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[Astrology * ,
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For the week of September 8-14
ARIES (March 21-April 20) - If married, you life can become
happier, be enriched by invitations of social nature, and you
m2j have approval of someone who was formerly dubious about
your romantic trend. Make the most of life with small children
if you have them to protect and enjoy.
TAURUS (April2l-May 20) - Avoid letting depression cause
you to eat or drink to gratify your frustrations in both personal
and career life. You can feel you should be in a different
station in life but must accept things as they come.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21) - You will have a busy cycle but it
can be one which will end with the word that the business
which employs you is closing down. Be of good cheer for it
will not be long until a wish about career will come to pass.
CANCER (June 22-July 22) - A surprise visit may have more to
it than meets the eye. You can pass a test beautifully because
you will be relaxed and in the right. Things happen swiftly and
you enter a new phase of life without being aware of it.
LEO (July 23-August 23) - Take it a little easy in social life
and do not try to be too shining a light in talk with others. Sit
back and listen, learn, discard what you do not think is
valuable.
VIRGO (August 24-September 22) - You may deplore the
attitude of a loved on about groups but know there is nothing
-you can do about it. Your loved one is undoubtedly a recluse
who quite unwillingly goes along when you attend meetings or
large social gatherings.
LIBRA (September 23-October 22) - Guard anything connected
with your artistic and creative skills, avoid chancing such
products falling into the wrong hands. Investigate the market
and personnel situations of any firm you deal with in effort to
sell a creative item.
SCORPIO (October 23-November 22) - You can have more
sincere realization of how it comes about that some people are
extremely adversely affected by conditions of their past. Your
sympathy and understanding, affections and efforts will be
much appreciated.
SAGITTARIUS (November 23-December 21) - Need for caution
in any means of transportation is here. You must also whittle
down your appetites to a more moderate degree. Romantic
matters may come to the place where decision is soon going to
be needed.
CAPRICORN (December 22-January 20) - You may feel some
nostalgia for your visitor of recent times, but you can be
resigned to be happy in your own world, as it must be. In love
concerns you may be quite frankly against marriage but do
consider the needs of a loved one.
AQUARIUS (January 21-February 19) - A very acquisitive
Cirson can vex you but in the long run you had better just
ugh about all this. Be generous with everything except money
and irreplaceable possessions. A good time for a romance to
become more interesting to you.
PISCES (February 20-March 20) - Go over your financial
situation, review your entire life of the present. You may come
to new conclusions about your present state of happiness and
find that things are really quite joyful for you.
vote
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(Augusta
fflnllege
The Sherman Drawdy
Graduate Scholarship in
Finance has been established
at Augusta College as a
memorial to he late board
chairman of the Georgia
Railroad Bank and Trust Co.
Created by friends and
admirers of Mr. Drawdy, the
scholarship will be awarded
annually to a student in the
Master of Business
Administration program at
Augusta College.
The scholarship will be
administered by the Augusta
College Foundation, Grover C.
Maxwell, chairman, and will
make its first award for the
fall quarter, 1974.
Gifts for the scholarship
fund can be made to the AC
Foundation, Augusta College.
Women’s Day
At Bethel AME
’*"■**’■ Vfcj*
MRS. FLORENCE M. HOGAN
The women of Bethel
African Methodist Episcopal
Church will observe their
annual Women’s Day Program
Sunday, September 16, 1973
at 11:00 A.M. Mrs. Florence
M. Hogan of Atlanta will be
the guest speaker.
Mrs. Hogan is a graduate of
Spellman College, and is now
Treasurer of the National
Alumni Association. She is a
Trustee, instructor ‘of the
Bible Class, and Organist of
the Senior Choir of Wheate
Street Baptist Church,
Atlanta, Ga. Her civic
affiliations are many. She is
now Grand Associate Matron,
Order of Eastern Stars of
Georgia (P.H.A.)
An interesting program has
been planned for this
occasion.
Mrs. Belle Gark is General
Chairman, Mrs. Annie S.
Searles is Co-Chairman.
