Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1960 — Page 7

The Indianapolis Recorder, Apr. 30,1960—T

Civic Heads Back Josephine Stuart For JAD Judge Two prominent Negro civic leaders this week openly endorsed Mrs. Josephine Stuart, deputy prosecutor assigned io child neglect cases, in her bid for the Democratic nomination for judge of the jnvenile court. Mrs. Cleo Blackburn and Mrs. F. B. Ransom, both executive members of the Juvenile Court Bi-Partisan Committee, are two of Mrs Stuart's supporters, who believe that she is a well qualified candidate for the bench Earlier, Mrs. Stuart missed

being slated at the Democratic slating convention by very few votes. The Juvenile Court Bi-Par-tisan Committee, with the purpose of insuring a well qualified candidate in each party for juvenile '•curt judge, is also behind Mrs. Stuart and is presenting her case to the individual voter. Mrs. Stuart was recently praised by Proscutor Piiil L. Bayt for her work in child neglect cases. Co-chairmen of the committee are Mrs. James Northam, Democrat and Gerald R. Redding, Republican. Secretary is Mrs. Robert D. Morgan, and Treasurer is Herbert f. Backer. Honorary members are Mrs. Clarence Merrell and Miss Gertrude Taggart.

Vote Right Dr. Ralph E. HANLEY

DEMOCRAT — for — State Senator CAPABLE » • QUALIFIED • HONEST Be Sure —- _____ VOTE BALLOT NO. 7-B TUESDAY, MAY 3 Paid Political Adv^

Q t IC tni?1irwar^d articles u.«> cash through Classified Columns of nil? RECORDER. amaxino LAXATIVE FORMULA helps restore regular rhythm overnight^ Gentle laxative also sweeten* upset stomach! Works overnight I Won’t interrupt sleep or workl

Negro Cardinal from Humble Church In the Middle of Banana Plantation ROME — Laurian Cardinal Ru- within a mile radius of the center to discourage them. The effect was gambwa recently made a cardi- ol the village there are about 2,000 just the reverse: the cats were disnal in one of .he most magnificent inhabitants. cou. aged. The missionary in charge

of the world’s churches, St. Peter’s in Vatican City, will be we’comed back by his own African people in a tin-roofed church set in hte middle of a banana plantation. The church is the cathedral of the first African Negro Prince of the Church, and is located in his diocese of Rutabo, Tanganyika, an area without stores, electricity, paved roads, or even addresses

Once all the territory between of the church, then tried to get the west shore of Lake Victoria rid of the bats with a treatment of and Ruanda-Urundi was the Vic- sulphur smoke. It succeeded only ariate Aposto’ic of Bukoba. The in turning everything in the church

Holy See. seeing that it had pro- yellow

greseed sufficiently, decided to di- ^ more fundamental problem vide it into two parts. This offic- lh an bats, or cats, in the Cardjially took effect on December 13, nal .* s diocese is the often super-

stitious religious mentality of the

* ON THE SAME DAY, Father Africans.

Rugambwa, just a few months All of them, Christians or pagan,

Rutabo is reached by steamer after his return from Rome where believe in one God who is good across Lake Victoria. Travelers he had earned a doctorate in can- and will do no harm to men. They dock at the western shore of the on law, received word that he had believe in an afterlife as well as lake in the small port city of Bu- been appointed Vicar Apostolic of in good and bad spirits who attach koba, and must then make their the vicariate which had been cut themselves to such objects as trees way due west for about 30 miles, off from Bukoba See..The new Vic- and houses. This explains some of

LEAVING BUKOBA, they leave ariate was called Lower Kagera, also paved roads, telephones, elec- taking its name from the Kagera tricity or movie theaters and enter River, which flows through the reon a twisting, bumping sandy road gion and empties into Lake Vic-

ihat winds for part of its way toria.

through heavy green underbrush, The nomination and consecraand sometimes through a gently tion of Bishop Rugambwa marked undu.ating plain ne wstep in the progress of the

followed even

Tuning in on ANDERSON

At the end of the journey the

Chu «h in the section of Tangan-

the practices still

by Christians.

