Wednesday, December 1, 2010

153rd ANNUAL COMMUNICATION And ELECTION OF OFFICERS

Thanks to the brethren and their families that helped make the November
14th GA CHIP event at the Marcus Jewish Community Center Atlanta a success.

December 2010 Fulton Fellowcraft

Monday, November 1, 2010

Past Masters' Night

From the SeniorWarden

November 2010 Fellowcraft

Brethren,
Since its inception, the Georgia Child
Identification Program (GA CHIP) has
been enthusiastically supported by Fulton
Lodge. The Lodge donated a computer
system in 2007 as part of our
150th anniversary celebration. We
sponsored one of the first events to be
held in a Lodge in 2008. In the same
year, two brothers donated a second
computer system.
Two of our brothers have been very active
in GA CHIP. WB Ross Laver is
currently the State Director. WB Frank
Vexler has served as Associate State Director
for Logistics and State Director
for Special Projects.
Fulton Lodge is sponsoring another GA
CHIP event in conjunction with the PJ
Library Story Telling Festival at the
Marcus Jewish Community Center
Atlanta (MJCCA) at Zaban Park. This
is an opportunity to demonstrate the
Lodge’s commitment to community service.
This event draws hundreds of children.
We need a large number of volunteers.
The details are as follows:
Date: Sunday, November 14, 2010
Set-up time: 9:00 AM
Event time: 10:00 AM –1:00 PM
Location: MJCCA Zaban Park
5342 Tilly Mill Road
Dunwoody, GA 30338
We need volunteers to begin setting up
at 9:00 AM. Volunteers are also
needed to help greet families, assist
with the paperwork, control the flow
through the event, and operate the
computer stations. You don’t have to
be a computer expert. Your children
and grandchildren (high school age or
older) can assist with the computer stations.
I want to thank my wife, Lara, who
has been working with the staff at
MJCCA to help coordinate this event.


Jeff Krieger
SeniorWarden

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Fulton Fellowcraft March 2010

From the East

Brethren:

Our line officers worked diligently through their preparation for the conferral of the Entered Apprentice degree on February 17th. I want to give particular thanks to our Junior Warden, Bro. Michael Hickey, who showed his willingness to go the extra mile in preparing himself for his initial opportunity to sit in the East (well done, Michael.)


Bro. Joe Ellis of Grant Park Lodge presented his “Green Dragon” or “Boston Tea Party” Lecture at our February 3
rd communication. Upcoming speakers for our March meetings are WB Wayne Glass giving his lecture on the Masonic Stations and W.B. Gary Leazer, PhD. Discussing the Biblical Origins in F & AM. Please make every effort to be in attendance for their presentations on March 3rd and 17th respectively.


As mentioned in our prior edition, the cost to the Lodge for publishing and mailing the Fellowcraft newsletter is $2,500 annually. I would again ask that you contact the Fellow Craft committee at fellowcraft@fultonlodge216.com
to receive future publications via E-mail. Doing so is a service to our Lodge.

The Fulton Fellow Craft newsletter is now presented by a committee consisting of your Senior Warden, Junior Warden, Junior Deacon, Senior Steward and Junior Steward. WB Ross Laver and WB Randy Hazan also lend their support and guidance. I would again ask you to thank WB Laver for his service to Fulton Lodge over the past years in seeing that the Fellow Craft was published in a timely and professional manner.


We will soon begin preparing for the Fellowcraft degree to be conferred on April 21
st. Any brother who has an interest in presenting a lecture, charge or in conducting a candidate please contact Bro. Randy Hazan at your earliest convenience.


Please put April 10
th on your calendar with this reading. Fulton Lodge will be meeting at the Masonic Home in Macon, Georgia on this date for the dedication of the pavilion raised in memoriam of our dear departed WB Sheldon Little. This is a 5th District Masonic Workday. Brethren, those able, please arrive at 8am to contribute a few hours for the benefit of our Children’s Home. The dedication will follow our workday at 11:30am. Grand Master Leonard Buffington and his officers will be in attendance. MWB Al Garner will be presiding as Grand Orator at the ceremony.

Lastly, please consider Grand Master Buffington’s call to action in this edition of the Fellow Craft for the Lightyear fundraising program. Service is available nationwide to the friends, family and Freemasons of Georgia. Please remember that this cellular service is offered on the Verizon and/or Sprint networks, with billing and customer service from Lightyear. A portion of your monthly bill will be donated to the Georgia Masonic Charities Foundation Inc. in support of our GACHIP program and the Masonic Home of Georgia.


Thank you again for all that you do. I look forward to seeing you in Lodge.


