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PAGE 2 GEORGIA BULLETIN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1963
CONSTITUTIONAL
Educators See
Private Schools
No Bar to Aid
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., 18
(NC)--A commission of the As
sociation of American Colleges
held that nothing in the U. S.
Constitution prohibits Federal
aid for education in private
colleges.
The claim was made in a re
port from the association's
Commission on Legislation.
Calvert N. Ellis, president of
Juniata College, Huntingdon,
Pa., and commission chairman,
submitted the report to the49th
annual meeting of the associ
ation, composed predominantly
of private liberal arts colleges.
"THERE is nothing in the
Constitution of the United
States," the report said, "to
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debar the Federal government
from assisting colleges and uni
versities, whatever their affi
liation, in the performance of
their proper educational func
tions."
The Ellis report also argued
that there was a difference be
tween Federal aid for colleges
and U. S. assistance for edu
cation in elementary and se
condary schools.
"THE relationships of insti
tutions of higher learning with
their students and with soci
ety are so different from those
of elementary and secondary
schools that an appropriate na
tional policy is not inferrable
from one case to the other,"
the Ellis report maintained.
The commission also said
that the "long-standing tradi
tion" of Federal support for all
colleges should be enlarged to
meet "present and future
needs."
THE report said the past ses
sion of Congress was "a frus
trating ^nd indeed traumatic
experience for those who are
concerned with the welfare of
higher education."
(After both chambers of Con
gress passed a bill to aid col
leges in the past session, the
resulting compromise measure
was killed in the House. A ma
jor public school group, the
National Education Association,
opposed the bill's provision for
equal treatment of public and
private colleges.)
ELLIS said the commission
believed that the "critical fac
tor" in the defeat was the U. S.
Supreme Court’s June 25, 1962,
decision on classroom prayer
in New York State public
schools. "This event provoked
highly emotional reactions,"
the report said.
In a resolution, the associ
ation appealed to President
Kennedy and the Congress to
keep the present tax Incentives
for individual and corporate
giving to higher education. Con
gress will review Federal tax
laws with a view toward cutting
down deductions this session.
AGAINST OSBORNE
AIMS SAME
Red Differences
Held No Reason
For Relaxation
KNIGHTS of Columbus Auxiliary from Father Thomas O’Reilly
Council 4358 recently elected new officers. Front row left to
right — Mrs. M. J. Lynch, President; Mrs. J. Martin, Cor
responding Sec.; Mrs. Vincent Sulgit, Vice-President. Back
row - - Mrs. James Carroll, Treasurer, and Mrs. Ray White,
Secretary.
BY J. J. GILBERT
WASHINGTON, (NC)--Com-
munism’s goal is domination of
the world, including the United
States.
That is a plain fact, experts
assert, which the Free World,
and particularly Americans,
should keep constantly in mind.
It is felt that there is a special
need to restate this fact, in
view of the Communist party
NOT SO HOT
Visitor To Russia Cites
Red Education Failings
HILLSIDE, N.J. (NC) —Edu
cation In Russia isn’t all it’s
cracked up to be in the Ameri
can press, according to a Ca
tholic youth leader just back
from a two-month trip in the
Soviet Union.
Unquestionably, Russia "is
ahead in science and languag
es", said Richard J. O’Neill,
22, a former regional and na
tional office holder in the Na
tional Federation of Catholic
College Students.
"BUT," O’Neill said, "there
facilities are inferior to ours
and the average person goes to
school for only eight or 11
years."
Now a management trainee
with a New York bank, he said
he was particularly disturbed
by one aspect of the Soviet edu
cational system: the manner in
which a youngster’s career is
mapped out for him, often by
the time he Is seven years old.
If a child lives near a tex
tile factory because his father
works there, O'Neill explained,
he will begin specializing in
school, learning to work a cer
tain machine in sixth or seventh
grade. The odds are small, he
said, that the child will ever
Marist 5 Avenges
Early Season Loss
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LUCKIL AT CONE ST.
A Good Addras in Atlanta
Avenging an early season set
back, the Marist quintet took
full advantage of a week’s layoff
to prepare for and defeat region
leader R. L. Osborne by 78-63.
Marist sports a 9-2 region re-
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cord and thereby edged Into
second place in Region 5-AAA.