Red Star Lunch
533 9th Street Service 24 hrs. A Day
I Dining Room Closes 1:00 A.M. & Opens 5:00 A.M.
Window Service 24 hrs. A Day, Also.
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We Specialize in Fried Chicken
Tuffey’s Restaurant
Milledgeville
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“The Slams,” presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, starring Jim Brown, is an
action-packed drama of a convict’s escape from prison to recover over a million
dollars in stolen underworld money. Gene Corman produced and Jonathan Kaplan
directed the screenplay by Richard L. Adams. Judy Pace co-stars in “The Slams
which was filmed on L.A. locations.
Augusta VA Nurse Meets
With Fellow Researchers
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Mrs.
Margaret T. Beard attended
the first meeting of the
American Nurses’
Association’s Council of Nurse
Researchers, held August
22-24 at Denver, Colorado.
Ms. Beard was among the
140 nurse researchers
participating in the conferenc,
which focused on such timely
issues as the ethnical concerns
and social responsibilities of
scientists.
Other topics considered
were the implications of social
and professional
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responsibilities for nursing
research, methodological issues
in nursingresearch, and “The
Light Blub Phenomenon:
Asking the Research
Question.”
Mrs. Beard, among other
Council members, also
attended the Council’s
business session.
The ANA Council of Nurse
Researchers was established in
1971 to advance nursing
research activities, provide for
the exchange of ideas, nad
recognize excellence in nursing
research.
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Meeting in the African bush, Shaft (RICHARD ROUNDTREE) and Aleme
(VONETTA McGEE) have a romantic interlude in the midst of trying to
expose a slave trade ring.
“Shaft In Africa” agains stars Richard Roundtree as the tough New York
private eye, John Shaft, who has now been enlisted by African diplomats to crush
an international slave trading ring. Produced by Roger Lewis and directed by John
Guillermin, from a screenplay by Stirling Silliphant, the film also stars Frank
Finlay, Vonetta McGee and Neda Arneric. Filmed in Panavision R and Metrocolor
on locations in Ethiopia, Spain and New York.
The Augusta News-Review - September 6, 1973
The Importance
Os Dignity
The brawny man came
running across the deserted oil
field with a sense of urgency.
Doubling his speed, legs
pumping hard, he threw
himself against the gravel pile.
He hit hard and lifted his rifle
to firing postion.
“Cut”, movie director
Jonathan Kaplan yelled. “That
was great, Jim, just great.” He
turned to the camera crew of
•Gene Corman’s MGM
production of “The Slams.”
“Let’s get ready for the next
set-up please.”
Jim Brown got up from the
gravel, brushed himself off
and walked over o a chess
board on top of a crate. Jim's
chess partner between scenes
resumed his position at the
board while the star looked
for something to sit on,
continuing a heavy discussion
that had started earlier.
“Dignity, like pride and
honesty, is a quality that
others must see in a person,”
says Jim. “It’s not something
that one feels as an integral
part of one’s personality.
Dignity is being respected as a
man to look up to. It does
not have a great deal to do
with immediate recognition or
hero worship. As a veteran
Geveland Browns player 1 got
Page 3
accustomed to recognition.
But the next step is the all
important one. Would people
still point and whisper is I
were not Jim Brown?
“It was in England that I
took the first objective look
at myself. No one had ever
heard of Jim Brown in
Europe. I began to realize
people were judging me
simply as another man,” says
Jim.
“This is what I mean by
saying a man’s dignity is
important. Do these qualities
in a man set him aside? Do
they make him someone
people would like to call a
friend? This has nothing to do
with recognition and flattery.
It is a great feeling to know
you’ve made it under this sort
of set-up.”
He added, “Another
attribute that is vital to living
in this society is pride. Not
proide synonymous with
boastfulness, but pride in
one’s bearing and being and
relationships with others.”
Part of that pride comes
from working in films and
doing a good job. Brown’s
latest is “The Slams,” a stark
prison drama which follows
the exploits of a prisoner and
his fight against the system.