Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / May 28, 1966, edition 1 / Page 9
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INTERMISSION - Shown during intermission at an annual All- College Party at Bennett College last week are left to right, Miss Eddyce Pope of Washington, D. C., and her escort Herbert I'lamer and Miss J%ula Martin, of Danville, Va., and Tony Backus. HONORED FOR SERVICE - Two nurses at the Greensboro L. Richardson Memorial Hospital, were last week honored for “long and dedicated service,” b\» the Women’s Auxiliary of the Greensboro Medical Society. The two are, center, Mrs. G. L, Burge, and Mrs. Charles Jones. The plaques are pre sented by Mrs. Essex Noel, left, chairman of Awards Com mittee, and Mrs. Clarence Cokely, president of the organi zation, looking on from right. Dr. Boulware Formulates A fheory For All Snorors TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-Athe ory of compentative resortia has been formulated by Marcus H. Boulware, Pli. D., profes sor of speech and also was an inveterate snorer, in coping with the snoring problem in a family. This theory is based upon the concept that it is feasible foi a nonsnoring mate to com pensate for the failure of the snorer in conquering his prob lem. The nonsnoring spose can compensate by (1) wearing ear stopples to mask out the snores or reduce them to an intensity comparable to that in a quiet rural garden, or (2) train the unconscious mind to reject undesirable auditory snoring stimuli as it does va rious kinds of environmental noises amidst which the aver age person sleeps soundly, or (3) by developing a positive at titude that enables one to be willing to help the snoring spouse through mental mecha nism of compensation. The reduction of noise by ear stopples is obvious, but learning how to disregard un consciously disturbing snores is more difficult. However, just as one can concentrate upon reading a book while the Seagrams n Jl Croton Seapatn-* Ms «. Seven £ Crown AMERICA* ALIXBED 'WHISKEY <J pi£sz±r ty £fl pint ttotllf T St»C?AV DISMISS COVPANY. NEW YCfK CITY FtEHOtO WHISKEY. 86 PROOF. 66% CRAIN NEUTRAL SRi'lTI television, radio, or hi-fi is playing, a nonsnorer, if will ing, can also shut out from his braLo distracting snores and thereby get sleep. Developing a positive attitude toward helping a snoring mate demands mental sympathy and the earnest desire to help the failing one. The negative “Why should I compensate, or why should I put on ear stopples, or I won’t do it” will destroy the security of a marriage. Sleeping in separate rooms is an excape technique which de stroys the lines of communi cation between a man and his wife, and when this is done, both might as well be living 2,500 miles apart instead oi the next room. But an appli cation of the theory of compen tive resortia will make the marriage flower bloom. * * * SOME OF THE WHITE HAB ITS worn by Carthusian monks last as long as seven years. What do they use? The best material, they report, isjennis ball covering. Practically in destructible'. Catholic Digest. - May. BIRDS . . . gift-wrapping the day in song. ___ CP&L Shareholders Hear Qmi Report Shareholders of Car olina Power & Light Company last Wednesday at their annual meeting heard 1965 described as a “good year” for the company and for the whole economy of the company’s service area. The shareholders, 87 per cent of whom were represented in person or by proxy, re-elec ted their company’s 14 direc tors and approved amendments to a stock purchase plan for employees. Reviewing the year’s busi ness, L. V. Sutton, chairman of the board, said that revenues increased eight per cent over 1964; earnings per share of common .stock rose from 51.60 to SI.80; and total kilowatt-hour sales were 10.8 per cent higher than in 1964. Growth of industry in the CP&L area was at a record rate in 1965, Sutton pointed out. An nouncements were made during the year of total capital expend itures to exceed $320 million for new or expanded manufac turing plants, as compared with S2OO million for 1964. The to tal for the first four months of 196 C is already at $206 million. He noted that the company’s tax bill in 1963 was over $27,- 800,000, an increase of $600,- 000 over 1964, Sutton announced that the dedication of the new electric generating plant at Roxboro, will be held September 34 with Governor Dan K. Moore as the principal speaker. The cost of the company’s construction program for the next three years is estimated at approximately S2OO million. Sutton said the program in cludes completion of the second vfnit now ? under construction at Roxboro and a portion of the cost of the nuclear-fueled unit scheduled for completion in 1970 at the Robinson plant at Harts ville, S. C. Meeting afterward, the di rectors declared regular quart erly dividends and re-elected company officers: Sutton, chairman of the board and chief executive officer; ShearonHar , ris, president; H. B. Robinson, executive vice - president; w. Reid Thompson, vice-president and general counsel; H. G. Is ley, E. N. Pope, J. C. Richert, Jr., J. R. Riley and Paul S. Colby, vice-presidents; R. S. Mallison, secretary; R.B. Car penter, treasurer; 11. T. Bucha nan, J. S. Currie and' J. R. Powell, assistant treasurers; and J. L. Lancaster, Jr., as sistant secretary. A&T Finals Program Is Completed GREENSBORO -- Nearly 