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PAGE-8 GEORGIA BULLETIN
THURSDAY APRIL 4, 1963
ST. JOSEPH S
Athens Parish
Marks Jubilee
BY OUR CORRESPONDENT
Last Saturday St. Joseph's
Parish, Athens, celebrated the
50th Anniversary of the dedi
cation of its Church. The oldest
Baptism records of the parish
are dated 1873. The present
Church was dedicated on March
30, 1913.
High Mass was celebrated
by Father Walter J. Donovan,
pastor of Blessed Sacrement
Church, Atlanta, who was
pastor of St. Joseph's for 13
years. The sermon was deliv
ered by Archbishop Hallinan.
IN ATTENDANCE were Rt.
Rev. Dorn Augustine Moore,
Abbot of the Trappist Monast
ery, Conyers, Georgia, Rt. Rev.
Msgrs. Joseph G. Cassidy, V.
G., Michael J. Regan, V. F.,
Hawk Wins
Association 1st
The Hawk, St. Joseph’s High
School Newspaper, won the
Columbia Scholastic Press As
sociation Award—first place in
Georgia, it has Just been
aimounced. It is a first year
publication.
In addition, Mary Louise Ale
xander and Catherine Magul.no,
both of St. Joseph’s, won first
place for their poster and essay
at the Serra-sponsored vocation
contest.
AMERICANA
T.V. SERVICE
CALLS $3.00
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804 N. Highland Ave.
Atlanta, Ga,
This Ad Worth 50<
ON ALL TYPES OF
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AT
Hoisa & Hobby Shop
BELMONT HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
PHONE: 435-5122
R. S. SEELEY, MGR.
Patrick J. O’Conner, Revs.
Harold J. Rainey, Michael Man
ning, Joseph O'Shea, V. G.,
Harry Phillips, Daniel J. Me
Cormick, John J. Cotter, Leo
nard F. X. Mayhew, Dale
Freeman, Christian Malone, 0,
F. M., Leonard Spanjers, Cla
rence J. Biggers, S. M., R.
Donald Kieman, Jarleth Burke,
J. Douglas Edwards, Daniel O’
Connor, and Vincent Conner,
C, P.
The Anniversary Mass was
followed by a reception in the
newly acquired Parish House.
This historic home is in the
process of restoration by the
parishioners of St. Joseph's
under the direction of the Build
ing Chairmen of the Parish
Council, Mr. Del Pankey and
Mrs. Robert Kane. Built in 1830,
the home was purchased by
General Cobb in 1848,
It had been vacant for many
years and was reported to be one
of the few haunted houses in
Athens. The Historical Society,
however, reports that the ghost
Is “friendly".
THE RECEPTION was the
first time the house was open
ed to the public. All the work of
restoration, including painting,
papering, paneling, and plumb
ing was done by parishioners.
The entrance hall was papered
by a University professor and
his wife, the bedroom was paint
ed by a non-Catholic doctor,
students at the Navy School and
members of Fraternities, many
of them non-Catholic, scraped
paint from the walls and floors,
a brick layer in the parish
restored the fireplaces while
a medical doctor laid tile in
the meeting hall, ,»r. F.B.I. agent
made cornices, and his wife
made drapes. In everyway the
new Parish House in Athens
is deserving of its name.
Site plans for the new pro
perty, which completely sur
rounds the parish Church and
School, have been completed
by Herbert C. Millkey, A. LA.
When the new property has
been paid for a new school and
cafetorium will be built. St.
Joseph's Anniversary celebrat
ion reflected a parish with a
glorius past and a future of
great promise.
Shamrock Knitting Mills
Marietta, Georgia
Phone: 428-9007
IGNATIUS HOUSE RETREATS
Schedule for next three weeks
April 4 - 7 Women
April 18 - 21 Women
No retreats during Holy Week
Phone i35-0503 or Write 6700 Riverside Dr. N. W. Atlanta 5, Ga.
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Procession leading to St. Joseph's Church, Athens, is pictured above as it was leaving the Rectory
to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the parish on March 30, 1963. Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan
of Atlanta presided at the Rites.