The key element in all the problems is the family, not only in

si:ch things as deep-rooted super- ... IT ^ , , ,, fctitions, but also in social and eco- 'Anderson Lrban League held nomic problems. ! s P nn 8 style show April

THE FAMILY Cl,AN is the basic social unit. The family clan is

By MADELYNE IRVIN

Phone 5179

ANDERSON— Dr. Marie Fleece Morris and her husband, Ray, were informed recently of the death of two of their dearly beloved life-long friends, 82-yea ro d Mrs. Hallie E. Tidrington, a teacher in the Evansville school system for 50 years, and Miss Elizabeth G. Mays, &7-year-old former teacher and business executive in

Indianapolis.

Mrs. Mays, w'ho retired seven years ago, was a member of Bethel A ME Church in Indianapolis, for 75 years, and she once was a guset speaker on a program given by the \oung people of Second Methodist Church honoring the great Negro Poet, Paul Laurence Dunbar. THE SWIMMERS CLUB of the

a native priesthood was establish-

ed.

Less than two years later, on Ma ch Z5, 1953, the Vicariate Apostolic of Lower Kagera was elevated to the rank of diocese and named the Diocese of Rutabo. Bishop Rugambwa

became its Ordinary.

Figures reported by the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation

y- 1W7 -y 111 cooperative, Irving the men to

ft h-jH vollrj f, ° other chores. Alto, it a family art. tlioned for lour years, j experiencing hard times, the an ?. other clan members will go to their

affaiis of the individual fajnilies who are its members. The family* then, is not necessari y autonomous and the father of a family will often be bound to obey the patriarch. There are benefits that come from the family clan, but there a*e also problems as far as the work of priests is concerned. The benefits are chiefly economic and social unity. A family clan will herd all its cattle together in a kind of

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nal’s See city. It is not really a city, but a village of a few hundred inhabitants—a cluster of mud huts

and thatched roofs

There is no phone, no post office, no paved road, no stores. The local butcher shop is a side of beef hung from a limb in the shade of a tree. Medicines are bought from Indian merchants traveling ihiough. The nearest phone is 30 miles away. The nearest mail box is in the next village, Kamaehumu, about half a mile further down the road. Box number 33 there is the one listed for Cardinal Rugambwa in the Vatican’s official

directory.

There are only two permanent structures in Rutabo: the cathedral and the Cardinal’s residence. The cathedral is a simple edifice built in 1910— four brick walls, a Hoo • paved also with brick, a corrugated tin roof, an altar and a few' benches. The Cardinal’s residence is a six-room bungalow’ which houses himself and his secretary. It is the village’s only house, as the villagers commonly understand the

term.

Einee every few hundred yards there is a separate cluster of huts which has its own neighborhood name, it is difficult to know where Rutabo ends, so it is difficult to say exactly what its population missionary who knows the

rescue.

But, if the head of a family dies, the patriarch has the power of absolute decision over the widow

miles then were 53,3-13 Catholics, 3.077 catechumens, 25 priests, 27 B others and nuns, 10 seminarians

and 92 catechists.

Today the Rutabo diocese has a , , , ...

Catholic population of about 61,000 “ nd children, and this sometimes out of a total population of 132,000. constitutes a p.oblom for the

The majority of the non-Catholics P r icsts.

are Moslems, and a difficulty in Another weak point in the famithe woi k of Christian missionaries ly clan is the position of women in the area has been the fact that Until recently—and it is an idea (ommercial success is identified that has not been wholly abandon-

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with being a Moslem.

The Catholics of the Rutabo diocese are poor and, as a natural consequence, so are the See’s p iests and churches. Until 195! the church at Kanhigo was the only permanent church edifice in the entire area apart from the cathedral

at Rutabo.

The Kanhigo church was little

is A

ed—women had no other function than to work in the fields and bear children, and were denied any

other right.

CARDINAL RUGAMBWA, being a product of this society, knows it thoroughly and knows that the strength of family influence and tile lor-e of family values constitute the Church’s avenue of approach in Christianizing his territory. He estimates that it will take about three generations for

more than a tin rcof with open

sides and was infested with bats

.. . The bats created such an odor that this approach to be fully success,

area well estimates, however, that eats w’ere installed in the rafters jul. —

22 at the

j Westside Community Center. Narrators for the sub-teen and teenage program were Mesdames Martha Early and Theodore Wright. Mrs. Eariene Falker is girls’ secretary of the league and also the Red

Cross water instructor.

