The Augusta news-review. (Augusta, Ga.) 1972-1985, September 13, 1973, Page Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

The Augusta News-Review - September 13, 1973 - [Astrology <3 ' J Today / A j J For the week of September 15 - 21: ARIES (March 21-April 20) - If unmarried, your romantic companion may be vexing, seem to be disloyal in talking to others about you. This may just be sincere concern for you, so take the best view of things and be happy. TAURUS (April 21-May 20) - You may unexpectedly come into contact with someone who will have a major role in your life from now on. This can be a business connection and your greatest cooperation is needed. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) - Be very dutiful about children in the family If you have responsibility in connection with a teenager, fulfill it even though it puts you in debt considerably. You will find business people patient and cooperative with you this cycle. CANCER (June 22-July22) - A good time to spend money, shop for autumn clothes, build up shoe wardrobe beautifully. Enjoy money and also keep an eye open for some good investment in near future. LEO (July 23-August 23) - Telephone messages are vital and also give you a feeling of excitement and attention from others which you crave. Keep in close contact with any business link at a distance. You can be invited to take a new job with moving expenses paid. VIRGO (August 24-September 22) - In spite of yourself you may consider engagement and realize your attachment is quite a lot more serious than you realized. Marriage may seem welcome and you can take an entirely new point of view about it. LIBRA (September 23-October 22) - A swift-paced week when you may suddenly realize you are in love, if unmarried. You may show this in small and simple ways which will be well understood by another. You can give much joy now. SCORPIO (October 23-November 22) - You can fully realize the faithfulness of a friendship of the past few months when a really major favor is done for you. Your list of friends to be valued may be newly headed by actions of this person. SAGITTARIUS (November 23-December 21) - Correspondence with someone you once cared for may come to an end abruptly. This is all to the good and it will not take long to realize the desirability of entirely new romantic trends. CAPRICORN (December 22-January 20) - If you are evasive with anyone, it will show up in your countenance. Do not imagine that you can nurture peculiar ideas and suspicions without others knowing it. A needed vacation may be coming up soon, so rejoice and anticipate some happy freedom. AQUARIUS (January 21-February 19) - Your talents may have to be extended as far as you can make it now. Work demands are heavy and call for skills not often exerted. Concentration and determination will do the trick for you this week and new admiration for you will be expressed. PISCES (February 20-March 20) - Do nothing to disturb an executive who keeps a close eye on you. Be prompt to work at all times, take no days off. You could lose your job if you turn to pleasure instead of being conscientious. & ■ - Announcement: WBBQ Radio Now has a opening for a personality Announcer - D.J. Good Opportunity for Right person. Must have F.C.C. 3rd Class License with Broadcast Indorsement. Send Audition tape and Resume to: Harley Drew - Box 1443 • Augusta, Ga. 30903 OR Call 279-6610 for an appointment. An Equal Opportunity Employer varc f SUBSCRIBE I TODAY 0 THE AUGUSTA NEWS-REVIEW P. O. BOX 953 AUGUSTA, GEORGIA 30903 . NAME ADDRESS i CITY One year (in county)sSoo One year (out of county) $6.00 y 'jk 5 years (in County)s2o.oo ■fl 5 years (out of county)s2s.oo Page 6 Black Legacy This Week in Black History by Gwen Loftlin September 9, 1957- New elementary school with enrollment of 1 Black and 388 whites was destroyed by dynamite in Nashville, Tennessee. September 10, 1962 Supreme Court vacated an order of a lower court and ruled that the University of Mississippi must admit James H. Meredith. September 10, 1965 - Father Devine, founder and leader of a religious cult, died in Woodmont, Pennsylvania. September 11, 1962- Hobart Taylor, Jr. was appointed Executive Vice-Chairman of the President’s Equal Opportunity Committee. September 12, 1913 - Jessie Owens, athlete