CAROLINA TIMES Sat. July 21. 197S
i . '. - - . - - - - . .
J Summer
enrollment
Is Now 1J84
North Carolina Central
University's summer sessions
enrolled 1,784 students, two
university officials announced
Dr. Charles W. Orr, director
of summer sessions and
continuing education, and
Brooklyn T. McMilion,
registrar, reported that 1,233
undergraduates, 513 graduate
students, and 38 library science
students were enrolled in the
two concurrent summer
sessions.
The regular summer session
began June 11 and will end
Jury 31. A six-week session, for
graduate students only, began
June 25 and will also end July
31. Students are enrolled for
one session only.
Not counted in the
enrollment announced this
week are the students who will
be enrolled in a post-session
which begins August 1 and
ends August 21.
Approximately 50 students are
expected to take
undergraduate level courses
during that period.
The course now scheduled
for the post-session, according
to Dr. Orr, is a course for
elementary school teachers of
mathematics.
-Chita
(Continued from FRONT Page)
unto November 27.
The fourth and final
seminar, to last for three
weeks, will deal with business
management in general and
interested individuals. The
subject has not been chosen
due to the Chain's efforts to
allow the public the
opportunity to suggest an area.
The course chosen will depend
upon the public's response to
what subject is desired by the
majority.
However, the public is urged
to attend any or all of the
above seminars. Please call the
office to register at 688-7356.
Jefcs
(Continued from FRONT Page)
Commission will publish a
report very shortly showing
minority employment data for
individual agencies and
geographic areas, and analyzing
recent changes in total and
minority employment. The
report, which is required by
the Equal Employment
Opportunity Act, wll be
placed on sale at the
Government Printing Office,
and is the last one which will
be developed by special survey
reports. The Commission noted
that in the future information
on minorities in the Federal
work force will be generated
from a new central personnel
data file, reducing the cost and
increasing the speed and
accuracy of data collection and
reporting.
-Jidge
(Continued from FRONT Page)
the growing importance of the
developing countries on that
continent, world interest will
be centered on Abidjan as the
conference gets under way.
Judge Thompson is a native
of Mebane, and a past
president of the Washington
and National Bar Associations.
He holds membership in the
American Bar Association and
has served in several official
capacities of that body. His
interest in international law
goes back many years.
Thompson was Secretary
General of the Center from
1961 to 1967 and has been the
Secretary-Treasurer since 1968.
He was appointed to the bench
in June, 1969.
Judge Thompson is a
graduate of Howard U. and the
Robert Terrell Law School and
did graduate work at City
College of New York. He is
married to the former Audrey
Waller and they have a son,
William Waller Thompson.
RABAT, Morocco j
The Libyan news agency said
in a broadcast monitored here
that- President Moammar
Khadafy's attempt to enforce
Islamic laws banning liquor has
encountered, a stumbling block
homemade liquor.
Ceramics Museum Opens in Niagara Fails
NIAGARA PALLS. N.Y.-The world's first museum de
voted entirely to ceramics has opened here.
Depictingjbe history, technology and art of ceramics as
it relates:; man and his environment. The Carborundum
Museum oreramics, under the direction of A. Richard
DeNatale, will emphasize the evolution of man and ce
ramics throush the use of
exhibits, displays, motion
pictures and special events.
The new building, design
ed by architect Gordon Bun
shaft, houses a small "fac
tory" where 16 craftsmen
from Staffordshire, England
produce fine bone china.
These exclusive pieces,
which visitors may purchase
at the gift shop, will be
manufactured and decorated
using techniques and mate
rials employed at the time
of Joslah Spode II.
A 200-seat theatre in the
museum features a film shot
in England, depicting
Spode's discovery of the art
of making bone china. A
second film is shown within
a unique environment en-
tirely made of stretch nylon
created especially for the
museum by sculptress
Aleksandra Kasuba.
The museum also features
a pottery studio with four
potter's wheels and a kiln,
and a grinding and finish
ing exhibition.
The museum has also es
tablished a Speakers Bu
reau to give multi-media
lecture demonstrations to
. interested clubs, groups and
school assemblies.
English Claymaster, Gerald
Bailey, at work in on-site
"factory" iri the Carborundum
Museum of Ceramics, Niagara
Falls, New York.
A public, non-profit in
stitution. The Carborundum
Museum of Ceramics is four
blocks from the American
Falls. During the summer,
it will be open daily and
weekends from 10 a.m. to
10 p.m. Admission is $2.25
for' adults; $1 for children.
Children under six are free.
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minister of the First African
Baptist Church and President
of Leiand College from MS
jo 1942, and at Benedict
College where he served for 23
ft was with success that Dr.
