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Four hundred Atlantans gathered at the Dinkler Plaza Hotel last
week to witness the presentation of the National Conference of Christians and
Jews Silver Plaque to John A. Sibley, Edgar J. Forio, and Richard H. Rich
for their outstanding civic accomplishments and contributions to improved
inter-group relations.
Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan offered the invocation and special
music was presented by the Courtland Voices, a selected group from the Glee
Club of St. Josephs High School under the direction of Sister Mary
Maddala. The Reverend John W. Teahy, superintendent of Catholic schools was
seated with the honored guests at the dais.
James F. Oates, Jr., president of the Equitable Life Assurance
Society, New York City, was the featured speaker of the evening. Speaking on
the businessmans responsibilities of citizenship, Oates said: Are
businessman properly concerned with results other than immediate dollar
profits? A moments reflection is convincing that long term continuing
profits can be achieved only where the enterprise is found to be acceptable by
the public which it serves and where the society in which it operates enjoys
health, education, economic strength, and political and religious
freedom.
Present day managers are concerned not only with short-term
profits, but also, and more importantly, with maintenance of a social,
political, and economic climate which assures long term business success.
Good men will seek to serve the social concerns of their
environment and particularly seek to do so if they are wise business
administrators.
Dinner Chairman James V. Carmichael, president of Scripto, Inc.,
lauded those who had gathered as a living witness of our determination to
build an ever-greater city, the strength of which is not only in the altitude
of its buildings, the latitude of its commerce, but also in the attitudes of
its citizens.
In bringing greetings from the city of Atlanta, Vice-mayor Sam
Massell, Jr. declared, We have come to the time when we must recognize
that there is only one reasonable response to those minorities who are
demanding of us that we stop discriminating against themand that is
simply to stop discriminating. |