Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1972 — Page 2

p.pr o THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER v SATURDAY, JANUARY 22. 1972 Attucks evening school to start registration Jan. 24

Adult Education at Crispus Attucks High School, Evening School Division can mean different things to different people, because of the wide variety of educational opportunities offered in the prograrrf. Crispus Attucks High School is one of the seven high schools . in the city that offers a complete curriculum which includes high school credit, prehigh school courses, vocational courses, self-improvement courses, business education courses, and short courses to meet special needs. Adult counseling is available for any adult in the community in Special program being planned by Jewish group T he American Jewish community has many tentacles - educational facilities, defense organizations, as well as the many social services rendered through community centers and synagogues. One such arm, is the Israel Allyah Center of Cleveland, Ohio. It main function is to enlighten assist and encourage immigrations to Israel. t The Israel Allyah Center's director, /.eev MenDavtd, met with officers of /, u. A., National consulate of Jewish Women, and the Jewish Community Center to organize and plan an "Allyah Sunday" to be held in Indianapolis March S at 7:30 p.m. in the Jewish Educational Association Auditorium, 6711 Hoover Road. The program will feature Shaul Ramatl, consulate general of Israel, as guest speaker. The "Hamaagal" Israeli Dancers of the Jewish Community Center will add also to the overall atmosphere of excitement that “Allyah Sunday will undoubly generate.

regard to education and training. Last year more than fifteen hundred different individuals, participated in this program, their ages ranged from 16 to 72 and their education varied from those who had had no formal education to college graduates. Eight pers o n s completed elementary requirements, while almost one hundred completed high school requirements graduating in May. The adult drivers training course showed a result of more than fifty persons learning to drive safely. The school offered a special eight-week typing class in November, and will offer it again in March. Several men and women took advantage of the shop program last year which Included: auto body, auto mechanics, carpentry, electronics, radio and television repairs, woodwork and photography. Charles D. Walker, Director of Evening School, stated today that the new semester begins January 31 and February 1. He also stated that registration will be held at the school at 1140 North West Street from 0:30 until 8:30 p.m., beginning next Monday, January 24. Full adult counselpng Is available each evening. NESC0 to hoM delegate meeting Thursday, Jan. 27 The Near East Side Community Organization (NESCO) will hold its monthly delegate meeting Thursday, Jan. 27, at 7:30 p.m., at East Park United Methodist Church, 2601 E. New York. The delegates will review and make final decisions on contracts for projects to be funded by the Community Services Program monies.

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Fort Wayne in Urban League labor program The National Urban League’s Labor Affairs Program has signed a new $4 million contract with the Office of National Projects of the U.S. Department of Labor, for its ongoing program to prepare minority group members for apprenticeship entry tests and admission to the construction trades, Vernon E. Jordan Jr., National Urban League executive director, announced. The funds will maintain and enlarge the League’s Labor Education Advancement Program (LEAP) currently operating in 42 cities across the nation. Fort Wayne, Ind., is among those cities sharing in the project. Also provided is expansion of LEAP’S Journey man Training component, now in 10 cities which offers job-related education to minorities who may be beyond apprenticeship levels in skills and age, for higher level entry into the same trades. Winter woes SNOW shovelling can pose a real hazard to men who are middleaged or older and slightly out of shape. The most common serious threat of overexertion from snow shovelling is hear attack. If you are overweight, recently recovered from illness or lead a normally inactive life, do not subject your body to sudden excessive physical demands. Snow shovelling is good exercise if you use good senee. One, alswayo work slowly and take frequent rest breaks. Two, get an early start on the morning of a fresh snow fall — this way, you can avoid the frantic rush to clear your driveway in time to get to the office. Three, don’t hesitate to hire the boy down the street to do the heavy shoveling so you can enjoy the fresh air within your tolerance. Another hazard is frostbite. One of the dangers of frostbite is that you often don’t feel it — freezing tissue is usually not painful at first, but gradually becomes numb and hard to the touch. Your hands, feet, ears and nose are most susceptible to belowfreezing temperatures. Symptoms are a pink skin which changes to white or greyish yellow as freezing sets in. NEVER rub frostbitten parts with snow or ice. Rubbing increases the risk of infection and gangrene. If fingers or hands are frostbitten, hold your hands under your arms, next to your body and go Inside as soon as possible.