- a m Wtj. j rka
ana airs, eajswaai ww
task of maintaining am
upgrading oeneaici uj
doubling the physical phut.
tripling the student nouy man
faculty, and greatly expanding
the budges. ',-,
y But the achievement most
gratifying to them was the
accreditation of the college in
i$$t by the Southern
jjjanrhrflnri of Colleges and
"This was recognition of
Benedict's long strides forward,
and of the diligent and
successful labors of my
husband and other supporters
of the college," the former
Benedict lint lady said.
Mrs. Bacoats taught English
for 15 years at Benedict before
becoming Dean of Students for
ten years. She was serving in
the latter past in September
1965 when her husband died
unexpectedly of a brief illness.
At the time, the couple was
build ing a beautiful new home
on Colonial Drive in Columbia
Dr. Bacoat's death, tees than a
month before his 73rd
birthday, came before he
occupied it,
Mrs. Bacoats has continued
to maintain her close ties with
the college and to keep busily
involved with many civic,
. 1 .AlldlAHl
Cultural mau iwiw
organizations. -),-",
Everyone from the butcher
to the banker tries to increase
their assets and many invest
in the stock market. Aa a re
sult, some 30,000,000 Ameri
cans (two-thirds with taxable
incomes under $15,000) invest,
and help our economy expand.
To make it worth the while of
individual investors who take
the risk, the capital gains tax
must continue to tax long term
investments fairly. Z
Mrs. t Bacoats
Mrs. Daxoais, wire 01 rormer
Benedict Pres. Leaves Columbia
COLUMBIA, S. Q. - It was
30 years ago this summer that
Mrs. Inez B. Bacoats and
Food Mill Ideal
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flavor so Intensified that
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particularly true of high-fiber
vegetables such as corn, lima
beans and peas.
former President J. A. Bacoats
of Benedict College came to
South Carolina to begin then
work at the Baptist-related
school.
Now, nearly eight years
after her husband's death, Mrs.
Bacoats is leaving Columbia to
take up residence in-.,
Spotsylvania, Virginia, where
she was born, received her
early education, married, and
began a teaching career which
spanned more than 40 yean.
"These have been rewarding
years in South Carolina and
I'm going to miss my many
friends in educational . and
religious work," she said. "I've
certainly put down some solid,
roots in Columbia, but now
feel like going back home to be
near my four sisters in
Spotsylvania."
The ninth chUd In a family
of ten children, Mrs. Bocoats
completed her public school
education in Virginia and later
earned the B. S. Degree at
Leiand College in Louisiana,
the M. A. Degree in English at
the University of Iowa, and
.1..JUJ ., ;,.r.ollr nt
StUUICU MM""' WW!
Columbia University and the
University of Pennsylvania, j
She met and married D.
Bacoats in 1923 while he wife
orincinaL of Fredrieksbnni
Normal and Industrial Institute
at Fredricksburg, Va., and
minister of two area churches.
Mrs. Bacoats shared in all of
the achievements of her
distinguished husband in
school, church and community
ac t i v I lies first in.
Fredricksburg, then in Baton'
Rouge, La, where he was
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A GOOD WORD ABOUT AMERICA'S BABYSITTER
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T-V or not TV for young,
impressionable children?
That question has been one
of growing concern among
psychiatrists, psychologists,
educators, the government,
and conscientious parents.
But at last there is good rea
son for a positive answer.
Consider the long stand
ing dilemma.
"It keeps the kids out of
mischief," is the defense of
American mothers who
plead guilty to propping up
their youngsters like rag
dolls in front of TV while
they enjoy a little peace and
quiet.
TV teaches violence, de
stroys imagination, stunts
intellectual growth, retards
emotional and physical de
velopment, and fosters a
dream-like state of con
sciousness that handicaps
children in dealing with
reality, charges a New York
psychiatrist, Dr. David
Rubuifiore,
Recognizing both sides
of the problem, PTA Maga
zine pointed out two years
ago that there were 83 mil
lion sets in some 59tt mil
lion homes and that
"America is, for better or
worse, wedded to TV and
we must make the marriage
work." 4s4
Now the chad experts
are saying good things about
TV for children-or at any
rate, for TV sets that have
been electronically acces
sorized to provide both en
tertainment and educational
stimulation. It is ironic that
while Senate investigations
have suggested legislation
and psychologists have
called for more parental dis
cipline, the TV industry it
self has come up with a
solution to turning the "bad
guy" babysitter into a
"good guy".
Odyssey, introduced last
fall by The Magnavox Com
pany, is the forerunner in
what appears to be a trend
towards electronic parlor
pme accessories for Amen
THE FIZZLE FAMILY
can TV seta. Odyssey is an
electronic game simulator
that hooks up to a television
sat and provides the basis
for s dozen different games
of skill and chance. For the
first time, TV viewers can
interact with their sets, and
relate to them in a positive
way, not just as passive
viewers.