A triple-guard offense devis
ed by Cadet coach, Pete Combs,
sparked the Blue and Gold to Its
impressive victoty. Slow in jel
ling at first, the new attack
brought Marist from a 37-33
halftime deficit to arousingfif-
teen point spread at the final
whistle.
FIVE CADETS hit for double
figures. Neal Moran and Bill
Reitmeier each chipped in with
19: Terry Ryan had 14; Mike
Hurst, who kept Osborne’s Bry
an Phillips under his region
average, added an even dozen
to the Marist cause; Pete Wall
tallied 11; David McDuffie iced
the cake with three markers.
Marist had a 49% average from
the floor and 62% mark from
the charity stripe.
Bill Reitmeler’s debute be
fore the home fans was memo
rable. A transfer from Syracuse
who arrived at Marist only two
weeks ago, he was chosen cap
tain of the Atlanta Tipoff Club
for this week as a result of his
performance against classy Os
borne.
The Cadets face GMA,
Gainesville, and Westminster
in their final region opposition
prior to the playoffs.
have the chance to do anything
in life but operate a machine
in the factory down the street.
O’NEILL traveled some
10,000 miles inside Russia,
holding frequent discussions
with communist youth leaders.
A 1962 graduate of Seton Hall
University, South Orange, N.J.,
he made the trip with three
other members of the Young
Adult Council, New York, of
which he is vice chairman.
The delegates made headlines
in the U.S. in December when
they criticized the Soviet Union
for striking the Siberian city of
Novosibirsk from their intine-
rary. The group was upset, he
said, because the itinerary had
been mapped out and approved
18 months earlier.
"It is difficult to say why
they didn't want us to go
there," he said. "They claim
ed it is a so-called , strategic
city. We knew it was a science
city; we wanted to go there
chiefly to see the fine univer
sity there. When we said we
didn’t know much about science,
they simply said that Americans
are not allowed in Novosibirsk,
and that was that."
WHAT THEY were allowed to
see during their trip were the
big cities, such as Moscow and
Leningrad, small villages of
collective farms, rapidly grow
ing Siberian towns, and rugged
pioneer settlements being car
ved out of wild virgin land by
young people O’Neill compar
ed to Peace Corpsmen.
Paraded proudly before them,
he said, were an endless suc
cession of dams, apartment
houses, factories and "Pioneer
Palaces," where children aged
6 to 16 are taught dancing,
singing, woodworking, sewing,
mechanics and atheism.
Stock issues that came up at
discussions with communist
youth leaders, O'Neill said,
were Cuba, racial segregation
in the U. S., unemployment,
communist youth festivals and
why the U. S. won’t participate
in them, the exchange pro
gram between the two nations,
literature, American television
and movies and delinquency.
"THEY KNOW all the bad
points there are about us,’’ he
said. "But they refuse to ack
nowledge any flaw in their own
system. The strongest self-cir-
tlcism they leveled was that
progress was being impeded by
bureaucracy.’’
There was no protest by Rus
sians whom he met against the
blackout of intellectual contaci
with the West, he said. They
rationalize that it would be
harmful to read the western
press because in advocates war.
O'Neill was impressed with
Russia's building progress, al
though he commented that "they
don’t seem to be able to make
cement yet—buildings that are
three years old are terribly
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BOSTON, (NC)—It’s "a great
asset In making the Marlonite
Rite liturgy better known and
liked," commented Richard
Cardinal Cushing.
The Archbishop of Boston was
cracked already."
HOWEVER, he said, "you
have to give them credit. Hous
ing is what they need most and
that’s what they are rushing to
give the people". Construction
goes on 24 hours a day, seven
days a week, he said. "They put
up a five-story pre-fabricated
apartment house in a week."
He said he had expected to
be questioned closely about re
ligion but found that he had to
bring the subject up himself.
"They just didn’t seem Inte
rested," he asserted. Hero
worship, he said, has been sub
stituted for religion.
"The Pioneer Palaces," he
added, "are hung with endless
posters and pictures of Lenin
and other Soviet heroes. In the
classrooms a picture of Lenin
hangs in the place where Catho
lic schools would have a cruci
fy."
AS FOR church attendance,
he said he saw no young people
in the churches in Moscow and
only a few in Leningrad.
"Tp get ahead in the Soviet
Union," he declared, "you have
to be a member of the fantas
tically powerful Komsomol
communist youth organization
and you can’t belong to that and
believe in religion. Only women
over 65 were at Mass in Mos
cow. They seemed to have a
great deal of devotion. But it
looks as though religion will die
with the few who are still at
tending church."
