Newspaper Page Text
I
PAGE 2—The Georgia Bulletin, September 2.1971
WHATS
SO SPECIAL
ABOUT A
Marietta
T oyota?
MARIETTA TOYOTA
879 Roswell Street 422-1490
Marietta, Ga.
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The RED DOG SALOON
3106 PEACHTREE ROAD, N. E.
RELIVE THE
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IN ATLANTA
FEATURING
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OWNED AND
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237-6831
MISS JANET LEWIS
At The Piano
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7286 Roswell Rd., in the North Springs Center
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TEL. 252-8045 or 252-8095
Computers
Count Church
Collections
CINCINNATI (NC) -
Volunteers used to count and
record Sunday collections,
but computers now will do
the job in a centralized
system adopted by the
Cincinnati archdiocese.
Launched Aug. 29 as a
pilot program in 11 parishes,
the system places the funds
of all participating parishes in
one bank.
Msgr. Ralph A. Asp lan,
archdiocesan treasurer, said
that the arrangement enables
participating parishes to
“invest and earn income on a
portion of their funds until
they are needed for
day-to-day operations.”
A key element in the
system is a new type of
collection envelope which is
magnetically coded for
computer use.
Archbishop Paul F.
Leibold, who approved the
new system, said that the cost
of centralizing parish funds
will be no more than that of
current collection accounting
and will make possible larger
returns while eliminating
much parish administrative
work.
Msgr. Asplan said an
additional 35 parishes will
enter the system in the next
few months, and other
parishes may join at any time.
DIRECTOR HIGHFILL AWARDS PLAQUES
Best Campers Get Them
Camp Hallinan Ends Year
By Fr. Ray Horan
Where’s the action been this summer? For about 750 disadvantaged kids from the
Athensaarea it’s been at Camp Hallinan, just up the road from downtown Athens.
Pat Mell
Veterinary Clinic
465 Pat Mell Road S.W.
Just Off Austell Road
Marietta, Ga. 30060
Wm. E. Harrison DVM
Since the fourteenth of
June, excited boys and girls
have enlivened the 85 acre
camp, and brought home
with them new experiences
from swimming to nature
hikes, from the craft lodge to
group activities such as
basketball and overnight
campouts, from building a
dam with the beavers to
sitting at the controls of a
C-131 at Lockheed, from
riding rafts at the camp lake
to riding the Log Flume at
Six Flags.
Camp Hallinan was started
back in 1968 by the
parishioners of St. Joseph’s
Church in Athens to meet a
need - a camping experience
for 6-15 year old
disadvantaged kids.
In three years the whole
city of Athens has become a
part of the Camp Hallinan
LADIEM00K!
ROOM OF CARPET
INSTALLED
NO MONEY DOWN!!!
Up to 36 Mo. to pay
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INSTALLERS
1743
Candler Rd.
DECATUR
289-3639
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WITH CARPET
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OR OVER
4 position rug
adjustment
floor coverings to deep shag rugs
experience, involving
housewives, church groups,
Model Cities, the Community
Chest, university professors,
the mayor, professional
people, police, workmen of
every skill, doctors, nurses,
and others all joining together
in a truly remarkable display
of community-wide support
for the day camp for
disadvantaged children.
This summer has been a
tremendously significant
summer for the camp. Under
the capable direction of Mr.
Brian Highfill, seminary
student from the Archdiocese
of New Orleans, the camp has
added live animals (in cages
of course) to its nature trail,
flags and poles, basketball
courts, canoes, sailboats, and
many physical improvements
as well. Central to the camp’s
life are the many teenagers
from the area who volunteer
their time and energy to
spend day after day with the
campers. Highfill,
commenting in the ATHENS
Los Angeles
Parish Gets
Poor ‘Hot Line’
LOS ANGELES (NC) - A
predominantly black parish
on this city’s south side has
started a 24-hour telephone
“hotline” with the help of a
$3,000 grant from the
Campaign for Human
Development.