500 persons will receive degrees at the 75th annual commence ment exercises at A&T Col lege on Sunday, June 5. The event, a combination baccalau reate-commencement program, is to be held at the Charles Moore Gymnasium beginning at 11:00 A.M. Main speaker for the finals is Dr. John A. Schnittker, no ted economist and undersecre tary of agriculture, U. S. De partment of Agriculture. Dr. Schnittker, who assumed his preseni position in 1965, came to the federal govern ment first in 1958 as a staff e conomist with the Council of Economic Advisors, Executive Office of the President, after returning to his original posi tion as professor of economics at Kansas State University for two years, came back to Wash ington as staff economist with the Office of Director of Agri cultural Economics. In 1964 he- was named director of ag ricultural economics. The commencement activi ties officially begin on Satur day, June 4, with the annual meeting of the A & T College General Alumni Association. That is scheduled for the Car ve: Ha”, Auditorium beginning at 9 ; 30 A. M. Other Saturday events in clude: The annual Symphony Band-Choir Concert at 4:00 P. M. ; the President’s Reception for Graduates, Parents and A lumni at 5:30 P. M., and the annual Alumni Dinner at Holi day Inn, South, beginnLng at 7:30 P. M. H. U. Prexy To Deliver Its Address WASHINGTON, D. C. - How ard University President James M. Nabrit, Jr., on leave from his post since last. September while serving as a member of the United States Mission tothe United National, will return to Howard next week to deliver the annual Commencement ad dress. Commencement exer cis e s are scheduled for 5;30 p. m. Friday, June 3, in the Upper Quadrangle of the campus. The program is open to the public. Dr. Nabirt was granted leave from the University last fall to accept the position of U. S. A dividend of 32 cents per share was declared on the com mon stock payable August 1 to shareholders of record Ju ly 8. Dividends of $1.25 per share on the $5 preferred stock and $1.05 on the $4.20 serial preferred stock were declared payable October 1 to holders of record September 21. Directors of CP&L are Sut ton, Harris, Robinson, Carpen ter, Thompson and W. H. Weath erspoon, all of Raleigh; Har grove Bellamy of Wilmington; Raymond A. Bryan of Goldsbo ro; E„ Hervey Evans ofLaurin burg; L. H. Harvin, Jr., of Henderson; Verne Rhoades and John V. Veach of Asheville; Fulton B. Creech of Sumter, S. C.; and Horace Tilghman, Jr., of Sellers, S. C. AfCC Finals Speaker Tops In Education DURHAM North Carolina College’s 1966 commencement speaker, Dr. Edward R. Brice, who has received fourteen a wards and citations from for eign governments, colleges, and universities, Is one of the most decorated U. S. civil servants in Washington today. Now assistant, to the assis tant secretary for education, the Department of Health, Edu cation, and Welfare, Washing ton, Dr. Brice will deliver the principal address atNCC’sSSth DR. EDWARD R. BRICE annual commencement Sunday, May 29. The convocation, which is open to the public, will be gin at 3 p. m. in the college’s McDougald Gymnasium. Some 600 candidates will receive un - dergraduate, graduate, and pro fessional degrees from the in stitution’s four schools. Brice, who joined the staff of the U. S. Office of Educa tion as a specialist in funda mental and literary education in 1958, had served for eight years prior to that with the U, S. Department of State and the International Cooperation Ad ministration, holding positions as public affairs officer at the American Embassy in Monro via, Liberia; chief of the edu cation division of the U. S. Operation Mission to Liberia; and as chief educational advisor to the government of Liberia. From 1956 to 1958 he was chief of the education division of the U. S. Operation Mission to Nepal and chief educational advisor to the Kingdom of Nepal. In 1961-62, he served as special assistant to Gov. G. Mennen Williams, assistant Secretary of State. A graduate of Tuskegee In stitute, Brice holds M. A. and Ph, D. degrees from the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. A former president of Clinton Junior College, Rock Hill, S. C., and a former dean of edu cational extension at South Car olina State College, he is one of the founding members of the Adult Education. Association. He is the author of eight books, three of them tex books publish ed by the Holt, Rinehart, and Winston Publishing Co. Deputy Representative on the U. N. Security Council. Just last month President Lyndon Johnson nominated him to be Permanent Deputy Represen tative, the number two post in the 125-member U. S. Mission to the U. N. This year marks President Nabrit’s 30th anniversary at Howard. He joined th School of Law faculty in 1936, and later was to serve in such capacities as assistant to the president, secretary of the Uni versity, director of public rela tions, and dean of the School of Law. He was named pres ident July 1, 1960. During next week’s exercis es honorary degrees of Doctor of Laws will be conferred on four prominent citizens. They are Congressman John E, Fo garty (D-R. I.); Dr. John A. Hannah, president of Michigan State University; Constance Baker Motley, president of the Burough of Manhattan, New York City; and the Rev. Dr. William Holmes Borders, pas tor of Wheat Street Baptist Church, Atlanta, Ga. In addition, degrees will be conferred on some ~000 sen iors in Howard’s 10 schools and colleges. TOPS AT A&T - The two top student leaders at A&T College, for the next academic year, named in general elections con ducted at the college last week included from left to right; Miss Nannie Kearney, War rent on, N. C., ‘‘Miss A&T,” and Roy White, Jr., Elizabeth City, president of the Student Govern ment. Both are rising seniors. Miss Kearney, a major in accounting is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kearney of War ronton. White, an honor student and a major in eco nomics, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. White, Sr., of Elizabeth City. Prison Inmate Objects To Being Halted; Injures Six JOLIET, TIL - (NPI) - Daniel Scotriers,. 