THE FUTURE OUTLOOK J. F. JOHNSON Editor & Publisher MISS EMMA P. JOHNSON News Reporter L. A. WISE Staff Photographer Make all checks payable to and mail to: THE FUTURE OUTLOOK P. 0. BOX 20331? GREENSBORO, N. C. 27420 PHONE 273-1758 Second Class Ppstage Paid at Greensboro, N. C 10c Per Copy Published Weekly $6.00 Per Year Helping The Handicapped Help Himself An agency may be established at the local hospitals to teach the students in the pediatric department and stu dents of school age who have become victims of tragedy. These students will have to remain in the hospital for the school year or maybe even longer if necessary. A good diversified retired teacher could fit in this type of category to teach academic subjects if the students are allowed credits for courses taught while they are re cuperating. The students could then take their places with regular classmates. There are several students at L. Richardson Memorial Hospital who are victims of tragedy which caused broken bones and other bodily injuries. These injuries will cause them to be out of school for a large portion of the school year or maybe the entire school year. If there were a teacher there to give them instruc tions they could keep up with their regular classwork of the school they attended before their accident. Victims of handicaps should be given jobs whenever and wherever an employer may hire them. Many people have been stricken from birth of one or more of their senses, but have been trained in some vocation. Some of the most looked upon handicaps are blindness, deaf, and polio victims. These people are handicapped by the laws of nature. Many are taking advantages of the services offered them by the Rehabilitation Centers and are making themselves useful in their vocations. Some of these vocations, especially for the blind are typists, making brooms, clothes brushes, switchboard operators and many other vocations of this type. What should be done about many of our professional employees who are in declining health, and at the age of retirement, but who conceal their age and illness? They fall into the same category as the handicapped. In many of our schools we find cases of such nature, I think that if the Board of Education, or the city or state council or parent-teacher associations would set up a re habilitation center whereby they can offer job opportuni ties for the invalid and aged teachers, so they may keep their minds busy and still earn wages, it would help the problem of business. - . We don't believe that teachers who complain of being ill, and who are absent a great portion of the school year because of ill health should be placed before a class of healthy, energetic students. Some are suffering from such chronic illnesses as bursitis, arthritis, rehetrmatism, high and low blood pressure, strokes, heart conditions, etc. These illnesses are not only foun