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words THAT WIN are the words you use in your advei> tisement in The Recorder 1 .

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AIRMASTER PRODUCTS, INC. — HEATING AIR CONDITIONING Stanley Tansy 810 E. 64th St. Phone: 255-9518

Letters warned CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 mattresses and ripped out plumbing fixtures and electric lights.' The trouble erupted after dinner Sunday at about 5 p.m. when about 300 prisoners refused to return to their cells, shouting that they were too cold. Temperatures Saturday and Sunday in Pendelton were between zero and 12 below. The disturbance spread to the gymnasium, where there were about 300 inmates, and then to cell blocks G and J, according to reformatory officials. Indiana Department of Correctlons Commissioner Robert P. Hayne the two guards, Charles L. Widener, 34, Anderson, and Larry G. Hollingsworth, 31, Middletown, were captured when inmates threw blankets over their heads. The two guards were released unharmed about two or three hours later and said they could not identify their assailants because they were kept in the dark at all times. Widener said he was forced to write a note saying “I’m OK. I don’t know where I am. If you kill anyone, they are going to do me in.’’ During a press conference Tuesday, Widener said he was led to safety by two black inmates who had convinced the others that they should release them. The disturbance was not reported until Monday night after officials were sure that the situation was “under control.’’ After the two guards’ release, other guards moved In with tear gas and riot guns, put down the uprising and returned the prisoners to their cells. - One visitor who had gone to the Institution to see a relative Monday told The Recorder that he noticed the odor of gas, but said officials told him that the institution was being “exterminated.” No newsmen were allowed behind the walls of the institution. SuperintendentGeorge W. Phend said at the news conference that Inmates had used to start a disturbance, but admitted that the cell blocks are large and drafty and that windows are not airtight. He said temperatures in the cells ranged from 65 to 67 degrees during the period. However, an inmate spokesman said he had heard rumors of Impending trouble because of temperatures ranging from 52 upward in some ?' areas. The spokesman said that the only reason windows were broken was because of the tear gas. Prison officials said at least 70 rounds of g a s had been fired into the cell blocks. Heyne said the disturbance was not racial and that whites also participated. B u t it is a known fact that feelings have run high since the release of t h e nine guards, all white, who were found not guilty 1 n early November of violating the civil rights of inmates during the 1969 disturbance. Letters from Inmates at the institution have complained of racial discrimination and unjust treatment. Excerpts from a few of the letters follows: “T If e present adminstration at this institution not only practices inhumanities against its inmate population, but encourages conflict between the inmate body so as to cover up, justify and misdirect opposition to another source, for actions taken by it. Right now we are in the midst of a small scale racial strife, which threatens to grow much larger. The blacks are pitted against white due indirectly from the tension cause by the treatment, attitude and actions of t h e administration." The letter was dated Oct. 27, 1971. An-other letter opens, “When will you awaken to the world around you? Don’t you realise that the September 26, 1969 Pendelton massacre was a small scale overt art of genocide, that, according to the trial and verdlot of its perpetrators, you condone.” Another reads, “Well they lust acquitted the p 1 g Capt. (Jason L. Huckelby) and his running dogs for riiurderlng the brothers here Sept. 26, 1969.” The injured Inmate was not identified, but prison offlcals said his wound, caused by shotgun pellets, was not serious.

INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER MARCUS C. STEWART Editor and Publisher Published Weekly By The 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 Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc., 310 Madison Avenue. New York. N. Y. Member of Audit Bureau nf Circulation, National Publishtors feebciation.

