Newspapers / Chapel Hill News Leader … / Dec. 27, 1956, edition 1 / Page 8
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■ !' 1 ,1 It • . II I' i; : i! :! „ ' I ’■ill" I. IJ PACE EIGHT CHAPEL HILL NEWS LEADED M5MPAY. PECEiii New Intercom System Given UNC Hospital Christmas carols and tall tales of that merry old elf from the North Pole will be heard through out the children’s section of the North Carolina Memorial Hospital during this holiday season. This has bsen made possible by the installation of new in tercommunication . system this week in the University Hospital. The new unit, co.‘it>-g- about $1,500, was donated by the Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority, a national social sorotily and a member of the National Panhellenic Coun cil. The money for the system came from the Robbie Page Mem orial Fund, a sorority project. The control panel for the • sys tem is located in the children’s Orange County rh *? wi‘h US for your Holiday r^eds. Wo appreclafe your past business. hAay we serve you again in the New Year. Merry Christmas Andr>ws ^ Gro. Phone 2956, Carrboro • When your Doctor writes a prescription, you want it 'compounded without de-. lay. We call for prescrip tions and deliver the medi cines at no extra charge. Call us the next time! SUTTON'S DRUG STORE Telephone 98781 playroom arid will be operated by Miss Katherine McLaren of the | Pediatrics Dept. Miss McLaren is the CoordinaLor of Rehabilitation Activities for the children who are patients at Memorial Hospital. From this central location the intercommunication system will have speakers in each of the rooms on the children’s floor. This will enable Miss McLaren to entertain all of the children in this section of the hospital at the same time. She will tell them stories, play phonograph records for them and tune in children’s programs on the ’radio, which is part of the s3'slem. . Robbie Page was the .son of Mr. and Mrs. Robertson Page of Doug- laston, Xew York, In 1951 the child entered school at X'ewton Center, i Mass. On the same day he entered ^ school he suffered a polio attack. i He never returned lo school and died two weeks later. At that, time. Mrs. Page was national president of the Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority and the Robbie Page Memorial Fund was ‘stabUshed in memory of her son. Aside from paying for the in tercommunication system, the so rority has indicated that it will give future vsupport to the Pedia- .rics Service of ^Memorial Ho.spi* tal. i Mrs. H. W. Morrison, chairman of the social services of the so- ( rority and the Robbie Page Mem orial Fund, visited Memorial Hos pital this summer and made ar rangements for the installation of the new system. Farm Agent's Column By Don Matheson & Ed Barnes Conventions (Contimiicd frmn Page 1) TOBACCO MEETING | A county-wide tobacco meeting will bfe held at Aycock School in Cedar Grove Towmship Thursday night, January 3 rd, at 7:30 p.m. At this meeting representatives of the State College Extension Service, Oxford Ex.reriment Station, and North Caiolina Tobacco Stabiliza tion Cooperative, will pi'esent their views on the tobacco situation. I The 20 per cent cut in the allot ments for 1957 and the uncertainty about Use best variety of tobacco to pi nt, m ke.s this meeting one of the most important to be held ill a long time. All tobacco farmers ere invited to attend. growers to experiment i The Coker Pedigreed* :5eed Com pany of ilartsville, South Carolina ir. putting on the market for the first time a new variety of tobacco called Coker 187. They claim that this variety produces a leaf which cures out to a rich orange color, with a moderately high nicotine content. This variety is a cross between Golden Wilt and Oxford 1-TSl. Tliey fio not recommend that growlers ,pl 'nt all of their crop in this var iety since it yields only a little more than Hicks and about 20 per cent less than Coker 139. The following growers from Ce dar Grove Township are planning to try out a small acreage in 1957: J. T. Dan^ebs, Maynard Parker, Jack Monft, and Vance Roberts. feeds. ' A simple feed mixture of com and; cottonseed meal win likely produce as much mi’k from The average dairy herd during the short winter feeding period