Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1960 — Page 13
Parents Urged Special Course
In Russian to
To Get Free Polio Shots
Berinnifig
Monday, Sept
next week, from
8, until Friday,
Sept. 12, parents may take their children to clinics throughout the city to receive free polio shots. Locations of the clinics and the time they will be open are as faUows: Monday, 8 a.m., Hill Community Center, 1860 Columbia, 1 p.m., Mayer House, 448 W. Norwood; Tuesday, 8 a.m., Morgan Health Center 15th and Missouri; Wednesday, 8 a.m., Concord Center, 17 W. Morris, Hill Community Center and Morgan Health Center at 8 a.m.; Thursday, 8 a.m., Christamore House, 502 Tremont and Morgan Health Center; Friday, 8 a.m.. Hill Community Center; Friday, 8 a.m., Hill Community Center and Jones Taber-
nacle, 840 Blackford.
Other places include: 8 a.m. Monday, Central, 230 E. Ohio, Room 406; Tuesday at 8 a.m., Brightwood, 2 2d and Avondale and Fletcher, 601 Fletcher; Thursday, 8 a.m.. Mars Hill, Farnsworth and Folts and Friday, Cen-
tral at 8 a.m.
Dr. Henry G. Nester, director of the city-county health department, said that the 1960 total is 16, two more than recorded for the same period last year. He cited the case of a 6-year-old girl who contracted an unspecified type of polio last week. Dr. Nester said that the young child had net received any Salk vaccine and added that “this is clearly a case of leek of interest on the part of the public. He further said that 'it demonstrates that eternal vigilance is the price we must pay for freedom from nolio.” In cooperation with the National Foundation, the health director recalled that 25,771 Salk shots were administered to Marion County residents in April, 1955. Dr. NMter said that the interest at that time, when the vaccine first became available, was so great we were nearly mobbed, and added “now that we have a plentiful supply of the vaccine not nearly enough people seem to
want it.”
He proved this point by going back to April's record and revealing a total of all shots given by the health department’s 17 clinics
Be Offered Here
Alexander M. Moore, principal of Crispus Attucks High School, announced this week that Elementary Russian language classes will be offered in the adult evening classes, this semester, beginning Sept. 12. Moore said that the Russian classes will be held on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 7:40 until 9:30 p.m., and, if more than the maximum of twenty-five students enroll, arrangements have been made to offer another class beginning at 6 p.m. on the same evenings. The teacher selected for instructor is Dr. Karlis L. Vanags, LL.M. The class will be offered on a tuition basis. Russian alphabet, elements of pronunciation, along with writing of simple sentences and reading of easy Russian texts, is the content of the course designed for students who have had no work in Russian. Charles Walker, director of the evening school, said that registration for all classes will be held in the school beginning Tuesday, Sept. 6 at 5:30 p.m. He further added that workmen are nearing completion of rewiring the entire building at the North West Street school and that new fluorescent lighting has been installed in all classrooms, offices, library and halls, enabling the students this semester to enjoy sufficient and adequate lighting for the first time.
amounting to only 583. The new case of polio in Marion County was one of five reported by the State Board of Health. Allen County reported three new cases of polio as . of last week all of them nonparalytic, and Scott County has one new case of paralytic polio in which no shots were given. The state-wide polio trend appears much better than the local picture. Only 36 have been reported in Indiana this year, compared with 94 for the first eight months of 1959. Dr. Nester urged the public to take advantage of the facilities of the local clinics which administer shots without charge.
DARK EYES
A RECORD NUMBER OF GRAND MASTERS: A record number of grand masters attended the recent Annual Conference of Grand Masters.. Prince Hall Masons, held in the Masonic Temple in Boston Mass. Associated Negro Press Photographer O. C. W. Taylor shows some of the highlights of the conclave. At too (left to right) Grand Masters W. Barnes, Washington, D. C; P. G. orter, Kansas; C. Hill of Pennsylvania; A. Wilson of Ohio and D Miller of the state of Washington look at the set of Masonic aprons used by Prince Hall and his
brothers in the first Negro Masonic Lodge in the U. S. Too right Grand Master Amos T. Hall of Oklahoma, conference president (at right) talks with Dean John U. Monro of Harvard Univeisity, a conference speaker; bottom, left, shows monument over grave of Prince Hall in Copp's Hill burial grounds, Boston, and at bottom right. Grand Master Isaacs (pointing) shows th original Prince Hall Charter granted to the African Lodge in 1784 by the Grand Lodge of England to Grand Master John G. Lewis of Louisiana.