Of the people themselves,
O’Neill said "they are satis
fied that the system is Increas
ing their economic standard—
but they are not happy, they are
not enjoying themselves the way
we do. You see only poorly
dressed people on the streets.
None of them seem to be having
fun.’’
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 19 (NC)
—More than 2,300 persons at
tended inquiry classes at St.
Paul the Apostle church here
last year, Father John Fitz
gerald, C.S.P., pastor, has re
ported. Of this total, 47 per
cent were non-Catholics, he
said.
"The vast majority of these
non-Catholics were invited to
the classes and accompanied to
the classes by a Catholic friend
...It is the devout and well in
structed layman who carries
Christ to those outside the
Church," said Father Fitz
gerald.
PI HIGH LOSES
congress just held in East Ger
many and the to-do made o-
ver the differences reported to
exist between Communist Rus
sia and Communist China.
"I FORESEE no spectacular
reversal of communist methods
or goals," President Kennedy
advised Congress and the A-
merican people on the very eve
of the East Germany Red ga
thering.
"A dispute over how best
to bury the Free World is no
grounds for Western rejoi
cing," the President also war
ned, referring to the reports
of the Sino-Soviet dispute.
J xperts agree, as the Pre-
fSt said, that communists all
have the same ultimate goal
and if they are disagreeing it
is only as to how to achieve
that end. The reason for So-
viet-Chinese differences most
frequently cited is that the Chi
nese Reds want to spread com
munism right now by promoting
and practicing revolution in
other countries, while the So
viet Reds feel they can get
what they want by what they call
coexistence, but which is really
deceit and subversion.
ALTHOUGH he mentioned
neigher country by name, Fidel-
Castro, the Cuban Red, is wide
ly regarded as having favored
Peking over Moscow when, si
multaneously with the East Ger
many Red meeting, he called
for revolutionaries in the Wes
tern Hemisphere to rise up
violently and seize power.
There are very able authori
ties on communism who say
Red China is not bickering with
Red Russia over whether or not
there should be a "big war."
They note that some in the
United States have quoted the
Peking People’s Daily to show
that Red China wants "a big
war" and that Red Russia wants
peace.
These authorities quote the
same Peking People’s Daily
as saying the people of China
"love peace" and that "China
was an Initiator or the Five
Principles of Peaceful Coexis
tence." What the two commu
nist-dominated countries are
debating, these experts contend,
is how to infiltrate Free World
countries and how ripe these
countries are for picking.
IN ANY event, even assum
ing that Moscow favors a less
violent line than Peking, there
is no doubt that Nikita Khrush
chev, Soviet Russian premier,
feels that "coexistence" is
serving communism well. He
said so in East Germany.
He said it had already enabled
Soviet Russia to catch up with
the United States in the nuclear
field. Asserting that nuclear
war would obliterate whole na
tions, and that the communists
could not win such a war,
Khrushchev indicated that the
Reds can go on as they are
and take over the world.
It has been suggested that a
stake in the Peking-Moscow
tussle is the allegiance of the
rest of the 90 communist par
ties Moscow says exist round
the world. However, this is
only a by-product of contention
over the best method of bringing
the Free World to communist
slavery.
It is, as the President has
said, a disagreement over
means, not ends.
MRS. JOHN TILLITSKI, President of St. Mary’s Hospital Auxi
liary and Sister Frieda, Director of Nursing Services at St.
Mary’s Hospital, Athens Ga. display with the pride the Certi
ficate of Merit awarded by the Council on Auxiliaries of the
Georgia Hospital Association at the third annual training con
ference for ’Exceptional Efficiency in the Performance of Vo
lunteer Duties for the Benefit of the Hospital Patient’. This
award recognizes the following achievement "Best Annual Pro
ject Report".
WORLD GROWTH
Food Need Double
By 1980 - UN Says
ROME (NC)—- The United
Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization in a survey of pre
sent and future food needs esti
mated that from one-third to
one-half the people of the world
today suffer from hunger or
malnutrition or both.
Based on the U.N. forecast
of world population growth by
the year 2000, the new survey
estimates that food supplies will
have to be doubled by 1980
and tripled by the turn of the
century to achieve "a level of
nutrition reasonably adequate to
the needs of all the world’s
peoples." United Nations ex
perts expect the world pop
ulation to double bv 2000. It
now stands at about three
billion.
