Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 April 1972 — Page 2
PAGE 2 THE •ND'ANAPOLIS RECORDER SATURDAY. APRIL 8. 1972
PANCAKES AWAY: Sam Jones prepares to loft a flapjock while Frank E. McKinney Jr., hustles the skillet in a rehearsal of a Boy Scout benefit breakfast scheduled for June 12. Jones, executive director of the Indianapolis Urban League, alona with Tom Binford, president of D-A Lubricant Company, are co-chairmen of the "Send-A-Scout-To-Camp" breakfast, to be held on the World War Memorial Plaza. McKinney, president of American Fletcher National Bank, is ticket chairman for the affair. The breakfast goal is to send 1,000 area Boy Scouts to camp this summer who are unable to pay the week-long camp fee.
MARCELIA HARDIN Mrs. Marcella Hardin, 47, died March 26 in the home of her brother, the Rev. Lee Lesser Jr., in Louisville. Funeral services were held March 31 in Pilgrim Baptist Church. Mrs. Hardin, 1429Congress had been employed at the Excelsior Laundry for 10 years. Survivors include her husband, Lee Hardin, and her father, Lee Lesser Sr.
MAGGIE HATCHER Final rites for Mrs. Maggie Hatcher, 83, were held April 5 in Corinthian Baptist Church where she was a member, with burial in Floral Park Cemetery. She died April 2 in her home, 3035 Martlndale. A native of Christian County Ky., Mrs. Hatcher had lived here since 1915 and had been a member of the Corinthian church more than 50 years. Survivors Include her husband, Henry Hatcher.
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FAMILY WEEK: The Carter and The Carruther families will be featured at the opening of a Family of the Week program at Phillips Temple CME Church where Dr. H. L Burton is the pastor. Beginning Sunday, a family will be honored each week. Those in the picture include Willie K. Carter, Cincinnati District Lay President of the Ohio Annual Conference, stew-
ard, faithful supporter of the worship services, choir, church school, and mid-week uplift and educational meetings, and Anthony Carruthers, steward, faithful leader and member. Their families also are sustaining faithful members and involved in the total program of the church. All are enterprising and worthy citizens.
NEW COMPANY FORMED: William R. Shively (seated center) president of the newly formed J & B Construction Company, 2104 E. 42nd, goes over plans with his employes. Left to right are James Dowdy (seated), James E. Anderson, Jerry Davenport,
Eddie M. Easley, Bobbie Contrail, Shively, Steve McCurn, Freddie Wright, Frank McFarland and Wanda Wright. The company specializes in commercial and residential driveways, patios and sidewalks.
Ex-local resident to engage Martin Luther King’s impact in medicine study in Africa assessed on ’Black Journal’
Isaac E, Osborne Jr. la one of the many University of California medical students whoae work in the community la aa much a pert of the life he leads aa three meal* a day. But for laaac, hla training will take him to the Eaat African Coast town of Monrovia, In the country of Liberia, where he will engage in community medicine in the field of cardiovascular research in pediatrics. Says Isaac, 4< Pedlatrlcs has become a fundamental discipline for me in my educational ad-
ISAAC E. OSBORNE JR. vancement.” Presently, Isaac is working on manuscripts to be submitted to the American Heart Association dealing speclfcally with chromosome disorders and the affects In mental retardation and physical abnormalities, with such studies aimed at pinpointing the abnormal metabolism in defective cells. If successful, this research project will be the preliminary to a series of studies thereby making more substantial indications which show the cause of Inherited disorders that affect one In ever 200 newborns, thus enabling him to become a candidate for a Louis W. Katz Basic Science Research Prize. Isaac, who has worked in advance study in cardiology with Dr. Julien Hoffman and in a technical capacity in the laboratories of the Cardiovascular Research Institute In San Francisco, hopes to use a portion of the prize money to continue study In Monrovia at Eastern African Medical School at Salaam. Isaac, currently a third year student, has spent a great deal of time and effort In the areas of health sciences tn family
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medicine, but fssls there Is still a great deal of work being made available to potential “black doctors/' especially thoas intsrsftsd In community aa well as preventive medi-
cine.
Isaac has been s volunteer for the Children Tooth Trip Clinics as known to a number of youngsters and toothers the Blackman Free Clinic located In San Francisco's Western Addition - Fillmore District since Its pioneer days of 1968. The clinic, which Is near the heart of the Fillmore, offers medical services, as well as dental and pharmaceutical services most of which are provided by volunteer students and staff from the University of California at San Francisco. A native onlndianapolis Isaac has announced his engagement to Miss Wanda Ruth Gipson, a recent graduate from the St. Joseph School of Nursing in Fort Worth, Tex. Though they both share the Interest in the fields of pediatrics, they will be In different types of challenging areas to
the the field.
