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PAGE 8—The Georgia Bulletin, January 20,1977
NEWS VIEW 1 King Celebration In Atlanta—
THE ARCHDIOCESAN
D E P A R TMENT O F
EDUCATION is buzzing in
preparation of Catholic
Schools Week, scheduled for
February 6 through 12.
Governor Busbee will sign the
official Proclamation on
January 25. Be sure and read
our February 3 issue for all
the details.
BECAUSE THE NEW
RECTORY will face
Peachtree Street, Sacred
Heart parish has been
assigned a new street number
and zip code. The new
address, effective
immediately, is 353 Peachtree
St., NE, Atlanta 30308.
VOLUNTEERS ARE
NEEDED to staff the nursery
at Christ the King during the
Mision Catolica, February
7-11. If you could help one
evening, call Sister Barbara at
881-6571 days, or 321-4994
evenings.
THE DIABETES
ASSOCIATION OF
ATLANTA will sponsor its
first monthly Diet
Management Course of the
year at the new Atlanta
Diabetes Center, 1365
Peachtree St., Suite 22, at 7
p.m., January 25 and 26. A
fee of $5 is charged one
member or a family for the
five-hour course. Call
881-1959 for further
information.
ST. MICHAEL’S
CHRISTIAN EDUCATION
CENTER in Gainesville needs
old copies of GUIDE POST
magazine for a report. If you
have copies to donate or loan,
give them a call at 534-3068.
EVERY WEDNESDAY
MORNING a group of eager
seniors pile on the St. Pius
school bus and head for the
Coca Cola building on North
Avenue where they
participate in weekly
seminars presented by
representatives of the various
departments which operate
the international corporation.
Advertising, public relations,
insurance, corporate law,
corporate taxes and
international operations are
but some of the functions of
a large corporation that are
being explained to the
students.
DID YOU KNOW THAT
Our Lady of Lourdes School
received a face-lift when
about 50 Cursillistas gave a
Saturday to paint all the
classrooms and corridors?
FATHER RICHARD
KIERAN headed north to
Gainesville and conducted an
afternoon of recollection for
the ladies of St. Michael’s
recently.
IF YOU HAVE A
ROSARY that needs repair,
the gentleman to contact is
Francis Winkel, 40 St. Clair
St., Port Sanilac, Michigan,
48469. He does this work
free, but does ask for a
stamped, self-addressed
envelope. He also accepts
donations of religious items,
such as medals and pictures,
which he distributes at no
cost to missions throughout
the United States.
FOUR ST. THOMAS THE
APOSTLE young people were
among the winners of the
Tri-Star Basketball Contest
sponsored by the Smyrna
Optimists and Smyrna
Athletic Association. Shelly
Lyday won first place in the
nine-year-olds competition;
Pat Douthitt won second
place in the same; Dana
Tollett won second place in
the eight-year-old girls
competition, and Erik
First Friday Hears McNally
Edward L. McNally, Chief,
Construction and Valuation
Section of the Veterans
Administration Regional
Office in Atlanta, will be the
guest speaker at the First
Edward L. McNally
Friday Club on Feb. 4 at St.
Joseph’s Infirmary. Mass will
be at noon followed by the
luncheon meeting. All
Catholic laymen are
encouraged to attend this
meeting.
McNally grew up in New
Bedford, Mass., and joined
th-e VA shortly after
graduating from Harvard
University with an AB
Degree. During World War II,
he served in the 15th Air
Force as a bombardier. He
was shot down during a
bombing mission over Austria
and was a prisoner of war in
Stalag Luft I in Germany
until released by the Russians
at the close of the war.
Now a confirmed
Southerner, he and his wife
Marcella and three of their six
children live in Stone
Mountain. They worship at
Corpus Christi Catholic
Church.
CLASSIFIEDS
MAGICAL ENTERTAINMENT
for Children’s Birthday Parties.
Call TASMA 458-5217.
FOR RENT - S.W. Atlanta Club
has spacious hall including
kitchen. Reasonable rates. For
information cajl 996-1492 after 6
p.m.