22-year-old Chica goan serving a 5-10 year term in Stateville penitentiary for armed robbery, is jealous of his reputation for being a dif ficult prisoner, and proved it last week at the expense of six guards. Assigned to a coal-loading detail, Sconiers was spotted by a guard inching toward a nearby yard area. Ordered to jL If elected to the House of Represents fives, I promise to concentrate my efforts toward achieving active, informed and progressive leadership in the years ahead. ! earnestly solicit your all-impor- *7}ss tant vote. i I VOTE FOR | lit HowardJ Twiggs DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE w W HOUSE of REPRESENTATIVES PULL LEVER 12 halt, he refused, whereupon oth er guards were summoned. One of the guards, Lt. Les ter Ford, began writing out a disciplinary ticket - the 61st which Sconiers has received in four years. That's when the prisoner liv ed up to his billing. Using a shovel, he began belaboring the guards until they finally sub dued him. Ford suffered a chipped elbow THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH, N. C., SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1966 Candidate Howard Twiggs Sets Spirited Campaign Howard Twiggs, 33-year-old Raleigh attorney and the re cipient of the Raleigh “Young Man of the Year Award” for 1965, is waging a spirited cam paign in his first bid for elect ed office. A candidate for the House of Representatives, Twiggs said that he “has visit ed every town in Wake County and has enjoyed meeting the people and discussing issues with them.” One of the major points of legislation that he has endors ed has been a strong position on education.' “In my opinion school teachers salaries, which rank 40th in the nation and some $1,200 below the national aver age, should be greatly increased by the next Legislature. I favor a $5,000 starting salary for teachers which would immedi ately move North Carolina in line with our sister states and would put us closer to the posi tion of educational leadership in the Southeast. “I also fav or the continuing contract for teachers and a reduction in classroom size," Twiggs stated. As past president of the Wake County Mental Health Associa tion, a member of the Board of Directors for the Wake County Retarded Childrens Associa tion, and a Board member of the Wake County Sheltered Work shop, Twiggs related, “I have worked closely with the prob lems of mental illness and re tardation in the past five years and know that much can be done in these areas. In particular, we desperately need additional Yes, We All Talk BY MARCUS H. BOULWARE PARENTS MAKE THEIR CHILDREN STUTTER The statistics indicate that about seven people out of every 1,000 persons stutter, that it is acquired during the language and speech-learning period (2 to 5 years of age), because of the home environment and pa rental domination of children. For help, parents should send to the Interstate Publishing- Company, 19-27 North Jackson St., Danville, HI. - 61834, for; and a gash on the head. I,ess seriously injured wereLiis fel low guards. Sconiers was transferred to Stateville in 1964 from the Pon tiac branch of the penitentiary, because he had “failed to ad just,” HOWARD TWIGGS personnel to staff our clinics and hospitals. This would al low both better attention to hos pital patients and also provide the staff for much needed out patient treatment.” Twiggs has been active in civic and community affairs, having served as President of the Raleigh Jaycees, Chair man of the Executive Commit tee of the Wake County Bar Association and as a director ' f the Raleigh Chamber of Com merce. He is a member and Sunday School teacher at St. Michael’s Episcopal Church and resides with his wife and three daughters on Marlowe Road in Raleigh. Johnson’s “Open letter to Mother of a stuttering Child’-' at 15? per copy; and Is Your Child beginning to Stutter? El vena Miller, 50? per copy; and For The Parents of a Child Whose Speech is Delayed. 50? each. QUESTION; My set of twins snore considerably all the time, ■io you have anv suggestions? —Mrs. G. H. ANSWER: Consult your phy sician about what to do. You may wish to get my pamphlet “Coping with Problems of Snor ing Child,” for 30? each. READERS; For my free dis cussion pamphlet, send two stamps and along self-address ed business envelope to; Dr. M. 11. Boulvare, Florida A&M University, Box 310-A, Talla h rssee, Floria - 32307 9
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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May 28, 1966, edition 1
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