Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Aug. 28, 1965, edition 1 / Page 12
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—IHM rAmiiWA mm SATURDAY, AUGUST as, IM 4-B I *> ■ WKM CALCULATING STATISTICS— Profeaeor John L. Perry (cen ter), an alumnus of Saint Aug ustine's, demonstrates the use of tha slide rula in calculating statistics of counting radio activity to participants in tha Conference on tha Effects of ionizing Radiations on Living ! North Carolina Garden Time - By M. E. GARDNER North Carolina SUto UnlworMty at Ral.iflh California has successfully tested a machine that can pick sweet corn -without injury- Rub ber bars strip the ears from the stalk, dropping them into foam rubber padded chutes leading to rubber conveyor belts. A new fluorescent lamp has been developed which seems destined to play an important part in plant growth, where supplementary (artificial) light is needed; and in after harvest ripening of such crops as to matoes. This is what is called a wide spectrum lamp which gives a more even and constant dis tribution of the waves of light found in the spectrum. In the case of green tomatoes the light causes certain chem ical changes which permit the tomato to develop a true vine FOR RENT OR SALE • Wheel Chairs 9 Hospital Beds • Walkers • Sick Room Equipment McBROOM'S RENTALS .. A'"- 3527 Hillsboro Rd 286-2247 MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INS. CO. § Jf* Jack Margolis HILL BLDO. Ml-W7! "U I FISHER | Funeral Parlor \ All Mob** Av«. Dorfcom ! Phsn. 682-3276—6*2-3283 jjj V*VWH\\\\\\vV\WW WHEN YOU CONSULT US ABOUT RBAL ESTATE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND INSURANCE MATTERS, OUR MANY YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN PROPERTY MANAGEMENT, AUTO, FIRE AND ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE PROTECTION AS SURES YOU OF THE VERY BEST. Consult Us Before You Build, Sell Rent or Renovate Union Insurance & Realty Co. Systems. The conference is jointly sponsored by tha Na tional Science Foundation and the United States Atomic Ener gy Commission. This conference has been conducted on the St. Augustine's campus for two consecutive years. Dr. Joseph Jones, Chairman of the Depart- ripened color. The ripening process, under this wide-spec trum tube, also apprecialy in creases the shelf life of the treated tomatoes. This should be good news for large tomato growers when early frost necessitates the har vesting of green fruit or the loss of the crop due to cold weather. A potato harvester, develop ed in Great Britain, uses X rays to separate stones and clods from the potatoes. A description of the operation of the harvester was broadcast by BBC as follows: "The mixture (potatoes, stones, clods, etc.) discharged by the harvester drop through horizontal beams of X-rays. The X-rays pass through the potatoes but are interrupted by stones and clods. > "When the beams are in terrupted, sorting fingers move aside and allow stones or clods to fall to the ground; the rest of the time these fingers stick out and deflect the potatoes down the chute." It is reported that commer cial prototypes of the machine, which is the first of its kind in the world, are being built. There is also a possibility that the same principle might be used for separating impurities from coal. These are just a few of the many scientific advances which bring into sharp focus the changes which are taking place in our agricultural economy. NATL BAR ASS'N SELECTS MIAMI FOR '67 MEET MIAMI, Florida—The Nation al Bar Association has selected Miaqii as host city for its 1967 convention. At the conclusion of its four day gathering in New Orleans Aug. 7, the group chose Miami. In other action, Revius Orti que, Jr., of New Orleans, was elected NBA president for the next two years. The 40-year-old organization annually meets concurrently with the National Association of Barristers Wives, Inc. Together, the organizations are expected to send about 900 delegates to Miami. ment of Biology at the College, is director oi the conference. He is also one of its chief lec turers. Pictured from left to ri«ht are: Slater Rose F. Preiss, Adrian, Michigan; Edmund A. Kulakowski, Fort Myers, Flori da; John L. Perry, Virginia Beach, Va.; Sister Francis C. Ladd, Clinton, Iowa; and J as. J. Man ton, Helena, Montana. buck lb school savings ! ' gjigj LAST WEEK 5307.00 WINNERS THIS SATURDAY NIGHT ... AUGUST IS i _ _ $1201.00 WINNER Colonial Rntrvti the right to have A Qualified Represent live R 4? I LIJ E HORSE uic I | DANIELS JR Determine ihe Authenticity of winning "CONFEDERATE FAYt I I EVILLE, N. C. I Pill CD na w*Z -T "Pit oie iwiy for Libw Day" I RATOR-TERDER /I 1....... YOUNG HEN LE * l1 ' MEATT iPrTI Mflfl |ciLo " uisT "" l tttdvfvc : rnnrif r u^UW/n COMPLETE SATISFACTION 1111 K ON ALL COLONIAL A W M««■ A BP . * BALL POINT PENS m J9c = I©M ®! ROASTS :s, = i: f-—SO BDT™! lh UH ! EOLJ 1011 STUMPS . 3|| ( (&>") *TYPIMP*PE« «... 26c I c.»- w - I T. y?" 