Fraternally.


Dean G. Watts, Worshipful Master



To View The Complete Fellowcraft Click Here


Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Fulton Fellowcraft February 2010

From the East

I hope this note finds you all well and working diligently
towards making your New Year a prosperous
time.
I was pleased to see so many of our members in
attendance at the first night of the Lodge of Instruction
for the 5th District. Unfortunately Fulton Lodge’s
regular communication dates conflict with two of the
chosen nights for this annual event, which runs each
Wednesday evening through February 3rd.
Our Budget & Finance Committee met on January
13th and the budget was approved January 20th.
There are a few items of concern that I want to bring
to your attention on the 2010 budget.
For a number of reasons Fulton Lodge is carrying
over a deficit from last year’s budget into 2010. We
are therefore looking for every opportunity to reduce
cost. I would therefore present the following for your
consideration.
Annual Dues
Most of our brethren submit their dues upon receipt
of invoice. Twenty‐two (22) of our brethren did
not pay their dues through the end of 2009. This
represents a $1,650 shortfall in our current budget. I
call upon every member of Fulton Lodge who has not
paid his 2010 dues to kindly remit your payment upon
reading this notice (with my thanks). I would also like
to take this opportunity to thank all of our Past Masters,
our Emeritus members, our 50‐Year Members
and our Perpetual Members for their annual contributions
to Fulton Lodge, as we depend upon your generosity
and cannot maintain a balanced budget without
your gifts.
Cost of the Fellow Craft
It is of great concern that the annual budget for
our newsletter is $2,500, particularly considering that
100% of this cost goes towards the printing and mailing
of the publication (our Editor and others contribute
their time and talent to its production). I now call
upon each of you to send an E‐mail to
“FellowCraft@FultonLodge216.com” requesting that
you receive future editions to your personal E‐mail
account. Doing so offers a great savings to our Lodge
and is the right thing to do for our environment
(thank you again).
Our line officers are preparing for our first EA Degree
of the year at our second meeting in February. If
you have an interest in participating by offering a lecture
or serving as a conductor please contact WB
Randy Hazan.

Thank you again for all that you do. I look forward
to seeing you in Lodge.

Dean G. Watts, Worshipful Master

To View the Complete Fellowcraft Click Here

The Not-So-Secrets of the Temple


Brother Ross Laver, PM forwarded this recent article from The New York Times.  The original can be found here:  http://bit.ly/8MTXED

