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THE ii
NEWS-REVIEW H
: SPORTS ||
Henri Freeman ][
•••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CATS COULDN’T RON
Lucy Laney’s Wildcats took the measure of the Josey Eagles
last Saturday night, but not before the lighter and undermanned
crosstown rival had let it be known that they were respectable
competition. The Wildcats won 27-12 and now know what must
be done before they face Region 4AAA opponents.
There had been those who felt that Dupree’s “horses” would
rip Josey’s line to threads. This situation, however, never
developed for the lighter Eagles’ line rose to the occasion and
threw back many of the thrusts of the highly touted Laney backs.
With the passing not yet developed and the running during
most of the game stymied by the fast-moving Josey line, Laney
was never in possession of a commanding lead.
Hank Daggett’s satisfaction from the game, short of a victory,
had to be the play of his defense. At no time were they pushed
around by the beefy Laney front.
If the Josey offense comes around soon, especially with Hubert
Ware, Victor Golphin and John Brown doing the ball-toting, the
Eagles will have some interesting evenings in store for the likes of
Statesboro High, Thomson High and Glenn Hills.
JOSEY AT STATESBORO
The T.W. Josey Eagles having lost their opening game to the
Lucy Laney Wildcats, journey to Statesboro, Georgia this week to
meet the ever-powerful Statesboro High team. Coach Hank
Daggett hopes to have his Josey offense well oiled in his first
attempt to get even with the Statesboro team for the defeat
suffered last year in their first meeting. (
The Josey defensive unit seemed to have been far ahead of the
offensive unit last week when the team went down to defeat at
the hands of the Laney Wildcats. Coach Daggett and his assistants
have been working hard this week to polish up the Eagles
offense, hoping that the stubborn defense that was evident in the
Laney game will continue when the team tackles Statesboro
tomorrow night.
LANEY SEEKS 2nd WIN AT SANDERSVILLE
David Dupree takes his Lucy Laney Wildcats to Sandersville,
Georgia tomorrow night to meet Washington County High
School. The Wildcats will be seeking victory number two after
having stumbled to its first 1971 win last week over the Josey
Eagles.
Dupree was not too satisfied with the offensive show put on by
his team in the Josey game. As a result he has been working quite
a bit with the offensive unit this week in hopes of being ready for
the Washington County team.
Augusta Stockade Boxers
Want Return Bouts
The boxing team from
Richmond County Prison split
in the return go with fighters
from the Wayne County
Prison. Charles Wilson and
Jackie Murray scored victories
for the Augusta team. Wilson
(145 lbs.) scored a TKO over
Robert Feilding (145) of
Wayne County and Murray
downed Charles Brown in a
TKO win.
Kenny Hearns (154) of
Augusta was awarded a draw
with Leon Futch (160) of the
Brunswick boxing team. A
return bout between Hearns
and Futch is in the making.
Kenny Hearns stated, “I can
beat him.”
Jimmy Usfy of the
Richmond County Prison lost
via a TKO to Walker Devoe.
Usry wants a return bout. The
referee stopped the fight in the
second round. The prison
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boxing team is trained and
coached by Mr. Gene Mann
and Mr. Emory Giles, both
former pro fighters.
“Usry was not hurt,” said Gene
Mann, “He was just covering
up and the ref. stopped the
fight.” “The Augusta team did
very well,” said Emory Giles,
We are arranging for return
bouts.”
In the fifth bout, Emory
Williams (176) of the
Richmond County Prison lost
on a TKO to George Clark
(162) of the Brunswick boxing
team.
Coach Mann said that he
plans to have return bouts in
about four weeks at the
Gracewood Community
Center. The plans for this card
sound very good. Tickets for
these bouts will be on sale at
Evon-Rose Leathercrafts, 215
9th Street, 724-3352.
CAC Meets
Monday
The Community Action
Committee, advisory group for
the CSRA Economic
Opportunity Authority, will
hold a meeting at 8 p.m. on
Monday, September 20, at
1325 Greene Street.
According to John M.
