Showing posts with label NCSU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NCSU. Show all posts

July 28, 2007



An Virginia pig has become a celebrity while having cancer treatment at NCSU. Fran Martin's 150 pound pig is a painter and has even appeared on the Regis and Kelly show...





News and Observer
July 28, 2007
Josh Shaffer, Staff Writer

Sick, artistic pig finds help at NCSU

RALEIGH - One look at Smithfield the pot-bellied pig reveals his special traits: the blue eyes, the star-shaped mark on his forehead, the paintbrush jutting from his porcine jaws.

The 150-pound swine paints abstract art with his mouth -- once selling a painting for $1,300 at a charity auction, once appearing on "Live With Regis and Kelly."

Then snout cancer silenced his muse. Now Smithfield is the most celebrated patient at N.C. State University's College of Veterinary Medicine, enduring a summer of 19 radiation treatments while stuck in a Raleigh campground.

"They X-rayed his lungs, they sampled his blood and his lymph nodes, so that gave us hope," said Fran Martin, the pig's owner and art teacher. "Then they took the tumor out in June. It was as big as my thumb."

Hope aside, Martin needs help.

She and Smithfield live outside Richmond, Va., and this is their second bout with pot-bellied pig cancer -- a rarity.

Four years ago, the bills at N.C. State -- the last word in large-animal treatment, a sort of Mayo Clinic for swine -- ran to $8,000, more than half of which came to her through generous admirers.

She fears the bills will rise that high again, and she hopes large-animal lovers will help with money and companionship. Martin gets lonely at the campground where she and Smithfield are spending the summer.

"I can't afford a hotel," she said, asking that their location stay a secret. "I'm a schoolteacher."

Martin, who said she "looks 45," bought Smithfield for her two young boys after a trip to the Chesterfield County Fair outside Richmond.

He was the lone pig in his litter, and before long, he had mastered all the doggie tricks Martin taught him. Bowing. Turning in a circle. Bouncing objects on his snout.

Hearing that pigs had roughly the intelligence of a 6-year-old child, Martin taught Smithfield to paint.

He took to it immediately, picking up a brush dipped in blue, dabbing at the canvas, then choosing another dipped in red or yellow.

"By golly, he did it," Martin said.

They may be abstract, Martin said, but Smithfield's paintings always leave an impression. His work has fetched more than $1,000 per painting, helping to build a children's cancer center in Richmond.

A robust pig lives to 18 years, and Smithfield is just 10. With the cancer in remission, Martin figured him good for at least another five -- until June, when the tumor reappeared.

At N.C. State, Smithfield sees several surgeons, a radiation oncologist and a pot-bellied pig specialist: Dr. Kristie Mozzachio.

His treatments take about 30 minutes including anesthesia. Aside from a little mouth soreness, she said, he springs back from each session like a baby pig.

"He doesn't know he has cancer," his physician said. "He's doing great."

While she waits, Martin hopes for a little company on her morning walks, which start at 8:30 a.m. each day at Gate 5 of the N.C. State Fairgrounds.

She said exercise gives her a sense of purpose, a feeling of solidarity with the beloved pet while he heals. She invites anyone to join her. Original article...

"Maybe they've been putting off exercise, putting off losing a little weight," she said. "Smithfield isn't putting it off. He's being brave." Original article...

May 29, 2007

Veteran sees red

Veteran sees red when passing the NCSU bell tower? Rather than complain about the bell tower glowing red on Memorial Day, veterans that don't like red lights shining on the tower on those days should be excited that we are taking time to think about current and past veterans and honor them with the lights. Turning on the red lights, or any other color for that matter, on Veterans Day indeed honors the soldiers and makes that day special.

Like the recent custom of lighting the tower with red lights after winning NCSU ballgames, shining the lights during Memorial Day serves to remind us all that our freedom has been won and protected by the veterans and should make the public aware of a time for celebration.

No matter what the color of the lights on Memorial Day, we are taking an extra step to honor veterans and make the day a little more special. After all, the red color is one of the colors on our nation's flag. Yes, we could light the tower with white or blue lights but red serves the purpose and makes it just as special to help remember those that served to maintain our freedom. That freedom lets us honor those that served in any way we choose and also lets a few complain about the color of the lights on the tower if they choose...

News and Observer
May 28, 2007
Josh Shaffer, Staff Writer

Bell Tower has veteran seeing red

RALEIGH - The Bell Tower at N.C. State University glows Wolfpack red for
the school's proudest and most solemn moments -- not to mention 20 times this
year for cherished basketball wins.

This irks Kenneth Beatty, 93, who can still recall the day in 1949 when the
university dedicated its Hillsborough Street tower as a monument to alumni
killed in World War I.

It stings him each year as Memorial Day nears and he thinks of troops getting
the same red-light honor that the men's hoops squad got by beating Duke in
March. Read more...