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Jackson 1-0316 Long Distance 421
Sacred Heart
Has Capacity
Enrollment
CULLMAN, Ala.—Many stu
dents from Georgia are a part
of the 50% increase in resident
students filling dormitories to
capacity at Sacred Heart Col
lege in Cullman, Alabama.
A new dormitory, built this
summer, was filled by student
reservations before construc
tion could be completed.
Sacred Heart College’s en
rollment growth has .continued
since its founding in 1940.
Faculty members hold 68 de
grees and memberships in 28
learned societies. They have
pursued advanced studies in
thirty colleges and universities
in this country and abroad.
Sacred Heart College is ac
credited by the Southern As
sociation of Colleges and Sec
ondary Schools and holds high
est ranking membership in the
College , and University De
partment of The National
Catholic Education Associa
tion.
The College is a modern
young college with the dignity
of fourteen hundred years of
Benedictine educational expe
rience. It functions in a plant
of six large modern buildings,
constructed of brick and native
stone. The campus is on an
estate of 130 acres beautified
by a sunken garden and a
grotto of Lourdes.
Lake Maurus on the campus
is available for swimming,
boating, and fishing. Two pri
vate tennis courts and outlying
woods on the property for
hikes and picnics add to the
many recreational facilities
available.
THE BULLETIN, October 1, 1960—PAGE 3
eT 5
Lauds Relief
Services
NEW YORK (NC) — Arch
bishop Karl J. Alter, chairman
of the Administrative Board of
the National Catholic Welfare
Conference, spoke at the open
ing general meeting of the 50th
anniversary meeting of the Na
tional Conference of Catholic
Charities, and lauded the work
of Catholic Relief Services.
Archbishop Alter told about
the work of Catholic Relief
Services - National Catholic
Welfare Conference in the
field of international charity.
GEORGIANS AT SACRED HEART—A large number of Georgia students entered
Sacred Heart College this fall to begin their college careers. Some are graduates of the
Mount in Macon; others graduated from St. Pius X in Atlanta. Left to rigt, first row are:
Mary Matthews, Betty Belladonna, Sally Falletti, Jean Hatcher, Kathi Wilbanks, Denise
Spikerman, Sandra Grohski, Betty Jean Clemmon, Celeste Pratt, Gayle McNutly and
Angela Grennor.
The Archbishop said that in
the last 17 years CRS-NCWC
shipped to 113 countries more
than 2,650,000 tons of relief
supplies valued at more than
800 million dollars. In the
same period, with the help of
diocesan resettlement commit
tees, Catholic Relief Services
assisted 231,000 refugees and
displaced persons to resettle in
new lands.
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CATHOLICS HIST HELP AFRO-ASIAH
STUDENTS BECOME LEASERS “WITH
C8HVICTI0HS,” HOLY SEE SAYS
Sabred Heart’s size is large
enough to offer a wide range
of courses in the vocations
which will give students the
greatest happiness and job se
curity. Discretion limits the
size of classes so that students
may have individual guidance
and instruction whenever
needed.
A limited student body of
especially selected young wo
men gives students an oppor
tunity to personally know and
make friends with the entire
student body and faculty.
Personalized classes protect
the student from the emotion
al strain of too keen competi
tion often found in overcrowd
ed college classrooms. Students
feel at home in the family at
mosphere of Sacred Heart Col
lege.
As members of the Mystical
Body of Christ, students love
living the life of Christ on
campus and discover that it is
their greatest privilege. There
is opportunity for daily Mass
and the Liturgical life of the
Church in the college. Educa
tion for Truth and freedom
from error is the particular
goal of Sacred Heart College.
The art of good living is a
vital part of the education at
Sacred Heart College. Students
enjoy the social life of the col
lege which includes parties, at
tending football games, dances,
picnics, and volleyball tourna
ments, hikes and Phi Kappa
Delta Sorority activities on
their own campus and many
activities on the neighbor cam
pus of St. Bernard College for
Trips to nearby Birmingham
and Cullman to attend con
certs, dramatic programs, and
operas are all a part of the
year’s schedule. Students are
encouraged to take part in
clubs . . . dramatics, sports,
language, science, internation
al relations, and Confraternity
of Christian Doctrine. They at
tend other social and educa
tional activities in adjacent
cities.
Modern economic life de
mands a high degree of special
ized training in its members,
especially at the level of high
er education as well as a solid
background in liberal arts. The
college’s goal is to give this
program to her students.