THE TEN KEYS CLUB met April 14 at the home of Mrs Christine Cantrel. After a short business session refreshments were served to Mesdames Beatrice Coleman, Clara - Hoopgood, Wanda Vaughn, Kola Miller, Cornelia Smith, Katie Green and Martha vVatson. The next meeting was to ho April 28 with Mrs Coleman, THE DUO MATRON QUINTET met April 18 at the home of Mfr>. Sally Ruth Manuel. The meeting was presided over by the president, Mrs. H. Hannah. After the business discussion refreshments were served to Mesdames Hannah Porter, Jimmie Lee Pool, Julius Sellers, and Corne ia Shields. T he next meeting will be May

2 with Mrs. Poole.

MESDAMES Madelyne Irvin, Delons Jack and Huddy Greenwood, all members of the World’s Fellowship Committee of the YWCA. helpefa to sponsor the family night eornbread and bean supper field April 19. The supper was in ursevanre of National YWCA Week which began April 24. WOMEN’S DAY will be held ^undny. May 8 at 3 at Second Baptist Church with Mrs. Emma Edwards, who has toured Europe and \sia, as guest speaker. She is a ■•ember of 17th Street Memorial Baptist Church, of Indianapolis. MR. AND MRS. FRED JOHNSON and Curtis Frederick of Chi-

Cancer's Causes Probed Both in and Outside Cells

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STUART MORTUARY . ' .l- ME. 4-1968.

N. WEST fry

J *

NEW YORK—Cancer “detectives” who want to know if cancer is an “inside job” are also looking outside the cell for a possible chance of shackling the criminal. Investigators, according to a report of the American Cancer Society’s research activities, are pursuing both approaches: cell merhanisms, and body influences, to find clues to the solution of the cancer problem As far as the cell is concerned, r esearchers are trying to learn what triggers the uncontrolled division which spells cancer. On the other hand, scientists working on American Cancer Society grants have found definite evidence that cell growth responds to what is called the host influence. Ir other words, effects on the total body will produce results within the cell itself. EVEN AFTER CANCER is well started, some control may be exerted through the body system on -these wild cells. Take hormones for instance. In some cases of advanced cancer, hormone treatment will sometimes have a profound effect on the progress of the cancer. Ocassionally, even far advanced breast cancer or other cancers of the productive system have responded to treatment by sex hormones. Recent evidence that viruses may cause human cancer lias led to a wide range of research into the question A score of viruses have already been found which cause cancer in chickens, deer, hamsters, rabbits, mice and frogs. During the past year, scientists have found that the same virus whica causes kidney cancer in •hamsters, caused leukemia in one strain of mice, breast cancer in another, and parotid gland cancer in a third type of mouse. What’s the evidence for virus-causesd human cancer? It’s still slim but there are leads. One scientist has induced leukemia in mice by injecting a filtrate from the brain tissue of persons who died of leukemia, a cancer of the blood-forming tissue. Another has photomicrographs of particles which appear to be viruses which he found in lymp nodes of leukemia patients. Viruses, then could be one of the villians that upsets the cell’s machinery. A virus is made up of compounds similar to thoss existing in the cell’s nucleus. One scientist has now shown that the compound, DNA, found in viruses, can act like genes, the chemical units which blueprint the structure, development and properties of offspring cells Investigators, too, have made great strides in learning about enzyme pathways through which cell division takes place and about the many compounds which inter-act to produce cellular substances. They have found how chemicals used experimentally to kill cancer tceUs act along certain enezyme pathways. While being able to

block one or two routes controlled by enzymes, researchers have learned that metabolic detours occur and cell growth is resumed. Hence, chemicals may prove effective for only a while. When enough is known about all ihe channels through which biochemical reactions take place, then compounds can be fashioned to block cell growth and control cancer’s orog,ess. But the other approach, control “ells through influence of the body as a whole, is now gathering new nomentum through evidence that a person may have natural defense against cancer. ANTIBODIES, the substances which drive off infections and infectious diseases, may also operate ?ffectively in cancer. Tests with laboratory animals, in which vaccines have been made against ransp’anted cancers, have worked effectively Now scientists are trying to do the same thing with pontaneous cancers. This is a relatively new field in cancer research and a great deal of support for researchers in this irea will be required, the American Cance- Society points out.