CARDINAL SPELLMAN ON IT
Pope Names Commission
To R evise Canon Law
The Editor
18 when the student newspaper
VATICAN CITY (NC)— Pope
John XXIII has set up a com
mission of 30 cardinals to rev
ise the Code of Canon Law.
Among the 30 are Francis
Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop
of New York, and Paul Car
dinal Leger, Archbishop of
Montreal.
THE commission will carry
out the third of three major
projects announced by the Pope
in the early months of his
pontificate. On January 25,
1959, Pope John revealed his
plans to hold a synod for the
Rome diocese and an ecumeni
cal council, and to update the
canon law code. The Rome sy
nod was held in January, 1960,
and the Second Vatican Ecume
nical Council, which opened last
October, is still In progress.
The Pope announced the esta
blishment of the new commiss
ion at a meeting (March 28)
of the council's Coordinating
Commission.
PRESIDENT of the new canon
law commission Is Pietro Ca
rdinal Ciriaci, Prefect of the
Sacred Congregation of the Co
uncil. Msgr. Giacomo Violardo,
Underscretary of the Sacred
Apostolic Signature, high Ch
urch court, is its secretary.
The task of the new commiss
ion will be to gather and pre
pare material for a revision of
the canon law code according
to the directives of the ecumeni
cal council. The revision will
apply only to the code now in
force in the Latin Rite. Eas
tern Rite Catholics are
governed by a separate code.
The commission’s work will
be the first major revision of
canon law since the present code
went into effect in 1918.
CANON law is the body of
laws and regulations formulated
by the Church for the discip
line of Its members. Its prin
cipal sources are decrees issu
ed by the popes, ecumenical,
councils and Vatican congregat
ions, and decisions of Church
tribunals. Canon law grew up
slowly over the centuries.
Its beginnings go back to the
very early days of the Church.
In the first century the bishops
of Rome governed the Church
mainly through correspondence
deciding on cases submitted to
them and settling points of gene
ral discipline, Many of these
decisions acquired the force of
law either at once or in the
course of time.
In addition, other bishops en
acted for their own Sees such
regulations as local conditions
required. These regulations
were not general, but some
times they spread from diocese
to diocese and ended by gain
ing universal recognition and
thus becoming part of the gener
al canon law. The ecumenical
councils, the first of which was
held In Nicaea In what is now
Turkey, not only defined points
of doctrine with the approval
of the popes, but also enacted
numerous disciplinary laws for
the whole Church.
DESPITE many efforts to col
lect and codify these laws, by
the Middle Ages there was con
siderable confusion about them.
It was difficult to know which
laws were genuine, which had
been repealed and which were
still In force. About 1140 an
Italian monk, Gratian, compl
ied a monumental work. He
collected and tried to put in
order all Church legislation
which had accumalated up to his
time. Although unofficial and
resting entirely on his own au
thority, "Gratian's Decree,"
as his book was called, was
so useful that it soon super
seded all earlier collections.
The Council of Trent (1545-
1563) was a major landmark
in canon law history. The disci
plinary legislation it passed was
promulgated in 1594 by Pope Pi
us IV and constituted the pri
mary source of canon law until
the 1918 codification.
By the beginning of the 20th
century canon law was again
in a state of confusion. At
Rome Altar
Society Meet
The April meeting of St. Mar
y's Altar Society, Rome, was
held Monday at the Rectory.
Mrs. Robert Brierly, vice-pre
sident, presided in the absence
of the president.
The visiting committee re
ported seventeen visits had been
made to sick people and new
comers to the parish. One box
of altar supplies were sent by
the altar society to missions
during the past month.
The nominating committee
was appointed to bring in a
slate of officers for the next
year to be voted upon at the
May meeting. The committee
consists of Mrs. Don Damon,
Mrs. Frank Briggs, and Mrs.
Richard Baer. Mrs. Lee Bat
tle, Sacristan, appointed her
committees to care for the
altar during April.
Father McDonough announced
that the memorial stained glass
windows would be Installed in
about four months.