as will a complex concentrate ration with four times as many ingredients. It did in feeding trials at North Carolina State College. A corn-cottonseed meal ration was tested against a mixture of corn, oats, * wheat ran and five protein .supplements. Both feeds had salt, calcium and phosphorus added, of the cows receive' a ;race min eral salt; the others got plain salt. All were fed a poor quality timothy hay. The tests ran for 10 weeks, which corresponds to the normal short’ winter feeding period in North Caro- I’ru when poor roughage might be fed. iiiere w'ere no differences in milk pmduction or body condition be- twene the cows on the simple ra- thn and these on the complex feed. Also, the addition of trace mineral .salt failed to .step up milk flow with eihtcr ration. I They are Profs. Milton S. Heath, Paul N. Guthrie, Lowell D. Ashby, I Ralph W. Pfouts, J. C. D. Blaine,' Robert L. Bunting, Rashi Fein and Clarence E. Philbrook. | Another member of the Busi ness Administration faculty, Ar thur M. Whitehill, Jr. will attend the lannual meeting of the Amer-, lean Business Writing Assoeiat on in Oklahoma City on Dec. 28-29. j Philadelphia Meet I The entire faculty of the Class ics Department will attend the an nual meeting of the American Phi lological Association in Philadel phia. They are Profs. B. L. Ull- man, P. H. Epps, J. P. Harland, Wulter Allen Jr. Albert Suskin, Charles Henderson Jr. and Dor- rance "White. ' Also going to Philadelphia are six graduate instructors and as sistants in the Classics Depart-. Clubwomen Decorate Hospital In Motifs For Chrisimas-Time ment: Charles Gross, Ben Reece, Ronald White. Mary Martin, Eliz- beth Hunter and Charles Milhaus- Two On UNC Faculty Honored By Scientists Two Dniversity professors w’^ere among the- scienasts elected to the leliowship in the New York Acad emy of Sciences. They were, Dri Edward C. Cur- ncU Jr and Prof J.hn Gulick. Dr. Curnen is a professor and I Chairman of the Department of WDTS FIRST PRIZE P. W. S?ott, fechnieiaii for the Orange County Artificial Breeding Association, has just received con gratulations from the American Breeders Service on winning first prize in the technicians contest for this area. He has increased the number of cows bred this year over la.st by 66 per cent. The prize for this accomplishment is a gold Gruen wrist watch. GUERNSEY RECORD A registeied Guernsey cow, Guernsdel Maxim Juanita, owned by Henry C. Carr, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, has completed an official production record in the Ad vanced Registry division of the American Guernsey Catlte Club. This record was for 12,911 pounds of milk and 718 ipoundLs of fat. “Juanita” was a junior four year- old. and was milked three times daily for 365 days while, on test. This official production record was supervised by North Carolina State College. Pediatrics in the School of Medi cine. Before coming to UNC, he was connected with the Harvard arid Yale Medical schools. Prof Guliek is an assistant pro; fovssnr of anthropology, and is al so director of the Cross-Cultural Laboratory and a research aisoci- ate in the Institute for Research In Social Science., SIMPLE DAIRY FEED Variety in the cow’s diet may not be ns important as we have thought. Cows tested during the short winter feeding period gave as much niilk on a 2-part concen trate ration as ^vith one having several ingredients. So, daiiymen may want to use more home grown Each Christmas Season we realize anew that our most treasured possessions aro our many enriching friendships. And so to all our friends and customers we wish a Very Merry Christmas! The Ban aj>el Hill •mmw tHum MMeroM* «*«. - Cl ipel Kill Carrbord Glen Lennox DEDUCTABLE ITEMS Farmers can deduct costs of leveling, grading, and terracing land; construction of earthen dams and ponds; eradication of briish; and the building of diversio chan nels from their income befoi'e pay ing tax, provided the deduction in any taxable year for these expendi tures does not exceed 25 .per cent of the gross income derived frXi farming during the year. Farmers w'ho have engaged iii any of these activities should get additional information about this deduction before filing their 1956 income tax. We have, at the Coun ty