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The Augusta News-Review - February 28, 1974
Academy of Richmond
County High School students
have been selected as
Outstanding Teenagers of
America for 1974.
Selection for the
Outstanding Teenagers awards
program automatically
qualifies these students for
further state, regional and
national honors and
scholarships totaling $7,000.
LOcal nominees are:
Kay Jackson, Deborah
PoweU, Ralph Liebelt and
Anita Wright.
Nominated by their
principals, the Outstanding
Teenagers of America are
chosen from individual schools
across the country for
excellence in academic
Future Homemakers Entertain Mothers
The Tutt Chapter of the
Future Homemakers
entertained their mothers at a
party on February 12.
The party was held in the
school cafeteria at 7:30 p.m.
Many of the members’ mothers
came and special guest
Family Planning Workshop
A workshop in Family
Planning Education will be
conducted for social case
workers from the Department
of Family and Children
Services from 8:30 to 4:00,
March 6 and 7 at the Medical
College of Georgia.
Planned Parenthood of East
Central Georgia and the
BUYING
COINS
Indian Cent ,27
Any Silver Dime .25 to .50
Any Silver Quarter ,50to$1
Any Silver Half $1.25 to $2
(Rate depends on market -
Above coins must be dated
before 1965)
Any Silver Dollar $3.70 to $5
AUGUSTA COIN
SHOP
1145 Broad Street
Open 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
1.49 each is all you pay
for professional color
portraits of your child.
Select either large sx7'
or set of 4 wallet size,
from several poses.
HOURS
Fri. 10 A.M. -1 P.M.
.yfeMy_„ al 6 P.M.-8 P.M.
Sat. 10 A.M.-IP.M.
2 P .M. - 6 P .M.
• 2 children photographed
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. e ah portraits delivered
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s 1 1 • Age limit: 12 years
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Pixy is available only
through JCPenney.
JCPenney
Outstanding Teenagers
achievement and community
service. The local students will
now vie for the Outstanding
Teenager of the Year Trophy
to be presented by the state’s
governor. Similar trophies will
be presented to the winners in
other states. The state winners
are selected by the Outstanding
Teenager Awards Selection
Committee, in cooperation
with the Board of Advisors.
The 51 state winners will be
eligible for awards totaling
$7,000. One boy and one girl
will be chosen for national
scholarships of $ 1,000 each to
be used at the college or
university of their choice. Ten
regional winners will also be
selected from the remaining
state winners to receive SSOO
included the school principal
and his wife, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Banks; Richmond
County School Superinten
dant, Mr. Harvey Duncan, and
Mrs. Martha Bums, Richmond
County Home Economics
supervisor.
Becky Rogers, chapter
Medical College are
cooperating to present this
workshop whose purpose is to
provide family planning
education and training to
enable social workers to work
more effectively with their
clients.
On March 6, the program
will include Demography of
the Community, Anatomy and
Physiology of Reproduction,
Conception Control and
Methods of Contraception.
Topics to be discussed
March 7, include Infertiliy and
/•7.7./..lA'S.' /{RIXO
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Page 2
regional scholarships.
In recognizing the special
talents of these Outstanding
Teenagers, author and
entertainer Arthur Godfrey,
said ... “You are an inspiration
to your eleders as well as your
peers; ... I hope you will
eventually be as proud of us as
we are of you!”
Under the guidance of the
Board of Advisors, the
Outstanding Teenagers of
America program was created
to encourage young people to
take full advantage of the
opportunities in our country.
The awards are presented each
spring, and biographies of all
those honored are recorded in
the annual volume,
OUTSTANDING
TEENAGERS OF AMERICA.
president, first welcomed the
mothers and guests. Then
Lauren Beattie told what FHA
meant to her, and Sharon
Floyd told about activities and
projects the club had done
during the year. A skit entitled
“The F.H.A. Change” was also
presented.
Genetics, Counseling for
Problem Pregnancy, Human
Sexuality, Sickle Cell Anemia,
Venereal Disease and
Behavioral Aspects of Family
Planning.
Participating in the
workshop, which will include
such teaching aids as trigger
films and rap tapes, are Ms.
