The Augusta news-review. (Augusta, Ga.) 1972-1985, October 22, 1983, Page Page 3, Image 3

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H ■MHM | .A M^L Z/ WWB IWK I K aV , as * I 1 MB B > F'WM I / a „•* > Is Jb jK» L > ’’ *iWi mb MBgOsBKt? 1 ■'. -JW'-T f "W 1 ' KB *»b w |ffe M; ■■ .■ ” JH W< wBBH> ' ® i jRfeL mBSm-''*' 3mt jjgpr wßtjfe i|| J Er Kt ' .x3bfEbHb F - B 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 I 724-6282 I 425 E. Boundary BREAKFAST HOURS 6:00-10:30a.m. Mon-Sat > Mason Boler, Jr. - Owner ii M J 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 RED STAR LUNCH 533 9th Street Augusta, Georgia 724-2068 Every day Buffet, $5, all-you-can-eat and tea refills. Breakfast Special: 2 eggs, sausage patty, grits, toast & jelly and colfee with refills, $2.10. Shrimp, French fries, coleslaw, $3.99. Whole chicken, $5.95 with potato salad or French fries. 12” Large Combination Pizza $3.99. Many other specials! Open 24 hours to serve you. VACANCY Hotel Accommodations at $lO a day Special Weekly Rates! 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, but what about new car loans? C&S presents the smarter way to buyacar Buying a car can be a complicated Compare for yourself process. Compare our Simple Interest You not only have to decide Auto Loan with any other loan, what you want, you have to decide an j y Ourse }f these questions: how you re going to pay for it. j s s i m p] e interest? Now, C&S has the smarter way. jj o j g et p a y men t holidays? The C&S Simple Interest Are there pre-payment Auto Loan penalties? . i Do I save on interest if I pay Interest Auto Loan you pay for the loan off early 01 pay tn the money you borrow only for as a ' an “' a ■, deduction ong as you use i. from the cost for automatic You save interest if you pay r ? more than the minimum amount P , roc n tt; M due each month or pay off your l h ( en ' come b ? the C&S offlce , j r j j nearest you. loan early. 7 T ,. What’s more, if you bank with to any C&S and let us automatically de- C&S loan duct your car payment from your representative checking account, there will Be We’ll give you all the details in additional savings off the cost of a simple, understandable way. your loan. And, we’ll do our best to get you And we’ve got a special pay- an answer the same day. The ment holiday feature that lets you Citizens and Southern Banks in skip a payment now and then. Georgia. Members FDIC. vices for companies grossing sales from $250,000 to $23,000,000. For additional infor mation and pre 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)