The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 21 February 1968 — Page 8
Pag* 8
The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana
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Indian beauty queen thinks education is the answer for her people in their war on proverty, ignorance
Pope appoints new archbishop
By DONALD P. MYERS DURANGO, Colo. (UPI> - Angelina Medina, an Indian beauty queen, thinks the way to a new image for her people is through the classroom. “I propose we wage war on ignorance, prejudice and fear to improve our status in American society by becoming active members of the new culture which surrounds us,” she said. “The key, I feel, is educa-
tion.”
The 25-year-old Acoma-Zia Indian from San Ysidro. N.M., is doing something about it. She has enroUed at Fort Lewis College in Durango to study business education, then plans to return to the New Mexico reservation, where she | was bom and raised, to teach Indian high school students. "To my eyes the u T ay ahead is clear. Miss Medina said. “We must encourage and help one another to take advantage of every’ possible educational opportunity to add the power of modem knowledge to the stability and wisdom of our Indian heritage.” Miss Medina, a brown-eyed, brown-haired beauty, is the reigning Miss Indian Expo, a national title she won last Oc-
tober.
With the title went a $1,000 scholarship, which she is using for her studies. She believes television and movies have done little to improve the image of the American Indian.
Bottled by Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. # Indianapolis, Indiana
Blind lady s day centers around others problems NEW YORK UPI — Her workaday world centers around people with problems. Hers is the job of listening to the elderly one who is lonely, distraught, fearful of the world outside. Hers is the job of talking with the adolescent whom the psychiatrist has found is a behavioral problem or more seriously troubled mentally. Hers might be helping to find the reasons for the massive despression of a young wife and mother. “I think the mentally 111 are more handicapped than any other group who have handicaps.” says Mary Moore. And yet Mrs. Moore is one of ‘ the estimated 500.000 in the' United States, of an estimated 15 million in the world with a special disability. Mrs. Moore is blind. She is director of the Social j Service Department at the Hos- j pital of the Holy Family in! Brooklyn, part of the whole complex of the Catholic Medical Center of Brooklyn and Queens. Mrs. Moore’s department is responsible for both in-hospital and out-patients, working with staff doctors and nurses on cases to determine whether psychiatric car’ is needed and if so what type—electrical shock, psychotherapy, chemotherapy or even perhaps a com- j bination of the three. Out-patient care is a growing means hospitals use in psychiatric care, she said. They find it helps to keep the patient “in the l community”, not requiring him to adjust to the hospital and adjust again when he’s able to
go home.
Man. - Moore has been totally blind since girlhood. Surgery only temporarily helped her sight—she remembers being able to see vivid colors like reds and yellows and greens and to recognize shapes. Mrs. Moore’s husband. Brian, Canadian-born, was a social worker too, and sighted. He died eight years ago. They had no children. Blindness does not deter this slim, brunette woman of 36. She travels by bus from her brownstone apartment to the hospital. travels the whole of New York by subway, guided only by an aluminum cane. She uses regular appliances Including a rotisserie for meal preparation, but gets friends to shop with her for clothes so she can buy her favorite colors.
“Script writers conveniently forget that Indians were defending their territorial rights. They overlook the fact that the white man is in truth the invader of the North American continent,” she said. “But if television gives us a poor image, I fear I must risk your anger by pointing out that so far w’e Indians have not taken advantage of the great : opportunities available to us today,” the graduate of Grants, N.M., Union High School said. Miss Medina said there is no reason Indians cannot accept the best of modem knowledge and still retain their culture, heritage and pride. “There have been some non-1 Indians who have asked me If our people care about anything at all. because to them, W’e seem to have no ambition, no goals, no hopes,” she said. “I find it difficult to help them understand the philosophy that an Indian lives for today and accepts nature in its season.” the pretty coed said. “On the other hand. AngloAmericans tend to be aggressive. future-oriented people interested in controlling and changing our environment.” She said government leaders in the past have made many mistakes in providing educa-! tion to Indians. But she said there also have been contribu-
tions.
Dartmouth College in New’ Hampshire was founded as an “Indian Charity School.” she said. Capt. R. H. Pratt established the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania which inspired the establishment of boarding schools such as the Haskell Institute and Indian schools at Albuquerque and Santa Fe. N.M. “An increasing number of
tribes, such as the Crow Tribe in Montana, the Navajo Tribe and others, realizing the financial needs of their young people in pursuing an education, are providing their high school graduates with scholarships,” Miss Medina said.‘‘The amounts vary from $150 to $1,000 a year.” In 1956. an employment assistance program was established for Indians. Since then, about 18.000 Indians have enrolled in courses which repre-
sent 115 different occupations throughout the western states. More than one-third have completed training and 2,200 are still in training. “For the thousands who have been trained and for more thousands to come, vocational education is one of the beginnings of opportunity as well as the beginning of a new image,” Miss Medina said. George Ademars had the first know patent on rayon in 1855.
Wednesday, February 21, 1968 archbishop of New York, died
j last December.
The Pope also named Bishop Paul F. Tanner as Bishop of St. Augustine. Fla. Ttanner, 63. is
VATICAN CITY UPI - Pope secretary of the U.S. ConferPaul VI today appointed Bishop ence of Catholic Bishops. John Carberry. 63. of Columbus. Archbishop Carberry was Ohio, to succeed the late born in New York City BrookJoseph Cardinal Ritter as Ro- lyn, July 31. 1904.
man Catholic archbishop of Ct.
Louis.
Cardinal Ritter died June 10.
1967 at the age of 74.
Carberry had been one of a half-dozen bishops considered most likely to succeed Ritter.
He was ordained a priest July 28. 1929. and named coadjutor to the bishop of Lafayette. Ind. in July. 1956. He succeeded na bishop there in 1957 and was transferred from Lafayette to
Columbus in 1965.
Bishop Tanner was bom in
The Pope’s appointment left Peoria. 111. Jan. 15. 1905. H* only one other major archbish- was ordained a priest May 30, op’s post vacant in the United 1931. and named titular bishop States, that of New York, of Lamasba, an honorary title, Francis Cardinal Spellman, in 1965.
Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF
TT WAS ONE of those nights not fit for man or beast, but 1 a hard-hearted father sent his son out to herd the sheep with nothing but an old. flickering lamp to guide him. A
few hours later, the father found his son fast asleep under a tree, with the lamp extinguished, and awakened him with a solid kick in the rear. Rubbing himself ift the appropriate place, the son complained. “It was so cold and dark when my lamp blew out that I surrendered to Morpheus. Do give me a new wick for my lamp." “Nay, nay,” his father rebuked him, “and know you this, you sleepyhead. There is no wick for the rested.”
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Hugo F'lugelheimer can’t understand why patrons of his delicatessen in St. Louis objected to his playing Christmas carols on his phonograph during dinner. The only possible explanation he can give is the day he was playing the carols: July fourth. * * * From the notebooks of Bill Feather: 1. The older and feebler a pedestrian is, the less attention he seems to pay to traffic signals. 2. Save while you’re young. Aren't you glad your rich grandfather saved when HE was young? 3. Some middle-aged women miss the attentions of men so badly they turn on the tea kettle just to hear it whistle. C 1968. by Bennett Cerf. Distrubutcd by King Features Syndicate
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