Society Elects
Mary Howe
Miss Mary Howe, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James J, Howe,
150 E. Wesley, Rd., N.E., At
lanta was recently initiated into
Delta Epsilon Sigma at Mary
ville College of the Sacred He
art, St. Louis.
Delta Epsilon Sigma is a nat
ional Catholic honor society,
Miss Howe is a senior at the
college. A sister, Miss Dorothy
Howe, is a freshman at Mary
ville.
Cardinal Named
VATICAN CITY (CN) Pope
John XXIII has named Paul Em
ile Cardinal Leger, S.S., Arch
bishop of Montereal, a member
of the Sacred Cons Is tor ial Con
gregation which prepares mat
ters for consistories, erects
dioceses and chooses bishops.
the First Vatican Council (1869-
1870) conditions had prevented
the passing of disciplinary laws
or consideration of the bishops’
request for codification of those
already in force.
BUT IN 1904 Pope St. Pius
X announced his determination
to have a complete and order
ly codification of all existing
Church laws, with obsolete and
outdated ones eliminated and
others brought into conformity
with modern conditions.
He appointed a commission
of cardinals under his own ch
airmanship on March 25, 1904
the world’s archbishops were
asked to confer their suffragan
bishops and within four months
to send word as to which laws
in their opinion needed amend
ment. Every bishop was given
the right to keep a representat
ive in Rome to attend commiss
ion meetings.
When a tentative draft was
drawn up, it was submitted to
expert canon lawyers who acted
as consultors to all bishops and
religious superiors entitled to
attend an ecumenical council.
Their opinions were then stud
ied by the commission. It is
estimated that every canon in
the code was discussed from
5 to 12 times before beingfinally
adopted.
THE CODE of Canon Law that
resulted from these efforts was
promulgated on May 27, 1917,
by Pope Benedict XV and went
into effect the following May 19.
Since then numerous official
Church documents which have
the force of law have been is
sued, necessitating the present
effort of revision.
BISHOP SAYS
HERSHEY, Pa., (NC)—The
Bishop of Wheeling, W. Va„
said here that unjust treatment
of Negroes by Catholics is a
matter for confession.
Bishop Joseph H. Hodges,
speaking to a leadership instit
ute of the National Council of
Catholic Women, said that rac
ial discrimination deprives the
Negro of honor due him as a
human being.
“UNLESS we are Just in our
dealings with our neighbor, we
can make no claim to love of
God and love of neighbor," he
said.
“In the Old Testament we
read: ‘Thou hast loved justice
and hated iniquity; therefore
thy God hath annointed thee
with the oil of gladness above
thy neighbors.'
“God made Negroes human
beings. In all justice, treat
them as God does. Discriminat
ion is a matter for confession."
THE PRELATE defined racil
discrimination as "the total
restriction or rejection of a
racial group without consider-
To
TO THE EDITOR;
Please accept the thanks of
the St. Cecelia Circle of Christ
the King Parish for the very
fine book supplement of the
recent Georgia Bulletin. The
article by Flannery O'Connor
was discussed at our meeting
and the movie reviews also
received laudatory comment.
We also wish to express the
concurrence of the members of
the Circle with Mrs. Schweer's
comments about the local news
of the Archdiocese in her re
cent letter to you. We consi
der this a most necessary func
tion of our paper - and we en
joy reading It. We hope that
as you become closer acqua
inted with the Archdiocese, you
will find ways to obtain this
news. We are anticipating its
return.
DOROTHY J. TRACY (MRS.
JACK) CHAIRMAN OF ST.
CECELIA CIRCLE
ATLANTA
TO THE EDITOR:
My attention has been call
ed to your "Reapings at Ran
dom" column which deals with
the NCWC News Service hand
ling of the Catholic University
controversy.
I find no fault with an editor
commenting forthright on
various topics, including the
NCWC News Service. But I
should hope that the comments
would show a respect for truth
and accuracy.
I object to your gross dis
tortion of telephone remarks
attributed to me in your col
umn. There is the possibility
that because it was a long
distance call you had difficulty
understanding me. But I cannot
see how even a bad telephone
connection could get my re
marks so horribly twisted.
