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GEORGIA BULLETIN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1963 PAGE 7
BY EXPERT
Jews Asked For Help
On School Aid Issue
KANSAS CITY, Mo (NC)~
Cathollcs need Jewish assis
tance on the question of govern
mental aid for private ed
ucation , a prominent Catholic
authority on constitutional law
and education said here.
William Ball, principal
author of the 1961 study on
church related schools and Fed
eral aid carried out by the
Legal Department of the Nat
ional Catholic Welfare Confe
rence, spoke (Jan. 29) at a
joint Catholic-Jewish sympo
sium.
“WE NEED your help, not
your hostility, on the school
aid question,’* said Ball, ex
ecutive director and general
counsel of the Pennsylvania
Catholic Welfare Committee,
Harrisburg.
"This is a profoundly mean
ingful matter to many millions
of your neighbors,” he added.
“It will not be winked away.
“At the very least, we could
hope that there would cease to
come from Jewish leaders re
petitions (albeit in the dialogue
setting) of the strident cries of
the Bible Belt bigots.
“WE WOULD hope that—in
the matters of Catholic
education—no encouragement
and no cooperation would be
lent by Jewish quarters to the
forces of extremism in the
field of Church-State re
lations.”
Ball was the opening speaker
at the one-day symposium en
titled "Encounter: A Catholic-
Jewish Confrontation.” The
event was sponsored by the Je
suit Father’s Rockhurst Col
lege, the Jewish Community
Relations Bureau and the Rat-
isbonne Center of the Sisters
of Notre Dame de Sion.
THE symposium, which drew
nationally recognized Catholic
and Jewish leaders, was de
scribed by its sponsors as the
"opening of a new phase in
Jewish-Catholic relationships,
marked by greater frankness,
greater willingness to acknowl
edge past tensions and present
problems.”
Ball’s remarks appealing for
Jewish understanding on the
school aid question came In
a section of his address in which
he also had what he called some
“finger-wagging” to direct at
Catholics.
Jews, he said, can teach Cat-
tholics "many things we ought
as Christians to know—things
Atlanta Area
Council News
The young adult club at St.
John Melkite Church was host
to a Communion Breakfast
sponsored by the Atlanta Area
Council of Catholic Adult Clubs.
The religious and social act
ivity was enjoyed by some
seventy-five members of the
four clubs which make up the
council.
After taking part in the
beautiful Byzantine Liturgy, the
clubs met in the hall of the
church for the brunch. Vic Lam
bert, President of the Council,
introduced the host pastor,
Father William Handock, who
spoke briefly about the various
rites of the church and some
of their customs.
Herb Azar then gave a
humorous and entertaining re
view on some of the highlights
of the previous touch football
league.
which they have had the courage
and wisdom in many cases to
pioneer—especially in the area
of civil liberties, civil rights,
social justice.**
BALL said lie thinks Cat
holics are “far too little in
terested” in intergroup re
lations. “Let us have more of
these meetings," he said. “Cat
holics know their Jewish neigh
bors relatively little.”
Ball identified “religion in
the schools” as the center of
interreligious dispute in
America today.
He Insisted that it can be
resolved, provided that some of
the "sloganized rigidities,”
which he said are intensifying
the conflict, are cast aside and
three “recognitions” are made.
FROM these "recognitions,”
he said , "we vlill find relief
for the two most manifest con
cerns on the Church-State scene
nationally— Jewish concern for
what Jews deem ‘secular’ ed
ucation in our present public
schools; Catholic concern for
the survival of education in ch
urch-related schools.”
The three recognitions listed
by Ball are;
That no education is ideolo
gically or philosophically neu
tral;
That every citizen has a
right to an education which
comports with his conscientious
choice from the point of view
of ideology or philosophy, pro
vided that education includes all
secular learning which a citizen
ought reasonably to have;
That government may le
gally support the providing of
such secular learning as a
public objective.
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Plus car expenses & Bonus.
B & B PERSONNEL
DIVISION OF MARKETING SERVICES
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DECATUR, GEORGIA PHONE; DR 8-7528
MISC FOR SALE
BAR, 2 cjiairs, coffee table
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items of Rattan. Burdick elec
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Phone Trinity 2-5530
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21” Emerson console TV, new
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TR 3-3192
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4 Occasional chairs, 5-piece
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PUBLISHED WEEKLY
Print your classified ad on this form. Slip it into an envelope
along with remittance and sent it to:
THE GEORGLA BULLETIN
Classified Department
***
4-Wheel 6x12 utility tfailor,
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friendly
stores
that GIVE
YOU MORE
VALUE-VARIETY-SERVICE
TELLS SENATORS
NCCW To Reaffirm Its
Equal Rights Opposition
League Has
Good Start
BECAUSE this year's Mardi
Gras Ball Is for the benefit of
the Free Cancer Home, even
though masquerade is the cus
tom, costumes will not be re
quired for attendance, and tic
ket sales will be upon an ad
vance sale basis only. Price is
$10 per couple. Ticket chair
men appointed by councils, and
their phone numbers are: At
lanta, J. Louis Young (MA 7-
4773), Phil A. Finnegan (636-
Basketball
The Atlanta area Council
Basketball League has jumped
off to an exciting start. In the
first game on Sunday, January
13, the Georgia State Newman
Club ‘defeated the Cathedral
Club 45-41. The second game
saw a strong St. John team take
an early lead and hold on to a
58-38 victory over the Society
of St. Michael. Gerald Jaboley.
led the winners with 24 points.
