Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 2—The Georgia Bulletin, July 3,1980
■FATHER JACK DRUDING-
Ministers To World’s Largest
Father Jack Druding
has just been transferred.
He has gone from
Hapeville to Jonesboro. In
reality what this means to
the Atlanta Assistant
Pastor is that he has gone
from the northern end of
Atlanta’s new airport to
the southern end. He is
still heavily involved with
the world’s biggest
Aerodrome, in fact as of
now he is the Catholic
Chaplain for the gigantic
new 600 million dollar
Hartsfield International
Terminal.
“Since I was stationed
at Hapeville in St. John’s”
says Father Jack
“Monsignor Jerry Hardy
asked me to represent the
Archdiocese on the
Airport Chaplain’s
Committee. I was glad to
do so and it sure has been
interesting. The numbers
are staggering” Father
Druding is exactly right.
A cool million people
will pass through the
worlds largest Airport
each week when it opens
on schedule in September.
The nervous Airport
management are admitting
to a minimum 60 million
folks each year.
But Father Jack’s
involvement began with a
call from the Mayor’s
Office to Don Newby at
the Christian Council of
Metropolitan Atlanta. “It
was the feeling at City Hall
that the Lord should be a
part of something this big,
remembers Father Druding
“and we truly agreed with
his Honor” A committee
of Christians and Jews was
'ormed and it was decided
that the new Hartsfield
should have a chapel
where travel weary
commuters could quietly
meditate. The
FATHER JACK DRUDING
stands outside the almost completed
terminal building at the new Atlanta
Hartsfield Airport. In the
background is Don Newby,
Executive Director of Atlanta’s
Christian Council.
denominations agreed and
the plan for a chapel is
being completed at a total
cost of $30,000 dollars.
“But jit’s not just the
chappl’’ says the
enthusiastic Father
Druding “it’s the program
that will go along with it.
We intend to have a
trained ministerial
counseller in the chapel
office and now we are
attempting to involve the
local Airport churches of
all denominations to
participate in the Airport
ministery. Our goal is to
have one hundred
churches participate.”
Father Druding along
with his Christian and
Jewish friends have
watched the granite giant
arise out of the red clay of
Clayton County. They
have been amazed at the
enormous distances
involved for passengers in
the terminal. They have
riden those classey subway
PREPARING TO MAKE the new
Airport Chapel a reality are 1. to r.
Don Newby of the Christian Council,
Father Jack Druding, Marvin
Schpeiser
Federation
Mykel.
of the Atlanta Jewish
and legal advisor Mike
cars and floated on the
new sidewalk people
movers. They viewed the
miracle of seeing the two
and a half million square
feet of space come
together so beautifully.
And at 240 dollars
per square foot, the total
cost of this big beauty is
$600 million dollars.
“For such a big
airport,” says Father Jack
“the chapel will be terribly
small. For example if we
want to celebrate Mass out
there the little space
would never do. But if
that should arise I have a
deal with one of the
Airlines that will allow us
to use one of the large
waiting rooms” Obviously,
like those who conceived
the Airport concept,
Father Druding is thinking
ahead.
September 21 is the
date set aside for this new
Atlanta first to open.
Word had it that a certain
Georgian President
presently running for
re-election will be on hand
for the great occasion.
Maybe so, but even the
President will be unable to
— steal the spotlight on that
g day. It will belong to the
o new William B. Hartsfield
a Airport and the men who
| watched it arise down
5 there South of Atlanta in
* the land of Scarlett’s Tara.
* Among those men will
be that little ministerial
Committee which will
include Father Jack
Druding representing the
Catholics of N orth
Georgia.
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“Learn, Lead, Follow”
BY THEA JARVIS
“Start with God,”
suggested Archbishop
Thomas Donnellan to the
women of the Archdiocese
gathered for the Council
of Catholic Women’s June
Leadership Conference.
The theme of the
conference was “How to
Learn, Lead, and Follow,”
and the Archbishop’s
words set the tone for the
day’s activities.
Mrs. Fleeta Williams,
conference chairman,
welcomed the
membership, urging those
present not to be “one of
God’s unemployed.”
ACCW’s organizational
services chairman, Mrs.
Ruth Maguire, was the
keynote speaker. Focusing
on the need for
communication between
all branches of the ACCW,
Mrs. Maguire noted:
“Communication is vital
and should continually
flow in a circular motion.