Urges CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

were George P. Stewart II, managing editor; Mrs. Patricia Stewart, women’s editor, and James Burres, photographer. Others receiving the awards were as follows (categories listed first): ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT - Micheal Rhea, James Shaw, Jesse Carter, Fuller Jones, Herman Walker, Harold Jamison, Howard Bell, James C. Cummings, Donald Davidson, Matie Stuart, and S. Henry Bundles. Also, Holton Hayes, Huerta Tribble, Bert Butler, Joseph Summers, Marshall Blultt, William Blultt, William MauItsby, Charles Holifield, John Lands, Herman Taylor and James T. Smith Sr. EDUCATION -DonThomas, Dicky Hickman, Robert DeFrantz, Luanna Davis, Bill Scott, JohnBrown, Jessie Jacobs, and Reginald Jones. LAW - Delano Bryant, Beulah Wallace, Calvin Franklin, Beatrice Woods, Lloyd Gilbert and Henry Mills. NEWS MEDIA - Andrew Ramsey, Ron Clark, Carl Stubblefield, Phillip Allen, David Rohn, Johnny Robinson, Rich Brady, Tom Mathis, Bernard “Spider” Harris, Tony Edwards, James Robinson and Jerry Harkness. Also, Barbara Boyd, Steve Scott, Renee Ferguson, Wendell Phllllpi, Opal Tandy, Ricky Clark, Fred Moore, A1 Hobbs, David Woods, Larry Nash, Marl Evans and Ronnie Griggs. MKDICINE - Dr. Frank P. Lloyd, Dr. Freeman Martin, Dr. Robert Briggs, Dr. William C. Swatts, Dr. Raymond Pierce, Felix Wilson and Mm. Ann Boling. POLITICS - Rozelle Boyd, Guy Russell, Mrs. Artrlcla Noel, Dr. William Baker and the Urban Union. SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT - Reverends James Earl King, Robert Keonlg, Alexander Bernard, James Williams, E. T. Johnson, Kenneth Ward, Donald Carpenter, F. Benjamin Davis, James C.

Hawkins, Grover Hartman, William R. Hughley, E. H. Adams, C. V. Jetter, Thomas Petty, T. G. Benjamin, Melvin Girton and Rabbi Murray Saltzman. SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT - Rev. Luther Hicks, Sam Jones, Nellie Gustafson, Shirley Hayes, Claretta Mitchum, Cherry Brown, Rev. George Cox, James Toler, Alfred Caldwell, Charles Hendricks, Julius Shaw, Edgar Searcy, Theresa Bowers, Arthur Pratt, Phillip Davis, Darden Chrismon, Louis Shanks, Tom Feske, Bill Mooney, Vern Ross man, Isaih Pogue, Doris Woods, Majorie McGuire, Bob Netolicky, Roger Brown, George McGinnis, Warren Jabali and Fred McCoy. Algo, Bobby Taylor, Albert Moore, Stanley Warren, Darlene Ricketts, Father Boniface Hardin, Rosa* Lee Brown, Laura Brandt, Robert Williams, David Mitchum, Ulyses Brown, Richard Crenshaw, Nancy Shaw, Russell Pope, Dean Acheson, Emma Johnson, Jerry Williams, Fritz Shaw, George Anderson, Faye Wllllai.is, A. D. Ford, Ron McIntosh and Willie Wardlow. Others were John Welsert, Ron Johnson, Doris Parker, Starling James. Neal Jotmson, Don Sidle, Bill Keller^ Mel Daniels, Freddie Lewis, Halba Jabali, Mary Mumford, John Gloss, Bobby Prather, Amanda Strong, Gerald Christian, the westslde Knights of Coventry, Welfare Rights Organization, Music Masters and Hwingmasters. Also presented awards for aiding SCLC-Operotion Breadbasket were F t r b e r Distributing, Scotty’s Lounge, Al’e British Lounge, Capitol City Supply Inci, Wonder Bread, Riverside Pest Control, Arlene’s House of Music, 19th Hole Lounge, Colonial Baking, Vickie’s Liquors, Hawk's Liquors, Chicken Shack, Twenty Grand Lounge, Willie Gardner, Dr. John E. Joyner, Mildred Ragland and Domini Chapmon.