How does Odyssey
work? And how does it
counteract the possible ill
effects of too much ordi
nary TV watching?
Basically, a master con
trol unit is plugged into a
set with an 18-inch or larger
screen transforming it into
an electronic playground, or
teaching screen. There are
two Player Controls which
control the " Dlavers" oh the
screen, an English Control
which gives a little engtish
to the ball, and various
game overlays and game
program cards. There is an
Antenna Game switch and a
cable to the Odyssey Master
Control unit. With this
equipment, it is possible for
two children to play a vari
ety of fames-from "Cat
and Mouse", "Haunted
House" to Table Tennis and
By H. T.Elmo
VWTEROaV VOU 0OMPLMlff
DPTStE MPT WEkSHT ANCI
XbOAV VtXI COMPLAIN Of
THE LONG VIAtTi AWH'Tl
YOU VER SHTrSFltu?
FcwtbaO, and a
dvcatioaal oocs.
RuiuSo 'has layabout
RueUluore nas wu
nf hi oarJents
be says, were affecte Jf
TV, and consider how elec
tronic game playing changes
all that. "The visual input
(of TV)," he say s, "in con-
In Last Place?
Does the U nited States have
rate in the world 7 Doriac taw
1960s, oar annual rake ef eco
nomic growth was about 4;
Japan's was H. un
of ten
it
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PUGGY ': ' orae E'mo
1wEMI69E01VIe)we-LlI 1TrAro CAB WILL (SET U 1 7 MTER CANMDU 3 j (WE'RE iS$ HORTi) 1
fUS (TA U6 TO SCHOOL OM TIME (. BACKUP AUTTJC? V
SALLY SWCKERS m' m, hitoitiuio
fe'ST5 Wi A5 Wo KET III WHK 6TJU
no effort, thought, judg
ment or action, no work,
and no frustration or delay,
fostered a dreamlike state of
consciousness."
But with electronic game
playing there IS an effort,
there needs to be thought.
Judgment and action, and
there is both work and frus
tration as there is in any
.activist game. Moreover,
playing the game requires
imagination and personal involvement-two
other in
gredients wiucn critics say
are missing in the usual TV
diet.
; ' While not endorsing the
product, because it is
against the magazine's
policy to endorse ANY pro
duct, Science World and
Scholastic Magazines never
theless decided that Odys
sey is an excellent device for
education. In fact, it edi
torially suggested several
new ways of using the TV
screen and asked teachers to
send in their own methods
of teaching with it as well.
Innovative mothers may
very well develop their own
variations to the Odyssey
games available, (even
though Magnavox will con
tinue to sell supplemental
games including Fun Zoo
and Baseball). "Whether it's
two youngsters playing to
gether while Mom gets the
floor mopped, or Mom gets
into the thick of the com
petition herself, there is
family togetherness, a com
petitive spirit that does not
exist with the home TV set
as is", observes Mary F.
Foster, one time psycholo
gist snd now fulltime
mother of two boisterous
boy toddlers. "This kind of
stimulating educational acti
vity is especially desirable
for preschoolers because 50
per cent of a child's per
sonality is fully developed
before he is in kinder
garten." For most women, con
necting Odyssey to the TV
set is a lot simpler than put
ting together the night
before Christinas toys.
But for any woman who
wants a little peace and
Sat., Jury 21. 1973
1LIH1 1JT11
U.S. devoted the rmalUtt share
of its total output to capital in-
learaeent Ever mere j
ranital rains taxes will
age the small
of our
are to
if
risks involved
in investing, iacentrves jbfM
form of equitable eapiu
taxes must be provided. 2
quiet in the house without a
guilty conscience, the new
era of television games
to be one great an-
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" YTJU MEAN WITHOUT THE ZIP CODE
YOU POSTAL CLERKS CAN'T TELL
THAT NEW-YORK CITY IS IN NEW
YORK?"
If you've ever spent
time walking through fields and
forests 01 evtm turner! oft the
I highway for a aide trip
through a rural suburb then
you may have wondered
about a high-pitched buzzing from
aranewhere deeu in the woods. And even if you did recognize the sound as that of a chain
tto K you rrobably never thought that anybody but dedicated lumber jacks ever
came in contact with the unfamiliar machine. Well, times have sure changed and
v,s home owners and amateur woodsmen have found that a Ugit-weight chain saw it tike ,
convenient solution to a great many chorea as well as a remarkable tool for the creative
genius in all of us. To build camp and patio furniture, for putting up cabins and lean-to's.
to rid an area of the diseased trees or those downed by a storm, the new stream-lined
eaadek open a wide range of possibilities tor the do-it-your self spirit The story farther talks about
that is now a viral member of every well equipped
and more
1