Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1970 — Page 2
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THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER PACE 2 SATURDAY, APRIL 25. 1970
Specialist in internal medicine with U.S. Air Force in Vietnam
Dr. Paul Tarry Battles, of Indianapolis, a captain In the United States Air Force is currently serving at the Ton San Khut Air Force Base in Vietnam, the largest Air Force Base In the world. Approximately 55,000 service men are concentrated at the sprawling facility. Dr. Battles Is the only medical Internist and the only specialist serving at this base. In line with the Air Force policy, Dr. Battles was recently granted a short leave for “rest and recuperation" which he spent In Honolulu, Hawaii, where members of his family, his wife, Mrs. Patricia Battles, and his parents, Dr. and Mrs. Paul A. Battles, 4248 Cold Spring Road, joined him. Following the leave, Dr. Paul Terry Battles returned to Vietnam, April 14th to complete his tour of foreign service with the Air Force. Upon completion of the present assignment, Dr. Paul Terry Battles will continue an additional year of service with the
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DR. PAUL T. HATTIES Air Force, prior to launching his private practice of medicine In Indianapolis as a “specialist" In Internal medicine. For a young medical physician, only 28, Dr. Battles has had unusually broad aca-
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demlc and professional experience. He Is a native of Indianapolis and a graduate of Indiana University School of Medicine. Following his graduation from LU. Med. School, he completed his Internship and residency In “Internal Medicine" at The Detroit General Hospital. , Crossroads’ day camp set July 6-31 Camp Crossroads, a day camp, sponsored by Crossroads Rehabilitation Center, will be held July 6 through 31 on the camp grounds at 3242 Sutherland Avenue. Physically and mentally handicapped children, four through six years old, are eligible to attend the camp, which Is made possible by an annual grant from the Sertoma Club of North Indianapolis. Mrs. Jlmmy (correct) Sullivan, a special education teacher, has been named camp director. She will be assisted by Mrs. Charles E. Russell, and a staff of volunteers. The camp will be In session Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. until 11:00 a.m. Enrollment Information may be obtained by calling Crossroads, 924-3251. MRS. MYRTLE SHORTS Funeral services for Mrs. Myrtle Shorts, age 82, 2522 N. Tacoma were held Wednesday, April 15 in Jacobs Brothers Westside Chapel. She was a member of Mt. Par an Baptist Church. Survivors include her husband George Shorts.
JAMES RICHARDSON Division Director
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Rev. Jackson picked by SCLC to be officer in Midwest
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IN FIGHT AGAINST CANCER: Mrs. Wordell B Amis (standing), 2008 N. Park, volunteer worker with the Center Township in the April Crusade of the Marion County Unit-American Cancer Society, turns in funds collected to fight cancer from her township. Mrs. Robert C. Fields, a cancer unit headquarters volunteer, tallies the amounts which helped the unit add some $13,000 from residential collections to the Marion County total of $43,000 in the first few days of the drive.
CHICAGO -The Rev Jesse Jackson, dire ctor of the Southern Chritian Leadership Conferences' Operation Breadbasket here, was appointed last week as a national vice president of SCLC. His appointment was announced by the Rev. Ralph Abnernathy, SCLC, president Rev. Abernathy was in town to express SCLC's full support of Breadbasket's drive to end hunger among Chicago's and Illinois' black citizens. Rev. Jackson will be one of 1 ‘six or seven" national vice presidents, according to Rev. Abernathy. They will assist him in planning and implementing SCLC programs throughout the nation. In addition, the vice presidents will be responsible for planning and implementing programs, more or less autonomously on a regional level. The Rev. Mr. Jackson will head SCLC's midwest region which includes Chicago and
MRS. D. WILLIAMS Funeral services for Mrs. Doris Williams, age 69, 182 N. College were held Wednesday, April 22. in the Greater St. Mark Baptist Church. The burial was in New Crown Cemetery. She died Thursday, April 16, in' General Hospital. She was a member of the Greater St. Mark Church.
