The Georgia bulletin (Atlanta) 1963-current, July 03, 1980, Image 2

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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. A&P S FINEST QUALITY ASSORTED FLAVORS vo* «•« BIG BEAUTIFUL LUSCIOUS SUGAR SWEET SMOKED I ANN PACE STRAW- HAMS I ICECREAM BERRIES :69«k99« -•I 4 * MARKS' STYLE 8UIK "7(lC Sliced Bacon . i. /a ~ * C#LL0N CTN mm Blueberries .. s 1 29 <AE FA nAf SWECT& JUICY THE PRIDE OF FLORIDA GROWERS k i HALVES 1 SAVE 11 30* ?l ANN PAGE WHITE ® Paper nnC Plates "y 513 0IXIE SPRING MEDLEY 16 02 I^OC Cold Cups "v 69 DIXIE SPUING MEDLEY 9 INCH (4 QG Paper Plates 1 0IXIE SPRING MEDLEY 9 02 M Cold Cups ift* 1 DIXIE SPRING MEDLEY flflC 6 Inch Bowls o™ s “a 0IXIE SPRING MEDLEY 7 02 i (4 OQ Cold Cups o7, G ao ^ I JANE PARKER HOT OOG OR Hamburger Buns 2™ #51 COUNTRY IiME FR02FN Lemonade C CANS 1)9 COUNTRY TIME FROZEN g% £ Lemonade Vi 69 KRAFT _ —_ . 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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 OUT-OF-TOWN NEWSPAPERS Atlanta’s largest selection of newspapers and magazines. Give us a call to see if we have your favorites. If you haven’t seen our new store yet come and Browse Atlanta's Largest Book Store ©xfori Tel: 262-3332 2345 Peachtree Road, N. E., Atlanta, Ga. 30305 in the Peachtree Battle Shopping Center 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. GEORGIA BULLETIN ADS BRING RESULTS!! Roofing - Aluminum Gutters Painting & Repairs By James D. Coleman Co. 21 Years Serving Atlanta Area We Do It Right, The First Time 948 0646 MAZDA is a winner... Take a look today. 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