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The Augusta News-Review July 30,1983
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Page 2
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WASHINGTON, D.C.—President Reagan recently met with
United Negro College Fund representatives and business leaders to
kick-off the UNCF’s 1983 corporate campaign.
J. Paul Sticht, left, chairman and chief executive officer of R.J.
Reynolds Industries and current chairman of the UNCF corporate
campaign, announced a $1 million contribution to the UNCF from his
company. Dr. Norman C. Francis, right, and Christopher F. Edley,
second from right, accepted a letter of endorsement of the campaign
from the president.
Francis is president of Xavier University and chairman of the
UNCF’s 42 member colleges. Edley is president and chief exective of
ficer of the UNCF.
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13-year-old escapes rape
Michael Wimbush, 24,
2503 Parkway Drive, was
arrested Monday on two
counts of burglary and
one count of attempted
rape.
A 13-year-old
Damascus Road girl told
police she was sleeping on
a couch when she heard a
noise at the back door.
She went to the door and
a man, later identified as
Wimbush, grabbed her,
threatened her with a
knife, and ordered her to
disrobe.
She said that while he
was undressing, he turned
his back to her and she
ran upstairs where her
brother and sister-in-law
were sleeping.
Wimbush ran out of
the back door, leaving his
hat on the kitchen floor.
He entered an apartment
next door, and when the
occupant questioned his
presence there, he fled
again.
Misunderstood by teachers,
students lost in society
Christian Methodist
Episcopal Church will
hear Sen. Horace E. Tate
addressed Central
Georgia Conference of
the Christian Methodist
Episcopal Church in Fort
Valiev. Fort Valley State
College Dining Room.
The senator centered
his message around the
general status of Blacks
in the State of Georgia
with special concerns
about their economic,
social, educational,
religious, and political
welfare.
Sen. Tate has voiced
concern about the general
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11
Box |Sb s
Score
by George Bailey adHKI
White, Kelly show their worth
Renee Kelly and Gerald
White have been two out
standing athletes with
outstanding high school
careers.
Last Wednesday night
in Atlanta, their high
school basketball careers
came to an end in the
Georgia High School
Association All-Star
Game. Both Renee and
Gerald demonstrated to
the fans present that their
selection to the All-Star
teams was no fluke; they
had exceptional perfor
mances.
Richmond Academy
Mayle’s idea pays off
Earlier this summer a
basketball league and
clinic were started at May
Park. The idea was the
brainstorm of Darryl
Mayle, a former standout
at Lucy Laney.
According to Mayle
high school players in the
area were invited to par
ticipate. The response
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Sen. Horace Tate
(plight of Blacks in
education, especially as it
relates to students who
have been suspended or
expelled from school.
“Students walking the
streets cannot receive a
formal education,” Tate
said. Hence they will not
and citizens of Augusta
and Richmond County
can be very proud of
these two fine young
people, for they have ex
cited crowds in the CSRA
for many years and are
deserving of this tribute.
We of the Augusta
News-Review staff want
to wish Gerald White and
Renee Kelly much success
in their future endeavors.
Renee is attending the
University of Missouri
and Gerald has cast his
lot with Auburn Univer
sity.
was overwhelming.
The players have been
divided into teams
through the forming of a
league. They receive in
struction in clinics.
Coaches are not allowed.
Mr. Mayle stated that the
program has been a suc
cess, and hopefully fans
will see better play during
the season.
be equipped to cope with
the economic, social and
political problems that
will confront them as
they become young adults
in this scientific and
technological world.
Tate has stated that
“too many children are
being lost in society
because they are not
being taught by teachers
who understand their
plight and hence, fail to
teach these children on
the level where they are.”
Tate stated that in order
to be assured that all of
Georgia’s children will be
adequately educated, the
racial ration of teachers
in our public schools
must be in the same
propotion as the racial
ratio of the pupils who at
tend schools in Georgia’s
school systems.
Tate is a longtime
educator as well as
political figure in the
State of Georgia having
served as a school prin
cipal, a science teacher, a
college professor, an
educational official in the
state’s education
association. He holds
several degrees including
the doctor of educational
administration from the
University of Kentucky.
He presently serves as a
Georgia state senator.