Newspaper Page Text
THE FOREST PARK NEWS, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1965
PAGE 8
Charles Driebe Joins
Wallace Law Firm
Albert B. Wallace and Howard
P. Wallace have announced
Charles J. Driebe has joined
their firm as a partner. The
firin will continue the general
practice of law under the name
of Wallace and Wallace at 157
S McDonough St. in Jonesboro.
Mr. Driebe was formerly law
assistant to Judge Homer C.
Eberhardt of the Georgia Court
of Appeals. He has been active
in his profession. He was pre
sident of the Younger Lawyers’
Section of the State Bar of
Georgia during 1963 and 1964.
This group was selected the
outstanding Junior Bar organi
zation In the nation by the.
American Bar Association. Ini
addition, he was a member of I
the first board of governors!
of the State Bar of Georgia, J
member of the board of go- 1
vernors of the Georgia Bar I
Association, and the youngest
member of the committee which'
drafted the rules for the
state Bar. He Is now serving
as vice-chairman of the State
Bar’s publications committee
and has also written articles
for legal publishers. On the
national level, he Is a member
of the executive council of the
Junior Bar Conference of the
American Bar Association, re
presenting Georgia, Florida,
Alabama and Mississippi.
Mr. Driebe is one of the or
ganizers and Immediate past
president of the Young Demo
crats of Fulton County. During
his tenure, the club had as its
guests such national figures as
Sen. Ted Kennedy and Luci
Baines Johnson. He is now ge
neral counsel for the Young
Democrats of Georgia and pre
viously served as executive di- i
rector of the state organization.
He also sat on the board of
directors of the Fulton County
Democratic Party.
Mtn. View Kiwanis
Hold Ladies’ Night
Eleven Klwanlans, seven Kl
wanl-annes and one guest of the
Kiwanis Club of Mountain View
attended the Kiwanis Divisional
Rally at Griffin March 16 host
ed by the Griffin club. Repre- ;
sentlng Mountain View were
President Harold and Vivian
Dennard, Immediate past pre
sident Jewell and Hilda Nash,
vice-president Harry Thomas,
Jess and Frances Waller, Ver
non and Edna Ashmore, Robert
and Louise Staines, Joe and Pat
sy Gallman and guest, Mrs.
Myrtis McCollum; Ed and Lilia
Pitts, Jim Chavis, Jack Bowen j
and Charles Sheppard.
The dinner meeting was held I
I • »ll '
Marietta-Adairsville
1-75 Location Builds
Steam on Both Sides
Controversy over the loca
tion of Interstate 75 between
Marietta and Adairsville Is
building up steam. Local par
tisans are gathering suppor
ters, and Highway Department
engineers are gathering statis
tics in preparation for a fu
ture public hearing on the
route’s location.
From the Highway Depart
ment’s viewpoint, the solution
of the 1-75 location controver
sy is a far from simple one.
A total of five State and Fe
deral agencies have been in
volved, and at one time six
possible alternate locations
were under study.
Efforts are now concentrated
on gathering Information on two
possible alternate locationsand
a third line, which largely fol
lows existing four-lane U.S.
41 and which will be used as
a basis for comparison of the
two alternate locations.
The three study lines begin
on Georgia 5 northeast of
Marietta and end at Georgia
140 east of Adairsville. The
base study line, “Line A”, fol
lows the existing four-lane from
just northwest of Georgia 5 to
a 'point northeast of Carters
ville, then runs north and north
west on new location.
The so-called “western
Forest Park Names
Merit System Board
At the Mayor and Council
meeting held recently, it was
announced that the required
Legislative action creating a
"Merit System” for the City
of Forest Park was passed
by the Legislature and was
officially a part of the Char
ter
Mayor Bateman officially
appointed the Personnel
I |
lYi
CHARLES DRIEBE
Mr. Driebe received his LLB
degree, Magna Cum Laude,
from University of Georgia,
where he was first honor gra
duate in tils class. He Is a
member of Phi Beta Kappa,
Phi Kappa Phi, Blue Key Ho
norary Fraternity, Phi Delta
Phi Legal Fraternity, Gridiron
Society, was editor-in-chief of
the Georgia Bar Journal and
was named to the collegiate
Who’s Who.
He practiced law In Rome,
Ga., for two years and was a
member of the faculty at the
Institute of Law and Govern
ment at University of Georgia
before joining Judge Eberhardt.
He Is also an army veteran.
Mr. Driebe Is married to the
former Norma Jac Mobley of
Fort Gaines, Ga., and they have
four children, Charles Jr.,B
years, Mitchell, 7 years, Anne,
4, and Elizabeth, 6 months.
in the Elks club dining hall,
where Georgia District Go
vernor Ed Hammond deliver
ed a magnificent address.
Tuesday March 23 a group
from the South College Park
club were guests of the Moun
tain View club. The visitors
were headed by Lamar North
cutt, past president, who was
the speaker.
Tuesday March 30 the Moun- !
tain View club will observe I
Ladles’ Night at 7 p.m., in the j
new Youtli Center house. The i
program will be an instrumen- ।
tai duo concert by Messrs.
John and Bill Ness, natives ।
of Scotland now living In Hape- j
vllle.
I
route”, “Line C”, also fol
lows existing U.S. 41 for about ,
2 1/2 miles on the south end,
then moves to a new location
west of the four-lane, passing
west of Cartersville and cros- '
sing four-lane U.S. 411 just i
west of its junction with U.S.
41. It crosses U.S. 41 at Clear
Lake and runs east of 41 to
Georgia 140.
The eastern line, “Line F”,
is on new location all the way. j
It swings east of Kennesaw
and Acworth, crosses Allatoona I
Lake between Red Top Moun
tain and G. W. Carver State
Parks, crosses U.S. 411 about
three miles southwest of the
center of White, and ends at
the common terminus of. all
three lines on Ga. 140.
The studies being made by the
Highway Department are very
complex and comprehensive. 1
They include: construction
costs of roadway on all three
lines, cost of structures, costs
of utility relocations, costs
of rights of way, maintenance
costs, detailed traffic assign
ment studies on affected
“feeder” or connecting routes
as well as on the study routes,
and so-called “benefit cost ra
tio” or road-user cost studies
on both the main lines and the
many feeder routes.
Board for the City of Forest
Park. Said Board consists of
the following:
Name, length of term in
office:
Brenard Murphy, five
years (temporary chair
man); Bill T. Smith, four
years: William Fleming, Sr.,
three years: Lynn Wells, two
years; Charles Tucker, one
year.
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MAIN STREET, FOREST PARK 366 5440