and top star of the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, was bom. September 13, 1886 - Alain L. Locke - Rhodes Scholarship recipient, and professor of philosophy at Howard University was bom. September 15, 1963 - Alabama National Guard was federalized by President Kennedy to prevent Governor George Wallace’s using the guardsmen to stop public school desegregation. Let’s not forget the past; be productive and enjoy the present; to prepare us for the future. Children With Communication Defects To Get Needed Support By Jacqueline Bolder NMS Staff Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. (NMS) - “It is my belief that Congress must provide adequate funds to treat and diagnose autism so that our battle against this treatable disease can be won,” said Rep. Yvonne Brathwaite Burke (D-Cal.), on the needs of autistic children. Rep. Burke, one of four black congresswomen, introduced a bill to amend the Mental Retardation Facilities and Community Mental Health Centers Construction Act of 1963; to include autism. The term “autistic children” as defined by the National Society for Autistic Children includes persons, regardless of age, with severe disorders of communication and behavior whose disability shows during the early childhood. Such children are typically multi-handicapped in their ability to receive and communicate information, resulting in behavior unsuited to the physical and social demands of their environment. Presently, there are 30,000 to 50,000 children diagnosed as autistic. They have not benefited from existing statutes under the Mental Retardation Act, because of a legislative oversight in the original bill’s formation 10 years ago. She feels this oversight has delayed the parents of autistic children from receiving the professional guidance and education needed to psychologically endure the burden of autism. This oversight has made it virtually impossible for state and private medical facilities to coordiante effective and practical regional programs allowing families to reside in the general vicinity of the health center. The amendement would enable health centers throughout the country to develop programs. A personal program geared to community orientation is far more beneficial and in the long run less costly than massive institutionalism which is the tragic result of our present policy, she said. Although cures and tangible results for autistic disorders will not be solved by the allocation, Rep. Burke feels the data and observations recorded by physicians in their treatment of auticism will be invaluable treatment for less severe malfunctions of a similar nature. The Congresswoman referred to the studies of Dr. Rocco Motto of the Reiss-Davis Child Center, Los Angeles, Calif., whose excellence, she says, “is well known throughout California and the country”, believes legislation of this type is desperately needed, if the efforts of centers like the We trade YOUR way m ■ to fit YOUR budget W IJM with thrifty (flexible) GMAC-terms y you can live with. I * I M>— KlulKt J I WIPE-TRACK 111 fh| CORNERS TELFAIR STREET PONTIAC I ST IM ASTER ••.liter ire sell—HK SKKlK—«inre J 937 Red Star Lunch 533 9th Street Service 24 hrs. A Day Dining Room Closes 1:00 A.M. & Opens 5:00 A.M. Window Service 24 hrs. A Day, Also. We Stand Behind 32 Years of Quality Food and l|! EFFICIENT SERVICE We Specialize in Fried Chicken Tuffey’s Restaurant Milledgeville L£Lr i v2\ Road IT IS HERE ' ( THE 24 HOUR RESTAURANT THAT ALL AUGUSTA AND THE C. S. R. A. HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR CALL IN ORDERS AND PICK UP ON ARRIVAL TUFFEY'S LOCATED AT 2061 MILLEDGEVILLE ROAD 724-9229 24 HOURS A-DAY WITH THE VERY BEST IN SOUL FOOD, SUPERB HOME COOKING AROUND THE CLOCK WHILE YOU ARE THERE TRY THE ORIGINAL WORLD FAMOUS TUFFEYBURGER OPEN 24 HOURS A-DAY OPEN 24 HOURS A-DAY DAC, WAC And Soldier Os The Month • ww , ** I SP4 HOWARD W. LIVELY Reiss-Davis are to begin to study and treat autism effectively. In those states where day treatment programs have been available for the autistic children, the costs have been estimated well at SIO,OOO - $12,000 per child per year. The programs operate a six to seven-hour day, five days a week, and children receive the full range of physical, psychological, psychiatric and educational