Father Alexander Nardi,
pastor of the St. Martin de
DAILY NEWS, stated “We
have a paid staff of key
personnel, but without the
volunteer young people to
supplement the counselors,
art director, waterfront
director, and nature director,
we just couldn’t handle half
of the children we now have
at Camp Hallinan.”
This year the voluntary
support went way beyond
Athens, to Newington,
Connecticut. Thirty
teenagers, two priests, and
two adults, chartered a bus
from their home parish, Holy
Spirit, in Newington and
spent the last week of June
through the 4th of July
working at the camp. Led by
Father Goekler, the “kids
from Newington” (as they
came to be called in the
Athens area) put a beach in at
the camp lake and
constructed a campfire area
for overnights and special
ceremonies. They finished the
mission in Winder and
entered into projects for the
poor all over the city of
Athens. But they fell in love
with the kids at Camp
Hallinan.
The eighty-five acres are
quiet now. But plans are
already being made for the
summer of ’72. The camp
board is evaluating, dreaming,
involving, looking forward
and into the nine months of
community involvement for
opening day 1972. And ’71
was a very good year.
Center,
said
the
aim is
to
assist
who is
in
need
!, whether
the
anytime,
problem involves food,
clothing, rent, drug addiction,
alcoholism, immigration,
poverty, employment - or
anything else.
A first-Sunday-of-the-
-month collection of canned
food is expected to provide a
stockpile for hungry people.
The hotline will be staffed by
a Sister, a lay social worker
and volunteers from parish
organizations.
SATISFACTION IS MORE TRAN
A WORD HERE
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451-3866
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Chamblw. Ga.
261-5130
3097 Piedmont. N.E.
Atlanta, Ga.
NFPC Head Forsees
Celibacy Easing
CHICAGO (NC) — Father Francis Bonnike,
president of the National Federation of Priests’
Councils (NFPC), thinks it probable that the
upcoming world synod of bishops “will permit holy
orders for those who have received the sacrament of
matrimony.”
In “Priests-USA,” NFPC
monthly publication, Father
Bonnike said that if instead
the synod “says nothing to
those already ordained, or if
it does not even refer to
national episcopal
conferences the question of
optional marriage for
ordained priests, I believe
nothing is going to prevent
these two developments here
(in the United States):
“(1) Priests are going to
feel more free to marry than
they did in the past, and (2)
they are going to socialize
more frequently and openly
with women than before.
“I say this not by way of
encouraging these things to
happen, but simply because
of hard scriptural,
psychological and sociological
facts.”
He added that “any
prohibitive pronouncements
about the matter at the synod
are going to be counter-pro
ductive. The treatment by the
synod of justice and human
rights can only accentuate the
issue of the marriage rights
for priests.”
Despite his belief that
priests should have the right
to marry as he said was
expressed by St. Paul, Father
Bonnike said he hopes the
synod will first consider the
topic of world justice and
only later consider the
priesthood. Both are the
synod’s announced topics.
In synod discussion of
world justice, Father Bonnike
said he hopes for:
-A listing of specific
injustices “caused by nations
which serve their own
industrial and military
establishments first, such as
we have so often done.”
-Naming of names: “It
would be easy for everyone at
the synod to believe that the
charges of injustice were
levelled at every nation but
its own.”
-Elaboration on Christian
duties: “Too often in the past
the Christian has been told
that the economic and
political are not the proper
arenas for the Church or her
priest .. .hopefully the synod
will be a source of
reconciliation in this regard
and will spell out in greater
detail what is expected as a
genuine Christian.”
-A discussion in depth of
the relationship between !
communism-socialism and
Christianity, “as well as the
relationship between
capitalism and Christianity.”
Father Bonnike said he
believes “the synod should
praise those who have risked
their necks to fight injustice
as well as those hierarchies
and persons who have cut
themselves off from
structures which are actually
keeping oppression alive in
the world.”
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