Miss Gipson plans to enter the United States Air Force and pursue more advanced areas at pediatric study. Isaac, who has done the majority of his undergraduate study outside of Indianapolis, says he does not rule outthepoasl-
A part Black Journal special will aasoas the impact of Dr. Martin Luther King 1 * life and death on the condition of black Americana April Uth at 9:30 p.m. on Channel 90. Three prominent black journalists will recount some of their peraonal and professional experiences with the slain civil rights leader and reflect on the timea from which Dr. King and the civil rights movement emerged. Appearing on the program will be: Gerald Fraser, New York Times reporter who covered Dr. King and who was with him on his last day In New York; Chester Higgins, senior editor of Jet magazine, and Peter Bailey of Ebony magazine. The newsmen will discuss the void created by D r. King's assassination four years ago
analyte what many believe to be preealng need for a new leader to unite disparate black groups In America. The panelists will assess the death consequence of Dr. King 1 ! death and Fraser’s contention that black Americans "learned more about being black In the United States ss a result of his (Dr. King's) death than they did learn from him while he was alive." Questions concerning the character of black leadership In general will beTaIsed as the newsmen analyze whether It is charisma or the white press that creates a black leader. Specifically, the panelists will examine the role the press played in helping Dr. King attain a position of national leadership. Black Jounal is a production is transmitted nationally by PBS, the Public Broadcasting Service.
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Isaac says; “My main objective and concern facing me now Is to qualify and prepare myself for challenge in medical science. I welcome change, but mutual change must be accompanied by mutual respect, if I might quote Vice-Chancellor Harlln of University of California a t San Francisco: 4 4 Presently all of my efforts are being exhibited to seek a workable program which will Involve basic training programs in which the community can learn to do basic medical prodedures. I feel It Is not a challenge, but a fulfillment of the basic fundamentals of the learning process to be associated with my people In and around the academia of advanced medical sciences.” Isaac Is the son of Mrs. Lois Pipkins of 1024 W. 27th,
Indianapolis.'
FLORA CHUMLEY ring, rites for Mrs. Flora Chumley, 80, who died March 28 In General Hopltal, were held April 1 In Jacobs Bros,
Westslde Chapel.
Mrs. Chumley. 1144 Butene was a native of MlNSlNNliitilahil had lived here 39 years. Nhe was a retired eook at General Hospital and a member of the Church of the Living God, Burvlvora Include a daughter, Mre. FlorIne Brewer, and a son, Buford 81ma.
Commenting on the “Changing Role of Negro Politics," Kilson credited the strength of newly emerging black political groups to their parental origins. “Unlike the criminal deviant, who surfaced during the 1960 riots In every town across America with awesome rhetoric, the new black politician halls from the skilled working class rather than the unskilled and semi-skilled lower black class," Kilson noted. 44 Hatcher, Stokes and Chisholm came from parents of the working class and were the first of their family to obtain college educations." These facts uncovered In a survey of black leaders led Kilson to forecast success, possibly within the next 20 years, to such groups as the Congressional Black Caucus due to their close relationship to the lower class blacks. Dr. Kilson, a professor of government and research In Harvard’s Center of International Relations, has concentrated hla studies on politics In Wast Africa and American cHles. He haa two widely used books circulating In the academic world, namely “Political Change in a Waal African Utale” and “Polltlca In Black America: CNhIm and Change in the Negro Ghetto." Kilaon claimed that the militant energy at the black lower class which lower class black leaders tried to harness
early in the 60*s has proven to be worthless. He stated that this same militant energy that caused a split in the middle class black leadership late in the 60 # s can successfully be channeled by new black politicians. “They have the skills and know how to transfer what was once a civil rights struggle into electortal political fights, which is hard and unglamorous work," he said. A graduate of predominately black Lincoln University in the early 1950’s, Kilson did his graduate work at Harvard before spending several years In Sierre Leonne on the continent of Africa. 44, n»e new black politician has learned to make alliances which are necessary for an ethnic group of only 10 percent. 4 ‘There are a growing number of white people who are 4 for the better’ than there used to be,’ he concluded, “and their numbers will continue to grow,’ HONOR the memory of your deceased loved ones with an In Memorlam In The Recorder.
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INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER MARCUS C. STEWART Editor and Pubhahar Published Weekly By The George P. Stewart Priming Co. Inc., 518 Indiana Avanua, 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. J Member of Audit Bureau of Circulatipn. National Publishipre.feeociation,
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