Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1973 — Page 3
Careers and Education by Gladys keys Price Liberal arts grads in administration
Administrators i n s u r e that programs and proceavires operate smoothly and efficiently. This broad description include duties as diverse as arranging press conferences, coordinating the work of the staff in aCongressman'soffice, and finding ways to cut costs in an industry training program. Liberal arts graduates who wish to enter administrative work may find positions as Administrative assistants, workers who help executives by coordinating and directing office services, records control, or budget preparation and control. The assistant may also review and answer correspondence, prepare operation reports, or help conduct management studies designed to find ways of improving work flow or simplifiying reporting procedures. Administrative assistants positions available in private industry, government and nonprofit organizatioas frequently lead to training for management positions. Personnel a d m i n i s tration is another career aspect that liberal arts grads should consider. Nearly all types of business and government organizations employ workers who plan and admin-
YMCA registration for last camp
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THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER SATURDAY. JULY 21. 1973
PAGE 3
Witnesses’ testimony conficts in Alabama sterilization case
ister personnel program?. Recruiters for these jobs look for graduates who have abetter than average ability to work with people and who can also speak and write effectively. PERSONNEL WORKERS may develop recruiting and hiring procedures, interview job applicants, counsel employees, deal with employee disciplinary problems, classify jobs, plan wage and salary scales, develop safety programs, conduct research in personnel methods, help conduct employee training programs, administer employee benefit plans, or work in employee-management relations. Some employers consider a liberal arts education the mosL desirable preparation for personnel work. A college eduoa-» i tibn is becoming increasingly important for entrance into personnel work. Employers hire new graduates for junior positions, and then provide training programs to acquaint them with their operations, policies and problems. After the training period, college graduates may progress to classifying jobs, interviewing applicants, or handling other personne 1 functions. After gaining expweience, those whithexceptional ability may be promo.ed to executive positions, such as personnel director. College graduates who enter personnel work are expected to find many opportunities throughout the ‘70s, and there is increased opportunities when • there has been a major in a related field, such as psychology (jobs involving testing or employee counseling), industrial relatioas (work involving employee management relations) or accounting (concerning wages or pensions and other employee benefit plans). Liberal arts graduates interested in entering any area of administration will find that the ability to organize and do detailed work are assets. Please direct your questions and comments pro and/or con to: Voc-Ed Counselor, Mary Rigg Neighborhoo-dCenter, 1917 Morris St., Indianapolis, Ind. 46221. GRANDVILLE TYLER Services for Mr. Grandville Tyler, 70, 1354 W. 27th, were held July 18 in Mount Olive Baptist Church, of which she was a member. Burial was in Floral Park Cemetery. Mr. Tyler was born at Henderson, Ky., and died Saturday in Methodist Hospital. He resided in Indianapolis 35 years and retired last year as a security g u a r d for Lockefield Gardens. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Cynthia Lucille Tyler, and two daughters, Miss Deborah Tyler and Mrs. Zelda Ackles.
COMPLETE IBDF COURSE: Mrs. Martha Trice (left) receives certificate after completing basic accounting course for minority businessmen and women sponsored by the Indianapolis Business Development Foundation. Presenting the certificate is Jon Cain director of Continuing Education, IUPUI. Ot-
hers in photo are (from left) James C. Shaw, president, IBDF Board; Henry M, Taylor, executive director of IBDF; N. John Oldham, assistant director of IBDF, ifci Robert Hotopp, instructor, IUPUI. (Recorder photo by Richard Gaither)
UT
INTENSE STUDY: This is but a portion of the class in accounting sponsored by the Indianapolis Business Development Foundation, in cooperation with Indiana Univer-sity-Purdue University at Indianapolis. On front row (from left) are Joseph W. Graves, Anna Coleman, Laura Malone and Martha
Trice. On second row are Lula E. Paige, Delores Jones, Jack Howard and James W. Davis. Rena A. Law, Charlotte Jackson, Nickey Morris and Freddie Moore brake up the third row, while Pauline Jacks, Delores Bellamy and James Lee are on last row. (Recorder photo by Richard Gaither)
WASHINGTON—(NBNS)— Howard Phillips, the former acting director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, last week told a Senate health subcommittee chaired by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy(D-Maas.) that government guidelines w n i c h could have prevented the sterilization of two young Alabama girls may have been held upbecaus of President Nixon's opposition to the useof federal funds for such purposes. Phillips said he could not confirm these charges but noted, “my impression of the White House position was that they merely reflected the view of the President that federal funds should not be used for abortion or sterlilization. My impression was that what discomfort did exist was not with ttte guidelines themselves.” Phillips, who was recently ousted from OEO when a federal judge here said he was holding the position illegally, said he did not know that OEO had issued a directive in 1971 permitting the use of the agency’s funds for sterilization by family planning clinics. However, his testimony was in direct conflict with that of Dr. Warren Hern, a Denver physician who was with OEO’s family planning division when the guidelines were compiled. According to Hern, who said he left OEO because of the frustrations of “political interference and the completely irresponsible action of OEO in blocking the dissemination of those guidelines,” 25,000 copies of the guidelines were printed but never sent to OEO’s family planning clinics. Last week it was disclosed that the guidelines were stored in a federal warehouse.
