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RAILROAD RETIREES D. Douglas Barnard, 10th Saturday at Bethel A.M.E. Church to discuss future
District Congressman (left) met with the Railroad Retirees benefits for retirees.
Business seminar to be held at South Carolina State
ORANGEBURG, S.C.
A free seminar
designed to help minority
business owners to
become certified to offer
a product or service to the
GAE settles out of court
The Georgia
Association of Educators
has completed an out of
court settlement with the
Emanuel County Board
of Education which
provides for the
promotion of a Black
GAE administrator
member to the position of
assistant superintendent
and eliminated the need
for continued civil rights
litigation in the Southern
District Federal Court.
D.D. Boston contacted
the association after
having been overlooked
for promotion by the
school system on several
occasions. GAE filed suit
on his behalf in the
Southern District Federal
Court in Swainsboro, Ga.
Tony Brown’s Journal
Grass roots Blacks stop the bus
It’s back to school for
the 30,000 students in the
Norfolk, Va., public
school system, but the
new school year marks
the renewed revolt of
poor inner-city Black
parents against busing for
racial integration and a
return to Black social
class warfare.
This red-hot issue of to
bus or not to bus has the
Blacks choosing sides
between the pro-busing
traditional Black middle
class established leader
ship (the Coalition for
Quality Public
Education) and a spon
taneous organization of
parents who oppose con
tinued cross-town busing
for elementary school
children, the Parental In
volvement Network
(PIN).
This conflict represen
ts, perhaps, the niost in
tense Black-on-Black
class struggle in the
nation and a symbol of a
possible erosion of sup
port for a desegregation
remedy considered a
major civil rights
achievement.
While opinion poll
results show that only 38
percent of Blacks in the
country favor busing for
integration, the Black
middle-class leadership in
Norfolk is solidly behind
the idea.
O/NE/Nor TAKEOUTS
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425 E. Boundary
BREAKFAST HOURS
6:00-10:30a.m. Mon-Sat >
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federal government will
be held Oct. 27 in the
New Building Conference
Room on the South
Carolina State College
campus.
In the out of court set
tlement, Boston was
promoted from assistant
principal of Swainsboro
High School to the
position of assistant
superintendent for Ad
ministrative Services. In
his new position, he will
be a 12 month employee,
receive 10 vacation days
each year in addition to
normal school holidays,
receive an increase in
salary, and be eligible for
additional increases
based upon his length of
service and certification
as applied to the State
Salary Schedule as well as
possible local supplemen
ts.
Finally, the out of
court settlement provided
Journalist Tony Brown
was invited to Norfolk by
the PIN parents and
found, in addition to the
classic busing debate, a
rebellion of poor grass
roots Blacks against their
middle-class leadership.
Brown returns to this
Virginia community to
profile this revolt on his
top-rate television series.
He compare this
grass-roots movement to
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Everett Adams,
assistant district director
for minority small
business and capital
ownership development,
will present the program.
$5,000 in cash for legal
fees incurred by the
Associaton on Boston’s
behalf prior to the set
tlement.
According to GAE
President Carolyn Lee,
“We are proud to be able
to help GAE members
such as Mr. Boston. GAE
has a long history of
protecting the em
ployment and civil rights
of Georgia educators. We
are especially pleased that
the Emanuel County
School Board settled this
case on an amicable
basis. Most school related
problems can be worked
out if the parties involved
will sit and reason
together.”
Rosa Parks’ refusal to
surrender her seat on a
bus to a white man and
Alabama Jim Crow laws.
She resisted because her
feet were tired, but her
innocent bravery fueled
the famous Montgomery
bus boycott and the civil
rights movement of the
60s
The show will be seen
'in this area on WCES-20
at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25.
He is responsible for cer
tifying companies who
are involved in the
manufacturing, construc
tion, accounting,
management consulting,
janitorial and food ser-
SR* * s
BR
Yni’ve been comparing the new cars,
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grossing sales from
$250,000 to $23,000,000.
For additional infor
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registration, call 534-
6894.
The Augusta News-Review October 22,1983
Woman wounded in robbery
Linda Dell Schlink,
28, 3866 Old Savannah
Road, the cashier on
duty, said that a man
with a stocky build,
wearing a blue shirt and
blue jeans entered the
Zippy Mart at Highway
56 and Tobacco Road
and paid $1.66 for gas.
The man then told her
that he had given her $2.
He then became hostile
and went to the rear of
the store, she said.
A few minutes later,
the man returned to the
counter and produced a
knife and demanded all
the money in the cash
register. Ms. Schlink then
said that while she was
Yerby finishes another novel
From page 1
it necessary?”
Three of his
books “Foxes of
Harrow,’’ “Golden
Hawk” and ‘‘Saracen
Blade”—were made into
films.
“Numbers one, two
and three on the list Os
the worst movies of all
times,” he says. “They
Support the Black Press
getting the money out of
the register, the man
reached over the counter
and stabbed her on the
right side of the chin. The
man took the money and
left the store. Ms. Schlink
stated that he was
traveling north on Old
Savannah Road in a small
green car.
Later, police traveling
on Bobby Jones Ex
pressway noticed a car
traveling in an irratic
manner going in the op
posite direction that fit
the description given
earlier by Ms. Schlink.
The police pursued the
car. The driver failed to
did me a bit of harm. I
had nothing to do with
the scripts, which were
awful.”
To make a living at
writing, Yerby says, you
have to make too many
compromises.
“One of the problems
a writer has, is that he is
almost always subjected
to the judgment of people
who don’t know what
Page 3
stop, but later pulled over
at the Bobby Jones and
Wrightsboro Road exit.
The officers then got
out and approached the
green 1974 Mercury
Capri. Donald Hardin
McClellan, 23, 3841 Old
Savannah Road, got out
of the car in which police
found a total of $153 in
cash and a 4-inch blade
pocket knife in the front
seat.
McClellan was iden
tified as the armed robber
by Ms. Schlink. He was
arrested and charged with
armed robbery and
aggravated assault with a
deadly weapon.
they’re talking about,”
he says.
Yet he gives the im
pression, despite a slight
heart attack several years
ago, that there is nothing
he would rather do.
He has just finished his
latest work, tentatively
called, “A Case for Dan
ny Dolan.”
(From the Atlanta Constitution)