January 8, 2010
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

The Not-So-Secrets of the Temple



Pittsburgh
IN the final days of a year dominated by repeated — and mostly unheeded — calls for full disclosure on the part of Wall Street banks, pharmaceutical companies, the N.F.L. and any number of other organizations, transparency arrived out of the blue from an unlikely quarter if ever there was one: the Freemasons.
Thanks go not to Dan Brown, whose latest novel, “The Lost Symbol,” focuses on the notoriously mysterious fraternal order, but to Tom Sturgeon, a career law-enforcement officer, who was installed as Right Worshipful Grand Master for Pennsylvania on Dec. 28. His ceremony, in a break with centuries-old Masonic tradition, was held at a convention center here and open to the public. “We need to make Freemasonry more contemporary,” Mr. Sturgeon told me, “to make it reflect 2010, not 1910 — or 1810.”
Nonetheless, the audience of about 1,200 people seemed to consist primarily of members and their families with a sizeable contingent of Masonic dignitaries from 13 other states and Canada. Many had come in full regalia, sporting tailcoats, purple moire or black velvet “collars,” satin aprons embroidered with esoteric symbols, white gloves, swords — all telegraphing distinctions of rank legible only to insiders.
Freemasonry in America is organized by state — there is no higher governing body — and Pennsylvania is the largest Masonic jurisdiction in the world, with a spectacular temple in Philadelphia, completed in 1873, as its headquarters. Mr. Sturgeon was sworn in reciting the same oath, or “obligation,” Benjamin Franklin recited 275 years ago when he took the same office.
If the ceremony at the convention center was any indication, it appears that not much has changed in the interim, although the torches around the altar are now electric and the musical repertoire has been updated to include “Beer Barrel Polka” and “No Man Is an Island.” Membership has been declining (currently 120,000 in Pennsylvania, down from 260,000 when Mr. Sturgeon joined in 1965) and the median age has been steadily climbing (now 68).
“Brethren, ladies and friends,” Mr. Sturgeon greeted the audience for his installation. “The 21st-century Masonic Renaissance starts today!”
The “renaissance” is Mr. Sturgeon’s agenda for reform, jump-starting a membership drive with a new strategy that permits “selective invitation,” replacing the old “To be one, ask one” policy that forbade Masons to proselytize. He also decreed a lifetime dues exemption for any Mason over 60 who brings in two new members under 30. Like other Pennsylvania grand masters before him, Mr. Sturgeon designed a necktie, to be distributed as a token of appreciation. Typically, the ties are a vehicle for the Masonic insignia; his is more in the style of Jerry Garcia, something he thinks younger guys might be more inclined to wear.
In his most radical move, Mr. Sturgeon has mandated that the ritual be published in book form. In Pennsylvania, since the order’s beginnings, each Mason has learned his obligation from another Mason, one on one. The ritual had never been written down. For the two lowest ranks of Freemasonry it lasts 30 minutes or so; for the third and highest degree it takes roughly an hour and runs to some 8,000 words. “It might take a man away from home maybe 50 nights to sit and learn it,” he said.
Though candidates will still be required to perform the ritual from memory, the printed text allows them to learn it on their own. Mr. Sturgeon assured his fellow masons that photocopying will be prohibited, that all copies will be signed out and strictly audited. Even so, this announcement met with silence, a response he had foreseen. “Many Masons will tell you that one of the great bonds of this fraternity happens when I meet with you 40 times to go over this work, and I become your mentor,” he said. “Now, that’s true. But for the greater good, we have to make a decision.”
Not a secret society but “a society with secrets” is how the protagonist of “The Lost Symbol” describes the Masons. Has that secrecy served a purpose? Is the famous Masonic bond based, at least to some extent, on shared information that nobody else knows? If that was once the case, it seems safe to say that it isn’t any longer, now that detailed accounts of the Masons’ procedures have been posted online, including YouTube videos of the secret handshake.
The drama seems to be in short supply. Any Dan Brown fans who came to the convention center in Pittsburgh expecting daggers pressed to bare chests or red wine drunk out of a skull surely left disappointed. Mr. Sturgeon says that he thought Mr. Brown made that stuff up until a friend reminded him that in one ceremony they attended for a branch of Masonry called the Scottish Rite there had indeed been a skull; he is, however, quite certain that he didn’t drink wine out of it. And if there is a pyramid with Freemasonry’s highest secrets inscribed on it, as “The Lost Symbol” purports, he has yet to hear about it.
Some Masons may regret losing the mystique — though surely not as much as the conspiracy theorists, who now have less room for speculation about the order. While it’s hard to put much store in allegations that Freemasonry is Satan worship or a plot to dominate the world when its membership has included such disparate characters as Count Basie, Daniel Boone, Winston Churchill, Paul Revere, Clark Gable, J. Edgar Hoover, Mozart, Colonel Sanders, Peter Sellers, Cy Young, Pushkin and Brad Paisley, those suspicions thrived nonetheless. The conspiracy theorists, it seems, needed the Masons’ secrecy even more than the Masons needed it themselves.

Holly Brubach is a frequent contributor to The New York Times.


Thursday, January 7, 2010

2010 Officer Installation

Last night's officer installation went smoothly. Fulton Lodge was honored to have MWGM Leonard Buffington with most of the Grand Line and DDGMs there to officiate. WB Randy Hazan was presented his Brother of the Year award with Sydell Little there in honor of the late Shelton Little.

In addition to a couple guest brothers in attendance we also welcomed approximately 25 family and friends who got to enjoy a wonderful dinner of beef bourguignon and see a lodge closed Grand Master-style. If the installation was any indicator - this year promises to be exciting!

Pictures coming soon....

Fulton Fellowcraft January 2010

From the East

My Brethren,
This will be my final address from the East. I would like to take this opportunity to comment on the future of the Lodge.
The lodge’s elections went smoothly and well. I was quite pleased with the results. Brother Dean Watts will do well in the continuing growth of the Lodge. I know him to be a kind and generous brother; one that will inspire and motivate our officer line. Our whole line is filled with very good men and the addition of Brother Adam Davis will only assure a successful future for us all. I see many things for our master to do, and I now truly understand what is required to do them.
I see great growth for our lodge, and I want to ask all of us to bask in the warmth of knowing that our lodge is growing, and in my opinion, the right way.
Also, I wanted to take this opportunity to directly thank my good friends and brothers Ross Laver, Mike Kessler, and Neil Schwartz. Each of you should understand why. And to all my brethren, I love you all and pray that you be Healthy, Wealthy, and Happy.

May the Grand Architect of the Universe find favor in you and bless you always and in all ways.

Adam I Brodofsky


To View The Complete Fellowcraft Click Here