Newspaper Page Text
Paine honors 9
at Convocation
Nine awards were presented
by Dr. Julius Scott, president
of Paine College, during Paine’s
Founder’s Day Convocation
this year.
Two President ial
Achievement Awards were
presented to members of the
community and seven
Presidential Alumni
Achievement Awards were
presented.
Charles S. Hamilton, pastor
of the Tabernacle Baptist
Church, received a Presidential
Achievement Award for
outstanding support of Paine
College. Joseph J. Rogers,
office accounting manager and
community relations director
at Proctor and Gamble, won
the second Presidential
Achievement Award.
Presidential Alumni
Mrs. Brenda Neely
Upward Bound
accepting applications
The Upward Bound Project
at Paine College is now
accepting applications for the
summer session of the 1979-80
school year.
Upward Bound is - project
sponsored by the U.S.
Department of Education. It is
designed to generate skills and
motivation necessary for
success in education beyond
high school for sophomores,
juniors, and seniors who have
academic potential and are
from economically deprived
backgrounds.
Whe (Augusta
Mallory K. Millender Editor-Publisher
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Frank Bowman Director of Special Projects
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Billy W. Hobbs Reporter
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Mrs. Mary Gordon Administrative Assistant
Mrs. Geneva Y. Gibson Church Coordinator
Mrs. Fannie Johnson Aiken County Correspondent
Mrs. Clara WestMcDuffie County Correspondent
David Dupree Sports Editor
Mrs. Been Buchanan Fashion & Beauty Editor
Roosevelt Green Columnist
irbyColumnist
Mrs. Marian Waring Columnist
Philip Waring Columnist
Sterling Wimberly!Photographer
Roscoe Williams. Photographer
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Mailing Address
Box 953 (USPS 887 820) - Augusta, Ga.
Phone (404) 722-4555 /gFjK
Second Class Postage Paid Augusta, Ga. 30903 J| I V]
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GEORGIA PUBLIC TELEVISION
salutes
/Bfeh BLACK HISTORY MONTH
I James Earl Jones
I PAUL ROBESON
’ a compelling
MFSjMy portrayal of
a complex man
ft special encore presentation
/ 1 Sat.,Feb.23,9p.m.
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1 J Charles McDaniel State Superintendent of Schools
Achievement Awards were
presented to Luther P. Neal,
presiding elder of the Christian
Methodist Episcopal Church
and member of the Paine
College Board of Trustees;
Willis J. Walker, dentist; and
Maurice S. Cherry, pastor of W.
Mitchel Street CME Church
and for chaplain at Paine.
Mrs. Mayme J.. Wesley, of
the class of 1910, attended the
convocation and received a
Presidential Alumni
Achievement Award. Two
Paine alumni, Dr. Ervin Smith
and Dr. Bernice D. Smith
received an award as the first
married alumni to each earn
doctorate degrees. Lewis W.
Jay of the class of 1948
received the Presidential
Alumni Achievement Award
also.
NAUW
recognizes
Ms. Neely
Mrs Brenda Delores Neely, a
math teacher at the John S.
Davidson Elementary School,
was recently named “Woman
of the Year” at the National
Founders Day observance of th
of the Augusta Branch of the
National Association of
University Women. Ms. Neely
is a public affairs officer of the
local NAUW Chapter.
Upward Bound students are
provided instruction in basic
skills, tutoring, a summer
residential program and varied
summer activities, as well as
assistance with post-secondary
school planning.
Students who wish to enroll
in the summer session,
beginning July 15 and lasting
through August 4, should
contact the Upward Bound
Office at Paine College. The
deadline for submitting
applications is March 15.
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Dance theatre to open
The Georgia Dance Theatre
Company will open its Spring
Season in Augusta with an
elaborate production of
Frankie Levy’s “Cinderella”
Feb. 29 and March 1 in the
Music Hall of the Bell
Auditorium. The two
performances of this
enchanting fairy tale will be
presented in one evening and
one matinee performance.
Woody Herman soloist
heads trombone workshop
Jim Pugh, the featured
soloist with the Woody
Herman Orchestra since 1972,
with ‘Cinderella’
Curtain time for the Friday
performance is 8 p.m. while
the matinee on Saturday will
begin at 3 p.m.
Cinderella is a fairy tale with
a rare appeal for all, full of
humor, glitter, and
sophistication. Its story is
unknown and loved all over the
world, its music by Prokofiev is
among the most beautiful in all
dance, its extravagant sets, its
will be a clinician at Paine
College’s Southeast Trombone
Workshop Feb. 22 through 24.
Pugh holds a Performer’s
Certificate from the Eastman
School of Music where he
earned his degree in 1972. He
studied trombone with Emory
Remington and jazz arranging
from Chuck Mangione, having
also toured with his orchestra.
