DR. MAYS SPEAKER FOR SOUTH
CAROLINA STATE FOUNDER'S DAY
ORANGBBURG, S. G -
Dr. Benjamin E. Maya, preai
daat emeritus of Morehouse
Collage, will be the featured,
qwakar for South Carolina
State College's observance of
Founders' Day, March 9.
He wID deliver an addraaa In
White Hall Auditorium at 4:30
p.m. A reception will be held
immediately - following Dr.
MOST HOSPITALS FULL TIME
ONLY FIVE DAYS PER WEEK
The American hospital—the world's most advanced and best
equipped lifesaving institution—is in most instances only fully
operative five days of the week.
But unlike some private business firms, which are inching
toward an even shorter week, there is a move in some hospital
circles to keep hospitals working at capacity seven days a week.
If this takes place, says the
Health Insurance Institute, it
could bring about a basic change
in health care by helping to
bring down costs and ease over
crowding.
Authorities point out that on
the present five-day basis, hos
pitals provide ample care for
their patients and for the emer
gency treatment necessary dur
ing weekends.
But because of reduced staff
schedules, expensive equipment
often lies idle on Saturdays and
Sundays. And if a patient is ad
mitted to a hospital on a week
end on a non-emergency basis,
he may have to wait one or two
Method leaching Children WHh
Behavior Problems Developed
TIT A DinvrnrrAVT a • . . I
WASHINGTON - A new
way of reaching and teaching
children with severe behavior
problems has been developed
by a mldwestem educational
laboratory, the U.S. Office of
Education said today.
In 18 months of using "a
token from the teacher" re
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W« Hov« Durham's Fiimt Rwwdlfiowd U—d Caw
M*/"* addraas in the Kbkhad
W. Green Student Center.
The day has been darignat
ed aa State College Day by
Trinity United Methodist
Church in Orangeburg and Dr.
M. Maceo Nance, preaidant of
the college, will be the qpeakar
for a 10:45 a.m. aarrlce at the
church.
Hie public is invited.
days before treatment begins.
According to the National
Commission on Community
Health Services, entering a typ
ical hospital on a Friday is "to
spend a lost weekend waiting
for the week to begin."
A study of nearly 4,000 hos
pital discharges in the Pitts
burgh area found that the day
of the week the patient was ad
mitted was the primary factor
in determining how long he re
mained hospitalized.
Admissions on Friday, the
study showed, resulted in longer
stays than admissions on any
other day.
ward system, the laboratory,
which is supported by the Of
fice of Education's Bureau of
Research, reports these strik
ing changes:
-Autistic children, sealed
off in their own world and
either mute or only able to
parrot sound developed
speaking ability and became
receptive to their parents and
other children.
-Underprivileged children
shy and withdrawn to talk
became better than average
talkers.
-Over-aggressive boys vio
lent activities made them wash
outs as students became more
cooperative than normal boys
and paid more attention to the
teacher.. A ■" —
Hie idea betimd the new
technique, says Dr. Robert L.
Hamblin, head of instructional
systems at the Central Mid
western Regional Educational
Laboratory, is "simply to re
inforce good behavior and non
punitively discourage bad be
havior."
Dr. Hamblin's research team
team found that one of the
most effective ways to do that
was a "token-exchange sys
tem.'! He explains:
"For tokens we use plastic
discs that the children can earn
by completing a math or read
ing lesson. At the end of the
lesson comes their reward-of
ten it is a movie, and the
' price varies.
Notes Increase
In Puerto Rican
Negro Students
NEW YORK - Over the
bat tea JMO, fee ambm at
Nepo high aiod studanta haa
•early tripled la ■dfclill -
lor acadeobc coaraaa whße
Puerto Rican atudeats have
more than tripled, according
to a study announced at Board
of Education headquarters.
More significantly, accord
ing to the survey, the 1967
enrollment in vocational
courses, while Increaaed, did
not exceed by 50 per cent the
1958 enrollment in vocational
courses by the same minority
groups.