THE NEW FAO survey —
IN COMPETITION
previous ones were published in
1946 and 1952 took the form
of a paper presented by the
agency’s statistical director,
Dr. P. V. Sukhatme. It was
published here as a nontechnical
brochure entitled "Six Billion
to Feed."
FAO Director General B. R.
Sen commented that "complete
agreement can hardly be
expected in regard to the find
ings of a study which has to
take into account a large number
of variables and which relies
at least partly on data of doubt
ful accuracy.
"I believe, however, that the
margin of error has been
narrowed down to the utmost
limit permitted by the nature
and quantum of data on which
the study is based."
Pius High Presents
4 Riders To The Sea 5
BY JERELYN HOLMES the old man.
Members of the St. Pius X
dramatics club presented "Rid
ers to the Sea" at the region
competition in Winder-Barrow.
They competed against five oth
er high schools Jan 17. The
group placed third in the one-
act play contest.
Before preforming at Winder,
the club staged a production for
the faculty Jan. 16.
"RIDERS to the Sea" by John
Millington Synge is a tradgedy.
The play is the story of an
Irish woman whose six sons
drown.
Barbara Shook had the lead
ing role of Maurya, the mother.
Thomas Keen played Bartly,
her son. Lawrenthia Mesh and
Jerelyn Holmes played Cath-
leen and Nora, the two sis
ters.
Kathryn Gondeson and Wan
da Lee Hunt had the parts of
the two old women. Steven
Mackal and Ronald Heeterwere
Briarcliff, Druids Skin Lions
speaking about the publication of
a manual of the Arabic and Ara
maic prayers used in the Di
vine Liturgy (Mass) of the Ma
ronite Rite and their transla
tions in English.
BY JAMES DAEDEN
St. Pius’ boys lost basket
ball games to Briarcliff, 44-
48, and Druid Hills, 41-51, this
past week. These two AAA
teams had to much height and
strength for the Lions.
in the Briarcliff game the
Lions were cold in the first
half and trailed 25-13. Denny
Wigbels brought the Gold and
White close in the final minu
tes, but they lost 48-44. Mike
Penny was the leading scorer
with 15 points. Denny Wigbels
had 9 points.
DRUID HILLS proved to pow
erful a challenge for the shor*
Lion team. The Gold and White
Tax Exemption
WASHINGTON (NC) Rep.
Hale Boggs of Louisiana has in
troduced a bill to extend to non
profit hospital excise tax ex
emptions now enjoyed by non
profit educational Institutions.
trailed 30-18 at the half and
never got closer. Denny Bis
hop, Tommy Almon and Jim
my Darden led the Lions sco
res with 15, 11, il points re
spectively.
St. Pius’ Lady Lions have
played impressive ball in their
last two games. They beat the
Briarcliff girls 55-41.
In the girls game against
Druid Hills, it was all Kitty
Hynes for the Gold and White,
The Lions lost, 58-57.
MISS ANN Guscio, modera
tor of the dramatics club, se
lected the play, She also ser
ved as director of the pro
duction.
At the region contest, the
group competed against New
ton County, Hart County, Win
der-Barrow, Elbert County, and
Stevens County.
Rev. Mother
Annunciata
Is Honored
CULLMAN, Ala-A citation of
appreciation for her more than
68 years service as a teacher
to the students of Alabama, was
presented to Mother Annunciata
Janeway, O. S. B., in behalf of
Governor John Patterson Mon
day morning. It is believed
that her teaching record has
rarely if ever been equalled
in the history of American ed
ucation.
Before the combined student
bodies of Sacred Heart College
and Sacred Heart Academy, ci
vic dignitaries, Benedictine
Sisters, college officials, re
ligious leaders, including Abbot
Bede Luibel, O.S.B., and mem
bers of the faculties of both
institutions, Mother Annunciata
was presented the governor’s
citation of appreciation from
Mr. James Berry, president of
the Cullman City Council.
The tiny nun, nearing 85 and
still teaching Latin at the col
lege, was escorted to the college
auditorium stage by Sister Mary
.Lourdes Michel, O.S.B., dean of
the college, and Miss Mary Ag
nes Davidson of Doravtlle,
Georgia, and president of the
student body.