Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1979 — Page 2

PAGE 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER SATURDAY. JUNE 16. 1979

Parking lot attendants: not pre-empted this week

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Si PF.HSHOKS: Mayor William H. Hudnut on hand 'lay 22 for the official opening of “Supershoes." and athletic shoe store located at 4702 Century Plaza Road (behind Lafayette '■'quare). iludnut congratulated owner Ralph Field- .rpifn on the opening of the fir-t minority owned athletic shoe store in Indianapolis and thanks the Indianapoli- Business Development Foundation for itfinancial support of the venture. The IBDf filled the capital gap necessary to induce Indiana National Bank to finance the store's oponi g wth a Small Business \dministn tion guarantee. I Bill will also be providing technical and management assistance in the months ahead.

Hope to keynote "Beckham Awards

More often than not, the every day—average John Q. Citizen and his/her daily routines are pre-empted from news publications for that all important ‘Big Scoop.’ After all, that’s what publishers want...and since they pay the salaries, that’s exactly what

they get..!

The Carter visits, the unusual births, the unfortunate deaths, the vicious rapes...the big u inners and the big sinners ...They make the headlines, while...meanwhile back at the ghetto...the average guy goes about his daily routine; remaining obscure —a nameless, shapeless mass. At least to the news media!. Bui for the 706,000 people (1070 Census Bureau est.) w'ho live, or exists, in Indianapolis, the average guy remains a large part of our daily life. Let us examine parking lot ittvndents. for example, though stuck away in their little cubbyhole all day, day after day. for those of us who must work or shop in the

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downtown area, parking lot

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Indianapolis dtn'sn’t have the

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p inkimr problem that New

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parking space in downtown

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Indy, at certain times, can be

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much hke trying to bum a dollar

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can -it back and control who

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doe- and doesn’t park here.’

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- :id one of Indy's many atten

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M!Kt MORTON

ALAN

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WHEN DO YOU SAY DUD? Af ter the work is done, or right in the middle of the fun.

ANHEUSEW BUSCH IT.C •ST UJU’S B-F BEV6RAGTC0.1 TDISTRIBUTfifUY’; 1 *02 STAGtUM DR? TNDtf NAP0LIS, INDIANA FRED H. KOCH, PRESIDENT *N ECHIALOPPOimJNlTY EMPLOYER

WITH

MICHAEL

I

. W GREENE

trouble with your supervisors, or the city by turning some customers away? A. No! Don’t get me wrong. I never turn anyone away, unless I just don't have any space left. I would never do that. What I am saying though, is that i* could be done, and made very profitable too. Q. Do you ever have people offer you a bribe? A. Everyday. Q. Do you ever accept them? A. Well, sometimes, if people want to give up money. I’ll take it. But what they don’t understand is that it’s not neccessary. I never ask for the money, they just give it up. And I don’t make enough money here to pass anything up. Q. What would happen if someone decided to pull out without paying you? A. Well, that comes out of my pockets! I have to pay $5 for every ticket I have left over at the end of the day. It's hard to see the whole lot at all times. So some of these (censored) sneak on out the back. Once I almost got ran over trying to catch someone trying to run out on me. (Just then, someone sneaked ON the lot.) Q. Did you notice that lady drive in here? A. Nope! And that’s exactly what happens. The same way -he sneaked in. others sneak out. t Incidentally, that lady DID pay.) Q. Well, I’d like to stay longer, but the rain seems to have slackened. I better make a move while I can. What's the quickest way to Blocks’’ A. Well, if you're walking I couldn't tel! you. Now , if you’re driving I’ll let you park here... But you’ll have to pay! You see. I got something y’all need. Bakke lawyers want $437,000 Two San Franciso attorneys have requested fees totalling $437,000 for representing Allan Bakke in his landmark Supreme Court reverse discrimination" case last year. Bakke, 38. completing first year of medical school at the University of California-Davis. was denied admission in 1973 and 1974 while less qualified minority applicants were ac cepted under a specially design ed quota system program. He argued that the quota system unfairly discriminated against w hites. The court sub sequently upheld Bakke’s claim, and the California Su preme Court ordered the Uni versity of California to pay his attorneys’ fees. The attorneys said they calculated their fees in part on the basis of “the novelty and difficulty of the case’ and on the fact they would have received nothing had they lost the appeal. Our Servicemen Navy Boatswain’s Mate Sec ond Class Larry M. Martin, son of Artist Martin and Martha Webster, recently returned from an extended deployment in the Western Pacific. He is assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Constellation, homeported in San Diego. While deployed, his ship operated as a unit of the U.S. Seventh Fleet. Martin joined the Navy in 1963.