Smith, Jr., CAC chairman,
members and visitors will hear
an overall report of special
anti-poverty projects being
funded in this area through the
Economic Opportunity
Authority. During past CAC
meetings, additional reports
have been made on
neighborhood center activities,
rural programs, and private
efforts.
Pitts -
Graduation
Speaker
Augusta Area Technical
School, White Road Branch,
will hold its 7th annual
graduation exercises Tuesday,
September 21, 1971 at 8:00
p.m. in the T.W. Josey
Gymnatorium. The guest
speaker for the occasion will be
Dr. Lucius H. Pitts. Dr. Pitts is
the ninth and first Black
president of Paine College and
also a graduate of Paine
College.
Chicago Friends
Help Paine
Mr. Harold Freedman, a
Chicago contractor and friend
of Paine College/ recently
contributed SIOOO.OO in
unrestricted funds to the
College.
Mr. Freedman’s wife, Helen,
traveled to Augusta this month
to visit Paine, along with
another friend of the College,
Mrs. Adam Ruch, also of
Chicago. Helen Freedman was
formerly the Director of
Development at Roosevelt
University in Chicago.
Both Mrs. Freedman and
Mrs. Ruch have known and
worked on educational projects
with Dr. Pitts for several years.
ln June, when Dr. Pitts was
preparing to leave Miles College
in Birmingham, Alabama, to
return to Augusta, the
Freedmans hosted a party in
his honor at their Chicago
home.
The Freedman’s plan a
return visit to Augusta in the
near future. Mr. Freedman will
be visiting the college as a
private consultant on
construction.
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OUTDOORS
BY DEAN WOHLGEMUTH
GEORGIA GAME AND
FISH COMMISSION
Public Dove Fields
Are Critical Need
ATLANTA (PRN) - Labor
Day weekend, as usual, got the
fall hunting season off with
several hundred thousand
bangs. Many a millet field was
surrounded by an army of
camouflage-clad gunners,
doing their best to put some
sort of a dent in the very large
dove population.
The dove has become
Georgia’s most popular game
bird, as well as being probably
the most popular all around
the country. There’s good
reason for this, primarily that
the dove is so available. Being
very prolific, the dove can
withstand very heavy hunting
pressure, and still thrive. He’s
mobile, being a migratory
bird, so he travels around from
state to state.
On top of that, he’s
somewhat local, too, in that
he can nest just about
anywhere, even in large cities.
For example, most of the
birds taken in our early season
coo with a soft southern
drawl, inherited from their
home state of Georgia.
The dove is hard to hit, but
offers so many chances, that
‘ he provides an abundance of
CHAPLAIN
Cont’d from page 3
He said: “I am recognized as
a professional; a part of a team
along with doctors, dentists,
and other professional men. We
are here to provide the men
with someone who is
competent in almost every
aspect of their lives.”
Working towards solving the
wide range of problems that
face soldiers was another
reason for the satisfaction with
their work, the chaplains said.
Chaplain Foley said:
“Sometimes in a small parish,
you get only a few problems
over and over again. The work
CSRA BUSINESS LEAGUE
MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
Volunteer workers for the
CSRA Business League will be
coming to see you soon.
They’ll want you to join an
organization that was founded
in 1900 to promote small
businessmen, by offering them
leadership, information and
service by expressing their
views, helping to expand or
establish their businesses and
helping to secure contracts for
small businessmen.
In your moment of decision
join in “Getting it Together.”
sport, and nearly everyone can
get a few. Those few who limit
out regularly can really lay
claim to being top notch wing
shots. Or else they have such
fabulous hunting grounds, that
they can shoot and shoot until
they get their birds.
While there is an abundance
of doves and dove shooting in
Georgia, there is in reality a
grave shortage of places for
the average hunter to go.
Unless you own some land, or
know someone who does>you
may have to look long and
hard, and still may not find a
place to go. When you do, you
may have to pay a premium
price for the right to hunt. It
costs a landowner to plant and
manage a dove field, and he
must make a profit from his
land.