'MP.l*? a ■■ \SPEOAI « IUJE home unst uxr ■istniisa," J. : lh |0 mm —' *«*»» «.m,i,»i.m » JORDAN'S OLD CURE VA. RATH'S BLACKHAWK SLICED SOUTHERN STAR—SAVE SI.OO A * N ° ' COMPLETE VAKIETY OF SCHOOL HAMS BACON HAMS -,, ~"i» CREST TOOTHPASTE, J __ . _ . • CHUCK STEAKS IN. 9«K |. -KB,z%z~ &•- in "Ml. »«« Cit SOM • franks srr- it sj. io - "" / 3 201 jj • ROASTS SSSSSw.. Ik. s»e ~ C-H. —»-» - I SAVE 9c OH DETERGENT LGE. PRELL SHAMPOO ■ Wl,h *" . AAAMTIII 3 ifL SI 00 vino irni AiwfT >•. iw# r| Hnh BNMH jgZWM UUQRIAIL j »i.uu RBRICCRBO m» ^ nr f • FLOOMOER « *I.OO pct ra B3 » * *TWo"cOGATE B "nVFKi SAVE UP TO 17c ON .. . LIMIT IOF CHOICE WITH >5 OKPEK OK MOKE L. »£■■'«-THR S |FTY omm IMAYONNAISEsss39«*s-49« BmHH HinHPaßßei UKnJ uMnh atttJß CAMPmUX-S TOMATO—SAVE *c '""^' 'V IIHH P MS UMi - RAIX'EM or RAATCM'EM I SOUP .... 9599« -srr.rsL 1-fc. 4-m. IIPTY E MM M ™ COIN • GOLMN CREAM CO«N •READED VEAL STEAK _U ■■ SAVE IU ON , WH OLt SPINACH BREAD Hi C DR1NK5...3«89- e,5 --99- ff JO TEA FLAKE—SAVE «c L__ COLI IINI STAMPS | PB V WHV ILa - 1 I -..RD.EYE FROZEN- 1 5 »»•—' 1 M 16-OZ. 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Wellons Village Shopping Center Northgate Shopping Center 908 East Main Street 426 West Main Street, 5 Points State Heart Ass'n Offers Advice To Varicose Vein Sufferers CHAPEL HILL—If the bfood vessels in an average-aixed adult were laid end to end, how far do you think they would ex tend? Sixty thousand milea, accord ing to the North Carolina Heart Association. That's more than one hundred times the distance from one end of the Tar Heel Stste to the other—plenty of area in which things can go wrong! Kinks, plugs and leaks in this marvelous maxe of blood channels can interfere with normal circulation, and every year they cause about half of all deaths in North Carolina. One of the less dangerous, but more annoying, problems to which the blood vessels are heir is that condition known as "varicose veins." They are per haps the most common of cir culatory troubles, and they af flict both men and women. Your heart is the center snd dynamo of your circulatory system. sending blood out thru thfr arteries; it is the depot to «hich the blood returns thru tht veins. On the return trip from the legs to the heart, the blood hk£ a long uphill climb. It is aided in this journey by three things: • Blood pressure, stronger in the arteries, is considerably diminished in the veins but still gives the blood a push. • The movement of leg mus cles during normal activity or exercise helps massage the blood upward through vein walls. • And the third aid is an extremely ingenious anti- de vice little cuplike valves which section off the veins and maintain one-way traffic. They open to let the blood travel upward, then close tighly to keep it from falling back. Varicose veins develop when vein walls or valves weaken. Some persons may be born with weak venous valves or walls. However, disease, injury, over weight. pregnancy even tight clothing—can damage or put undue pressure on the veins. When vein walls are weak, eventually they may give way under the pressure of blood, and sag outward at the site of the calves. Therefore, the the values cannot close tight ly enought to regulate blood flow properly. This increases the pressure of blood against the vein walls, which may bal lon and become "varicosed." ' Standing or sitting a long time U difficult for people with accumulates in the lower legs varicose veins because blood accumulates in the lower legs and exerts great pressure on the veins, the state heart group says. Doctors recommend that such persons put their feet up often —at home, even at the office —if they can get away with it And, the Heart Association adds, even if you don't have varicose veins it's a good idea to interrupt long automobile trips to let the whole family stretch legs. For free single copies of a Heart Association booklet on "Varicose Veins," readers may write HEART, Chapel Hill, N. Carolina. VA URGES RIGHT USE OF FORM TO SPEED SERVICE W I N S T O N-SALEM The proper execution of required forms will speed up applica tions for veterans' benefits, Judson I). Deßamus, Manager of the North Carolina Veterans Administration Regional Office said early this week. Every item on the application form must be filled out legi bly before the claim may be adjudicated, Ramus pointed out. ' Deßamus said failure to pro vide the necessary information delays the decision on a claim ONLY A PEACEFUL WORLD CAN PROVE HELPFUL TO NEW NATIONS BROOKLYN, N. Y. The enormous problems faced by new nations cannot be solved except in a peaceful world, and the solution of these problems requires the cooperation of all the rest of the world. That's the plea the leader of one of Africa's new nations made at the Thursday night session of the assembly of Ne gro members of the Christian Churches (Disciples of Christ) in the Stuyvesant Heights Christian Church. Chief Simeon O. Adebo, per manent representative to the and often leads to an exchange of correspondence before a complete answer can be ob tained. In the event some doubt exists as to how blanks on the forms should be filled in, the applicant may get information and assistance at any VA of fice. United Nation* from Nigeria, told the National Christian Mis sionary Convention that it ia the duty of people of any faith to make the world safe from war. "In Nigeria," he said, "about half our people are Moslems, and only 10-15 per cent are Christian*. But we are getting along without any discrimina- Continued on page 6B The Stallion Club FOR RENT PARTIES-CABARETS PHONE 652-3120 or 5544-2103
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Aug. 28, 1965, edition 1
12
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