EXTRA INCOME SEMINARS
Learn how to develop
permanent second income. For
information on seminars call
761-9919.
ALTERATIONS: Men and
women’s clothes. Call Tina
874-7927.
NO CREDIT?? BAD CREDIT??
Buy here. Pay here. Weekly
payments, Daniel Auto Sales,
1156 Memorial Dr., S.E.,
681-2355.
AMELIA ISLAND, FLORIDA
Ocean-front, 3 Br., furnished
condominium. Tennis, golf,
pool. Private fishing pier.
Rental day, week or month or
short term lease. Low rates.
Call 636-5688.
FOR RENT - 2 bedroom
beachhouse. Neptune Beach,
Fla. $30.00 per day or
$180.00 per week. Call
921-0854.
PAINTING - Interior, exterior.
(Doraville-Chamblee area) For
estimate, call 457-5316.
UPHOLSTERING for Homes and
Business Antiques a Speciality.
344-2201 or 627-9287.
BEAUTIFUL CONDOMINIUM
overlooking 6,000 acre lake at
Bear Paw resort in North Carolina
mountains. 125 miles from
Atlanta. Completely furnished.
Cable TV, stone fireplace. For
rent by day, week or month.
Accommodates seven. Call Stu
Overton 934-3498.
PIANO TUNING
12 years as concert tuner.
Museum restoration. Regulations.
Pipe organ work, U.S. and
Europe. Electronic organ service
afso. Service contracts available.
Call R.T. Staton, 876-7703.
Williams won third place in
the seven-year-old boys
competition.
THE CANCER HOME IS
ALWAYS IN NEED of old
white sheets and shirts to be
used as bandages for the
patients. Clean out your
closets and linen chests and
donate to a most worthy
cause.
THE GEORGIA HEART
ASSOCIATION’S 1977 Heart
Fund Kickoff Breakfast will
be held Tuesday, February 1,
at 8:30 a.m. in the Magnolia
Room of Rich’s downtown
store. This will mark the
beginning of fund-raising and
educational activites for
Heart Month in February.
The 1977 Heart Fund goal
for the state is $1,414,700.
The five-county metro area
goal is $602,000.
THIS HAS BEEN A
MONTH OF COLDS and
sniffles at the Catholic
Center. Among those ailing
have been Archbishop
Donnellan; Chancellor Father
Jerry Hardy; Social Services
Director Father Jacob
Bollmer, and as far as the
BULLETIN staff goes . . .
ahhhhhCHOOO!
IF YOU’RE WONDER
ING if the David McGill who
wrote the “What Was Jesus’
Message?” on last week’s
Know Your Faith page is the
same Dave McGill whose
column has returned to the
BULLETIN editorial page,
the answer is yes. We’ll
probably be seeing more
McGill articles on KYF in the
future. And welcome back to
the BULLETIN, Dave.
CONGRATULATIONS
AND BEST WISHES to Bob
Krick, choir Director of Our
Lady of the Assumption
parish. Bob is one of the
leaders of the Atlanta Boy
Choir and this week travelled
with them to the
inauguration in Washington.
ADRIAN WILKINSON IS
NUMBER ONE student
academically at St. Joseph’s
School in Marietta. So say the
Optimist Club which gave the
award - and we say it, too.
Weil done!
ALL CATHOLIC
BUSINESSMEN, including
those who are retired, are
reminded that the First
Friday Club hosts monthly
meetings at St. Joseph’s
Hospital, 265 Ivy Street, the
first Friday of the month.
For details, call D.I. Arroyo
at 255-1078.
Prayer For Our
(government
(On the occasion of the Inauguration of the 39th President of the
United States, Jimmy Carter, January 20, 1977, special permission has
been given this newspaper by THE CHRISTOPHERS to reproduce this
prayer).
Father, a handful of courageous men in a moment of danger,
pledged their lives, fortunes and honor to proclaim a nation
whose citizens’ rights were based not on the nod of king or
ruler, but on creation at your hands. Grant to our
administration a ministry of service to all, not the few; to our
Congress the upholding of public interest, not merely a welter
of competing private claims; to our judiciary a wisdom in
interpreting law, grounded in principle, not expediency.