Executive Deputy Superin
tendent Dr. Nathan Brown
commented:
"The dramatic lncreeae in
academic students, coupled
with the decline in percentage
for vocational students, shows
clearly the increased interest
on the part of minority stud
ents in a college education in
stead of a job after graduation
from high school".
The itudy found that in
1958, out of a total of 28,442
Negro students, 19,292, or
67.8 per cent were in academic
high school*, while 9, 150 or
32.2 per cent attended voca
tional high schools.
Ten years later, in 1967,
out of 0 total of 65,610 Ne
gro students, 53,171, or 81
per cent chose academic and
commercial courses and 12,
439 or 19 per cent enrolled
for a vocational education.
Of thoae now enrolled in aca
demic high schools, over 60
per cent are enrolled for Re
gents academic and commer
cial programs.
Over the same ten years,
the Puerto Rican students
showed the same trend.
In 1958, out of 17,091
students, the Puerto Rican
students were divided neatly
** W( ally:t3»Bs2 jfiiniiiwrartaMkr
high schools and 8,239 in voca
tional schools.
In 1967, out of 42,777
students, 29,908 or 69.9 per
cent were in academic high
schools with over 50 per cent
enrolled for Regents academic
and commerical courses, and
12,869, or 30 percent, took
vocational courses.
Stated in percentages, the
total registration of Puerto
Rican students in high school
increased 150 per cent in ten
years. The academic high
school enrollment for this,
group went up to 300 per cent,
but in vocational high schools,
the increase was only 50 per
cent
I ■
BEGINS CAREER IN U. S. AIR
FORCE—A&T State Universi
ty student Leamon Strickland
of Claxton, Ga., receives second
lieutenant's bars from co-ed
A new reducing and exercis
ing device for use in the home
provides a chance to do uphill
3r level pedaling. The tension
control on the bicycle-like ex
ercise adjusts manually. The,
device costs less than sls.
Several Negro Artists Slated for Notre Dame
_ « M • * n I it • 1 A. 1 _ » -»*»— -
NOTRE DAME, Ind. -
Several major Negro artists and
political figures will appear in
separate student -sponsored
events this month at the Uni
versity of Notre Dame.
The two events are the
"Black Arts Festival," co
sponsored by the Civil Rights
Commission of the Student
Union and the A fro-American
Society, and the "Community
Forum on Black Power," spon
sored by the Student Union
Academic Commission, with
the assistance of various South
Bend groups, including the
soothing antiseptic relief for
CHAPPED LIPS
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S ELKINS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH S 2T. W*g
Miss Linda Bell, Jackson, N. C.
Lt. Strickland was commission
ed in exercises at the Univer
sity recently
When we have nothing to
say its' best to say nothing,
but few of us can do it.
Compensation and pension
payments to veterans exceeded
$4.6 billion during 1968.
Mayor's Human Relations
Commission, the Urban League,
the NAACP, the Chamber of
Commerce, the St. Joseph
County Council of Churches,
and The Junior Chamber of
Commerce.
The Black Arts Festival will
include both drama and lec
tures by literary figures. The
drama will include two plays,
"A Slow Dance on the Killing
Ground" and "Psalms of Pro
test," both performed by art
ists of Ebony Talent Asso
ciates, Inc., Chicago.
The literary figures are
scheduled to appear on cam
pus between March 17 and 23,
but specific program informa
tion is yet to be released. Head
lining the writers and editors'
will be Gwendolyn Brooks,
poet-laureate of the State of
Illinois.
Other speakers will include
Lerone Bennett, on leave as a
senior editor of Ebony maga
Physicist Looks
At Man's Quest
To Create Life
One of man's moot atari**
dreams-the artificial creation
of life-will get a long look
from a Nobel Priza-winning
physicist Thursday night at
Duke Unhrentty.
Dr. Eugene P. Wigner, pro
fessor of physics at Princeton
University, is expected to exa
mine the relationship between
physics and principlee and the
secret of life, and the implica
tions for the science of physics
of the sgeold dream should
come true.