Your colmn says; “The NC
editor said he did not know
what they could do, seeing as
the public relations girl at
Catholic U. was on vacation."
I said no such thing.
My remarks were these: I
said I had assigned a man to
check into the report that four
priests were "banned" from
speaking at the Catholic Uni
versity. I said I did not know,
at the moment, what he would
come up with because he had
not completed the investigation.
I most definitely did not say
that the absence of the Catholic
University public relations offi-
cial prevented us from handling
the story. In fact, we provided
a release on the controversy in
her absence.
For the record, there is also
a serious wrenching of the truth
in your assertion that "the
NCWC News Service remained
silent" on the Catholic Univer
sity affair.
You say the "banning" by
the Catholic University of the
four theologians “broke into
the public forum” on January
ation of the capacity or merit
or concrete behavior of the in
dividuals in that group."
He said “segregation Is a
sub-division of discrimination
where there is physical separ
ation or specific boundaries set
nn »9
up#
Bishop Hodges dlscussedfour
basic rights due the Negro;
the right of free association,
the right to a decent living
the right to a full education
according to his capacity and
the right to freedom of wor
ship.
He called It “sickening’’ that
Negroes have been segregated
in Catholic churches “and at
times even discriminated
against in the reception of the
Sacraments."
URGING the women to study
and to act on the problem of
racial discrimination, he said.
"Catholic Action in the field
of race relations has been too
feeble in intensity and extensity.
The Church has done much but
not In proportion to its numbers
and principles."
printed a story dealing with it.
However, this development
was not brought to the attent
ion of NC until Friday, Feb
ruary 15, a delay for which
the NC can hardly be blamed.
We do not have a program of
combing through the student
publications of the hundreds
of colleges and universities in
this country because we judge
this would be time consuming,
highly expensive and generally
unproductive of story leads.
We depend for tips on college
and university news of national
interest principally on the col
lege public relations officials,
the local press, both Catholic
and secular, our local repre
sentative, and interested part
ies. In this particular case,
none of these traditional
sources alerted us.
We first found out about the
“ban" on Friday, February 15,
when we saw a story on the
front page of the February 14
Issue of the Davenport diocesan
paper. We went to work making
investigations on the story im
mediately, and had put together
a release for the Catholic pap
ers by late afternoon of the same
day.
Since we dose our service at
3:00 P.M., the release was too
late to be Issued that afternoon.
However, it was included in our
service of the following day,
Saturday, February 16.
It should be pointed out, in
addition, that no news agency or
daily paper printed anything on
the Catholic University affair
before the NCWC News Service.
Apparently, the "public forum"
your column mentions was so
restricted that none of these
agencies or papers were aware
of it before the NC News Service
issued a release.
In view of the circumstances,
your charge that the NC News
Service "remained silent" be
trays itself as an ugly distort
ion, either purposeful, or due to
an Ignorance of the facts. If
based on ignorance, it is
scarely indicative of the
thorough journalistic research
that should precede responsible
commentary in a syndicated
column.
Elmer Von Feldt
News Editor
N.C.W.C. News Service
Washington 5, D. C.
EDITOR'S NOTE:
A reporter always runs the
hazard of having even indirect
quotes denied — all the more
so when a telephone conversat
ion is involved. We do not tap
telephones and cannot produce
a record of the conversation.
We stand by our report.
It is surely surprising that
the major news service of the
Catholic press should admit
that It had to learn about a
controversy on its own door
step in Washington, D. C. from
a diocesan weekly in Daven
port, Iowa. Furthermore, it is
also surprising that Mr. Von
Feldt should suggest that be
cause no other person or news
agency had up to this time
published a story about the
Catholic U. controversy, then
the NC also was excused.The
Catholic press obviously ex
pects its own news service
to be first with a story about
a major Catholic institution.
