Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 2 — The Georgia Bulletin, January 21, 1971
Peachtree-Phipps Shell Service Center
Open 24 Hours
Shell Tires - Road Service
Sun Engine Diagnosis Air Conditioning Service
3t>3TPeacmree Road N E. 997 9n9n
Corner Peachtree & Roxboro Road
Television - Radio - Phonograph
Clairmont - Skyland T.V.
4010 Buford Hwy.
Motorola & RCA - All makes of TV
Repairs - Sales - Service
636-5909
RBM
MOTORS
■
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
VOLKSWAGEN
dealer
m
N. Expressway, Griffin, Ga. 288-2771
BROTHERS TWO
Steak House and Lounge
Atlanta’s Newest and Most
Exciting Restaurant
has openings in the following positions day
or evening shift:
Maitre d’ Hotel
Hostesses
Bartenders
Cocktail Waitresses
Waiters
Waitresses
Salad Department
Cooks
Bus "Boys”
Porters
Insurance and Health benefits.
Call Vince Sarni. 892-1877.
Must apply in Person,
9 a.m.-4:3(1 p.m.
1175 Peachtree, N.E.
1 00 Colony Square
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Discount Fabrics
Custom Made Upholstery & Draperies
Complete Line Of Fabrics At Discount Prices
All Types Of Alterations
Custom Made Accessories *
Silks-Crepes-Woolens- Upholstery
F abrics-Drapery Fabrics-
Notions-Trims
Double Knits-60” To 72” Wide
100% Polyester $4.98 To $5.98 A Yard
31 Peachtree Place East-West.
Between The Peachtrees
North-South. . .Between 9th & 10th St.
Close By The Catholic Center
Designer Service At
Reasonable Rates! 873-2757
Go Carts Mini-Bike
Personnel Handling Equipment
Built & Serviced By
Hamilton Bros. Mfg.
2175 Piedmont Rd. N. E. 876-2330
(Open Evenings)
immy
WlV beauty
salon
2759 Chamblee
Tucker Road
451 -3060
Marietta & North Cobb County's
COMPLETE SERVICE
FUNERAL HOME
24 Hour
Ambulance
Service
Call 427-8447
• No Closing Hours
* Off Street Parking
• We Honor All Ins.
• Our Prices Are
• Kitchen Facilities Very Reasonable
Norman Medford Funeral Home
1699 Canton Rd. N.E.
Smyrnans
‘Care’ For
T eenagers
BY MARY STAGG
Facing the issues and
problems of todays teens
squarely is the object of
C.A.R.E. (Continuing Adult
Religious Education at St.
Thomas The Apostle
Church).
The teen of today is
concerned, disturbed and
touched by the problems of
humanity in a fast changing
world.
C.A.R.E. bridges the
“Communication Gap”
between parent and teen.
Religious Theory and
adolescent communication
skills are taught.
Under the guidance of
Sisters Damian, Barbara, and
Elizabeth, interested parents
in ever growing numbers
gather and exchange ideas..
Through greater knowledge
of God and his never ending
love for humanity, each
comes to realize that he is a
bit player in the “Play of
Life”,
C.A.R.E. meets each
Monday 8-10 p.m. and
Tuesday 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
The nursery is staffed, and
those attending are invited to
bring a friend or neighbor.
C.A.R.E. is coordinated
with the classes taught in
CCD. resulting in happier
home life, under the direction
and love of God.
St. Thomas also features a
young peoples group, which
meets once a week at
different locations. Those
graduated from high school
are invited to attend and
enjoy Christian Fellowship
with others in this age group.
For details, phone 436-7677.
The Apostles of Good Will
send cards to the sick, and
visit when possible. The St.
Peter Channel Guild plans
various events for the
Children of the Parish. St.
Thomas is reaching out.
The Youth of Saint
Thomas C.C.D. classes are
attending a retreat at Vogel
State Park from Friday until
Sunday.
Jacques
RESTAURANT [FRANCAIS
3033 PEACHTREE
233-9210
Catholic Press Features
NORTH EASTON, Mass.
