WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 5,1973
THE TRIBUNAL AID
PAGE 7
TANNER.
1859-1937
5oRN in PITTSBURGH, pa-son OF AN
A.M.E. BlSHOf;—THE MAN FRENCH EXPERTS
CALLED "GREATEST AMERICAN PAINTER"OFTHE
DAY! AFTER TEACHING AT CLARK UNIVERSITY
i HE WENT TO LIVE IN PARIS, FREE FROM RAC
IAL PREJUDICE . HIS BIBLICAL PAINTINGS
WON COUNTLESS AWARDS THROU6HOUTTH6
UNITED STATES AND EUROPE!
(-osriN^tJTAt, Fe-A-rufzes-
I WINSTON-SALEM NEWS
Human Resources
EDITORIALS
Continued from Page 4
Vernon E.
years counting every farm animal
and tractor in rural America. If we
can count chickens every five
years why not people?
But Congress refused a mid
decade Census so we must deal
with these figures for the next ten
years. I have already suggested an
across-the-board increase in of
ficial population figures to account
for the estimated undercount, but
such suggestions have met with a
defeatist response that simply
says that the national figures can't
be adjusted on a local basis.
Now the National Urban
League's Research Department
has come up with a formula it says
can be applied to correct the
undercount. The researchers went
to the Census Bureau's own
estimated national undercounts of
different sub-groups of the
population and devised a system of
adjusting local figures.
They make clear that this is an
Jordan, Jr.
interim device to be used in the
current emergency. Eventually,
population researchers and the
Bureau may come up with a
fool-proof method of compensating
for national undercounts, but until
then, it makes sense to put the
League's method to immediate use
in all population-based formulas
on federal and state aid.
After all, this wouldn't be the
first time the government used
nation-wide figures to deal with
localities. The famous poverty
index, for example, applies a
national definition of poverty
regardless of the significant cost of
living variations in different
regions. The national poverty
index is used as a national
standard for allocating funds to
localities; so too, the suggested
revisions in population figures
would be used as a standard for
disbursement of funds until the
next census.
Continued from Page 5
ston-Salem Coliseum to
Wilmington, North Caro
lina.
“We are forced to move
the game from Winston-
Salem due to their ice
renovation,” explained
the Cats’ General Man
ager Carl Scheer. “We’re
sorry we can’t play there,
but it’s just impossible for
them to have the
basketball floor dovirn
until the ice and its
accompanying equipment
is installed for their
hockey season. It does
give us an opportunity,
howfever, to return to the
Carolina coast for the
first time in three years.”
The Cougs' last Wil
mington venture was a
108-105 victory over the
New York Nets on
October 8, 1970. Carolina
will meet the Bullets in the
Port City’s 3,500-seat
Brogden Hall, site of the
previous contest in 1970.
The game will be under
Cougars
the sponsorship of Wil
mington Youth Baseball,
Inc.
The string of inter-
league contests is then
interrupted on October
2nd by a Carolina visit to
Wilhamsburg, Virginia,
and the campus of
William and Mary College
for a “border warfare”
resumption with the
Squires. This skirmish,
originally slated for Rich
mond’s Coliseum on Sept
ember 19th, will unfold in
the new 10,000-seat Will
iam and Mary Hall.
ALL WINSTON-SALEM
NEWS. PICTURE^.
ARTICLES, etc.,
SHOULD BE TURNED
IN TO MRS. VELMA
HOPKINS. AT 1228
HIGHLAND AVE. NO
LATER THAN
WEDNESDAY NOON
RALEIGH — Occupa
tion of the new $4 million
Bath building will begin
Tuesday, September 4,
1973.
First agency to move
into the modernistic
structure will be the State
Laboratory which will
utihze the top two floors.
The Community and
Personal Health Sections
of the Division of Health
Services will occupy the
third floor. The Sanitary
Engineering Section and
units of the Division’s
Administrative Service
Section will use the
second floor. The Gover
nor's Advocacy Council
on Children and Youth,
storage, and utilities will
take up most of the first
floor.
According to Mildred
Kerbaugh, assistant dir
ector of the State
Laboratory, it will take
about 15 days to shift
operations. She said
every effort is being made
to prevent delays in
laboratory examinations.
“No study should be
delayed more than two
days,” she emphasized,
“and arrangements have
DID YOU BUY YOUR
MEDICINE
been made to take care of
critical examinations
promptly.” Mrs. Ker
baugh pointed out that
doctors and county health
departments across the
state have been notified of
the possibility of some
delay in getting results of
lab tests and have been
advised to hold the
forwarding of specimens
to a minimum during the
transition period.
The laboratory floors
were designed in con
sultation with specialists
at the U. S. Center for
Disease Control in At
lanta, Ga. Both floors are
windowless to provide
better use of space and to
furnish a completely
controlled environment in
terms of temperature,
humidity, pressure and
cleanliness.
According to Ben Ea
ton, Administrative Ser
vices Chief, moving will be
done in phases and should
be completed by the end
of September.
The Bath building, like
most state buildings, will
feature a concession
stand operated by the
visually handicapped.
DID YOU BUY YOUR
CAR
Don’t Waste Your Money
With
Unappreciative Merchants
from a
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The final three games
remain the same, a pair of
outings with the ABA
Champion Pacers in
Indiana and the much-
discussed, long-awaited
invasion of Charlotte by
the NBA Milwaukee
Bucks on October 6th. The
Cougar-Buck clash will
serve as the final tune-up
prior to the season opener
on October 10th.
FREE
Sickle Cell Testing
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