hurricane go to die? It is, if students are considerate enough to leave them in specially 'designated areas in the dorms or on —Hurricunu Phot« by BRUCE POSNER campus, where they can be collected and recycled, for future use. The Sewage Treatment plant is the area where such recyclable items as paper and glass bottles are being collected and stored, in an effort to maintain a litter-free campus, and the fight for a better ecology. Ibis Publishes 4Memorabilia9 To Rciise Funds For Future By MARK TARGE A- ill« Nuws Editor For he first time rin 47 years of IBIS history, tb ie UM annual has begun to e xpand its own subsidiary publication. ♦ The new publication. titled “Memorabilia - Recollections of UM” will be publish led this July for sale to UM .alumni, faculty, administration, and interested students an d community residents. Assembled by lfl'72 IBIS Associate Editor Tomy Pas-sarello, the Memorabilia totals 100 pages, and is. the result of extensive research at the Coral Gables Ptublic Library, the UM archj ves, the University’s News Bureau, and many personal interviews with the people who contributed to the f ¡rowth of UM over the court ;e of the past 50 years. Passarello, now the 1973 IBIS editor, is prod ucing the book in order to naise additional funds for the 1973 yearbook. “Among other things, the revenue produced by this new publication should enable us to make extensive use of color reprt iduction in the 1973 yeaibool«,” Passarello said. This year’s yearbook contains no color photographs. The old photos of the Memorabilia trace tk ie history of UM from its day! i in the temporary “Cardboiird College” facilities in thi! Anastasia Building on the‘now defunct North Campus through the difficult years iof the Great Depression on through the ’40’s and '50’s. Memorabilia j Includes photographs from t he days when UM served ai > a national training cente r *or Allied flyers, and of the later influx of returning G.I’s. Memorabilia covers the phenomenal growth of the new Main Campus, and the era of student activism on the UM campus. “Although one of our prime objectives is to pro- Continued On Page 2 By PAUL SWANSON Of Th* Hurrkunu Stuff A total of 60 students have qualified for candidacy in April’s Student Body Government (SBG) elections. The list included eight candidates for president, three candidates for vice-president, four candidates for treasurer, and three candidates for secretary. In deciding the eligibility of each candidate, the commission based its decisions on the qualifications set forth in the SBG Constitution, according to Eddie Mills, election commission chairman. The qualifications specify that each candidate, with the exception of first semester freshmen and transfer students, must have a 2.0 cumulative average, be a full-time student in the semester of candidacy, and have completed no less than 12 credits in the semester preceding candidacy, including incomplètes or courses still being completed. “We disqualified candidates because they didn’t meet the requirements listed in the SBG Constitution,” Mills said. The disqualified candidates for executive office included C. Rhea Warren for president, and Norman Cohen and Eddie Mercer and Pete Soko-loff for vice-president. Grandma Knows Cure By F.J. MIZZLES, JR. Hurrkunu Scluncu Idllur Grandma may still know the best cure for nearly everything. A husband and wife team who are UM interns and a fellow collegue in California have reaffirmed a folk remedy for hiccups. Hiccups are a serious matter, even though they were made light of by the slapstick comedians of the 30’s. Doctors James and Barbara Lankton have encountered people who have had hiccups that lasted from eight hours to two weeks. “No one really knows what causes his hiccups. Some people believe that it might be caused by irritation of the diaphragm (the partition of muscles and tendons between th* chest and abdominal cavities). Others believe it to be the irritation of the pharynx (the throat),” James Lankton, a UM intern at Mount Sinai Hospital said. “Hiccups may also present themselves as manifestations of certain diseases of the liver. What is believed to be hiccups, sometimes may actually be a mild heart attack,” Dr. Lankton said. The Lankton’s first became interested in hiccups when they held a party at their home in Pennsylvania and one of the guests came down with a serious hiccup attack. They tried several clinical cures, which proved to no avail. His wife then suggested sugar and the cure was underway. “After this we did more research into the cure and sent a letter to the editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, in which I said that a simple spoonful of sugar relieves hiccups In eighteen out of twenty cases. They published the letter and over night I was a celebrity,” Dr. Lankton said. Lankton said that Dr. Engelman in California had helped him with a lot of the research and deserved a lot of the credit. “In January, News Week magazine picked up the story on us and folk cures started pouring Into us. It seems that everyone has at least one cure for something. My wife and I and Dr. Engelman may, in the near future, compile a book on folk medicine,” Lankton said. Lankton said that he had some other cures, which —Hurricunu Photo toy BRUCE POSNER A Spoonful Of Sugar Between Hiccups ... may be a cure he had received via the mails, one is for headaches and the other is for nose bleeds. “To stop a headache, especially the throbbing kind, simply massage the body deeply or have someone press on the trapezius muscle with their elbow. The trapezius is the muscle on the shoulder near the neck. This is relatively painful, but in a few seconds the pain will be gone along with the headache,” Lankton said. “To stop a nose bleed from the right nostril, stand up against a wall and extend the right arm over the head until it’s against the wall then try to push through the wall with the arm. The bleeding will stop after several seconds. For the left nostril do the same thing, this time using the left arm,” Lankton said. mmm |
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