Send your spirit on our people, that they may become active
in the affairs of government, that they may not confuse dissent
for disloyalty, that they may use their mighty power for the
healing of differences among nations with justice and mercy and
love.
March Leader Invites Carter
WASHINGTON (NC) -
Leaders of the March for Life
have invited President-elect
Jimmy Carter to demonstrate
his willingness to meet with
grass roots people by
addressing the Jan. 22 march
marking the fourth
anniversary of the Supreme
Court’s decision striking
down most state laws against
abortion.
According to Nellie J.
Gray, president of the March
for Life, “Jimmy Carter has
said he is interested in
meeting with the people . . .
On Jan. 22, we’ll have a large
number of people. This
would be an appropriate time
for him to begin meeting with
the people.”
While making the request
to Carter, Miss Gray, a
Washington attorney, pledged
that the March for Life will
do nothing to mar the new
president’s inauguration two
days prior to the march.*
“As a candidate, Carter
met many expressions of
pro-life sentiment,” she
noted, adding: “But we told
him the March for Life will
not be sponsoring any
activities on Jan. 20.”
The pro-life organization
could have stationed pickets
along the inaugural parade
route, Miss Gray said. “But
we chose not to - we decided
to focus all our attention on
our own day.”
According to Miss Gray,
no answer has yet come from
the President-elect.
Her comments came at a
press conference at the
National Press Club staged by
march officials.
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(Continued from page 1)
the millions of tasks that have
to be done and the fifteen
million persons crying out to
be given a chance would be
brought together through a
Full Employment plan.
Later in the day, Clarke
urged that Americans work
for the prevention of crime
by providing jobs for youth.
For first offenders he sees
diversion before incarceration
by offering jobs or training as
an alternative for jail
sentences. Clarke decried the
involuntary servitude of those
who work in prisons for no
recompense instead of being
meaningfully, employed in
work release programs.
Attention was called to
the inequity of employment
within the prison system.
Most judges, guards, and
probation officers are white;
most prisoners in the US
come from minority groups.
Mamie Reese, chairperson
of Georgia’s pardon and
parole board, reported that
7 0 per cent of those
incarcerated in Georgia are
black, their average age about
30, with a fourth or fifth
grade education, and with no
marketable skills. There are
11,000 persons in jails and
prisons in Georgia, the
highest rate per capita in the
US; another 33,000 persons
are on parole, she said.
On Friday, January 14, an
I n d u stry / Labor/Management
breakfast was held at the
Martin Luther King
Community Center, UAW
President Leonard Woodstock
expressed confidence in the
Carter administration to work
toward a full employment
economy for this nation.
Woodstock said Carter’s
economic package is not a
program of full employment,
but the stimulus the country
needs at the present time to
get the economy moving.
The breakfast was
followed by a tour of the
complex and a press
conference. Friday evening a
public rally was held at the
Center to gather support for
the drive for jobs.
Dr. Benjamin Mays,
president of Morehouse
College and the president of
the Atlanta Board of
Education, was awarded the
MLK Non-violence Peace
Prize at the Ecumenical
Service At Ebenezer Baptist
Chruch on Saturday morning.
Senator Ted Kennedy and
Honorable Bert Lance were
among the principal speakers
at this ceremony. Both
praised the humanitarian
efforts of King and urged
continued attempts at
fulfilling his dream of
equality, brotherhood,
justice, and peace.
After a brief ceremony of
the dedication of the
permanent entombment of
Martin Luther King at the
Center for Social Change,
hundreds of persons
representing many
Colony Square Hotel. Several
groups of entertainers
performed.
The concluding
ceremonies of the event were
held in an Interfaith Service
on Sunday evening from 5
until 8 p.m. at the Big Bethel
A,M.E. Church. The principal
speaker for this occasion was
the Reverand Ben L. Hooks,
executive-director designate
of the NAACP. Archbishop
Donnellan led the Litany of
Commemoration of Martin
Luther King at this
celebration.
ON
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