The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 30.08.1985, Qupperneq 7

The White Falcon - 30.08.1985, Qupperneq 7
Preventive dentistry Dental Clinic will sponsor back-to-school program Story by Lt S.R. Peck The Naval Station Dental Clinic will be spon- soring a "Back to School" Preventive Dentistry Program from Sept. 3-17 at the dental clinic, building 862. Appointments for the program can be made by calling the dental clinic, 7425, Aug. 30 through Sept. 6 between 1 and 4 p.m. Children participating in the program will receive an ex- amination, cleaning, flouride application, and oral hygiene instructions. Many parents ask when should their child first see the dentist? The American Dental Association recommends a first dental visit before the age of two. This is by no means a hard fast rule. If your child has obvious dental problems or injures the teeth in an accident, you should see the dentist right away. The main point is to try to have the child meet the dentist in a situation not associated with discomfort. How the child accepts the idea of dental care, depends largely on the parents. If the parents are apprehensive, the child will pick up on that attitude and will react the same way, even if the parents say nothing negative about going to the dentist. How can parents help their children feel good about going to the dentist? Schedule your childs first visit at an early age. Teach your child that the dentist and the dental staff are "helpers" -- people who can help the child have strong, attractive teeth that will last a life- time. Treat the trip to the dentist as a posi- tive adventure. Make the child's first visit a time of orientation by letting the dentist give a guided tour of the office and the child's mouth. Need to lose weight? There are no shortcuts says flight surgeon Story by Mai. Steve Grayson, Flight Surgeon Surprised by a mass weigh in? You're in good company. Renewed emphasis has been placed on wei- ght control Air Force wide. Being too fat drains energy, pro- motes health problems and is bad for esprit de corps. Now that you've been labeled fat, how do you get off the list? A diet, right? Dieting is a cruel delusion. A hard-fought victory over fat is a temporary one. More than 95 percent of dieters will regain weight lost, often gaining back more fat and less muscle than before. Diet aids don't change this poor success rate. Diet aids can be divided into two groups: hunger suppressants and food supplements. Suppressants are pills that have amphetamine-1ike properties. They cause loss of hunger, ner- Staten Island, N.Y. (NNS)-- Customers shopping at the Navy Exchange will find first rate merchandise being sold and every product the genuine article, ac- cording to Navy Exchange offic- ials. John Marecki, Director of Merchandise Division at the Navy Resale and Services Support Of- fice here, assures customers vousness, light headedness and irregular heart beats. And like amphetamines, the effect on hun- ger decreases with time, so the dose must be increased to main- tain suppression. This obviously is not the way to go. Food supplements are differ- ent. These are vitamin-loaded, low-calorie powders intended to be mixed with milk and substit- uted for one or more meals. If this is done regularly, they work. However, if a person normally eats a 1,200-calorie evening meal and substitutes it with a 160-calorie mildshake, more than 1,000 calories will be cut out of the day's intake. Just three days of this and a pound can be lost. The only thing better, and cheaper, would be to skip the supplement and drink plain milk! It's easy to spend $1 or more per day on rneal supplements. that the problems of counterfeit products have not reached the shelves at Navy Exchanges. Counterfeit products are be- comming more of a problem for the civilian marketplace. Rang- ing from counterfeit Levi Jeans to birth control pills, these inferior products are being found in stores around the world. In addition, the weight lost may be 50 percent muscle, not just fat. Save your money and go for a walk instead. Fat people have three choices. They can stay fat, watch their diets forever, or exercise and eat sensibly. Those are the cold hard facts. "Something has come between us, Gertrude.” A recent article in "Navy Times" warned service shoppers to be on the look out for these counterfeits so as to avoid pay- ing high prices for inferior products While the article stated that there wer no "coun- terfeit horror stories" in mili- tary exchanges, it still advised customers to be alert while shop- ping on base just in case. No counterfeits on NEX shelves The White Falcon August 30, 1985 7

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