“On numerous occasions,” Hern stated, “I made attempts to find out when the guidelines would be issued and why they were being held up. I was told that they were being reviewed at the White House and that they would not be issued until after the 1972 elections. “I pointed out it was a very dangerous situation,” Hern added. “If these guidelines had been put into effect, the situation in Alabama (where Minnie Relf, 14, and her sister Mary Alice, 12, were sterilized allegedly without the informed consent of their parents) would have neer occurred.” The girls’ father Lonnie is suing the government for $1 million as a result of the sterilizations. The two Relf girls and their 16-year-old sister Kat ie did not
testify at the open hearing but were interviewed privately in Sen. Kennedy’s office. Minnie Relf, the girls’ mother said she “put an X on a piece of paper” after a nurse told her' it was to gain her consent for “some shots” her daughters needed. Mrs. Relf, who is illiteate, said she did not know her daughters were to be operated on. “I feel angry about it (the sterlization),”Mrs. Relf told Sen. Kennedy. “I was mad. I wouldn’t have let them do that.” ' Sen. Kennedy, who completed 12. days of testimony into human experimentation in government funded projects last week said of the Relf situation, “The sort of thing that has happened to your daughters will never happen again.”
Who’s who in the community
r
Jji
by HENRI HEDGEPATH
Mf*'
Minority businessmen, women complete accounting course
Omega fraternity to assemble America’s influential blacks
The Indianapolis Business Development Foundation, a publicly supported private voluntary agency in cooperation with the School of Continuing EduPoverty topic of TV discussion Who’s winning in the “War on Poverty” and how will the Nixon Administration’s plans to decentralize social programs via k ievenue sharing affect poor people? Two professional advocates for the poor, Steve Kaplan and Lou Rosenberg, will discuss these questions on “A Jewish Perspective,” to be seen Sunday, July 22, 11 a.m., on WISH TV ( Channel 8). Kaplan is director of the West Indianapolis Town Community Organization, a delegate agency of Community Action Against Poverty. Rosenberg, director of the Indiana Center on Law and Poverty, was formerly an attorney with Legal Services Organization.
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cation, IUPUI, sponsored a small business basic accounting course for minority businessmen and women recently. The classes were conducted two nights a week for five weeks to help to remove a most severe handicap to small business success - the lack of adequate financial data and planning. Some topics covered were: Introduction to administrative functions, sole proprietorships, partnerships, for profit corporations, mutual trusts, joint ventures, basic accounting acumen and the accounting system daily cash flow, recording cash transactions, bank reconciliations, federal taxes, state taxes, sub-chapter S taxes, internal business operations, franchises, advantages and disadvantages, company financial planning, and personal planning. Individuals receiving certificates for completion of the course were: Mrs. Delores Bellamy, Mrs. Anna Coleman, J a m e s W. Davis, Joseph W. Graves. Jack Howard, HoMing Hsia Mrs. Pauline Jacks,Mrs. Delores Jones, Mrs. Rena A. Law, James K. Lee, Mrs. Laura Malone, Freddie Moore. NicKey Morris, Mrs. L u 1 a E. Paige, Edgar Randall, andMrs. Martha Trice. S p e c i a 1 attendance commendations were presented to Mrs. Delores Bellamy, Mrs. Mrs. Delores Bellamy, Mrs. Laura Malone, James W. Davis, Freddie Moore, Ho Ming Hsia, Mrs. Pauline Jacks and Jack Howard. Presently, the course is being evaluated in planning for the next class to begin in early September. The course was funded by the Office of Minority Business Enterprise, U.S. Department of Commerce.
WASHINGTON, D.C.-~
America’s only black State Supreme Court Justice, thepresident of America's 1 a r ges t black business, Ariarica’s most successful and youngest black magazine publisher, and a world renowned black research bacteriologist will be among the array of distinguished talent scheduled to appear at the 55th Annual Conclave erf Omega Psi Phi Fraternity inSt. Louis from
July 31 to August 5.
Other nationally famous black members of Omega to appear will be the assistant legal counsel for General Motors, a black former president o f a newspaper association and the presi-
ICLU to present Oct. 13 program at War Memorial
dent of a southern college. The conclave theme for the 62 year old black college fraternity will be “Reassessment Of Goals For Black Americans In A Democracy.” Highlights of the St. Louis meeting will be three major panels including America’s most influential blacks. The panel on social welfare will feature Dr. Hildras A. Poindexter, Howard University medical faculty member and world known medical researcher; Robert N.C. Nix, Jr., America’s only black State Supreme Court Justice and Dr.Jerome Gresham, president of Barber Scotia College in Concord, N.C. The panel onbusiness will include Otis M. Smith, assistant legal counsel for General Motors; Milton Johnson, an executive and a buyer for the J.C. Penney Company and William J. Kennedy, III, president of North Carolina M u t u a 1 Insurance Company of Durham.
