Newspapers / The Pilot (Southern Pines, … / May 6, 1981, edition 1 / Page 34
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THE PILOT-Southern Pines, North Carolina Wednesday, May 6, 1981 800 Expected To Attend Meet Of Medical Society May 7-10 Bridge Winners WELCOME — Peggy Sarvis (left), membership chairman of the Pinehurst Business Guild, and president Marty McKenzie (right), welcomed new members Bob and Tracy Toenniges, new owner- managers of the Carolina Sundries, into the Guild last week.—(Photo by M.E. de Nissoff). M. Frank Sohmer, M.D., a Gastroenterologist of Winston- Salem, will preside over some 800 physicians who plan to attend the North Carolina Medical Society annual session to be held May 7-10 at the Pinehurst Hotel. Dr. Sohmer began his term as president in May 1980 by pledging to continue the Medical Society’s drive toward providing optimum health care delivery to everyone. His service to medicine is reflected active participation in health care legislation. A native of Danville, Virginia, Dr. Sohmer received his undergraduate degree from Catawba College in 1948. He earned his medical degree in 1952 from Bowman-Gray School of Medicine and followed this with an internship at North Carolina Baptist Hospital. Some of Dr. Sohmer’s many accomplishments are: President, Forsyth County Medical Society; President, Piedmont Medical Foundation, Inc.; President, North Carolina Medical Peer Review Foundation, Inc.; Board Member of the American Association of Professional Standards Review Organizations; and author of numerous scientific articles for the North Carolina Medical Journal and the Southern Medical Journal. Dr. Sohmer will conclude his term as president at the conclusion of the North Carolina Medical Society’s Annual Meeting. Dr. William Y. Rial, a family practitioner from Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, will be guest speaker at the 127th Annual Your Pharmacist Hal Reaves, Jr. Says Hal Reaves, Jr., Hal Reaves, Sr.,'Ralph Caricofe, Pharmacists / Here And Away John Derr Is Speaker At PCC 7 Hearty salute to Mom! What is it about a mother who loves her children equally, yet in different ways? What is it about a mom who feeds, clothes and sees to it that education is high on the list of priorities for her young? Who disciplines, though in her heart she wants to spoil? Who attends our sick, feverish days like they are her own? And who teaches us love, devotion, and compassion not from a book, but first-hand through example? Mom, we indeed salute you, again, on your Day! With much love. .. Here for a week’s golfing vaca tion with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mosbrook is their son, Joseph Mosbrook, who is associated with NBC News in Cleveland. As a member of the USGA Rules Committee, Peter Tufts was at Hilton Head Island, S.C. last week for the Women’s Inter national tournament at Moss Brook. He was accompanied by his sister, Mrs. Donald Blinn, who has been in Pinehurst for the past several weeks. PCC Women Session of the North Carolina Medical Society, Dr. Rial is speaker of the American Medical Association House of Delegates, a position he has held since 1977. In addition to speaker. Dr. Rial has held numerous other positions within the American Medical Association; Vice-Speaker, 1973- 1977; Delegate, 1968; Alternate Delegate, 1964-1968; and others. Dr. Rial is one of the relatively few individuals who hold degrees in both medicine and engineering. His university career was interrupted by World War II and, while serving in the South Pacific, he became interested in medicine. Until this point he had been pursuing an engineering degree. After graduation in 1946 from the University of Pittsburgh, Dr. Rial entered the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and received his medical degree in 1950. The American Contract Bridge League has sanctioned an additional duplicate game for the Sandhills area. It will be played at the Pinehurst Hotel each Monday afternoon at 1 o’clock, and all bridge players are invited. Celeste Warmbrod and Thelma Alpern; (4) Martha Schrader and Margaret Schultz. At the initial game on May 4, winners were: North-South (1) Louise Macdonald and Jeanne Burgin; (2) Marjorie Scott and Dolores White; (3) Alex Davidson and Phil Wainford; (4) Fran LaMarre and Gene Miles. East-West (1) Eunice Menton and Dorothy McKay; (2) Frank and Johnnie Johnson; (3) COMPLETES BASIC Army Pfc. Wallace