I was happy to see that one
of our forest industries got
into the act this year to help
to relieve some of the pressure
on the tremendous need for
public dove fields. Georgia
becomes almost routine. In the
Army, you get almost every
problem imaginable. It’s a
challenge.”
Also, the similar age group
represented by most soldiers
helps a chaplain establish a
dialogue with the men,
according to Chaplain Pierce.
“The men you work with
are basically blocked in one age
group,” he said. “You can find
things that are relevant and
work from there.”
Most of the problems they
deal with are personal rather
than spiritual, the chaplains
said, but they sometimes
reflect deeper troubles.
“Personal problems are
often an indication that the
soldier is groping for something
deeper,” Chaplain Kirkland
said. “The true problem comes
out after you talk to the man
for awhile.”
For Chaplain Pierce, there is
no difference between a
personal and a spiritual
problem. “All problems are
religious,” he said, “because, as
a Christian, I can not help but
view thae total man.”
The search for a relationship
with God on a personal level is
one of the major themes of
Aquarian Age Christianity.
And working towards this
theme is also good for the
chaplains, they said.
“I’m very, very happy,”
Chaplain Pierce said. “Dealing
with troops on a
person-to-person basis has
made my ministry much more
profitable.”
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ALEXANDER'S
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308 So. Main St.
NEW ELLENTON S.C.
OPEN ON SUNDAY
kraft operated a field on
opening day near Forsyth, and
had no trouble in getting all
the hunters the field could
stand.
Os course, you can run into
unforeseen problems in
operating a dove field. This
tract, for example, had an
abundance of doves before
season, but the birds were
none to plentiful when the
hunters got there. There was
steady shooting most of the
afternoon, however. I
personally looked in on this
one myself.
The fact that there were so
many hunters here emphasized
to me the great need for more
such fields. I knew it already,
however, because each year in
August and September, my
phone stays busy with
hundreds and hundreds of
calls from persons wanting to
know where they can hunt. I
try to collect a list of as many
dove fields as possible each
year, but seldom get more
than one or two. These few
always are filled quickly.
It’s surprising to me how far
people are willing to travel,
and how much they’re willing
to pay to hunt doves. But
then, it doesn’t require a lot of
physical exertion to hunt a
dove, nor do you have to be
an expert. I’ve seen dove fields
with such hunters as women,
little children, and even
persons confined to wheel
chairs, as well as plenty of
seasoned veterans of many a
hunt. Equipment may range
from a cheap (or what used to
be mail-order) single shots to
ultra-expensive engraved
shotguns with gold inlays and
triggers. And all types of guns
to get the birds as long as
theyYe pointed in the right
direction.
Yes, dove hunting may even
grow more popular than it
now is. I’m sure it will. I just
hope there will be enough
fields for everyone.
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AUTOMATIC
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MUFFLER SHOP
470 BROAD ST.
Ph. 722-5994
Specialized in body repair,
panting.
Luther Paint & Body Shop
416 East Boundary’
Phone 722-0333
Southside Karmart
1890 Gordon Hwy. 738-7738
69 Olds $2399
67 Buick 225 $1799
68 Ambassador .... $1299
67 Dodge $ 999
65 Comet $ 799
64 falcon $ 599
63 Valianf $ 399
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COLMAN
VOLKSWAGEN INC.
2415 Millodgoville Rd.
738-2561
©Serving Augusta
Since 1958
Barber Shops
REESE’S
BARBER SHOP
Phone 722-9132
1259 ■ 12th Street
Support building fund
drive. Send all donations
payable to the NAACP.
NAACP, P.O. Box 2800,
Sand Hill Branch, Central
Ave. & Troupe Street,
Augusta, Ga. 30904
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Barber Shops
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122954 - 12th St.
Phone 724-9341
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CALL 724-6717 or
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733-3611
1264 DRUID PARK AYE.
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and Laundry
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1514 - 12th ST
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Phone 798-5826
After Hours 863-8949
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722 8838
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