In the second series of games,
the same St. John's team over
whelmed a stunned Georgia
State team 76-45. The Society
of St. Michael took the third
place slot by defeating the Ca
thedral Club. The standings
are (1) St. John Melkite, 2-0;
(2) Georgia State Newman Club,
1-1; (3) Society of St. Michael,
1-1; and (4) Cathedral Club, 0-
2.
The games are played every
Sunday In the gymnasium at
the Cathedral of Christ the
King.
BAKED BY THE MONKS OF CONYERS GEORGIA
SOLD AT
THE (BLg,dftfll£ SUPERMARKETS
Voted by over 700 members
of the four councils to be the
recipient of the proceeds,
among the several most worthy
causes that were considered,
will be Our Lady of Perpetual
Help Free Cancer Home. Knight
William B. King has been ap
pointed as liaison between the
Knights of Columbus and the
Cancer Home, of which Sister
Mary Josephine is Superior.
Council representatives who
will coordinate the various pha
ses of the Mardi Gras event be
tween the executive committee
and the individual councils are;
Decatur, Shirley L. Vick; At
lanta, J. Louis Young and B.
Franklin Clark; Ben Hill, Mark
Lunday; Marietta, William Mc-
Mullin and Tom M. Bergin.
^MONASTERY
BREAD
WASHINGTON (NC) — The
National Council of Catholic
Women has reaffirmed its op
position to the proposed equal
rights amendment to the Con
stitution in a letter to each
member of the U.S. Senate.
SISTER MARY JOSEPHINE WITH KNIGHTS
. , .Cancer Home Benefits
FOR CANCER HOME
Knights To Plan
Mardi Gras Ball
The four Knights of Colum
bus Councils in Atlanta announ
ced plans for their 6th Annual
Mardi Gras Ball to be held
Saturday, Feb. 23 at 9 p.m. at
the Dinkier Plaza.
John W. Maloof has been
elected general chairman. Oth
ers elected include Tom M.
Bergin, co-chairman; Damon
J. Swann, chairman, public re
lations; Walter J. McCann,
treasurer; and George T. Ash
worth, secretary.
EX-OFFICIO members of the
committee are the four grand
knights; F. Bohlinger Sharp,
Father Thomas J. O’Reilly
Council 4358 in Decatur; Ma
rio Moscardelli, Immaculate
Heart of Mary Council 4420
in Ben Hill; Fred Spears, St.
Joseph Council 4599, Marietta;
and George A. Andrews, At
lanta Council 660.
9237), William Coyle (636-
9237); Ben Hill, Mark Lunday
(DI 4-4849), Joseph Stretch (PL
3-0963); Decatur, Shirley L.
Vick (ME 6-3857), Tom Ben
der (289-1521), Ernest Mar
tin (634-3879), John Arnett
(634-8200); Marietta, William
McMullin (HE 5-4519).
Selection of the Queen of the
6th Annual Knights of Colum
bus Mardi Gras, the appoint
ments of maids and dukes, the
awards for masquerade costu
mes and the appointment of the
judges, will be announced later.
Costumes, of individuals or
groups, and the resultant
awards made, are pointed to the
best interpretations of the Mar
di Gras theme. The theme this
year is “Out of This World”.
Signed by Mrs. Joseph Mc
Carthy, NCCW president, the
letter states that she was re
quested to voice this opposi
tion by the federation’s board
of directors at its annual meet
ing in Washington. The 27-
member board represents some
nine million Catholic women
throughout the country.
THE LETTER states that the
proposed equal rights amend
ment, which has been before
Congress for the past 30 years,
"in our view tends to flaunt
nature itself. Men and women
are endowed by the Creator
with differing characteristics
and functions. To attempt to
make them equal in all things is
to overlook their fundamental
differences, and remove the
true foundations of woman’s
dignity.”
Dunaway’s Rexall Drug Stores
For over 40 years serving the
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of Marietta and Cobb County
LOCATED IN THE FOLLOWING AREAS
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MIKE b STEVE SERTICH
The proposed amendment
provides that equality of rights
under the law "shall not be de
nied or abridged by the United
States or by any state on ac
count of sex.”
MRS. McCarthy quoted
from a resolution adopted at the
NCCW 28th national convention,
which stated the council posi
tion on this issue. It reads;
“Again we strongly reiterate
our opposition to the proposed
equal rights amendment to the
U.S. Constitution as a threat to
the nature of woman which in
dividuates her from man in
God's plan for His Creation.
“Under the guise of equali
ty, the proposed ’equal rights’
amendment would in reality
wipe out the many legal safe
guards which protect woman’s
position in thefamily. Under the
proposed amendment, maxi
mum hour and minimum wage
laws for women, widows’ allo
wances, alimony and support
payments, and the basic respon
sibility of man to provide for
his family would be placed in
jeopardy”.
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