care as needed. The doctor’s views parallel those of the Congresswoman’s - both see the exclusion of autism in the Mental Retardation Act as a mistake - very costly to thousands of children. Wo Dose But Never Clow 24-Hour Service Jack Dempsey Proftssfovral Bondsman Office Phono 724-1204 118 Ninth St. Bt WWlBr J?' ■ gUIL TV PFC BARBARA S. TWIGGS Mrs. Elaine B. Boyd, Private First Gass Barbara S. Tiggs, and Specialist-Four Howard W. Lively have been selected as DAC, WAC and Soldier of the Month for September at Fort Gordon. Mrs. Boyd, of Augusta, works as a secretary at the US Army Medical Center with the Ginical Specialist Course. She began working with the civil service in December, 1968. She attended Jackson, High School, Jackson, S.C. and Augusta Technical School where she graduated in 1968. Mrs. Boyd and her husband, Ralph, reside pi Wj| 111 I ROUGHING UP-Peter Boyle (Crazy Joe), left, and Fred Williamson (Willy), right, rough up Steve Sheehan (Steve) during a take over of The Horse Room, a bookie parlor, in this scene from the recently completed film, “Crazy Joe , a Dino De Laurentiis Presentation for Columbia Pictures. Filmed entirely on location in New York City area, “Crazy Joe” is an action-packed drama starring Peter Boyle in the title role as a hot-headed young hoodlum who defies the established leaders of New York’s world of organized crime. Also featuring such well-known stars as Rip Tom, Luther Adler, and Eli Wallach, the much talked abot motion picture attracted an onslaught of fans and curious onlookers during the on-location shooting. Williamson’s initial appearance was no exception, despite a brief shooting scene. The former football star, known as “The Hammer” with the Kansas City Chiefs, has become a film favorite, following such box office smashes as “Nigger Charlie”, “The Soul of Nigger Charlie”, and “Black Caesar”. WhenJerryfinishesTech, he’ll stay in Georgia. Will your son stay, too? There s a job for Jerry in his home state. near future. If Jerry and other young people He ll stay. And join Georgia’s work force of are going to find jobs and build homes, more than two million. they’ll need the power from plants that are How long employment opportunities will being built now. last is an urgent question. Nearly all This new construction will take a lot of those two million jobs depend money, over SSOO million this year, on electricity in some way. Ninety percent of that must be To light offices. Supply borrowed. A small increase in heating and cooling. price will enable us to borrow Run computers Oper- the money needed to keep ate heavy machinery. construction going, and keep Refrigerate food. power flowing to you. And, as technology Holding down the price of brings better work- electricity won t help any- ing conditions, more body. It will only mean power electricity will be neces- tMBK may not t^iere w^en Y ou sary. Not just for the W need it. next generation, but for you. F Electricity. What would you Right now Sf) do without it? It’s our job to supply the power. s But our present facilities won’t meet the growing needs of Company Georgia homes and >■. JU® ~ ® industries. even for the We ' /b BWwESi! ilw »fl> a & A' at 1947 Gordon H]ghway. Private First Gass Tiggs, works as a medic in the Allergy Ginic at the US Army Medical Center. Entering the service in March 1972, she attended basic training at Ft. McGellan, Ala. Afterwards, the 21-year-old WAC took Advanced Training at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas. She attended Westem-Olin High School in Birmingham, Ala., where she graduated in 1969. Later she attended the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Ala. Private First Gass Tiggs resides with her husband, Eddie, at 2445 Amsterdam Drive, Augusta. I w v ' r ' 13 ■’ '' *lf * w MKS ELAINE B. BOYD Specialist-Four Lively entered the service in May 1968 and attended basic training at Ft. Polk, La. He is presently assigned as a supply clerk at Headquarters Company, 57th Signal Battalion. Lively attended Dudley M. Hughes High School in Macon, Ga. where he graduated in 1967. Prior to his Ft. Gordon assignment, the 23-year-old soldier was stationed with the US Army Strategic Communication Command, Okinawa. He is presently residing with his wife, Ruth, at 2510 Blackstone Street, Augusta.