Page 8 Portland Observer. June 27, 1964 miianoKf J ' • ' * AME conference set in Missouri Good News The P o rtla n d Observer seeks your cooperation in working together to establish and maintain a religious page Let the community know about your church activities and events. There are ap­ proximately 22.(XX) newspa­ pers sold weekly. For more in­ form ation and advertising rates, call 283-0090 or 283- 2486 Baptists hold 29th Annual Communion The Union District Baptist Association will hold its 29th A n ­ nual Session beginning July 1st, to July 8th, 1984 The Annual Communion service, July 1st, of the 16 area Baptist Association chur­ ches, will be held at the Providence- A rle la Baptist Church, 4815 S.E. 64lh A ve., at Foster Road, one block south, approximately 15 to 20 minutes from N. Williams Ave. The Dr. O B. W illiam s will bring the Communion Message. REV. EUGENE BOYD. JR. All other services, including the 7 O.m., Monday night musical, will be held at the Vancouver Ave. 1st Bap­ tist Church. The host pastor is the Rev. Eugene Boyd, Jr. The public and all Christians are invited. There will be dynamic preaching, singing, and wonderful fellowship. The African Methodist Episcopal Church will bring together 20 to 30 thousand people from 29 countries, tc attend the 42nd Quadrennial Session of the General Conference in Kansas City, Missouri. The week­ long conference en titled , "Jesus Christ — Master D eveloper" will begin July 8th and extend through July 15, 1984. Bishop F M . Reid, Program Planner for this General Conference, has included on the agenda, all phases of church life and Black community development The General Conference is com­ prised o f the Council of Bishops, the executive head o f the Church and the ruling body; General O f ­ ficers elected by the membership; the General Board and some 1,500 delegates from the C h u rc h ’ s 18 Episcopal districts, who are official representatives o f the A .M .E . C hurch. In addition to being a m ajor religious gathering, the General Conference is one o f Black America’s most significant events, with programs and activities designed to promote sp iritu a l, educational, economic, organiza­ tional, and political development. Also on the agenda are several major cultural activities, including presentation o f a mass choir o f 1,500 voices, and the play, R ichard A lle n — A n Apostle o f Freedom Preconference activities will be held Sunday, July 7th. These ac­ tivities are sponsored by the Fifth Episcopal D is tric t— the host district— and will include a banquet featuring the Reverend Jesse L. Jackson. The African Methodist Episcopal Church has over 3 million members in the United Slates, A fric a , the Caribbean and the northern section of South Am erica. The F ifth Episcopal District is presided over by the Reverend H H a rtfo rd Brookins. The district consists of 17 slates, including H aw aii and Alaska. Sanctuary to get new elevator After 55 years of service, carrying millions o f visitors. The G rotto's elevator w ill receive a body Iran- planl and begin life anew. The Fred Meyer Charitable Trust has granted the Grotto, The National Sanctuary of Our Sorrowful Mother, $150,0(X) " fo r the purchase and installation of a new elevator.” It is the largest gift to date in the Vision o f Peace capital campaign, according to David Burkhardt, cam­ paign executive director of the $4.5 m illion appeal to restore and pre­ serve The Grotto. The elevator was built in 1929, five years after The G ro tto was dedicated. It has been in continual use since it first began operation. Providing the only public access to the upper level grounds from the lower level grounds, the elevator operates daily from 9 a.m . to 6:30 p.m . weekdays and until 7 p.m . weekends during the summer. In the winter, the hours are from 10 a m. toS p.m. The elevator requires an operator and when pilgrims want a ride, there is a bell they can ring to summon the operator. Summer is when most visitors come to The G ro tto . The 4th of July week is a peak time and usage o f the elevator is heavy. The old elevator, due to its slow speed and lim itations on load, cannot handle all o f the visitors in some peak periods. THE M O U N T OLIVET BAPTIST CHURCH ___ NE HratCr Schuyler • 2S4 1964 John H J ttb io fi M x u ii r M id M D 9 30 A M Church School 11 00 A M Congreyatvznal Worsfvp 5 00 P M V«%<>•* Service 10 00 A M Baptism Fourth Sunday 11 00 Communion Each First Sunday The American Baptist Convention. American Baptist Churches ol Oregon Lott Carey Foreign Mission Convention National. Oregon. Portland Ecum enical M inistries. A m erican Bible S o ciety. M b M Board B ALLEN TEM PLE C M E C H U R C H C orner o l 8th and S kid m o re Sunday School 9 30am Sunday Worship 11 00am Christian Youth Fellowship 6 00pm (second and fourth Sundays) Elonza J. Edwards (Pastor) We are featuring the Hour of Power A Community Firstl W h e re souls ere saved, backsliders reclaimed. heelings miracles. right her« in ou r n e ig h b o rh o o d «vary W e d n es d a y . 