The parish council leader
and her associates,
national and diocesan
leadership, and leaders of
other organizations should
share information that is
of value to all. This type
of sharing uncovers new
ideas that enrich the
Council and the Church at
large.”
On a lighter note, Mrs.
Maguire mentioned the
family obligations of an
ACCW leader. “Your
family will accept peanut
butter sandwiches four
nights running,” she
quipped, “but not
crabbiness.” For Mrs.
Maguire, family comes
first.
Afternoon workshops
at the conference included
international, community
and family affairs,
organizational services and
Church community.
Participants had an
opportunity to examine
and discuss drug
education, aging, mental
health, the refugee issue,
and the American Bishops’
Pastoral Plan for the
Family, among other
topics.
The Archdiocesan
Council of Catholic
Women is an “umbrella”
for all women’s groups in
the Archdiocese and is a
part of the National
Council of Catholic
Women. It is geared
toward service in the
Church and the
community in which it
finds itself.
Because of the open
and inclusive nature of its
structure, each parish and
each woman in the
Archdiocese is
automatically a member of
the ACCW.
More information on
ACCW chapters can be
obtained by contacting
local parishes.
MRS. RUTH MAGUIRE, Organizational
Services Chairman for the Archdiocesan Council
of Catholic Women, was the keynote speaker at
the ACCW’s June leadership conference, “How to
Learn, Lead, and Follow.”
Coin Dates Shroud?
(NC News Service)
Jesuit Father Francis L.
Filas, a theology professor
at Loyola University,
Chicago, has studied
markings detected on
photographs of the shroud
of Turin and found them
similar to those on a coin
issued between 29 and 32
A.D., during Pilate’s
regime.
In a 7,000-word
copyrighted report
released June 29, Father
Filas said the chances were
“astronomical” that
markings could have
resulted from deceptive
patterns resulting from the
weave of the shroud cloth
or from plate screens used
in printing photos.
“To have these four
letters appear from the
Greek alphabet in proper
order by chance already
amounts to one chance in
eight million,” Father
Filas said. The four letters
are part of the Greek
inscription, “of Tiberius
Caesar,” on the coins of
Pontius Pilate. A tiny
astrologer’s staff was also
detected.
The imprint was found
over the right eye of the
“man of the shroud” and
fits the supposition that a
coin had been placed on
the eyes of the dead man
to keep them closed,
Father Filas said.
Worship Hailed A “Miracle”
NC NEWS SERVICE
Lutheran clergymen participating in joint
Catholic-Lutheran worship services in New York City and
Louisville, Ky., to mark the 450th anniversary of the
Augsburg Confession, a basic Lutheran statement of faith,
hailed the events as “a miracle.”
“It’s a minor miracle,” said the Rev. William H.
Lazareth, a Lutheran Church in America theologian, at
the service attended June 22 by a standing-room-only
crowd of about 5,000 in New York’s St. Patrick’s
Cathedral.
And the Rev. Trygve Skarsten, professor of church
history at Trinity Lutheran Seminary in Columbus, Ohio,
told about 300 persons attending an ecumenical prayer
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service on the same day in Louisville’s Cathedral of the
Assumption, “We are witnesses to a miracle. We are
experiencing a miracle of reconciliation.”
The services commemorated the presentation of tne
confession by Lutheran princes and theologians to Holy
Roman Emperor Charles V, a Catholic, at the Diet of
Augsburg on June 25,1530. The confession presented the
Lutheran movement as compatible with membership in
the Catholic Church. Catholic rejection of it led to the
separate denomination existence of the Lutheran Church.
The service in the neo-Gothic St. Patrick’s included
singing of Martin Luther’s hymn, “A Mighty Fortress Is
Our God,” Gospel readings, a confession of sins and
reaffirmation of baptismal vows.
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CHURCH NIGHT
With the Atlanta Chiefs
Saturday, July 1?
Atlanta-Fulton
County Stadium
7:30 p.m.
Chiefs
vs.
San Jose
Come on out to see professional
soccer on the Chiefs economics 1
Family Plan Ticket Two adults and
two students in the general
admission section for only $10 00
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Bring a picnic dinner with
family and friends And enjoy
a pleasant tailgate party.
CHURCH NIGHT 1
July 12
Atlanta Chiefs vs. San Jose
7:30 p m.
Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium
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