D. Mack, son of Wallace Mack of 1165 Iowa Ave., Southern Pines, has completed basic training at Fort Knox, Ky. During the training, students receive instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, map reading, tactics, military courtesy, military justice, first aid, and Army history and traditions. PAUL V. BRECHTELSBAUER, D.D.S. ANNOUNCES THE RELOCATION OF HIS OFFICE TO MEMORIAL DRIVE (ACROSS FROM PINEHURST SURGICAL CLINIC) PINEHURST. NORTH CAROLINA 28374 Office hours TELEPHONE By appointment 295-4242 Medical Meet Respectfully Medical Center Pharmacy Tel. 295-6126 Across from Hospital. Pinehurst, N. C. The North Carolina Medical Society will hold its 127th Annual Meeting in Pinehurst, on May 7- 10 at the Pinehurst Hotel. Some of the issues which will be discussed by the House of Delegates are: Pharmacists Prescribing Medications; Elevated Systolic Blood Pressure in the Residents of Towns with Salt Contaminated Water Supplies; and Confidentiality of Hospital Medical Staff Committee Records. When scheduling two or three wash loads for one day, do the items to be ironed in the first load. You can finish the ironing as the other loads are washing and drying. From concept to completion, a Page Built Home has a whole lot more than meets the eye. From planning to registering the home in the Home Owner’s Warranty program, a whole lot more goes into a Page Built Home than meets the eye. Careful consideration is given to placing the home on the lot, such as sun and wind orientation, view, and saving every desirable tree. Plans are studied and recommendations made for energy efficient, cost conscious, maintenance free construction. Every material and craftsman needed to build a strong, long lasting, home that reflects the individual owner’s needs and tastes is assembled, and the cost calculated, in order to give a firm contract price. Constant supervision is maintained during physical construction to assure that the owners will have many comfortable maintenance free years of home ownership. Personal assistance and guidance is provided for the selection of finishing materials to compliment your furnishings. Every Page BnUt Home is protected by HOW, the ten year homebuyer protection plan which includes a one-year warranty on the home’s workmanship and materials, a tw^ year warranty against major structural defects and certain defects in the homes systems, and eight years of insurance coverage against major structural defects. With everything that goes into a Page Built Home before, during and after it’s built, is it any wonder that Page Builders have been making families in the Sandhills happy for so many years.' You Saw It First In The Sandhills At Page Builders HOh/t CWhKS W^RRA^^Y PAGE BUILDERS 29^4!978 McIntyre Road P.O. Box 1788 Pinehurst, N.C. Middle age comes a lot later in man’s life span than it used to, John Derr told members of the Pinehurst Country Club Christian Leadership group at their semi-monthly meeting last week. “In 1900, when man’s life expectancy was 49 years, on an average, middle age meant around 45,’’ Derr reported, citing biological studies from a recent survey. “By 1970 the life span norm had increased from 49 to more than 71 years and this delayed the onset of middle age, proportionately. Today the ages of man have been described by biologists as: youth 25 and then 25-55 as adult, 55-65 as maturity, 65-75 as middle age, 75-85 as later maturity and one should not be considered on the threshold of old age until he has passed his 85th birthday.” This re-statement of the ages of man, while accepted in scientific studies, has not been adopted in popular usage and causes a great many people to try to fit the mold of middle age, decades before they are physiologically or psychologically eligible to be so classed. “The stigma of aging is based on social definitions that should be changed as conditions change,” he quoted a celebrated biologist, “and being an older person ^ould lose some of its negative, disqualifying character in the future.” Derr also cited a number of characteristics which do not diminish or change with years and urged his fellow members to concern themselves with the unchanging A, B, C’s-Attitude, Benevolence, Compassion and 1 Consideration. As a follow up to conditioning and diet to avoid the middle age crisis, Derr cited several medical studies showing the advantages of the essential trace mineral, selenium, which in the