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With the cooperation and as
sistance of governments, he
added, the material relief
programs of Catholic Relief
Services have expanded until
at present more than 32 mil
lion persons in 58 countries are
aided through its massive feed
ing programs. If sent at one
time, he said, the goods sent
overseas since 1954 by CRS-
NCWC would have required
230 freighters, each carrying
10,000 tons.
Radio, N.C.W.C News Service
COPENHAGEN — The Holy
See has urged Catholics to aid
African and Asian students in
Europe so that they will be
come “an elite with convic
tions.”
The exhortation was con
tained in a letter sent on be
half of His Holiness Pope
John XIII to the First Euro
pean Meeting for the Lay
Apostolate in the Danish capi
tal. It was written by His
Eminence Domenico Cardinal
Tardina, Vatican Secretary of
State, and addressed to Bishop
Johannes Theodor Suhr,
O.S.B., of Copenhagen,
Professor Silvio Golzio,
chairman of the directing
coucil of the Permanent Com
mittee for International Con
gresses of the Lay Apostolate,
declared in his opening address
that the four-day (Sept. 17-20)
meeting was designed to en
sure collaboration among
members of the lay apostolate
in Europe. He said it would
also prepare remotely for a
third international congress of
the lay apostolate.
Cardinal Tardini’s letter let
ter said. “While the lay apos
tolate rightly takes different
forms according to particular
conditions to be found in each
country, there is no doubt in
times when various nations are
becoming more closely linked
and exchanges are more fre
quent among them, Catholics
should adapt themselves to
these developments by colla
borating more closely in their
apostolate.
“Wider perspectives are
gained by exchanging infor
mation and publications, dis
cussing general problems and
making personal contacts, so
that it becomes easier to see
what tasks will have to be un
dertaken in common if the
apostolate of the laity is to
measure up to the great needs
of the new Europe which is
gradually being built, and if
the light of the Gospel is to
penetrate the new structures
which are being created.
Anoiher fask, equally im
poriani, will be helped for
ward by ihis first European
meeting: that of ensuring that
lay Catholics act with greater
effectiveness in assuring their
responsibilities for young Afr
ican and Asian students who
have come to Europe to ac
quire learning and technical
skills, and who will return to
the new countires, where they
will constitute an elite, with
convictions formed from their
relations with Europeans."
Msgr. Achille Glorieux, ec
clesiastical assistant to the
permanent committee, said
that during 11 years of experi
ence in the lay apostolate he
found that Catholics in one
country often misunderstand
Catholcis in other countries
because they do not make a
sufficient effort to learn the
facts.
He added that the main
channel of information for
most people is the daily or
weekly newspaper.
Apart from rare and praise
worthy exceptions, fie said,
the characteristic mark of
such publications is their su
perficiality. Judging every
thing from the outside and
avid for sensation, they are
incapable of giving objective
information.
When there is a religious
event in a foreign country.
Msgr. Glorieux added, “it
would be a real duty for jus
tice and charity towards their
brothers afar off to look for
objective information.”
Miss Rosemary Goldie, exec
utive secretary of the per
manent committee in Rome,
traced the growth of the lay
apostolate from the early 19th
century. She cited document
after document to substantiate
her analysis of the develop
ment of the apostolate.
Miss Goldie divided the
modern history of the lay
apsotolate into four major
periods:
—The first half of the 19th
century, marked by rapid de
velopment of the individual
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apostolate.
—The reign of Pope Pius IV,
marked by the rise of Catholic
associations for the defense of
the Church against enemies
from without.
—The period from the reign
of Pope Leo XIII to the reign
of Pope Pius XI, marked by
the development of Christian
social action and of Catholic
Action.
—The reign of Pope Pius XI,
in which Catholic Action was
defined as an apostolate in
the strict sense. It was marked
by the rise of specialized
movements.
Miss Goldie said: “We are
still today in this last period,
if not on the threshold of a
new stage. Enriched by the
teaching of Pope Pius XII
and strengthened by the en
couragements and directives
of Pope John XXIII, it may be
that the lay apostolate is about
to bring forth in fullness the
fruite of this century of
growth, and above all of these
last 40 years, during which
the role of the laity in the
Church’s apostolate mission
has been not only deeply
studied but also experienced
in mainfold forms.”
OPEN LETTERS
TO PRIESTS
BERLIN (NC) — Commum
ist authorities in Poland have
tightened the censorship of
foreign letters addressed to
priests in Poland, according to
word received here.
At the central post office in
Warsaw, where all letters from
abroad are sent, letters ad
dressed to priests are opened
photographed. The letters are
then resealed with paper tape
and stamped, “Imperfectly
sealed on arrival.”
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