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BOY WHOSE KIN DIED IN
PUNE TRAGEDY BRAVELY
TRIES TO FACE REALITY
NEW YORK (NC) — Eight-
year-old Bobby ‘ Sullivan, in
formed that his parents and two
sisters died as a result of a plane
crash (February 3), bravely tried
to display the “ability to face
reality.”
The boy’s father, Joseph, 41,
and his sisters, Patty 13, and
Joan, .5, perished in the East
River crash of an American
Airlines jet plane. The boy’s
mother, Lorraine, died after she
and Bobby were brought to the
Flushing Hospital.
“But I saw Mommy down
stairs. She only had a broken
leg,” cried Bobby after three
uncles broke the tragic news to
him in the hospital here.
The uncles, Edward and Don
ald Murphy and John O’Neil, all
of Chicago, fought back the
tears as they stood at Bobby’s
bedside.
“Bobby, God took your father
and mother and your two sis
ters,” one of them told the boy.
Doctors at the hospital said
Bobby appeared unusually
brave for his age and had held
up manfully while being treat
ed for minor injuries.
According to neighbors, the
Sullivan family was united by
strong bonds of love. This love
was expressed in an essay writ
ten recently by Patty, who was
an honor student in the seventh
grade at Our Lady of Loretto
parochial school, Hempstead.
The essay, on “Christian So
cial Living,” was disclosed by
Sister Mary Francis William,
Patty’s teacher.
It stated in part: “The family
should be bound together by
love. At home our family is tru
ly bound together by love. My
dad helps my brother with his
arithmetic. My mother helps us
with spelling and English. . .
and I help my brother with his
piano lessons.
“Character is life dominated
by principles instead of by the
way I feel or that which is about
me. Two qualities of a mature
person: (1) ability to face reality
and (2) decisive thinking.”
Units Of Two Educational
THE BULLETIN, February 21, 1959—PAGE 3
Services For
B. F, Taylor* Sr,
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mr. Benjamin Franklin
Taylor, Sr., were held January
30th at the Sacred Heart Church,
Rev. John Emereth S.M. offici
ating.
Survivors are Rev. Hugh Tay
lor, O.S.B., Waynesbuih, Ky.,
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Taylor,
Louisville, Ky.; Mrs. Emma
Smith, Miss Maude Taylor, Mid-
dleport, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. J. C.
Taylor, McMindville, Tenn.;
three grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Savannah Services
For John Trapani
SAVANNAH — Funeral serv
ices for John M. Trapani were
held January 30th at the Ca
thedral of St. John the Baptist.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Mary Lovett Trapani; four
daughters, Sister Mary Chris
tine, Mrs. Arthur Cannon, Mrs.
Willis Maner, all of Savannah,
and Mrs. N. T. Stafford Jr., Ger
many; four sons, John M. Trap
ani Jr., Dallas, Texas, Bert L.
rapani and Thomas M. Trapani,
both of Atlanta, and Reid Trap
ani of Greensboro, N. C.; bro
ther, Guy L. Trapani of Savan
nah, 25 grandchildren; several
nieces and nephews.
ANDERSON'S
BARBER SHOP
3100 ROSWELL ROAD
CE. 7-0711
ATLANTA
PARAKEETS
GUAKAHTEF.D TALKERS
ANY TYPE PET
WHISPERING PINES
BIRD FARM
POplar 1-2261
l'/z Mile S. of Ford Plant
HWY. 85 OFF 41 S.
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BROWN TIRE CO.
If You Can't
Re-Tire — Retread
CHAMBLEE, GA.
5039 Peachtree Rd.
Glendale 7-6005
Robert Brown,
Owner
Groups Oppose Federal Aid’s
Publie-Private Distinctions
WASHINGTON, (NC)—Com
missions of two influential ed
ucational associations have call
ed for a remedy to what they
charge are distinctions in treat
ment between public and pri
vate schools in the National
Defense Education Act.
Both indicated that they will
support moves in Congress to
amend those clauses which deny
benefits to private, nonprofit
school teachers while granting
them to public school instruc
tors.
Almost identical stands were
taken by the Committee on Re
lationships of Higher Education
to the Federal Government of
the American Council on Edu
cation and the Comission on
Legislation of the Association
of American Colleges.
The act, now in effect, pro
vides for expenditures of some
$887 million over the next four
years for a variety of purposes,
mostly loans to needy college
students.
Key point in the positions
taken by the two commissions
is that section of the act which
permits college students who
borrow Federal funds to work
off 50 per cent, of their loan by
becoming teachers in public el
ementary or secondary schools.
The act provides these teach
ers can be forgiven 10 per cent
of the principal and interest for
each year they serve, up to 50
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per cent of the loan.
Both educational groups said
this “forgiveness feature” should
be extended to teachers in pri
vate, nonprofit elementary and
secondary schools and to teach
ers in both public and private
institutions of higher learning.
An additional point was made
by the committee of the Ameri
can Council on Education, The
council itself is a federation of
leading colleges and universities
and of educational organiza
tions, including the National
Catholic Educational Associa
tion.
It also called for an amend
ment to the provision which
prohibits teachers from private
secondary schools who attend
Federally sponsored institutes
on guidance and counseling
from sharing in the stipends
given public school teachers
who attend the same institute.
Both groups also called for
repeal of the act’s stipulation
requiring individuals who re
ceive funds to sign a statement
disclaiming affiliation with
communist groups and to sub
scribe to an oath of loyalty.
His Holiness Pope John XXIII has had the portraits of his
five immediate predecessors copied and placed on the wall
of his private apartment. The pontiffs, who reigned during
his lifetime are: Top, Leo XIII (1878-1903); second row,
St. Pius X (1903-1914); Benedict XV (1914-1922) and bot
tom row, Pius XI (1922-1939) and Pius XII (1939-1958).