He will deliver the annual
Fritz London Memorial Lec
ture at 8 p.m. in the audi
torium of the Duke Biological
Sciences Building. The pro
gram will be sponsored by the
Duke Chapter of Sigma XI.
It honors the late Fritz Lon
don, Duke physicist who pio
neered in the development of
quantum mechanics, a concept
that underlies many brances
of the science today.
Wigner will speak on "A
Science of Consciousness." In
recent writings, he has main
tained that given the present
knowledge of physics, the crea
tion of life appears within
man's reach.
But if this is achieved, he
concludes that many of the
zine and currently a visiting
professor of Afro-American
studies at Northwestern Uni
versity. Among Bennett's seve
ral books are "Before the May
flower," "What Manner of
Man," and "Black Power:
U.S.A."
Leßoi Jones, a black mili
tant social critic, poet, and
playwright, will speak at 8 p.m.
March 23 in Washington Hall,
his appearance is being co
sponsored by the Sophomore
Literary Festival
George R. Horn, Jr., a soph
omore from Mobile, Ala., and
gfeairman of the festival, said
its theme is "The Contempo
rary Black Man." "We hope
the festival will bring into
sharp focus the dual aspect of
the American heritage and sti
mulate a greater appreciation
for the Black man's significant
contribution to yesterday's
American and his great promise
for tomorrow's world."
SATURDAY. MARCH 8. IMS THE CABOUNA TIMKft-
ATTY. a HUGO PAYNE IS SEMINAR
CONSULTANT AT CLAFLIN COLLEGE
ORANGEBURG, 8. C. -
Everyone must bet the reality
of Ufa and resolve for Mm—lf
who Im ia and what his highest
Mp(ntk>ni an. Until the indl-
Tidual does this, be flnda It
difficult to cbooee a perspec
tive from which to chart a
meaningful count for hit life.
Thia la the general theme of
the Third Annual two-day ae
minar called Operation: Self-
Concept which will take place
on Friday and Saturday, March
7 and 8 at Clafiin College In
Orangeburg, South Carolina.
Students will become involved
in group fioni, sensitivity
session*, open-end discussions,
and lecture sessions that deal
with the concepts of self-iden
tity and the Black experience.
Attorney Payne, a consul
basic laws of physics will be
changed.
A leader in the development
of nuclear reactors during
World War 11, the Princeton
scientist also received the
Fermi Award in 1958 and
the Atoms for Peace Award in
1960 in recognition of the
leading part he played in that
development.
He also is the co-author of
two well-known books on the
proceas of nuclear reactions
and the nuclear reactor, and
the author of numerous scien
tific papers.
CARPENTER'S
The Action Dealer
Can Do!
Will Do!
1969 Chevrolet $195 Down
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TO DO BUSINESS WITH ...
E. Haia at Elisabeth St. TeL MM4SI Opca tfl • PJL
tant for the Seminar, wfll re
late farming and the practice of
law to setf-swareneaa. (Note:
Please Continue WHh Materials
Found on Attached Sheets...
Biographical Notes on Comul
tant.) 0
Dr. John Van Buren, Pro
faaaor of Guidance at Hofstra
Unlvenity, Hempstead, New
York and a Consultant in Psy
chological Counseling, win
head a team of five consultant
in various vocational areas ss
they explore s cartography of
life through self-identity.
Samuel D. Ewing, Jr., a secu
rity analyst of Grass and Com
pany of New York, wfll lecture
on finding meaning in life
through engineering and the
itock market. Mrs. Freddye
Henderson, vice-president of
Henderson Travel Service, Inc.
of Atlanta, Georgia, will lec
ture on finding oneself through
travel and fashions. Bill Mat
ney, NBC reporter, will discuss
those aspects of maaa media
that relate to helping one And
himself. The Ave consultants
will conduct a closed session
on Friday afternoon for folk
under 30 years of age. Thia
session will give students op
portunity to become quietly
involved in pertinent questions
and responses that confront
them today.
7A