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attitude is key'
speaks regularly to civic groups
in the Atlanta area as well as in
the rest of Georgia in an
attempt to “get a crack in the
door’* of environmental
problems and make the average
citizen aware of what needs to
be done in the field of
environmental controL
p a g t 2 The Red and Black Wednesday. May 24. 19*72
-PROBLEMS-
(From Page I)
"The Campus Police,” said
Dean, “will do a lot of things
like just sit and listen to people
for hours. You can't just let
them commit suicide.”
It is a rare case when a
student commits suicide
without giving some kind of
previous warning. “You usually
find that they gave some kind
of cry for help before
committing the act,” said
Dean.
“Usually there has been some
change to indicate that the
WEDNESDAY, MAY 24
ft 30 p.m. American Society for
Personnel Administration charter
preaentation dinner at Holiday Inn.
C«ll 543-3254 for reservations.
7 |> m KumUlini Yoga. Art
School on ColleRe Avenue. Rnnit
njf or blanket to sit upon.
7 30 p.m. American MarkeUng
Association informal dinner
meeting. Ireland's Restaurant.
Wives and dates invited.
H p m. - Baha'i Club. 411
Memorial.
H p.m. II111 el Foundation
Seminar Sociology of American
Jewry. 11 55 S. Milledge.
THURSDAY. MAY 25
5 30 p.m. Soccer Club practice,
Myers quadrangle.
ft 30 p.m. Circle K. 415
Memorial.
6 45 p.m. - Christian Science
Organization. Lutheran Center
rhapeL
8 p.m. Ideas and Issues lecture
Dr. Paul F.hrlish of Stanford
University on "The Population
Knvimnmenl Crisis Where Do We
Stand Now?" Reed quadrangle
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The University Union is now
accepting application for a paid
coordinator for the Summer
OperaUons Division. Applications
should he filled out in 228
Memorial by Thursday noon.
Minimum two quarters Union
experience required.
person is troubled,” said
Campbell.
Linden agreed that many
suicides give warnings. “Most
suicides are perfectly rational,”
he said.
A desperate student is
standing in the window of a
high-rise building, threatening
to jump. What can the police do
without provoking Turn into
taking the leap?
“First,** said Dean, “We
would try to get a girl friend or
someone close to the student
to talk him down. The most
immediate problem would he
to get people away from him,”
he said. Spectators will often
encourage a potential suicide
to jump, according to Dean.
“Wt WOULD try to convince
the person that we are frying
to help,” he continued. “It’s
also important to remove his
identity. We assure him that no
one knows who he is so he
won’t he ashamed of his action
and will he more likely to
come down.”
After being talked down, the
student would he taken to the
Health Services, where “one of
our main missions is to keep
him from killing himself or
someone else," Campbell said,
“lie would not be released
until we could reassure
ourselves that he was no longer
suicidal.”
Fortunately, there are few
suicide attempts at the
University. Authorities agreed
that this may he due in part to
the availability of counseling,
especially at he Health
Services. “Anytime there is
someone to turn to, there is
not a very high ration of
suicide attempts,” said
Campbell.
Captain S. G. Jordan agreed.
"We’ve been very lucky as far
as suicides go,” he said. "The
Health Services may have some
bearing on this, because the
students know they have
someone to turn to.”
In fact, “There are no
statistics on these cases in our
records becausy there are so
few,” said Jordan.
University Chorus performs tomorrow night
The University Chorus, under the direction of Dr. Gene
M. Simons, will present a Spring Concert Thursday, May
25 at 8 p.m. in the University Chapel. The performance will
include 20th century music, a woodwind quintet and a
double choir selection. Female voices from Clarke Central
High School will also assist the chorus for one number. The
chorus is composed of 75 voices representing
approximately 25 schools and departments on campus.
Dialogue applications
Positive
“A positive attitude is the
key to acceptancy in the
environmental movement in
this country,” stated Ms. Jane
II. Yarn, president and one of
the founders of Save America's
Vital Environment in an
address to 65 persons in a
Botany Seminar Monday.
Speaking on “Citizens and
Environmental Crises - The
Third Force,** Ms. Yarn
emphasized that the
“underlying problem in
environmental awareness is
education. Unless a person has
had a first-hand experience
with some specific problem, he
can’t relate to the
environmental crisis.”
Social work is
granted funds
By LESLIE THORNTON
The University’s School of
Social Work has been granted
federal funds through the
Georgia Department of Family
and Children’s Services to set up
iearning service centers
throughout the state.
A learning center is not
necessarily a building,
according to Dr. Paul
Deutschberger of the School of
Social Work, although it could
be and probably will be in
most communities.
A learning center trains
people to deal with human
problems and the social welfare
of a community, he said. These
problems include public health,
minority rights, children’s
problems and schools.