(CPF) — A newsletter to help
the elderly feed
themselves-economically and
nu tritiously--has been
launched by the Food
Research Center for Catholic
Institutions here.
Called The Golden Nugget,
the newsletter is beginning as
a quarterly and will be sent
free of charge to anyone
wishing to receive it,
according to its editor,
Brother Herman E. Zaccarelli,
C.S.C.
Brother Herman, who
founded the Food Research
Center-located on the
campus of Stonehill
College-in 1958 and has since
become an internationally-
-recognized expert on food
planning, describes The
Golden Nugget newsletter as
“the first of its kind.”
He said that although
many elderly people are cared
for in special homes,
“millions live alone in
proverty and must survive on
a very small income. The
F'ood Research Center is
publishing the newsletter to
assist the elderly living alone
to plan, purchase and prepare
foods within a modest
budget.”
For example, Brother
Herman explained, The
Golden Nugget will regularly
offer recipes for the service of
one and two people in such a
way that all the food will be
utilized and not wasted.
Issue Number One
contains, among other items,
a “Menu Guide” that lists
“Economical Meat Dishes”
and includes: Oven roast, pot
roast, Swiss steak, chopped
beef, Swedish meat balls,
broiled chicken and roast leg
of lamb.
A preview of upcoming
topics to be covered in The
Golden Nugget even includes
a “Gout Diet.”
Brother Herman, who has
conducted food seminars for
many religious institutions
throughout the country and
was cited as one of the ten
most notable people in food
service by Food Service
magazine, said The Golden
Nugget is “a direct response
to recommendations made by
both the President’s Task
Force on Aging and the
recent White House
Conference on Food,
Nutrition and Health.”
Insufficient income is
merely one of the several
causes of poor nutrition
among the elderly, Brother
: Herman added, citing the
* Task Force report that part
of the problem is also “the
lonely older person who can
afford an adequate diet but
does not eat properly, the
older person who finds going
to the store too great a
burden, the older person who
is nutritionally ignorant.”
Consequently, the first
issue of The Golden Nugget
includes such diet tips as:
“Large meals should be
avoided. It is better to eat
smaller quantities of food
more frequently.”
“Decrease the use of
sweets and fats in your daily
diet.”
Attention Homeowners
For Speedy Plumbing Repairs And Plumbing Supplies
Call 993-3993 (Night Or Day)
General Mechanical Corp.
Raymond Chatham, Owner 8555 Roswell Rd.
THE LOVETT SCHOOL
announces
ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS
Saturday, February 6,1971
8:30 A.M.
Administration Building
One new class section will be added in Grade 6 and one in Grade 8. Applicants
will be selected on the bases of qualifications without regard to race, religion
or national origin. New students will be admitted to other grades only as vacancies
occur. Applicants for admission Nursery School, Kindergarten and Grade 1 are
tested by individual appointment after the above date.
For information or applications
Telephone 237-3358
DEAN FRED H. LOVEDAY
Co-ordinator of Admissions
4075 Paces Ferry Road, N.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30327
Ignatius dKouse
6 7 oo m iverside [Drive. 11 W.
[Riverside [Drive
JTt/a nta. Cjeorg
ta 3o3qS
QUIET WEEK-ENDS Directed
Scripture reading and ex
planations for today.
February 12-14
March 26 - 28
For information write,
or phone 255-0503
The elderly with small
food budgets are advised, in
another section of the first
issue of The Golden Nugget:
“Store brands-with no
money devoted to costly
promotion-are frequently
top quality and cost far less
than nationally-advertised
names.”
“It costs a company more
to package a quantity (such
as cereal) in many small
boxes than in one large
box-and you will pay more,
too.”
Brother Herman also plans
to include in future issues
non-food topics, such as
by-lined articles by
physicians, gerontologists,
social workers and elderly
persons active in
senior-citizen programs and
even a write-in column for
the exchange of ideas,
household hints, and
problem-solving tips offered
by the elderly.