12 ' noon until W a celebrated our first year of services in May Public welcome Come hear rlynami« massages such as God conditions for positons and positions for conditions " ÍÍÍI ’w'l J ' 1 P r <•’ J » - ■ j EM M ANUEL TEMPLE 287 2223 Tuesday Bible Band Thursday Choir Rehearsal YOU ABE WELCOME TO W O R SH IP AT 84 N E Killingsworth • 281 0499 "A warm spirit of fellowship always" (A* 1032 N Sumner Sunday Sunday School Morning of I lie Ark ol* Safety W orship 7 30pm 7 00 p m 9 15 e m 11 15a m 6 30pm St. Vincent's loses program The St. Vincent de Paul Child Development Center offers more than just day care to its prim arily low income, minority, single parent clientele. Its services include such in­ novative programs as a remedial speech and language program, now in its ninth year. The program provides language and hearing screening and audiological assessments early enough to inter­ vene before learning problems develop. This program is only one of the services which will be cut at the St. Vincent de Paul Child Development Center the end of this month, due to a 13,8% decrease in United Way funding. The loss o f the $20,158 represented by that 13 8% cut means that the center will be forced to entirely eliminate its two-year old program (w ith two teachers and twelve children) and raise all fees 15% ($1 a day per child). Because parents' incomes are so low, direc­ tor Tom Tison speculates that as many as twenty children may have to leave the center. You are Invited to a Revival July 8-13, 1984 • 7:30 P.M . “ Consecration to Christ“ Sunday, July 8th “ Only“ 11:00 A .M .-2:30 P.M. ____ __ Robert James. Evangelist Jania« Lord Winchester married John Aaron Bradford Saturday, Juna 23rd, at the Northeast Portland home of her mother, Corina Winchester. The Reverend George Hawkins officiated. Lewis Loren Winchester is the father of the bride. John Arthur and Joe Anna Bradford are the parents of the groom. (Photo: Richard J. Brown) C h u te n ° ’ C b 0 ,t rch« phone- Contact Bill Hunter: 8:00 a m. 4:30 p.m. M F 249 5511. After 6:00 call 775 3055 Leo Brown 289 1961 Witness for peace persists despite setbacks by Robert Lothian The war being waged against Nicaragua by right-wing rebels financed by the C IA has displaced I5O,(MX) Nicaraguans, according to the leader o f a religious develop­ ment organization speaking in Port­ land recently. "These people are suffering, losing their homes, their crops, their livestock, and then being thrown in­ to new communities,” said Gustavo P arajo n , a Nicaraguan Baptist minister and head of C E P A D , the Protestant Com m ittee for Development Aid. P arajon said his organization, which represents 62 church denominations in Nicaragua, has helped 30,(XX) victims o f the war with housing, food, clothing, training and setting up agricultural co-ops. The committee, which was set up Io aid victims of the 1972 earth­ quake, receives much of its financial aid from church organizations in the U.S. and Europe. The government does what it can but is hard-pressed due to the war, which is escalating, he said. A force of 600 contras recently surrounded and occupied the northern town of Ocatal, he said, in one of the largest attacks so far. They burned grain silos, a lumber m ill, construction equipm ent, and they killed two workers at a radio station which they also burned, he said. P arajon said the health clinics and workers are targeted by the contras, as are schools. "They killed GUSTAVOPARAJON (Photo: Richard J. Brown) one of out health workers on the 18th of D ecem b er," he said. " In our program all o f the health workers on the border live in fear." American Christians in the W it­ ness for Peace program helped clean up after the contra attack at Ocatal, and (heir help was much ap­ preciated, he said. Witness for Peace members live in areas threatened by contras, acting as a shield between the contras and Nicaraguans, and Parajon says the strategy works. " T h e area where they are has not been attacked.” he said. In spite of the war, Nicaragua has made progress in public health since the downfall of the Somoza regime, according to Parajon " N o polio has been reported in the last two years," he said, because every child age five and under has been in- noculated Innoculations against measles, diplheria and tetanus have also been given, he said. Parajon said that education and land are two basics for improved health. The country’s illiteracy rate was reduced from 60% to l2 % during the national literacy crusade, he said, and many Nicaraguans who could never a ffo rd land are benefiting from the revolutionary land reform program . They are given small plots of land confiscated from the huge estates o f the Somozas and other rich families. " Y o u can be pushing pills and shots, but if you don’t have the land to grow the food, you're not really doing much," he said. One health problem that will be expensive and that will likely take a long time to sove is making more pure water available, especially ii rural areas, he said "Nicaragua does not have the resources to develop a sophisticated water delivery system,” he said, and it will likely be many years before pure water, as we know it in the U.S., is a reality there, he said. Many Nicaraguans suffer from gastro­ intestinal infections caused by water-borne parasites Dehydration caused by diarrhea contributes to infant mortality. Nicaragua finds it hard to devote necessary resources to public health when it must defend itself against the contras, he said. " It depends on what you people do in the United Slates." Parajon said that Methodists in Oregon and Idaho helped feed 2(X),(XX) Nicaraguans after the revolution through their con­ tributions to (he Church World Ser­ vices Organization, and they have been aiding Nicaragua in other ways for seven years. Parajon lived in the U .S. for 13 years and received a M aster's in Public H ealth from H arvard in 1968. He said that most Nicaraguans have the impression that Americans know little about Central America. "O u r message," he said, "is that people here in the U nited States hear us and do something to stop the aggression of the U .S . government against Nicaragua." Listen to the Prove God Now Miracle Crusade Ministry each Sunday morning at 8 A .M . on K VAN Radio 1560 A M on the dial w ith Evangelist W. Pritchett