past eight years has been reported to be helpful in preventing the breakdown of heart muscle and forestalling cardiovascular illness, slowing the aging process, strengthening the body’s immune system and improving energy levels. The message was one of optimism in that middle age is a later stage of life than formerly, many worthwhile characeristics are not diminished with age and medical studies continue to find ways to extend the already increasing life span of humans to permit longer, more useful and more enjoyable lives. Derr, currently executive director of the Carolinas PGA, lives in Pinehurst. Formerly he was head of sports for CBS in New York and is a frequent lecturer on golf, history and health. Last Sunday he appeared on national television, describing the Ladies International golf tournament from Moss Creek CC on Hilton Head Island. On April 24, 100 members of the Pinehurst C.C. Women’s Golf Association participated in an Individual Tournament: Low Gross, Low Net, and Low Putts. Course No. 3 was played. The handicap was 100 percent. Winners were: Class A, Low Gross: Mrs. Edwin Haertl; first Low Net, Mrs. Merton Gundry; second low net, Mrs. Charles Watson, third low net, Mrs. Charles Kench. Class B, Low Gross: Mrs. Arthur McSteen; first Low Net, Mrs. Harold Salzman, second Low Net, Mrs. Curtis Roney, third Low Net, Mrs. Alfred Zingaro. Class C, Low Gross, Mrs. Raymond Pyle; first Low Net, Mrs. Robert Wilson, Second Low Net, Mrs. Richard Carver, third Low Net, Mrs. Robert Lagergren. Class D, Low Gross: Mrs. John Sugg; first Low Net, Mrs. Ralph Pickett; second Low Net, Mrs. Donald Russell, third Low Net, Mrs. Scott Harrison. Low Putts in Field: Mrs. Willard Hagen; Mrs. Peg Kotovsky, Mrs. Thomas Bothwell, Mrs. Justin McNelly, A tie with 29 putts. WHAT ! ! ! A Quail Hill For Sale QUAIL HILL 52 ^Olde Towne RealtjC, Don’t Miss this Opportunity!!! These Exclusive Condominiums Only Come Available On Rare Occasions. Overlooks 17th Hole, No. 3 Course, Pinehurst 295-GOLF MEMBER MIS Marty R. McKenzie Tony Celia Bill Kelly Located in Historic Theatre Building in Pinehurst I Nothing Could Be Finer H in Pinehurst, North Carolina ^ '• ■■ «• i 15 ELDORADO LANE - $155,000 - Fabulous Arthur .Manns Harden designed home on 15th Green, No. 1 Course - Under Construction (Webb Construction) 620 LAKE FOREST DRIVE - $112,500 • Great home in Unit 1, designed by Arthur Manns Harden • Under Construction (Horris-Kirby Associates, Inc.) f QUAIL HILL II - $157,500 - "The" condominium address in Pinehurst • Overlooking 17th Fairway of No. 3 Course. 102 QUAIL LAKE ROAD - $240,000 - The absolute ULTIMATE In Pinehurst golf course living • Views 5 Holes - Jose Comino Design. Ij „ A -wt. 3040 PAGE ROAD - $185,000 - Exclusive old town with perfection in design for Pinehurst living - Jose Comino design - (Webb Construction) 144 DONALD ROSS DRIVE • $185,000 - Superb living in newest Pinehurst "Estate" section • Jose Comino design - Under construction - (Webb Construction) Nine-Holers The Women’s Nine-Hole Group of Pinehurst Country Club played tournaments during the past month as follows; Aix-il 14-Best ball of four on the front nine of course No. 3. Winners by match of cards: Betty McDougall, Margaret Milliken, Lucille Sheasby. ^ril 21-Captain’s choice on the front nine of course No. 4. Winners: Margaret Milliken, Fran Wales, Jean Crutchfield, Grace Bell. April 29-Best ball of four on the front nine of Course No. 3. Winners (team of three): Grace Bell, Agnes Thompson and Joy Hart. 2 BR 2 Bath on Winchester Rd. $66,500.00 CONDOMINIUMS PINEHURST HOMESITES 135 Unville Garden $85,000 129 Ukeview $94,900 101 Golf Terrace T>01de Towne Realt>Cc $82,500 Golf Torroco 101 2 Bodroom 2 Bodroom, 2 both houso In Gun Club oroo. $75,500. (919) 295-GOLF Pinehurst, North Carolina 46,! $13,‘ 17,': (SOLD) 14,£ SOLD 7,f 7,J SOLD 39, 14,( Located in the Theatre Building Village Green West MARTY R. McKenzie President TONY CELLA Broker BILL KELLY Broker Ridgewood Rood Monticello Surry Circle Merion Circle Winchester Longleaf Knollwood Road Merion Circle Westchester Circle Linden Road Torrey Pines Torrey Pines Longleaf Drive Amboy Place Wilson Road Spring Lake Drive 7,! Asheville Way 9,( Canter Lane SOLD 31,1 Oolc Hills Drive Merion Circle '3-' SOLD SOLD
The Pilot (Southern Pines, N.C.)
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May 6, 1981, edition 1
34
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