On the question of accuracy,
it should be made clear that
the "release" referred to in
paragraph 13 of Mr. Von Feldt's
letter was only an "editorial
information". It was not a news
story; but merely a statement
from the Vice-Rector of Catho
lic University defending its
position. There is no question
that the ban on the four theo
logians was common knowledge
in Washington, D. C. Catholic
circles, long before February
15. We presume the News Ser
vice staff mixes in these
circles.
HOLY WEEK: A FRIEND DIES
DEEPLY MOvING the other day was the funeral Mass of
a man we bad known many years. The crowd in the church was
impressive, causing onlookers to ex
claim In amazement. . . . For he was
one of those whose special gifts is
making friends. Over 1,000 Mass cards
had been left at the wake, and fifty
persons gave up their day’s work to
go to the graveside in a distant bor
ough. One woman, turning away after
ward, said sadly; “An era has ended.
It’s remarkable how many people he
brought, together . . . This week we
mark the death of Christ and all
around the earth Christians pause to
pray and be thankful for being
brought together in the Mystical Body of Christ. At the Last
Supper, Christ said: “You are My friends” ... As His friends
we help others to find Him—others like the leprosy victims in
India. The Sisters of Mary Immaculate of SHERTALLAY,
Green Gardens, care for them devotedly . . . But poverty pre
vents many things, a chapel of their own, for example. Can you
help us gather the $3,000 needed? Your special HOLY WEEK
sacrifice can make new friends for Christ!
MASS OFFERINGS MAY BE A MISSIONARY’S ONLY DAILY
SUPPORT. PLEASE KEEP THEM COMING!
Tht Holy Father^ Mission Aid
fur tht Oriental Church
FROM THE GARDEN STATE. Barbara writes:
“Dear Monsignor: I am interested in adopt
ing a seminarian. I cannot afford to pay the
S600 at once but will be able to space it over
two years, paying $20 a month ... I am 17,
just graduated from high school. I have a
steady permanent job.”
You can adopt a seminarian for $100 a
year, Barbara. To adopt a sister, $150 a
year for two years is needed. But it takes six years to train a
priest. We have names of many seminarians and novices:
JOSEPH KEELATH and GEORGE PUTHUMANA of Manga
lore, India . . . SISTER IVA and SISTER EUPHRASIA of the
Sisters of St Catherine of Sienna in IRAQ, You may write to
them through our office!
YOUR EASTER BONNET—
may have many ribbons on It, but a STRiNGLESS GIFT to us
will speed help where It’s most needed!
THE ANCIENTS COPIED NATURE. Egyptians decorated
their pillars with lotus blossoms; the Greeks favored acanthus
lssves . . . Solomon's temple featured strings of pomegranates
and his crown was patterned after the blossom of this fruit . ,
Christ spoke in parables of the “lilies of the field” . , . For
thoss sending in s donation for the missions, we'll mall a card
of PRESSED FLOWERS from the Holy Land if requested , , .
If you wish to make your gift in another’s name, we ll send that
porsoa « lovely EASTER GIFT CARD.
■ASTIR GIFTS YOU CAN GIVE:
Q Membership In our assoelslion. $1 a year per person;
$5 for • family. Perpetual: $20 single; $100 ramlly,
Q JOIN one of ov DOLLAR-A-MONTH CLUBS, to help
the aged, orphans, lepers, ste.
□ A MEMORIAL CHAPEL for s loved one. Cost: $2,000 to
$8,000.
Q A MEMORIAL SCHOOL. Cost: 83,000.
□ A 310 FOOD PACKAGE to help e PALESTINE REFU
GEE FAMILY for one month.
□ A WARM BLANKET to a Bedouin. Cost: $2.
KINDLY REMEMBER US IN YOUR WILL. LEGAL TITLE:
THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. As
• member of oar association you share In the graces of 15,000
nHedeoery prteets end the Mease* of the Holy Father!
f^lllearSstGlissions^
PIANOS CA1DINAL SPKUMAN, President
Mayr. Jeaepfc T. tyee. Metl S+t'y
*|| tMMMMidltlMII a*•
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
4IO Uxington Ava. «rt 44th St. Ntw Yori< 17, N. Y.
Racial Injustice
Confession Matter