The Indianapolis Recorder, Sept 10,1960—13
Lieut. Sneed Seriously III In Methodist Hospital Lieutenant George Sneed, 36 , years a member of the Indianap- s hard for me to say because olis police force, is in critical con- be’s my husband and I, of course, dition in Methodist Hospital suf- think he’s the best policeman.” fering from a cerebral hemor- She further characterized her rhage. husband as being “even tempered According to his wife, Mrs. anti sincere.” Addie Sneed, 2137 N. Capitol, his . To the question, when is his condition is improving slowly. She birthday, Mrs. Sneed said, “He’s added that he has been in the seventy-one years old, born Januhospital for three weeks, since ar y 22” and went on to add, after Aug. 7, and still remained on some delay, “I’ll have to get a the critical list. Mrs. Sneed fur- pencil and paper to figure out the ther said that he had not been year,” 1889 of course. “too well” for some time. Happily married for 42 years, Seventy-one-year-old Lieutenant Lieutenant Sneed has been a memSneed, previous to his confine- ber of Corinthian Baptist Church ment in the hospital, had been since 1958, Police Retirement Grin Sidney, O., visiting with Mr. ganization and the Masons, and Mrs. Sam Brown, brother
of his wife.
Mrs. Sneed said that her husband remained a patrolman in the police force for only six months, became a detective, and in 1925 was first appointed lieutenant. Later, she continued, he again was a detective, but in 1945 was reappointed a lieutenant and remained one until his retirement
May 20, 1964.
When asked how she would describe him as far as the kind of policeman he was, Mrs. Sneed hesitated and with a laugh said,
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City-Grid Wide Continued from Page 11
still doubles in brass as a right tackle oti defense. Ripple drove to a touchdown with Charles* Stewart carrying the mail, for a final score of South 20, North 13. With Ledale Johnson playing quarterback, Davis and Willie Smith at half, Wood much of the time had an all-Negro eleven on the field. At other times there would be one white player in the lineup. Chucks noted were Jack Jackson and George Jones (good defense), Jerry Wilson (who suffered the night’s only kayo), Larry McCloud, Lionel Porter, James Smith, William McDowell, Edward Chester, Aaron Goldsmith and Bobby Jitaples. * CAROLYN POINDEXTER was Attucks’ queen. The Attucks color guard did the honors for the “StarSpangled Banner.” Unfortunately, the boy on the left was out of step. — REGISTER TO VOTE —
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NEW YORK—Some df them said that it shouldn’t be done, but in view of its box office magnetism, here $43,000 first week, and in Chicago $38,000 for its initial stanza, they are changing their tunes about “All The Young Men”. They are also changing their tunes about the drawing power of Negro stars and the advisability of doing pictures with an interracial theme. Written, produced and directed by Hall Bartlett, “All The Young Mert*’ is the first picture of its kind to come out of Hollywood. Despite the fact that some people have confused it with “Home Of The Brave”, the role played by James Edwards in the Stanley Kramer production, though laudatory, was as different from the
one assumed in “Young Men” by Sidney Poitier as chalk and cheese. IN THE FIRST place, Poitier is not only a star in the Bartlett picture but he gets star billing as well. This billing is the same on Broadway as it will be in the Negro neighborhoods throughout! the country. The theme of the picture is built around him; and the Negro soldier for the first time is given a role of leadership and bravery^ According to Bartlett, himself: There was a great deal of opposition to making this picture. Most of the people in Hollywood turned the story down. They said that the idea of a Negro as a first class citizen, of a Negro as a leader, could not possibly be sold to the motion picture audiences of America.
elude middleweight Chester Winters, who was the Golden Gloves 1 ighHira vyweig Wt—champion ta*t year; Kelly, ihe welter champ of Mayer Chapel and Happy Hollow Camp; featherweight Edgar Bateman, and flyweight Ollie Hurt. * * * THE ENERGETIC ALLEN came through with a victory in another weight class Sunday as his wife presented him with an 8-lb, 2-oz son, Anthony Cesar.
Finally, Columbia gambled with him. They put up a great deal of money and allowed him to make this picture the way he wanted to make it, with no de-emphasis on the race question, no de-em-phasis on the controversial issue.
Irene Holmes Last rites for Mrs. Irene Holmes, 44. 3334 North Downey, were held Sept. 8 in the Kirk Funeral Home, with burial in Floral Park Cemetery. She died Sept. 4 in Marion County General Hospital. Bom in Carter Creek, Tenn., she lived here more than 20 years. Suvivors include her husband, John Holmes- tw'o brothers, J. O Alexander of Indianapolis and Nathaniel Alexander of. Milwaukee.
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