Mary Eva Flanders, Social
Work Consultant for the
Northeast Health District; Dr.
Virginia P. McNamara, assistant
professor, Department of
Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Medical College of Georgia; Dr.
Paul G. McDonough, associate
professor, 08/GYN
Department, Medical College
of Georgia; Dr. W.E. Quillian,
associate professor,
Department of Psychiatry,
Medical College of Georgia; Dr.
_| _ ______
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YEARBOOK DEDICATED TO MRS. JONES
Mrs. Catherine Jones, who has served as cafeteria manager at Belvedere schools since 1949, was honored by the
Belvedere PTA who dedicated their uearbook to her at their recent meeting. Pictured with Mrs. Jones, who is
seated, is PTA President, Mrs. Vera Russ.
E.S. Bronstein, associate
professor, 08/GYN
Department, Medical College
of Georgia; Miss Charion
Seegar, Chief of Social Work
for Family Planning and M & I
Project, Medical College of
Georgia; Mrs. Ocie L. Johnson,
Chief of Family Planning
Outreach Service and Project
Director for Planned
Parenthood; Mr. B.L.
Abramham, Community
Project Coordinator, Sickle
Cell Center, Medical College of
Georgia; and Mrs. Emily
Young, Health Educator for
Planned Parenthood.
Mike Sanders, Executive
Director of Planned
Parenthood, will be moderator
for the workshop, which is
being held in the small
auditorium of the Medical
College of Georgia.
Women’s Health
Center Sets
Clinic Time
The Women’s Health Center
will hold a Clinic Wednesday,
Marcg 6, from 5 to 9 p.m. at
the Planned PArenthood
building at 1862 Central
Avenue.
For an appointment or for
information call Planned
PArenthood of East Central
Georgia, Inc. at 736-1161.
David L. Johnson
TAX SERVICE
2703 Peach Orchard Rd.
Phone 798-5826
Berlin: Year-Round Festival for All
pp* fll
For year-round entertainment it is hard to beat West
Berlin which in 1974 continues to offer visitors several
top-notch events each month, in addition to the scores of
conventions for which this metropolis is renowned, photo
show’s entrance to the annual German-American Folk
Festival in July/August; but there is an excellent variety
of choice for anyone at any time.
Right after the Int’l Green Week Fair (Jan./Feb.), March
offers the Int’l Boat Show, Leisure-Time Exhibition, Int’l
Travel Show, Annual Used-Car Show & Mart, Int’l Pedi
greed Dog Show (followed by the Pedigreed Cat Show),
and the year’s first Ballet Week at the Opera.
April has its Inter Chic Int’l Women’s Fashion Fair,
Spring Fair, Blossom Time Festival, and the Free Berlin
Art Exhibition. May presents the May Day Festival, and
the 6th International Art Fair.
In June, root at the World Soccer Championships; or
attend Berlin’s 24th Int’l Film Festival, another Ballet
Week at the Opera, or the German-French Festival.
In August, Berlin is also host to the 20th annual Euro
pean Dance Jamboree; and September brings the 24th
annual Berlin Festival Weeks.
October has the 26th annual Oktoberfest, and also the
year’s second Inter Chic, November ushers in the incom
parable sound of Berlin’s Jazz Days, and the Int’l Book
Fair for some 30,000 just-out works.
And finally, December rings in the beautiful Christmas
Fair at Berlin’s vast, landscaped Exhibition Grounds.
Essay Contest
Aliciadiane Starks,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James L. Starks, Jr. of 2028
Steiner Ave., was recently
selected as winner in the Fire
Prevention essay contest for
the Richmond County Public
NOW Meets
Wednesday
The CSRA Chapter of the
National Organization for
Women (NOW) will meet on
Wednesday, March 6, 1974, at
8:00 p.m. at the Augusta
Federal Savings find loan
Association, 2839 Central
Avenue. The program will
include a discussion led by
Officers Frank Jones and E.
Coy of the Augusta Police
Department on self-defense
techniques and the prevention
of rape. The agenda will also
consider nominations of new
officers for the coming year.