engo, were the Easter guests of Mrs. Cornelia Shields and Mrs Charles Green. Mrs. Johnson is the daughter of Mrs. Green THOSE ON THE SICK LIST include Mesdames Margaret Davis, Pearl Boone, Lillian Kennedy, Anna Glazebrook and Florence Cox and Messrs. Ray Wright and James and John Clemons. » FUNERAL SERVICES for Paul S. Cole, who died enroute to St. John Hospital April 17. were held recent y at Zion Baptist Church, vdth Rev. James Minnifee, pastor, officiating. Burial was in East Maplewood Cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Roberta Cole who is the pianist of the youth guild chorus of Allen Chapel

A ME Church.

SERVICES lor Forest Brown, who died recently at St. John Hospital, were held April 20 at Allen Chapel AME Church with Rev F B. Jones officiating. Burial was in East Maplewood Cemetery. Survivors include the wife, Mrs.

EDUCATOR SAYS RACES MUST UNITE OR BE OBLITERATED

PROVIDENCE, R. I. (ANP) — Dr. Barnaby C. Keeney, president of Brown University, told a student convocation last week that “before

you die whole races will be obliter- i

ated or they will be equal ” He said it will be impossible for one race to deny that another rase

is human.

Dr. Kenney condemned apar- 1 theid violence in South Africa, seg- | rogation disturbances in the South- ; ern United States, and housing 1 discrimination in Rhode Island. ALL-STAR SHOW SET

FOR PIIILLY

PHILADELPHIA (ANP) — Two prominent young business m e n, Charles Blackwell and Marcus Brown, will co-promote the third annual “Cavalcade of Jazz” scheduled May 1, at the Academy of

Music here.

The .event features Count Basie’s Orchestra, Philly Jo Jones, vocalist - Gloria Lynne and the All-Stars Ornette Coleman Quartet, Sonny Stitt Quintet, Ray Bryant Trio and Le,? Morgan Quintet. Another star nerformer will be Joe Williams top blues singer.

Lfflii four sons. Harvey, Lawrence and Robert Brown, all of Anderson, and Forest Jr., of Cleveland; three daughters, Mrs. Mary Floyd, Mrs. John Turner and Miss Barbara Brown, all of Anderson; two sisters, Mrs. Ida Lindsey and Mrs. Anna Drich of New Albany; two brothers, Robert Brown, Cleveland, and John Brown, New Albany; an uncle and aunt, John Mitcham and Lula Brown, both of Corydon; a great-aunt, Mrs Elizabeth Mitcham, Anderson, and 15

grandchildren.

ON FRIDAY

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oheck Program to Be Launched hi May ^aTri all-out campaign to inspect 1,300,000 motor vehicles in almost every Indiana community will be launched the fist week of May. The Vehicle Safety-Check Program, which is sponsored by the Governor’s Traflic Safety Committees, i 1 -

both free and voluntary.

Safety-check lanes will be established in almost every city, town and hamlet as well as by industries and military establishments to detect and correct mechanical and electrical defects in more than half of the vehicles traveling on Hoosier streets and highways. During tiie 1959 program, 1,064,765 cars and trucks were checked and 132,870 were found to have defects which could contribute to accidents. These were “potentiol, accidents going somewhere to happen,” according to State Traffic I

Safety Director L. C. Bever. The state director is urging all note ists to co-operate with local '.‘ffb.isls to make certain their veules are in safe condition for nthcoming summer and vacation

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It is estimated that at least one out of every nine vehicles on the load has at least one defect which ould cause a serious crash. On the basis of vehicles either inspected j. not inspected, about 200,000 ars and trucks are operating in Indiana with improper headlights, tan lights or turn signals. The program is co-sponsored by the Indiana Office of Traffic Safety, State Police and associations of chiefs of police, sheriffs and auto

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