Another of Pugh’s positions
was principal trombone with
the Rochester Philharmonic.
Among the other clinicians
at the Southeast Trombone
Workshop will be John
Marcellus of the Eastman
School of Music, William
Cramer of Florida State
University, Harry Arling of
Georgia Southern College, and
Phil Jamieson of the University
of Georgia.
Dr. Arved Larsen,
coordinator of the Music
Department at Paine, Michael
McClary, director of the
Augusta College Jazz Ensemble
and William Brunkow,
—1 ' '//I
Poison ivy rash can be recog
nized as clusters of small
blisters of various sizes, on
reddened shiny skin.
rjjgßbi GRADUATION PORTRAIT BBBNH
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Thru March 31, 1980 bk|
Proofs
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gift certificates availible IJ £
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CRAWFORD’S PHOTOGRAPHY
Phone (404) 733-7474
1900 Olive Road Augusta, Georgia 30906
lavish costumes and its
excellent choreography by
Frankie Levy combine to make
this a performance for
everyone. Add to this the
dancers of the Georgia Dance
Theatre Company and nothing
else quite has the magic of
“Cinderella.” “Cinderella” is
more than a work for children,
in the best tradition of the
grand ballets, it is a lavishly
instrument repair technition
will be local clinicians. Jim
Martin, free-lance bass
trombonist, will also
participate.
Ensembles attending the
workshop will be the
University of Georgia
Trombone Choir, the Paine
College’s Community
Trombone Choir, the Georgia
Master
Piece
2nd Feature
beautiful full-length ballet.
Tickets for “Cinderella” are
on sale daily at the Georgia
Dance Theatre Company
Studios, 461 Highland Ave.,
Surrey Center, Augusta from
10 aan. until 6 p.m. Beginning
Feb. 27, tickets will be on sale
at the Bell Auditorium Box
Office. For more information,
phone 736-9061.
Southern Trombone Choir and
the Augusta College Jazz
Ensemble.
Benny Gordon's
The College Bowl
Auditorium & Restaurant
126 Laney-Walker Blvd.
Augusta, Georgia
Disco And Live Enterainment Weekly Weekly
Open 10- 2 Mon. Sat.
4-2 A.M. Sunday
722-9161
The College Band, The Now Spot
The Augusta News-Review - February 23,1980
Douglass’ life
to be dramatized
The Mack Student Union at
Augusta College will sponsor
Charles Pace in a one-man
drama based on the life and
times of Frederick Douglass,
generally recognized as the
most outstanding black man of
the 19th century.
The free performance will be
held Feb. 29 at 8 pjn. in the
College Activities Center. A
workshop will also be held on
the second floor of the College
Activities Center the same day.
Charles Pace, the author and
actor, works as a program
adviser for the Texas Union at
the University of Texas at
Austin. He also serves as a
regional coordinator for
minority programs for the
Association of College
Unions-International. He is a
co-founder of the
Afro-American Players, Inc., a
non-profit community theatre
in Austin.
The 90-minute drama will
include two acts which span
the life of Douglass from the
age of 9 to 35.
Paine dean
gives paper
Dr. Vivian U. Robinson,
academic dean and professor of
English at Paine College,
recently presented a paper at a
national conference on church
women’s history held in
Cincinnati.
The paper, entitled “C.M.E.
and United Methodist Women’s
Missionary Training Institues:
A Quarter Century of
Cooperation,” was one of 60
scholarly papers presented at
the conference. Hie conference
was sponsored by the United
Methodist Church through its
Women’s History Project.
Dr. Robinson is national
chairperson of the Department
of Missionary Education,
Women’s Missionary Council
and is a member of the
Department of Education and
Ministry of the National
Council of Churches. She is
also on the Executive
Committee of the Consultation
of Church Union.
w QqhMEt
Zetas climax
Observance
The Eta Theta Zeta Chapter
of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.
will climax its annual Finer
Womanhood Week Observance
Feb 24, at 3.p.m. at Saint
Mary’s Episcopal Church. The
speaker will be former
Augustan, Evelyn D. Brown, a
member of Epsilon Zeta
Chaper, Zeta Phi Beta sorority
Inc. in Atlanta, Mrs. Brown is
president of Better Infant
Births and Secretary of Organi
zation and Promotion, the
Womans Missionary Council of
the Christian Methodist
Episcopal Church she is a
member of the board of
directors of the March of
Dimes.
Alumni club
sets meeting
The Augusta Chapter of the
Benedict College Alumni Club
will meet Feb. 23 at 7 pjn. at
the CSRA Business League
Office on the comer of 12th
and Laney-Walker Blvd.
All Benedict graduates are
asked to be present.
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