Newspaper Page Text
Ex-Augustan attends meeting in China
Dr. Joseph Bernard
Floyd, a former Augustan
recently attended the
Sino-American Confer
ence on Anesthesiology
in the People’s Republic
of China.
The professional
program, which included
17 anesthesiologists from
this country, was
organized to allow ex
changes between
American physicians and
their colleagues in the
Meeting announced
The Wpmens Aglow
Fellowship Meeting and
Luncheon will be held
downstairs at the
Augusta Civic Center
June 30 at 10 a.m.
The speaker will be
Mary Ann Brown of
Henderson, Texas.
Armstrong gets scholarship
Tonya La’Vette Ar
mstrong, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry T. Ar
mstrong Jr., is the
recipient of the William
Lester Scholarship
presented by the Ex-
“. ...you can’t
ride to freedom flHh
,n Pharoah’s yaSf
Chariot! —Rev. Jesse Jackson ! '
Black Americans are indispensable to the
American economy and body politic. We
spend over $l4O billion a year on
consumer goods and services, pay S3O
million a month in union dues, contribute
millions more to pension funds, and pay
billions in taxes. Yet our dollars are not
reinvested in our community for our
economic development.
Using our dollars to fight
for dollars.
The Democrats may stand for welfare and
the Republicans for workfare but who
.stands for OUR SHARE? Corporate
America is using social generosity to
appease us, when we need economic
reciprocity to develop us.
We must renegotiate our economic
relationship with corporate America. We,
as Black people an occupied people in
exile must fight for economic territorial
integrity. Corporate America has moved
its buildings to the suburbs but its
business remains in our community. We
must vote for dignity everyday with our
dollars. Only if we resist and demand our
People’s Republic of
China by contrasting the
health care system, the
educational system and
specific diagnostic and
treatment issues such as
acqupuncture ’and herbal
medicines.
.The conference was
also designed to give the
participants the oppor
tunity to experience the
cultural aspects of
present day China as well
The Luncheon will cost
$5.
The nursery at Holy
Trinity Church is $1 per
child. Sack lunches for
children are required.
Drink is provided.
For reservations, call
798-3941 or 863-0253.
change Club of Augusta.
A 1983 honor graduate
of Westside High School,
Miss Armstrong will en
ter Augusta College in the
fall to pursue a major in
telecommunication.
as places of historical in
terest. This included
working communes, the
Great Wall and the For
bidden City in Peking.
Other cities visited
were Nanjing, Xiam,
Shanghai, Wuxi and
Yangzhou.
Floyd, former
associate professor of
anesthesiology at Emory
Medical School and
Grady Memorial Hospital,
McFarlin graduates
Pvt. Derrek C.
McFarlin, son of Ryolla
R. and Henry C.
McFarlin of 2411 Birdie
Drive, has graduated as an
armor crewman at the
U.S. Army Armor
School, Fort Knox, Ky.
The training was con
ducted under the one
station unit training
programs, which com
bines basic combat
training and advanced
individual training into
one 13-week period.
During the course,
is presently at Gwinnett
Community Hospital.
Floyd has returned to
his duty at Gwinnett
Community Hospital.
He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. John G. Floyd
and nephew of Mrs. Ruth
E. James, James B. Ellis
»and Mrs. Martha Floyd.
He and his wife,
Virginia Floyd, M.D.,
have one daughter,
Lauren.
students received
training, in the duties of a
tank crewman, including
firing the tank’s ar
mament and small
weapons. Instruction was
also given in field radio
operations, map reading,
and tank maintenance
and repair.
His wife, Devora, is the
daughter of Samuel
Green of 1027 Talcot St.,
Augusta.
The private is a 1982
graduate of Glenn Hills
High School.
share will we achieve self-determination.
This is the philosophy and the message of
the PUSH for Economic Justice. We plan
to mobilize the combined resources of the
black community into a force that
changes America and creates a new
economic order.
We must organize and unify a disciplined
economic resistance movement that will
trade only with those who respect us
enough to trade with us.
We need each other’s help. Let’s turn to
each other, not on each other.
NOBODY
WILL SAVE US,
FOR US,
BUT US.
Join the PUSH for Economic Justice
Only an organized economic resistance movement can succeed Join the na-
I tional resistance campaign TODAY! '
K'S*"! name .
• • J ADDRESS
CITY/STATE/ZIP
!*S»! PHONE
Make checks payable to Operation PUSH and send to 930 E 50th Street, Chicago.
IL 60615 You Will receive a RESIST card and periodic RESIST newsletters to keep
you informed, up-to-date and resisting targeted companies National organizations that
would like to become a part of the National Selective Patronage Council should
j I call 312/FREEDOM.
tggr™ , w-W" * “JBE-
' I* -.
Illi! JF S2ll
' i
EYESORE—Residents of 7th Avenue say they have been unsuccessful in getting the above
abandoned house on their street torn down.
Matthew Lamar, 1106 7th Ave., said he went to the tax office and was told that the owners
of the home, Mr. and Mrs. Netrius Redfield, have been dead for more than 10 years, and their
heirs have failed to respond to requests to demolish the building.
Lamar said that county officials have said that it would be torn down, but nothing has
happened.
WORD SEEK
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Augusto, Boston, Lansing, St. Paul, Jackson,
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