The Augusta news-review. (Augusta, Ga.) 1972-1985, November 01, 1973, Page Page 6, Image 6
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YOUTH REVIVAL
There will be a Youth
Revival at the First Providence
Church in North Augusta,
South Carolina. Beginning
November 5, thru November 9,
1973. George L. Brightharp,
local pastor and instructor at
Paine College, will be the guest
evangelist of the week. Paine
College Gospel Choir will be
guest choir one night.
SPARTA NEWS
Hickory Grove Baptist
Chur?*’ is having its annual
choir festival on Nov. 2 at 4
p.m. Rev. R.E. Edwards is the
pastor. The public is invited.
Macedonia Sunday School is
held every Sunday morning at
10 o’clock. “We are looking for
you, and you.” says Sunday
School Superintendent Walter
Gayton.
BIBLE PUBLISHED FOR
BLACKS ONLY
Just two years ago a new
concept in Bible translation
was introduced. It was the
Living Bible, a contemporary,
modern version of the scripture
that reads “a lot like your daily
newspaper”, according to one
reviewer.
The New Testament of the
Living Bible has now been
published in an edition
especially for the Black reader
in a volume called Soul Food.
It is a vinylized paperback
edition, generously illustrated
with actual “today style”
photographs, and is available
nearly anywhere books are sold
at 51.95 per copy.
The popularity of the Living
Bible and its understandable
style of paraphrasing the
scriptures has been proved by
sales of over 12-million copies
sine publication. The publisher,
Tyndale House of Wheaton,
Illinois, is currently shipping
over 12-thousand copies of the
Living Bible per day, to book
retailers throughout the nation.
“Publishers Weekly” magazine,
SEALED BID SALE
(NO. OP-31 (D))
The undersigned, acting for and on behalf
of the Government, will accept Sealed
Bids until 1:00 P.M., November 12, 1973
? for the purchase of 181 lots of Surplus/
3 Replacement type property with an
original cost of approximately $559,512.00.
Property consists of manual and elec
tric office machines, shop equipment,
mowers, boat motors, air com
pressors, pumps and misc. lab and
instrument equipment
Automotive property includes Ford,
A.M.C., Rebel and Plymouth 1964
thru 1971 Sedans. Also Ford, Chevro
let and Dodge Vi Ton to 3Vi Ton
Trucks, 2 36,000 GVW IHC Trucks,
Forklift Trucks ranging from 3500 lb.
to 18000 lb. capacity and other misc.
items.
5 Inspection may be made at our Sales
; Area week-days only thru November 9,
1973 between the hours of 9:00 A.M. and
3:00 P.M.
| Bids must be submitted on our Bid Forms
| which are available by contacting:
E.l. du Pont de Nemours
& Co., Inc.
Savannah River Plant-Purchasing Division
Aiken, S. C. 29801
Phone: N. Augusta, S. C. (803) 824-6331,
Ext 3593. B. L. Godwin
•get a 5
Chicken
Dinner Box
A,
149 Wrightsboro Road Phone 722-0632
3007 Deans Bridge Road Phone 793-2827 JI
Wishbone Fried Chicken m
Fried chicken, the way it ought to be.
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the barometer of the
publishing industry, rated the
Living Bible as the best-selling
book of 1972 in the
non-fiction category. The book
outsold the fiction best seller,
Jonathan Livingston Seagull,
during
It is the New Testament of
this same best selling Living
Bible that comprises the text
of the recently published Soul
Food. Each different book in
the New Testament is
preceeded with a brief example
of how the theme of that book
relates to life in today’s world
by Twentieth Century people.
In addition to the introduction,
there are pictures at the first of
each chapter of Black people in
actual life situations that
illustrate the ideas and
thoughts in th., following book
of the Bible.
Acceding to the publisher,
Soul Food is the first New
Testament that makes the
scriptures more compre
hensible to, and fits the
specific needs of the Black
society in this nation.
'Painting
With Flora’
The life of Aiken native
Mina Tropp has been as
unusual and as varied as her
exhibition, ‘ * Painting With
Flora”, now on display in the
Auditorium of the
A u gusta- Richmond County
Public Library.
