The Tyler Leader (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 23, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 19, 1972 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGE FOUR
THE TYLER LEADER
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1972 — SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1972
Dr. Rollins Named Department Head
PRAIRIE VIEW— Dr. Ber- ble’s in Milwaukee; Florid
nice Barnes Rollins, a native A&!M University; and Gram!
oil Tallulah, Louisiana, (has linig College,
been appointed professor of The new appointment wia
Business Education and head announced by Dr W W
of the Department of Business clemj Dean of the'School c
in the School of Arts and Sci- ^ts and Sciences, iwho sai
ences at Prairie View A&M -that Dr. Rollins' main tas
College. Dr. Rolhns, who join- diiring this semester, will be
ed college s staff January 4, ,aiong ^th her colleagues, t
1972, received her B.S. degree engage jn the revision of cui
from Southern University, m rjcuium as well as the reoi
Baton Rouge, La., a M.A. de- ganization and improvemen
gree from New York Urnvers- of the Business Department
ity; and a Ph.D degree in ultimate goal.” Di
Business Education from An- clem added) .-ls to establis.
zona State University. , , „ _ . , ~ .
Before coming to Prairie a ach°o1 of at Pran
View, Dr. Rollins worked at ie View A&M College in th
Macey’s in New York; Gim- fall of 1972.”
Coastal Bermuda Excellent For Grazing Purposes jf
Montgomery's Flower Shop
We Fix Flowers for all occasions
Serving You is Our Business
1520 North Confederate
Phone 597-6796
sights in relation to the size
of each grazing /unit. Coastal
bermuda grass was to be his
main forage.
The land was well prepared
and the coastal sprigs planted
and rolled. After the sprigs be-
gan to come up Sterling start-
ed his fertilizer program with
16-6-12 at the rate of about 300
pounds per acre. Lime was
applied iat the rate of about 1
.ton per acre.
The SCS, with Hubbard and
Bundy Maxfield working to-
gether laid out two ponds on
the farm and assisted in de-
veloping a spring for livestock
water.
Bulldozing, piling trees >and
filling old eroded ditches was
carried out according to his
plan. Now Sterling says I
haven’t got the problem that
A good example of growing
coastal bermuda for winter
grazing may be seen on the
E. S. Sterling farm west of
Tyler in the New Harmony
community.
Sterling bought the farm a-
bout 3 years ago and sought
technical assistance in soil
erosion and land management
from the Soil onservation Ser-
vice. Australia Hubbard, Soil
Conservationist in Tyler work-
ed with Sterling in developing
his conservation plan. During
the planning process Sterling
advised Hubbard that he
wanted the best pasture poss-
ible.
His soil was mapped by the
SCS to determine texture, wa-
ter holding capacity, move-
ment of air and fertilizer and
locations of possible water
I used to have of starting to
feed hay in date fall. I pulled
my cows off this pasture in
August and fertilized with a-
bout 300 pounds of 16-6-12 per
acre. In October I turned
them in on the 30 acre past-
ure and haven’t fed hay at all
except during the freezing
cold and ice. My hay feeding
last year was very expensive
as I had to hire it done daily..
Usually I keep a 37 per cent
mineral block before the cat-
tle ,at all times. A check by
Hubbard revealed that the
height of the coastal ranged
from 20 to 35 inches high.
Sterling stated that this 30
acre pasture is presently car-
rying about 24 grown cows
and bulls and I have fed hay
only 5 times up to January 31.
cessfulstk
North Palace Bargain Center
1107 N. PALACE
NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS
SHOES anc! Clothing for Men, Women and Children.
Odd Pieces of Furniture
Phonograph Records galore at Bargain Prices!
Phone 593-4132 oor 592-5734
Open Thurs., Fri., & Sot. 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
A. B. GOODACRE - Owner and Operator
"Appreciate Your Patronage"
LET DELLY DO IT
IF YOUR PROBLEM IS
CLEANING - PRESSING - ALTERATION
Delley's Drive In Cleaners
AUTO SUPPLY COMPANY
Phone LY 2-3012
1115 West Bow
WE STAND READY TO SERVE YOU
Place T© Have
Heart Attack
Where The Price Is Right
Bettye D. Jones
Alma V. Delly
AUTO PARTS — ACCESSORIES
Asst- Manager
Manager
HARTFORD, Conn. —Great-
er Hartford Connecticutt may
be the best p’ace in the nation
to’ have a heart attack.
