Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1946 — Page 10
Rh x iid “Foes Unable to Depy Many Leaders Developed, By ALVIN E. WHITE Written for Scripps-Moward Newspapers WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—Although the United Negro College fund has conducted several successful campaigns to aid 30 Negro colleges, opposition to the program has developed in some quarters, Opponents say the fund is being gupported BY whites who seé it as an effective medium to maintain segregated schools for higher education. These critics do not deny that Negro colleges have given the race : many leaders,
Xx
But they point to the changing attitudes toward edu |
cation and criticize the lack of graduate work in the Negro wcolleges and opportunities for professional training. : ‘Must Have Support Others say that. until Negroes are freely admitted to white colleges, state and private, it is necessary to support the United Negro College fund which during the war era, was a life-saver to many of «the smaller colleges. The fund is the brainchild of Dr. Fred D. Patterson, president of Tuskegee institute. For years, white northerners and some southerners gave huge sums to these colleges. During the depression, , these funds were curtailed. So out of this need, the fund was born. Head{quarters are in*New York. Nearly | $3,000,000 has been distributed. William Trent, whose father is president of Livingstone college in| North Carolina, is director of the! (fund, Mr. Trent formerly was with | the federal works agency and | played an important role in bringing the plight of Negro workers to government attention,
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GUTS POLIO DANGER
By Sclence Service MADISON, Wis, Aug. 1.—Latest advice to ‘parents anxious to protect their children from infantile paralysis: Have all cavities in the children’s teeth sealed off by the dentist, so ‘that the polio virus cannot invade the child's body through the decay-exposed nerves in teeth. This advice comes in “an urgent plea to parents, physicians and dentists” by Dr. Hans H. Reese, professor of neurology at the University of Wisconsin here, and Dr. John G. Frisch, practicing dentist of this city. . These scientists urge cavities
‘THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
FILLING OF CAVITIES Writer Reveals Indianapolis
Popularity in Latin America
Mention Indianapolis. to a Latin American, Vance Packard, American magazine feature writer says, and “he will beam, grasp your hand warmly, and besiege. you with questions about your home town.” Mr. Packard is the author of an article, “$1,000,000 Invasion,” to be released in the publication tomorrow, . . The writer describes results obtained financially and culturally as the result of the recent good-will tour of the southern hemisphere by an entourage of local businessmen. Until the international air tour made by the local enterprise, Indianapolis was obscure in the minds
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“Then suddenly it became the best known U. 8. city between New York and Hollywood,” Mr. Packard observes.
“The trip had started as a quiet| friendship and hemispheric
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oped into a triumphal tour, acclaimed in every city. Before their return home their mission was being hailed in both hemispheres as
Trade Development, much to the surprise of unassuming, down-to-earth Hoosiers.” One of the chief factors in‘ the Hooslers' successful invasion of the continent can be attributed to the Indianapolis businessmen’s understanding treatment of the Latins. The thing that seemed to endear the Indiana visitors was their approach “as one businessman to another with‘no White Man’s Burden complex,” Mr, Packard says.
Mr. Packard concludes that since “the Latins took the Hoosiers to their hearts,” the way is set as a precedent for the rest of the United States in developing “international sol-
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