Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 2000 — Page 3
THE INDIANAPOLIS RECORDER
PAGE AS
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2000
Providing Affordable Legal Services Through Creative Problem-Solving
CAMPBELL & HENDREN, L.L.P. ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW
m
More than 30 years of combined experience. Practice areas include: • Estate and personal planning • Business entity formation and planning • Corporate counsel • Appellate practice • Community association representation • Civil rights Expert resources. Personalized service. Reasonable rates. Call today for a free consultation!
TWO LOCATIONS TO BETTER SERVE YOU:
LOCKERBIE OFFICE
DOWNTOWN OFFICE
Robert Hendren
Scott C. Campbell
302 N. East Street
129 East Market Street, Suite 1100
Indianapolis, IN 46202
Indianapolis, IN 46204
317.685.2525
317423.9777
317.687.8642 (fax)
317.638.3474 (fax)
hendrenlawQiquest.net
campbelllawQiquest.net
O 2000 Campbell & Hendren, L.L.P.
m.Ai k M.WKIM)
WfcMfi tfcairOrMii A Daittav? WWI la* # 1AIS8R OT DM Ood craati dMn IMd
Widi is me onmn ol ine Wile man t/aDs and lens 3
Pimm
Arakhlt ftf Iptalunj (njojtmtnh lo Order, (ol il /-S/7-OJ9I Or tfrih
wwirVwKdf qMKHn WUt roof nom. oMnu, op (o4o. ♦ ori* *10 Mol* (IkIs poyoW* to Shokof PuUiltn)
Students learn agriculture In conjunction with the Indiana College Preparatory Program (ICPP), administered by Martin University, 22 students from Forest Manor Middle School participated in the second annual Gardening Project. The six-week program taught the students teamwork, the understanding of various nutrients in the soil, weeding procedures and the opportunity to create and maintain a garden. The students grew a variety of vegetables and will deliver them to an area nursing home once the vegetables are fully grown. AIDServe Indiana Inc. kicks
• •
off Walks and Festivals Special to The Recorder sands of participants in the 10th
Annual AIDS Walk and Festival 2000, Central Indiana, which benefits the statewide programs of ASI, the second-oldest HFV/AIDS service agency iti the United States. The walkers will gather at the. Indiana University Track & Soccer Stadium, 901 W. New York St. Registration, live entertainment, health fair, food court, children’s area, team photographs and team picnic areas are all available be-
ginning at 11 a.m. on Oct. 8.
Prizes for the walkers in 10 categories will be presented at the
conclusion of the walk.
Further information about the Walks and Festivals may be obtained by calling the ASI events office at (317) 920-7755 or (800)
848-2437.
The 2000 editions of traditional AIDS Walks and Festivals organized in cooperation with AJDSerye Indiana Inc. (ASI), with si(es'frorn Evansville to Michigan City/Gary, begins in Fort Wayne’s Lawton Park on Saturday, Sept.
10.
The statewide events, which proudly list Indiana first lady Judy O’Bannon and Maggie Keman, wife of Lt. Gov. Joseph Keman, wjll follow the Fort Wayne Walk with similar functions in Michigan City, South Bend, Richmond and
Evansville.
The Indianapolis event will be
held on Oct. 8 at the IUPUI Michael A. Carroll Track & Soccer Sta-
dium on West 16th Street. A new venue awaits the thou-
Formore
information call:
655-2276
Family Planning Clinics -Birth Control ServicesServica are provided at low cost onto cost, based on an Individual* Income. Medical Exams ■ Annual Exam
■ Pap Smear ■ Breast Exam
AU forms of • birth control available. Pregnancy testing &
counseling.
Testing, treatment & counseling for infections, n urinary tract A vaginal infections 1 sexually transmitted infections
HD it uri IIIIHM
%
—— a..:—
Funded with Title X, I through the Indiana '■ ■ Family Health I Council, Inc.
lusadtowin. Thtnlotobt. Thaiwin 0 fifth ogoin. I mb an Ital my kxk ms going to dnngi and I ms going to knp winning. Bui fiddi't. And instood I lost my jcti, my as and my houu. And finaly, I lost my famly. GamUng is oddktiw and you axAd lost absolutory Mrythng that mottKS to you in om ml of lie dn. 1 know. ThmisMp.CalltMlndtono PnUom Gambfing Mond lim: 1-800-994-8448.
A milm
Free cancer support group
Partners in Wellness, a collaboration between Little Red Door Cancer Agency, the Wellness Community of Central Indiana apd Wishard Health Services, will offer a free cancer support group on Wednesday, Sept. 13 from 1:30 - 3:30 p.m. at Wishard Hospital, 1001 W. 10th St. The group will meet in the multi-purpose room on the 1st floor of the Myers Building. Cancer patients, caregivers, friends and family members are invited to attend this free meeting that is facilitated by a licensed psychotherapist. Free transportation is available and may be arranged by calling Little Red Door Cancer
Agency at (317) 925-5595. Partners in Wellness hopes to bring vital psycho-social suppc to the medically underserved Indianapolis. The collaborative elfort is made possible through the support of the Hoover Family Foi m dation. For more information, t b Li ttle Red Door Cancer Agency } Wellness Community of Central Indiana at (317) 257-1505. Established in 1945, Little Red Door Cancer Agency works to reduce the physical, emotional and financial burdens of cancer for the medically underserved of Indianapolis by providing free-of-charge patient services, cancer screenings and education.
|C; . , ■■it*'*: ■
■M* "P-
s< Tg o-, I:
%
; !W
I
r m > ,, f
Join
j *
;>
»
l '
The CtWiM Force • 1,200 businesses • 6,000 volunteers • 110,000 contributors. • 37 school/community partnerships • 89 human service providers • 240 proven programs *100 youth-led volunteer projects All brought together by United Way.
i
MARCH Continued from A1
^ (8.000 cmdreh succeed in school
Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), which co-sponsored the march with Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network. Sharpton, the event’s co-key-note speaker, delivered fiery oratory saying of the next presidential elections “this vote will be soaked in the blood of our ancestors and >we won’t give it away cheaply to anyone without knowing who we are giving it to.” The amazing story of the “Redeem a Dream March” came in stages juxtaposing the civil rights leaders of the 1960s and the present ■generation of African-American deaders. Speakers from each generation come forward to speak and pledged to work together against
racial injustices that many African Americans are experiencing across the nation. The new generation, guided by Martin Luther King III, Sharpton, NAACP President and CEO Kweisi Mfume and many others came out in numbers — estimated at 100,000 — to participate, listen and tell their stories of police brutality and racial profiling. Noticeable differences between the 1965 march and this year’s event included a more sober crowd, who, although responsive to the message of the speakers, were not victims of anxiety and disenfranchisement of the forbearers three decades earlier.
Cftrf nw wc l\cfr‘cd:
23,000 senior citizens maintain their dignity and independence
(2,000 koFhjefess people receive emergency shelter and support
(2(,000 children * stay safe and continue to grow up to be successful adults.
3,000 peopfe escape domestic violence
. Utrf(-> (T /,nv
Please give generously, and help.
Children and Youth auecood
it Familiat and Neighborhoods bocomo
People have a - second chance
Seniors not be alone
and saf a
United Wby of Central Indiana
www.uwci.org