Agents office several copies of the 1956 Farmers Tax Guide which w'e will be glad to distribute as long as the supply lasts. Law Meet Eight members of the law school staff will go to the annual meeting - f Association of Ameri can La”^ Schools in Chicago Dec. 28-30. Tli^y include Dean Henry Br'':-Gdis Jr.. Profs. M. T. Van Hficke, Frank W. Hanft, John P. TOqVnii Rnbe'-l- H. Wettach. Fred R. McCall. M. S. Breckenridge and Miss Marv Ol'ver, law' librarian. Van Hecke is Association Presi- and ''ill preside at the Chicago- gathering. Other facultv members schedul- -“d at attend maetinss during the holidays are; Prof. John F. Das- hieli of the p.^vchologv Depart ment ”'ho will attend the annual convent’on cf the American As- soe.'ation for the Advancement of in Momi York: Prof. Glen Haydon, chairman of the Music Department w'ho will attend sev- ptvd moo'ins® in TJrbana, Illincis. and P"of:. Alfred T. Brnuer and W. Robert Mann. Mathematics Department w’ho will attend the annual winter meeting of, the American Mathematical Society in Rochester, N. Y. . Also to attend meetings from UNC are Prof. Harrv Davis. Prof. Tom Patterson, and Prof. Samuel Scldon. who will attend the annual meeting of the American Educa tional Theatre Association in Chi cago. E. R. Rankin, head of the De partment of School Relations of the UNC Extension Division, will attend the meeting in Chicago of the committee on discussion and debate materials and intetnstn'e cooperation of the National Uni versity Extension Association. Through the combined efforts of local garden clubs, civic organ-: izations. staff personnel and pa- t J X Mem.: rial Hospital ks dressed up for Christmas. The festive dress begins with the Christmas tree in the main lobby, reaciies into each waiting room, and on Christmas day wiL ent.r the patienls’ room as favors on the meal trays. ! The tree and other decorations for the main entrance and hall w'crc arranged by these .lad.l'ois from the W.'C. Coker Garden Club: Mrs. W. C. Coker, Mrs. Col lier Cobb, Jr. and Mrs. St. Pierre Dubose. A committee from the Chapel Hill Garden Club, Mrs. L. J. Phipps, Mrs. P. H. Quinlan, Mrs. H. R. Totten and Mrs. J. M. Til ley, decorated the two main wait ing rooms. Mrs. William Sprunt and Mrs. Tom Barnett of the Woman’s Au xiliary of ths hospital decorated the back lobby. From the Cemmunity Club, a committee made up of Mrs. C. C. Sholts, Mrs. H. C. Robb, Mrs. F. J. LeClair, Mrs. J. S. Honninger, Mrs. J. A. Warren, Mrs. 11. S. McGinty, Mrs. W- F. Pendergraft and Mrs. Kelly decorated the waiting rooins on the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh floors. The decorations for the third floor waiting room were arranged by Mrs. Susie Weaver and Mrs. Ruby Jones of the Negro Gray Ladies. The entrance to the clinic was deco!al?d by representatives from the Oakview Garden Club, Mrs. John GCldcn, Mrs. M. M. Timmons, Mrs. H. E. Thompson, Mrs. II. D. Crockford, Mrs. F. W. Ellis, Mrs. Sandy McCIamroch. Mrs. MTlliam Moffitt and Mrs. MTlliam Harri son. The seventh floor ' f the hospi tal is particularly interesting as the children have helped make their own decorations. Part of this work was on display on Friday wh?n a show made on the seventh on WUNC-TV. B| the direction of Mrs. er and Mrs. Andre^ k wreathe.s for the y and for the patients floor. floor of th Light the tree! Hang the It's time to wish you, every » A MERRY, MERRY CHRlSTMi ‘ WON MEDAL THREE TIMES Jerry Vayda, Carolina captain in 1955'56, is the only piayer ever io win the Foy Roberson, Jr,, Me morial Medal more than one time since it was iititiated in 1943. Ke won it three years in a row. The medal is awarded to the player making the greatest contri'oution to team morale and sportsmanship. Wentworth & Sloi Jewelers 167 E. Franklin St. STEVENS-SHEPHERD As thi; joyous sloiy of Christmas anfoid may the dour of Pei Good Will and Ha, open for you . and and bring you the many blessings * n the season! ‘1 is J till 1.1 'JJii, ALL GOOD WISHES OF THE SEASON FROM OUR STAFF AND MANAGEMENT BENNETT & BLOCKSIDGE 105 E. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill News Leader (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 27, 1956, edition 1
8
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