Local Youth
Serves As Pages
At State Capitol
Leonard and Aliciadiane
Starks and Lisa Dunn were at
the Capitol in Atlanta
Wednesday as pages for State
Representative R.A. Dent.
Leonard and Aliciadiane are
children of Mr. & Mrs. James
L. Starks, Jr., 2028 Steiner
Avenue and Lisa is the
daughter of Mr. & Mrs. James
Dunn, Barton CHapel Road.
Schools.
The presentation was made
at Copeland School where
Alicia is a fourth grade student
and was shown on Channel 6
news.
Because of illness Alicia
Jobs Dodge
Wills
fr *
WILLS
NEW YORK - Frank Wills,
the SBO-a-week security guard
who discovered, the Watergate
break-in, has been
overwhelmed with honors and
awards. Job offers are another
story.
“He was considered a hot
potato,” said his attorney,
Evans Dorsey, as wills picked
up his latest plaque Sunday at
the Waldorf Astoria. “Firms
refused to hire him because
they were afraid of government
repercussions and the IRS.”
Wills, who quit his job in the
Watergate apartment-office
complex soon after the
burglary, spent six months
unemployed and pounding the
pavement before finally
landing another security job in
the Washington area. He was
rejected by, among athers, a
university and a hospital
fearing loss of federal aid.
“You don’t have to go
underground to find hell; it’s
right here on earth and 1 was
there,” said Wills.
“The feeling was, to hire
Frank Wills is to say ‘Nixon,
you’re a dirty dog,”’ Dorsey
added.
Wills’ latest honor, “for keen
concern in government...” was
from Key Women of America,
Inc., a service group of Black
women.
The shiny gold plaque will
share scant wall space with a
dozen others in Wills’ modest
Washington apartment.
MAXWELL HOUSE
PHARMACY
—open AU day seven
pays pen ween—
-1002 GREENE ST.
722-4695 722-7088
JD |
’awn Shop
549 Broad St
VBMTOtIOANMOMrf
ON ANYTHING Os 1
YAUif
Wf Stll tVIIYTHtHG |
could not be present for the
ceremony. In accepting the
award Miss Lillian Mallard, her
teacher, praised her as an
outstanding student in all
phases of the school program.
Mr. W.E. Croft, Jr. is principal
at Copeland.
Bo's Bait & Tackle
2011 Savannah Rd.
All kind of belts 8> tackle*
Soft drinks a Baer
Open 7 days a wook 5 a.m. until
rour Patronage Appreciated
FOR SALE
1972 Ford Custom
4 Door - Air - R - H
£795
724-1996 i Or 863-8640
MAXIE MEN
STORE
11!>4 Broad Si.
Augusta, Georgia
“I got my job
through the
State Department
of Vocational
Rehabilitation.”
i -a
L W
' '
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AKO
IM
If you’re looking for skilled, dedicated men and women, write
the Director of Vocational Rehabilitation in your state capital.
The U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare.
Sorority
Culminates
Finer
Womanhood
Week
r **■ |MBI
KATE SHAKESPEARE
Members of Eta Theta Zeta
Cliapter of Zeta Phi Beta
Sorority, Inc. will culminate
Finer Womanhood Week
observance, Sunday, March 3,
1974 at 3:00 p.m. at Trinity
CME Church on Eighth Street
The speaker for this
occasion will be Mrs. Kate
Shakespeare, a native of
Macon, Georgia. She was born
and educated in Bibb County
and completed her graduate
work at Atlanta University.
She is a principal at Carver
Elementary School, Macon,
Georgia.
Affiliated with First Baptist
Church in Macon, Georgia, she
serves as historian, director of
youth activities- and Sunday
school teacher.
Mrs. Shakespeare is a
member of the GAE, NEA,
NAACP, American Association
of University Women, and
secretary of the Elementary
Principal Association.
She holds a life membership
in Zeta Phi Beta Sorority and is
associate director for the State
of Georgia.
The public is invited to
attend.
$49.88
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GIANT
Giant Auto Painters i
1817 Wilkinson Road )
Phone 733-1095