Newspaper Page Text
The Augusta News-Review - January 26, 1978 -
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THE VOLTAGE BROTHERS SHOWCASE AT THE
CO PA - They all gathered for a picture with the ten
members of the Voltage Brothers: The Pips; The
Temptations; celebrity model. Sterling St Jacques;
Denny Greene, from the Sha Na Na Show; Tony
Martell, vice president and general manager associated
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NATIONAL GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER AWARD went to the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King Sr. who was the main speaker at the 34th Annual GWC
luncheon in Pittsburg, Pa. Dr. King attracted the largest crowd (968) in the long
history of the event. (Left to right) Roy Kohler, Gulf Oil Corp, manager-special
projects, co-chairman Carver Week; Dr. King; W.C. Bickel, Gulf’s
manager-community relations; Mrs. Artegious Moncrieff, president, National
Achievement Clubs, Inc., which runs Carver Week and Camp Achievement, an
inter-racial summer camp near Pittsburgh which benefited from the luncheon.
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VA HOSPITAL DIRECTOR RECOGNIZED - At a recent ceremony at the
Veterans Administration Hospital. Eugene E. Speer Jr., Hospital Director, was
recognized for 35 years of dedicated service to the Veterans Administration.
Robert Athey, Assistant Hospital Director, presented Speer with a lapel pin and
Certificate of Achievement signed by Dr. John D. Chase, chief medical director of
the Veterans Administration.
„ motto in the background is a promotion of the VA Administrator’s special
VA - May I Help You? campaign. The motto is “Your Tomorrow Is Our Concern
Today”.
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THIS SPACe CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER
Page 6
labels; (extreme left), Ron Alexenburg, Senior Vice
President, Epic/Portrait/Associated labels; Sid
Seidenberg, President, SAS Management; Phil Kumit,
Senior Vice President Lifesong Records and George
Brown, General Manager, Lifesong Records.
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THE NEW.ARK 801 S (.HORUS will appear on the Paine College campus Feb. 8
at 8 p.m. in the Gilbert-Lambuth Memorial Chapel. The concert is free to the public,
and is sponsored by the Paine College Lyceum Committee.
Terence Shook, music director, auditions an applicant for the Newark Boys
Chorus. Approximately 2,000 boys are auditioned each year for the 15 openings.
Boys ranging in age from 9 to 14 make up tlie 32-member concert chorus and the
28-member training chorus. Attending the day school on full scholarship, the boys
receive rigorous scholastic and music training.
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Stevie talks
about life
without sight
It might be an inner world
of free, boundless expression
that allows Stevie Wonder to
captivate millions.
Or it might be his musical
insight and intuition - the
knack for bringing out the
right tune at the right time.
At any rate, he’s a boon to
the record industry. And with
a backlog of five albums and
18 singles topping past charts
nationwide as million sellers,
most producers are too busy
presenting him Grammys,
countless congratulations and
contract offers to wonder why
the little blind boy from
Detroit is doing so well.
Meanwhile, one might
expect Wonder to be relishing
all this, wallowing in constant
attention and living in
luxurious, expensive style.
Admittedly, the
blind-since-birth entertainer
has changed his image a little.
His longtime fans might
remember him growing from a
mod, contemporary image to a
dashiki-Afro one. They may
recall when his hair was
comrowed, his feet sandaled
and at least one album cover
designed with a little Braille.
That was the image of a
ph il osp h ica 11 y aware,
humanitarian Stevie. It was
picture perfect of the
philanthropical, down-to-earth
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LESLIE EGGAMS was featured on the “Kraft 75th Anniversary Television Special”
Tuesday night Uggams performed on an early Kraft Music Hadi when she was just
eight years old.
attitude of an entertainer who
donates thousands to groups
like the Renaissance Detroit
Lions and others who
construct facilities for the
blind.
Up until now, however, not
many people probed that side
of Wonder’s nature. His life
without sight, while not
exactly overlooked, was never
directly attributed to the depth
of his talent.
But, Constanze Elsner,
author of a Stevie Wonder: My
Life Without Sight, decided to
find out whether or not
Wonder is really content in his
world without vision. He is.
According to the findings,
recently published in excerpt
in the National Enquirer, the
introspective Wonder harbors a
well-kept secret of some sort.
In that self-enclosed sanctum
of his lies the key to a
thousand unproduced songs,
prophesies and messages. He
accepts the theory that the
intensity of his verse and
rhythm is derived from the fact
that he cannot see.
Wonder’s blindness has cost
him a lot though. As he put it
in the book, “Sometimes I
think I would love to see, just
to see the beauty of flowers,
the trees and the birds and the
earth and the grass.”
Yet, he acknowledges a
sense of serenity in not being
able to witness firsthand the
horror of ruin and destruction.
“Being as I’ve never seen, I
don’t know what it’s like to
see. So in a sense I’m complete.
Maybe I’d be incomplete if I
did see,” he says, “Maybe I’d
see some things I don’t want to
see.”
He has “innervision” as his
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million-seller album by that
name proved.
What can
you expect
for *3485?
1978 HONDA
• Front wheel drive.
• Reclining front
bucket seats
• AM radio
• Day/Night mirror
• Tinted glass all
round.
• Open rear quarter
windows.
• Rear window de
froster
• Fold-down rear seat
• White sidewall tires
• Transverse mounted
engine.
Limited Supply!
Gerald
Jones
V.W.-HONDA
241 5 Milledgville Rd.
Phone: 738-2561