“I think there is too much attention given to‘What’s wrong with our youth.’ The youth appear better equipped to handle life today than adults,” he continued. “Adults practice too much dishonesty and expect too much from youth.” He lists as the three most important elements in his life: 1. FAMILY- giving children the best I have to offer for their future. 2. PROFESSION- using its tools to the best advantage for all people, with a spec-ial interest inblacks. 3. FINDING a continuous area of self improvement.
The panel oncommunicatins
After 20 years of being de- wil1 include EarlGraves, publinied the right to meet there, sher of the new and skyrocketing the Indiana Civil Liberties business publication known as Union (ICLU) last week ann- Black Enterprise and Garth ounced that it will hold a meet- Reeves, editor and publisher
CARL STUBBLE FIELD Our guest personality this week should be no stranger to most Indianapolis citizens. He’s Carl S t u bb 1 e f i e 1 d, news reporter for WRTV, Channel C, whose major assignment is in the area of urban affairs. Stubblefield was educated in his hometown of Zanesville,. Ohio, before spending two years at S o u th e r n California University where he was majoring in structual engineering. He is a graduate of the Academy of Broadcasters and the Institute of Structural Engineering.
He believes there should be more emphasis on idividuul choice for a person doing what he or she is equipped to do. “There should be more emphasis on basics and teaching of discipline,” he states, adding that there should be more honesty on our total approach.
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ing in the public auditorium of the Indiana World War Memorial on Oct. 13, from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. To commemorate the historic event, a distinguished panel composed of Fred W. Friendly, William F. Buckley Jr., Mike Wallace and Bill Moyers will discuss the furxiaihental safeguards afforded by the Bill of
Rights.
Following the October 13 meeting, which is open to the
of the Miami Times and a former president of the National Newspaper Publishers Asso-
ciation.
According to James Avery, Grand Basileus of Omega Psi Phi, and ^n executive with Exxon, the fraternity will have a record turn out this year in St. Louis and some of the usually secret awards from Omega will be the most exciting in the fraternity’s history. Speaking in Washington about
public, the Indiana World War the 55th Annual Conclave, Har-
old Cook, the new executive director of Omega Psi Phi, said that reservations are con-
Mumorial, a dinner will be
held at which the ICLU will present additional speakers of
national stature.
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Here’s what two women did to stop smoking cigarettes: Mary Budnick of Michigan reports, “I eliminated smoking episodes one by one; and I trained my self not to smoke. The first thing I eliminated was smoking in my car. I could smoke any time of the day, a thousand cigarettes if I wanted to, but smoking In the car was just out of the question. Then the next cigarette I eliminated was the one before work and breakfast; smoking any other time of the day was just fine and if I wanted to double up that was OK. One by one I went through and gradually eliminated every single smoking situation.’’ Ada Brown of Louisiana has a different story: “By not buying them, Idldn’thaveanytosmoKe. My husband does smoke and the first couple of weeks I was sneaking around getting buttts out of ashtrays. I decided this really wasn’t doing me any good, I was still smoking. My husband knew I was trying to quit smoking, so he would hide his cigarettes from me, and after a while I really didn’t
have any cigarettes to smoke. So I just didn’t SlYioke anymore.’’ From New York, A nnette Goodrich reports: ‘^f had dinner with a man who was speaking about a woman frtend of his. He said she was on of the most elegant and im maculatewomen he had ever seen, but she had a very dirty habit: she smoked. This make a tremendous impression on me, suddenly seeing smoking as so anaesthetic. Right away I started looking at ftabtrays with butts and thinking how dirty it all was. After about a week, I just couldn’t smoke anymore. It was as simple as that, and I stopped.”
If qulttting smoking is one of your problem*, ask your lung assoc 1 at ion, the Tuberculosis and Reapfratory Disease Association of Central Indiana, 615 N. Alabama St., Rm. 335, for copies tit' the newspaper in which these stories and others are reported. No charge -- it’s a Christmas Seal service to help your health.
stantly pouring in to the extent that a second hotel may be used to accomodate the thousands of Omega men, their families and friends. Md. college cited for bias WASHINGTON (NBNS)— Frederick Community College in Frederick, Md., a suburb of Washington,hasbeencharged with bias on account of race and sex by the National Education Association. The suit pointed out that only one black, a woman, is one of the 380-member FCC faculty. She is the lowest paid and with a master's degree has a salary under $9,000 after two years. Percentage of blacks in college increases WASHINGTON- — Proportionately, a b o u t as ‘m any blacks as white high school graduates went to college in 1972, with 49.4 per cent of whites and 47.6 per cent of blacks enrolled. This compares with 56.6 per cent for whites and 46.2 per cent for blacks in 1968.
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