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Bell's newest prescription

center now open on East 38th

Bell's Prscription and Surgical Center will hold a grand opening of its newest outlet at 4829 E. 38th (38th and Dequincy) on Saturday, Jan. 22, at 2 p.m., it was announced this week by W. Howard Bell Jr., president of the chain. The Bell’s Prescription and Surgical Center chain is the only one of its kind in the state. It is an operation in which a patient, hospital or nursing home can find everything from the smallest prescription (which is delivered to your door) to the most elaborate examining room equipment. Presently, Bell’s services are extended to six nursing homes, three clinics and scores of doctors who have found their services more complete than any other source. The chain employes an integrated staff of 15 men and women who are skilled In the methods of fitting braces, compounding p r e s c r 1 ptlons, selecting proper invalid equipment and various other Important factors in the field. Howard Bell is one of the youngest, most enterprising pharmacist in the state. At 27 he is a graduate of the Howard University School of Pharmacy and has had experience in the Hook’s Drugstore chain. From this background and other personal research, he has gained enough knowledge In the field to make his

first endeavor a success. He plans to add two more stores before the end of 1972. “We recognize the need for our kind of service in Indianapolis,” said Bell, “and in answering we have just opened a second store. It offers the same prompt, courteous and responsible service as the other store.” “I’d like to take this opportunity to invite the public to attend our grand opening and Inspect our complete facility,” he added.

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LEARN AT 2 RIGHT ON!

CRISPUS ATTUCKS ADULT EVENING SCHOOL 1140 N. WEST ST. 638-8440 634-7421 REGISTRATION STARTS JANUARY 24 CLASSES BEGIN JAN. 31 SCHEDULE OF CLASSES

• EDUCATION WILL J GUARANTEE YOU • BETTER JOBS SECURITY AND ADVANCEMENT • IN YOUR PRESENT JOB • A FULLER LIFE 6 CHARLES D. WALKER, DIRECTOR 6 EARL DONALSON, PRINCIPAL

SUBJECT AREA

TUES.-THURS. 4:15-5:55

MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY

TUESDAY AND THURSDAY

6:00-7:40

7:S0-t:30

6:00-7:40

7:S0-f:30

Th« Art»

Plano

Plano

Art Ceramics Painting

Art Ceramics Painting

Job Trtlnlnt In Butlnou ■ ■ ; . ■ ■. ■ >'V,

Typing Caahlorlng V

Typing Bookkaaplng Kay Punch

Typing . Advancad Buslnass Clarlcal Practice Offlca Procadura Kay Punch Caahforlnu

Typing - Sacratarial Practice Advancad Stenography Cooperative Office Occupation Kay Punch

Typing Stenography 1 Kay Punch

Communication •klllt

Journalltm Spoech

English 1 English 4 English 6 English •

English 2 English 3 English 7 Composition (Advancad)

English 3 English 5 Spoech Journalism

English 4 English 6 dramatics

Homa-maNln«

Clothing

Clothing

Clothing Poods

Clothing Home Managtmgnt

Clothing Homg Nutting Child Card

Jab Training In Induttry

Auto Itapalr Industrial Caoparallwa Training

Auto Hapalr TV. Hapalr Otereu Mi-Pi Hapalr

Machine Drafting Photography Auto Body Hapalr

M«6hina bhop Photography Carpentry Auto Body Repair

Poralgn L-anguaga

•- " ..

French

Mathamatics

Algabra 1 Ganaral Math 2 Gaomatry

Algabra 2 Algabra 3 Sanior Math

Business Math 1

Business Math 2

Haalth anq Safaty

. Driver Training

Haalth and Safaty Drivar Training

Drivar Training

water Safety Driver Training

Driver Training Health a> Safety

Social Studla*

Psychology

Economics U.S. History 1 World History 1

Government U.S. History 2 World History 2

Black History Government

Economics Sociology U.S. History 1

Science

Biology

Biology

Chemistry Science 1

Science 1 Science 2

Getting Ready° for High School

•\. r

Arithmotlc 7-8 Arithmatlc 4-6

English 1-3

Arithmetic 7-8 Arithmetic 4-6 Arithmetic 1-3

English 7-8 English 4-6 English 1-3

English 7-8 English 4-6

Arithmetic 1-3

8 WEEK W0RKSH0P-“AEL ABOUT WIGS” BEGINS FEB. 14 7-9 P.M.