QUINCY INSURANCE AGENT AUTO* FIRE* LIFE ACCIDENT A HEALTH 3026 CENTRAL AVE. 923-9237 ESTABLISHED 1937

QNDTANAPOLIS REORDER 1 ~ [LttPS 262-660]

BLACK STAR: Secretary of the Army, Clifford L. Alexander, Jr. held a news conference last week to announce the selection of Colonel Hazel Winifred for promotion to brigadier General. Brigadier General Selectee Johnson [left] is shown with Alexander. $5,000 camp grant

County Welfare director Elizabeth Samkowski has announced the Marion County Children's Guardian Home received a $5,000 grant from the Indianapolis Foundation. This grant makes possible the hiring of two camp counsellors and a cook for a summer program at Camp Sertoma, a camp made available for use of the Guardian Home children through the beneficience of the Sertoma Club of Indiana. Camp Sertoma covers 37 acres and is located at German Church Road and Highway 52

in southeastern Marion County. Facilities include a pavilion, playgrounds for softball and basketball, bicycle tract and six cabins which will accommodate eight youngesters each ranging in ages from six to 16 years. In addition, the swimming pool at the Ransburg YMCA will be utilized by the children. According to Paul Brown, superintendent of the Children’s Guardian Home, this is the first opportunity for many of these youngesters to enjoy open air living and to share in daily group activities.

IPL plans to test money-saving heater

Indianapolis Power & Light Company (IPL) has announced it has been selected as one of 20 utilities in the nation to test a prototype water heater which could possibly reduce consumers’ annual electric water heating costs by about 50 percent. tinder laboraory tests, the TEMCOR Heat Pump Water Heater, which is being built by Energy Utilization Systems, Inc., of Pittsburgh, Pa., used only one-third to one half the energy of standard electric water heater. The water heater works

much like a window air conditioner except that the heat is taken from the room transferred to the water tank rather than to outdoors. IPL plans to install five experimental water heaters in already selected homes throughout its service area by early fall. The utility said a typical residence uses about 7.000 kilowatt-hours a year, or about $175, to heat water with conventional resistance systems. If it achieves the performance IPL expects, the water heater may save an electric customer about $90 annually.

Fight inflation the quick easy way. Clip RECORDER advertisers coupons.

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i MARCUS C. STEWART j r Editor and Publisher .t , - * PvbRcbed Weekly By 5 The trtrge P. Staerhrt Ptfrilhtg Co. me., 2901 N. Tacatha, Indianapolis, IndWaa « second Goes matter uiw^r thd let of March 7, 1870. ^ I National AdvorHskig Represent Native Amalgamated Publishers,! lac., 45 West 4Stb?5treet, NeJ (York, N.T. 10036. f Member of Ledh Bureau ol Circafation Natloaal Pubf^he*»

Greyhound is good transportation at low prices. Most peoplfget homesick And that's when they should look at their budget to see if they have enough money to go home for a visit Thanks to Greyhound s : ow prices, many people are able to spend a much needed and enjoyable weekend with the folks at home Greyhound offers you a variety of special fare plans. So no matter how close or far you are from home. Greyhound s the way to go Traveling from New York to Philadelphia. Boston to Washington. D C : Chicago to Memphis, or Los Angeles to San Francisco; remember. Greyhound is-,, good transportation at low prices

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Outlay is increased for minority engineers study

NOTRE DAME— The National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering (GEM) has increased its stipend to student participants from $3,000 to $4,000 per academic year. The action was taken at the recent annual meeting of the board of directors, where exeutive Director Howard G. Adams reported that the first seven students have received their master’s degrees in engineering through the program, more than 100 summer interns have been placed in laboratories, and 60 students will be enrolled in graduate school next September. The GEM Program is the only concerted national effort to increase the pool of minority men and women with advanced degrees in engineering. Established in 1976, the consortium of 22 major engineering colleges and 17 industrial and governmental laboratories maintains its central office at the University of Notre Dame. It offers financial support and practical engineering experi ence to American Indians, Black Americans, Mexican

Americans and Puerto Ricans who want to pursue graduate studies in engineering. Each participant receives a graduate fellowship of tuition, fees and a $4,000 stipend each academic year as well as summer employment at a participating research laboratory. The board also voted to increase university membership in the consortium to 27, and it reelected Jospeh C. Hogan, dean of the College of Engineering at Notre Dame, president and chairman of the board, and Theodor* J. Habarth, affirmative action officer fbr the Applied Physics Laboratory at the Johns Hopkins University, vice president. Newly elected members of the executive committee, Micael V. Nevitt, Argonne National Laboratory, and John B. Turner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will join Robert A. Eubanks, University of Illinois at Urbana, William M. Sangster, Georgia Institute of Technology, and Edward W. Seeberger, I.B.M. The consortium receives major support from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and each member institution makes an annual contribution.

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