Because of a new medical
communications system intro-
duced recently in the Greatei
Hartford, area, a heart attack
vactiin can receive on - the -
spot expert medical care any-
where - fom a bedside, office
building, street curb or a
Guaranteed Rebuilt Parts
J| where things are happening
tyler banH
-r AND TRUST COMPANY
The new system, called Aet-
na Cardio-Alert, transmits a
cardiac* victim’s electrocard-
iogram via a portable two -
way radio to a hospital Where
a physician analyzes the sev-
erity of the attack. The phy-
sician then instructs medical
personnel at the scene over
the radio on what live-saving
duties to perform.
Aetna Cardio - Alert was in-
troduced by Aetna Life & Cas-
ualty, thei nation’s largest
health insurer, and St. Fran-
cis Hospital developed the sys-
tem.
According to
search studies,
victims die
prompt
AND TRUST COMPANY
MEMBER FDIC
Ross’ Grocery and Market
Fresh Vegetables, Meats, Poultry
Drugs, Notions and Hardware
medical re-
most cardiac
from lack of
professional; treat-
ment before thay can reach a
hospital — a gap a system
like Aetna Cardio-Alert can
eliminate.
Medical research studies
further indicate that Aetna
Cardio - Alert may save 500
lives annually’ in Hartfod
County — Connecticut's larg-
est in population. It also could
spare an estimated 150,000
livqs -annually in Hartford
tionwide.
Once Aetna Cardio-Alert is
fully operational, it will be
the most extensive system in
the nation for providing swift
pre-hospital coronary care in
a highly populated, large met-
ropolitan area.
Aetna Cardio - Alert is also
unique because of the cooper-
ative efforts of vital commun-
ity institutions. Police depart-
ments, private and voluntary
ambulances services, hospit-
itals and private businesses
have joined together to create
a network to provide better
pre-hopital coronary care in
the Greater Hartford area.
These are the components
of the network:
—Twelve ambulance serv-
ices in the Greater Hartrford
area will be equipped with
portable two-way units and
special coronary life - saving
equipment.
—Three major hospitals in
the area will have remote
control consoles in emergency
rooms for physicians to moni-
tor heartbeats, analyze data
and give instructions to ambu-
lance technicians at heart at-
tack victim’s location.
—Police departments in the
area will screen emergency
calls for possible cardiac
.cases so they can disipatch j
one of the specially - equipped |
1114 N. Palace Ave.
Tyler, Texas
LV0 Television Cable Service
LY 2-1861
BIG HENRY 1 Wolf" RAY, 222-Lb. heavyweight
from Troup, won the heavyweight title in the East
Texans Golden Gloves by knocking out Joe Griffin
of Longview in 28 seconds of the first round. Ray is
an employee of Tyler Pipe Industries, and will repre-
sent East Texas in the state tournament at Fort
Worth March 2-6.
322 North Glenwood
Money To Loan
On Anything Of Value
Nix Finance And Pawn Shop
219 E. Fcrgas^n
Tyler, Texas p; — r93-0203
Office Ph. 665-2131 R. C. Wc ’ ~
Lewis & Walker Funeral l
Owner
Competent Service
With Compassicn
Lewis Protective Ass’n.
Jefferson, Texas
Stock No. 2183
Equipment Includes;
V8 Engine, Power Steering,
4 Seasons Factory Air,
Tinted Glass and All
Standard Chevelle Equipment.
GET A
WAY
lib.
[THE
CHEVROLET
WAY
WE WELCOME YOU
| SONNY’S CAFE
| AND
I CHRIS’ BEAUTY SHOP
1 910 HWY. 79 HENDERSON, TEXAS
§ Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Coss, Owners
CHEVROLET
527 WEST ERWIN STREET
PHONE 592-4377
IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE!
i . ' V
'
** « W' ^ :
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Wilkinson, S. F. The Tyler Leader (Tyler, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 23, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 19, 1972, newspaper, February 19, 1972; Tyler, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth885841/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Smith County Historical Society.