THE LEARNING service
center can be on the level of
undergraduate, master’s and
the projected doctoral
programs of the school.
More than 100 students are
already involved in the center
which began last September.
Four learning centers have
now been set up throughout
Georgia. Each center is set up
in a particular city and serves
the surrounding counties.
The center in Gainesville has
an Appalachian Program for
the human problems and social
welfare in the Appalachian area
of Georgia.
Dr. Deutschberger sees the
learning service center as a
gateway between the School of
Social Work and the
surrounding community. “The
learning service center is a real
experience for real live service.
It reaches out to people turned
on to social needs and helping
other people,” he said.
The learning service center is
not specifically for training
people to work for the
Department of Family and
Children’s Services. A person
could work in a hospital, for
example, or any area with
human problems,” he said.
UNIVERSITY students
involved in the program are
placed in the learning service
center in Athens, according to
Dr. Deutschberger.
“They do all kinds of
tilings,” he said, “working on
their own in hospitals, family
agencies, mental and public
health services, Communiver-
sity, community schools or
model-city planning.”
Dr. Deutschberger described
the classroom experience of
the program as a practice
seminar.
“These are small groups
limited to nine people which
meet several times a week to
discuss their experiences,” he
said. Some meet on campus
and some meet in the learning
service center.
“The students discuss what
they need to know and how
they can go about learning it
There is very little lecturing.
The student structures things
for himself,** Deutschberger
said. “We don’t feel that
students achieve professional
growth by memorization and
required facts.”
Carter accused of
media intimidation
ATLANTA (UPI) Tom
Irwin, a candidate for the
Democratic senatorial
nomination, charged Tuesday
Gov. Jimmy Carter had
intimidated the Atlanta news
media as part of a plan to get
the Democratic presidential
nomination.
Irwin, an Atlanta lawyer, said
in a statement, "There is an
ominous blackout of political
reporting by the parochial
news media of Atlanta. The
reason is obvious. The governor
has directed the news media to
say nothing had about him.”
“The quasi-endorsement of
Gov. George Wallace by
Carter’s campaign manager in
the U.S. Senate is a
smokescreen. This shadow
endorsement together with
other recent endorsements in
Atlanta is calculated to cause a
deadlock at the convention in
Miami Beach to the benefit of
Gov. Carter, who is a candidate
for the nomination.”
“Gov. Carter and his two
campaign managers, Charles
Kirbo and David Gambrel!, are
hovering like honey buzzards
over what they consider to be
the political loss of Gov.
Wallace. My own support of
Gov. Wallace in his bid for the
presidential nomination of the
Democratic party is both real
and unshakeablc.”
Kirbo is chairman of the state
Democratic party, a post to
which he was appointed by
Carter. Gainbrell was
appointed to he Senate by
Carter after the death of
Richard Russell. Irwin and
several others are trying to
unseat Gambrell.
Gambrell has joined a
speaker’s bureau for Wallace
but says, “I have not endorsed
anyone for President - I don’t
plan to at this time.”
Carter has said he is not
seeking the presidential
nomination.
due in this afternoon
Ms. Yarn, Georgia
Conservationist of the Year in
1969 and Atlanta's Woman of
the Year in 1970, works for
environmental legislation in the
Georgia General Assembly.
“There’s nobody in the
(General Assembly representing
the people,” said Ms. Yarn.
"All the lobbyists have a vested
interest. All the environmental
pressure comes from people
who will gam financially.”
“The 1971 session of the
Georgia General Assembly gave
us a huge package of legislation
which was really good, said Ms.
Yarn, “but a tremendous effort
to discredit the environmental
ists” was waged in 1972.
As the first woman to serve
on the Atlanta-l ulton County
Joint Planning Board. Ms. Yarn
l I v
The last day student
applications will be accepted
tor Dialogue ’72 is today,
according to the Dialogue
Planning Committee.
The deadline last week was
extended because of student
interest, said Steve Patrick,
head of the Dialogue Planning
Committee.
This year senior applications
will be considered, too.
Nancy Cline, participant
selection chairman, said the
committee was especially
interested in obtaining a
cross-section of the student
body. She said they wanted
graduate students, foreign
students, married students, and
students “not involved in a lot
of things" to apply, in addition
to students involved in many
activities.
June 15 is the deadline for
faculty and administrators to
apply.
Dialogue is a student-faculty-
administrative conference held
annually at Camp Rock Eagle
near Madison. The conference
will he held September 12-14.
Room and board is $ 15.
Collector
NOTTINGHAM, England
(UPI) Joseph Join s 28, took
a pound note worth $2.60
from his pay packet to pay for
some gasoline.
“It was blank on one side,”
he said. “It must be a
collector’s item. I intend to
have it valued because I have
been told it may be owrth a
good deal of money.”