“We’ll include any topics
geared to the enrichment of
lives often suffering from a
poverty of stimulus in the
declining years,” Brother
Herman said.
He and staffers at the Food
Research Center are currently
compiling lists of the nation’s
elderly who live alone. The
Golden Nugget will be sent to
the elderly via direct mail and
bulk distribution to local
community groups serving
the elderly.
Now a four-page quarterly,
the newsletter will increase in
size and come out every other
month if Federal funds for
such an expansion can be
obtained, Brother Hqrman
said.
Meanwhile, copies of The
Golden Nugget can be
obtained fay writing to the
Food Research Center for
Catholic Institutions, North
Easton, Mass., 02356.
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141 CLAIRMONT AVE.
Decatur
373-3676
Free Parking
in rear
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Phone PO 6-2741
32B7 STEWART AVE.
HAPEVILLE. SA.
Catholic Schools
Stronger, Better
CHICAGO (NC) — The American Catholic school
system is not in danger of financial collapse but is
getting stronger and better, according to a Methodist
seminary professor.
NUNS TAKE ON BANDITS — A group of nuns takes on slot marchines during an outing by the
Eastern Suburbs Leagues Club. The confrontation with the slot machines was part of the club’s
treat for 170 nuns from schools, hospitals and convalescent homes. (NC PHOTO)
Old Advised Free On Food
“There is no objective
evidence that Catholic
parochial schools are in
financial difficulties,” says
Dr. John M. Swomley Jr.,
professor of social ethics and
philosophy of religion at the
Saint Paul School of
Theology in Kansas City, Mo.
In the cover story in the
Jan. 13 issue of Christian
Century, interdenominational
weekly published here, Dr.
Swomley quoted various
Catholic educational leaders
as denying that the parochial
school system might close
down without public
aid--including Cardinal
Terence Cooke of New York
and the priests in charge of
several major diocesan school
systems where some schools
have been closed or
consolidated.
The article noted that
consolidated schools “appear
in the statistics as closed
schools and therefore create
the impression that the whole
Catholic school system is in
crisis.”
“The parochial school
system is in no danger of
collapse but is merely
sloughing off inefficient
units,” Dr. Swomley stated.
“Such units are most often
found in rural areas with
declining population, or in
the inner city where black
non-Catholics have replaced
the white Roman Catholics
who fled to the suburbs.”
A radical decline in the
national birth rate in the
1960’s included a decline in
Catholic births, he said, so
fewer Catholic children-a 14
percent decrease in the last
five years-are
school.
entering
In addition, Catholics no
longer “consider themselves
an embattled minority”
needing separate schools to
maintain their faith. Those
factors, plus a Catholic
population shift to the
suburbs, have given church
school systems a chance to
consolidate and opt for fewer
children in each class, Dr.
Swomley concluded.
He quoted Father C.
Albert Koob, president of the
National Catholic
Educational Association, as
saying that the number of
teachers employed in
Catholic schools actually
increased in the years
19 63-69, while pupil
enrollment declined.
Z+t ~
\
fiouse of
h Alusic
C ^u.lt>r arisen
C
Pianos and Organs
6125 Roswell Road, N.R.
Atlanta, Georgia 30328
SANDY SPRINGS
SHOPPING CENTER
BUCKHEAD
LENOX
OFFICE SUPPLY INC
275 BUCKHEAD
AVE. N.E.
261-5313 '
pilgrimages
for 1971
LOURDES FATIMA VATICAN CITY
IRON CURTAIN COUNTRIES THE HOLY
THE SHRINES OF EURO
tOUND
IRELAND GREECE LONi
TORREMOLINOS TANG1 1
CASABLANC,
Catholic Travel Office
1730 Rhode Island Avenue, N. W. • Washington, D. C. 20036
AG
•CATHOLIC TRAVEL OFFICE
1730 Rhode Island Ave., N. W.
Washington, D. C. 20036 (202) 293-2277
Mr. Hodgson:
Please send me your free, detailed, illustrated booklet
about Catholic Travel Office's “world-covering” pilgrimages.
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