Illinois. He will continue to hold his present post as national director of Operation breadbasket. Rev. Abernaty said the appointment of National vicepresidents will result in a restructuring of the SCLC. "We are decentralizii^ SC LC*s authority and power so we can do a more creative job throughout the nation." he said. Until now the organization has concent rated all of its efforts in one area or one city. "By moving in to a community and dramatizing some evil within it, we have been able to focus national attention cm that community and as
a result we rooted out the evil. But once we left a community little progress was made thereafter. "By decentralizing the organization, the SCLC will be able to maintain a constant presence within an area to assure continued progress in the area of human rights." Rev. Abernathy also announced that be plans to attend several national church meetings across the country this year to ask them to underwrite the cost of operating the SCLC. He said the organization, which is in financial trouble, should be the social action division of the churches in this country.
Premarital conceptions found high
WASHINGTON - One third of all first-born children in the United States from 1964 through 1966 were conceived out of wedlock a government survey disclosed this week. Hastily arranged marriages jave many babies legitimacy by the time of their birth, but one out of every seven was born illegitimate during that period. These were among the major findings of an extraordinary report from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, based on a solid sampling of one out of every I, 000 first births in those years. It was the first attempt in this country to obtain national estimates of extramarital conception. The study, conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics, pointed up a connection between income and pregnancy at the time of marriage. More than 37 percent of women in families earning less than $3,000 a year went to the altar pregnant. A shade more than eight percent from families with income exceeding $10,000 were expecting when married. Forty-two percent of the married women under 20 had been wed less than eight months when their first baby was born. The size of the sample was II, 331 first births out of 1.1 million in the United States annually from 1964 through 1966. Statistics are being gathered for more recent years, but the data has not been tabulated. Those who took the last survey said there was no way to predict now whether newer figures would show more, less or the same number of illegitimate babies. They cited as imponderables the effects of the birth control pill and increasing sexual freedom. PATRONIZE RECORDER
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THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER MARCUS C. STEWART Editor and Publisher Published Weekly By Fhe George P. Stewart Priming Co. Inc.. 518 Indiana Avenue. Indianapolis. Indiana, 46202. Entered at the Post Office. Indianapolis. Indiana, as second Class matter under the Act of March 7. 1870. National Advertising Repre■sentative Amalgamated PUvr Ushers. Inc., 310 Madison Avenue. New York. N. Y. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation. National Publishers Association.
Book on Dr. King’s life scheduled - for reprinting Salisbury, N.C.—"I Have a Dream:" The Life and Times of Martin King, Jr., will be reprinted and released this fall by the Negro Universities Press. The author of the book Lenwood G. Davis is an instructor in history at Livingstone College. The publishing organization 9re-print) is an affiliate of the Greenwood Publishing Corporation, Westport, Conn, and London, England. The book will be published in several languages and distributed
throughout the world. The Davis book was originally published In paperback by Adams Press of Chicago. With the hardback edition and worldwide distribution, It will be more readily available to many more people. The author recently completed his second book, title of which is undisclosed, and is presently negotiating for Its publication. Davis temporarily suspended the writing of A Black Man Looks at the Congo to complete his most recent work. He hopes to put the finishing touches on it this summer for publication in early 1971.
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People are smarter than computers.
Sure, computers are wizards with facts And as RCA grows to a $4 billion a and figures. year business, talented people grow They can spell sarsaparilla.Tell you with us. what’s the capital of Afghanistan. “If you think clearly, you can work And instantly figure out your income with computers!’ says Mr. Murrel tax or how many triples Babe Ruth Freeman, Manager of RCAs Los hit in 1928. Angeles Computer Center. “ Fhe But no computer can invent, build, opportunity is there’.’ operate and maintain itself.That takes Murrel, who is only 28 years old, people. Bright people. joined RCA eight years ago. He’s
helped us build our L.A. Center from the ground up. Now this five-story center houses three of the 83 computers in RCAs worldwide management information system. “We handle all computer processing for RCAs west coast divisions!’ Murrel says. “W'e also help other companies with their management information requirements!’ Murrel explains. “W’e analyze their management problems and data processing needs. And provide computer equipment and programs, or custom-design special systems!’ Right now, Murrel supervises thirty computer specialists.They are tape librarians, key punch operators, programmers, computer operators. They are people. People smarter than computers. ItCil
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Computer lights reflect off Murrel Freeman, Manager of RCAs Los Angeles Computer Center