After attending Winthrop
College, Rock Hill, South
Carolina, she married a soldier
and moved to New York City,
where in the early Twenties she
and her husband evolved a
process of painting on silk. An
executive of Wannamakers,
seeing the handpainted silks in
the small club the Tropps ran
Page 6
Silas X. Floyd pre-school
teachers along with other
pre-school teachers in the
Richmond County School
system developed an in-service
workshop on the theme
“Learning Through the Five
Senses.” Areas covered were:
Math, Science, Art, Music,
Language Arts, Physical
Education, and Classroom
Organization.
Highlighting the in-service
workshop was Dr. Jerold
Bauch of Peabody College,
Nashville, Tenn. He stressed
“Curriculum Goals Through
Attitude Development”. The
ten major areas stressed were:
Persistence, Delay of
Gratification, Curiosity,
Resistance to Distraction,
Attention, Achievement and
Motivation, Social Living,
Independence, Interdepend
ence, and the Joy of Being in
School.
Mrs. Margaret B. Jones,
Director, gave closing remarks
and emphasized that if
pre-school children are
creative, curious, resourceful,
and imagitive - they are in
need of activities that provide
for listening, speaking, tasting,
touching, feeling, smelling,
squeezing, rolling, punching,
throwing, chewing, and other
aspects necessary for learning.
She also stressed the
importance of imparting the
most needed aspect of any
child’s development - LOVE.
She told all of the teachers that
the business of all pre-school
teachers is to develop
competency in pre-school
children in language
development, socialization,
school routine and
independence.
for their friends in a loft on
Fourth Avenue, offered his
show windows for a display of
their work, which led to the
organization of their Dek-Art
Studios.
In 1929-after the stock
market crash-the Tropps
returned to Aiken, and it was
here that Mina Tropp began
collecting the natural materials
from which she creates her
paintings.
Her first exhibit of the
technique she called “Painting
With Flora” led to a job with
the WPA which included
making applique designs for
the WPA sewing rooms,
posters, illustrated maps of
South Carolina and
illustrations for a book on the
Charleston to Hamburg
Railroad.
Then she was sent to
Charleston to assist with the
restoration of the Dock Street
Theatre. Later she worked at
the Charleston Museum doing
botantical specimens, and this
assignment led to her
illustrating a book on South
Carolina silversmiths written
by the museum director, Milby
Burton.
Being gourmet cooks in
addition to possessing artistic
talents, the Tropps were
offered the job of managing
the kitchen and dining room at
Eseeola Lodge in Linvill, North
Carolina. When they returned
to Charleston they managed all
social and catering facilities at
the Country Gub of
Charleston, where they
planned parties for the
DuPonts, the McCormicks, the
Huttons, the Guggenheims, the
Legends, the Roosevelts and
many other VIPs.
World War II curtailed lavish
entertaining and Mr. and Mrs.
Tropp went to New York in
1942, where for over a decade
they owned and managed the
restaurants at The Adams and.
The Oliver Cromwell Hotels.
In 1954 they retired from
business and went to live in
Tryson, North Carolina, where
Mrs. Tropp devoted her time to
creating pictures using material
preserved a quarter of a
century earlier.
Mrs. Tropp has exhibited at
the Florence, South Carolina,
Museum; the Gibbes Art
Gallery in Charleston;
Savannah’s Telfair Academy;
Kennedy Gallery, New York;
the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens;
and the Aiken Campus of the
University of South Carolina.
On Wednesday, October 17,
at 1 p.m., Mrs. Tropp will
lecture in the Auditorium of
the Main Library on her unique
process.
“Painting With Flora” will
be on exhibition in the library
Auditorium through November
15. It is open Hee to the public
during regular library hours.
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Plain facts about beef
• Shoppers have confidence in beef graded by the U.S. Gov’t.
• The higher the grade the more tender the beef.
• The highest grades are U.S.D.A. Choice and Prime.
• The overwhelming shoppers favorite is U.S.D.A. Choice.
• U.S.D.A. Choice beef is flavorful and Naturally Tender.
• Pantry Pride sells U.S.D.A. Choice beef... exclusively.
• Not all beef is graded by the government.
• Some stores sell beef that is not government graded.
• Some stores add artificial tenderizers to their beef.
• Beef graded U.S.D.A. Choice needs no tenderizers.
• There's nothing
artificial about
Pantry Pride beef. ILI J 1 1111H
We sell only U.S.D.A.
Choice Naturally / -
Tender £'
beef.
• Discount
Prices,
' 2907 WASHINOTON
INTIRSTAH 20
AUGUSTA GBOIGIA