(NC Photos)
Sufferer’s Gift Of Eyes May
Permit Teacher To Resume Job
' Ndw Located at
2583 Shallowford Rd.
Across the Expressway
from .
St. Pius X High School
Landscaping & Designing
Contractors
HAPEVILLE
JEWELRY COMPANY
583-B S. Central Ave.
HAPEVILLE, GA.
NAME COMMITTEE
TO STUDY CUBAN
SCHOOL LAW
HAVANA (Radio, NC) — A
government committee has been
appointed to study effects of a
controversial law invalidating
degrees granted since 1956 by
Cuba’s private universities.
Students and graduates of the
universities involved have pro
tested that the law is unjust.
Observers here said there is a
good chance it will be repealed.
Spokesmen for the new re
gime explained that the law was
intended to remedy injustices
to students of the state-run Uni
versities of Havana, Villas and
Oriente, whose studies were in
terrupted by strikes and by
struggles with supporters of the
regime of Fulgencio Batista.
Students of the state universi
ties had complained that they
were put at a disadvantage by
the fact that private universi
ties continued to grant degrees
during this time.
Students of the universities
affected have protested that
they also opposed the Batista
regime, as did the students of
the state schools, and that it is
unfair to penalize them while
no penalties are imposed on
professional people and workers
who likewise did not abandon
their occupations to fight the
Batista regime.
SEATTLE, Wash., (NC)—Be
fore she died January 15, Mrs.
Fred J. (Hazel) Nelson, 40, of
St. Anthony’s parish, Renton,
Wash., donated her eyes to the
eye bank of Providence Hos
pital here.
Because of Mrs. Nelson’s self
lessness, Justin Paulson, 54, of
Kirkland, Wash., now has an
excellent chance of regaining
good eyesight and resuming her
career as a school teacher.
Mrs. Nelson had been ill with
cancer three months. After
learning she could not survive,
she donated her eyes to the hos
pital bank and also submitted
to painful tests by cancer re
searchers at the University of
Washington in an effort to help
conquer the dread disease.
Mrs. Nelson became too weak
to be moved before the tests
could begin. But shortly after
she died, the cornea of one of
her eyes was transplanted to
Miss Paulson’s left eye. Miss
Paulson had been waiting for
some time for an eye transplant.
Failing eyesight had forced her
to give up teaching.
Miss Paulson’s surgeon said
the transplant appeared to be
even more successful than he
had hoped.
Meanwhile news of the suc
cessful transplant inspired a
number of donations to the
Providence eye bank.
“Even since the story appear
ed in a Seattle newspaper about
the transplant, inquires about
donations have come into the
eye bank at the rate of about 10
Centenary Tour
Services For
Dave A, Salome
ATLANTA — Funeral serv
ices for Mr. Dave A. Salome
were held February 6th at St.
Joseph’s Maronite Church, Rev.
Joseph Abinader and Rev. Wil
liam Haddad officiating.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs.
Dave A. Salome, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph M. Salome, Sister David
Joseph, C.S.J.; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred T. Humphrey, Miss Diana
Salome, Mrs. Zarifa Anton and
three grandchildren.
Most Rev. Rene Fourrey
(above), bishop of Belley,
France, and biographer of St.
John Vianney, the cure of
Ars. The reliquary containing
the heart (incorrupted) of the
Holy Cure will be exposed for
veneration in all the great
French cathedrals, during a
tour preceding the centenary
celebrations, the bishop has an
nounced. (NC Photos)
a day,” said Margaret Byrne,
medical staff secretary at the
eye bank. “Previously, calls
about donations average only
two or three a week.”
Persons requiring surgery us
ually must wait three to eight
months before an eye is avail
able. And eyes must be removed
four hours after the donor’s
death.
The Providence facility, estab
lished a year ago, is the only
eye bank in this region. Provi-.
dence Hospital is conducted by
the Sisters of Charity of Provi
dence.
FULTON HOSPITAL
Alcoholism Nervous-Disorders
90 7 Edgewood Avenue Atlanta, Georgia
PHONE JA. 4-9392
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JOHN MARSHALL
LAW SCHOOL
115 Forrest r*
Ave., N. E.
JA. 3-8550
“Around the Corner from
Sacred Heart Church”
Day And Evening Classes
SURETY BONDED
Complete Pest
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Insured — Terms Up To
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For Free Estimate . . .
PLaza 5-6618
F. N. ROBERTS
CO.
Established 1941
Office — 1146 Gordon S, W.
Serving Atlanta
and 50 Mile Radius
VOSS
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JA. 5-6164
703 GRAND THEATRE BLDG.
ATLANTA, GA.
TWENTIETH ANNUAL CONVENTION
SAVANNAH DIOCESAN COUNCIL
OF CATHOLIC WOMEN
MACON, GEORGIA APRIL 25-26, 1959
Convention Headquarters
Hotel Dempsey
515 Cherry Street
Macon, Georgia
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS EARLY AT THE ABOVE ADDRESS
Single Rooms: $5.00 - $6.00 - $7.00 - $8.00
Double Rooms: $7.00 - $8.00 - $9.00 - $12.00
One (1) extra person (cot) in R.oom: $1.50 Additional
ALL PRICES PLUS 3% TAX
FOR LUNCHEON AND DINNER TICKET RESERVATIONS.
WRITE, WIRE, OR PHONE:
Mrs. E. H. Buck, Buck Finance Co., 373 Cotton Ave., Macon, G SH. 6-2443
Dinner Tickets: $3.50 Luncheon Tickets: $2.50
REGISTRATION: $1.00 upon arrival at Convention Headquarters
NOTE DATES APRIL 25 26, 1359