Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 8
GEORGIA BULLETIN
THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1963
UARLEN DISSENTS
Court Reverses
‘Sit-In’ Rulings
CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE
ordinance prohibiting such con
duct.
"We have just held (in the
Greenville case) that where an
ordinance makes It unlawful
for owners or managers of
restaurants to seat whites and
Negroes together, a conviction
under the state's criminal pro
cesses employed In a way which
enforces the discrimination
mandated by the ordinance can
not stand.
Bar Y I!4> Fro® Mas”
MAX METZEL. OwMf
MAX'S MEN S SHOPS
t Ptaehtrtt IMoMlW B.vi
CMfflNM P.4*« tnoppia* Can Mr
Paon* 431-1*11
#74 PtachtrM. N.K.
pdom tk 4-«aas — At mu at
REMEMBER
YOUR
PATRONAGE
OF
THE GEORGIA
BULLETIN
ADVERTISERS
MAKES THIS
ARCHOIOCESAN
NEWSPAPER
POSSIBLE
MOTOR HOTEL
• rv * aim ooNomeNtNe
• FAMOUS MIAMI BUPPIT
• .ea * aavanAOi itationi
• OOFPBI MAKUi IACH ROOM
"Equally the state cannot
achieve the same result by an
official command which has at
least as much coercive effect
as an ordinance."
Justice Harlan in his dis
senting opinion had no sym
pathy for laws to require se
gregated eating facilities. He
maintained, however, that the
sit-in cases involved "compet
ing constitutional claims of a
high order: liberty and equa
lity."
"FREEDOM of the Individual
to choose his associates or his
neighbors, to use and dispose
of his property as he sees fit,
to be irrational, arbitrary, ca
pricious, even unjust in his
personal relations are things all
entitled to a large measure of
protection from governmental
interference," he said.
Commenting on the majority
opinion in the Greenville case,
he said:
"Although the right of a pri
vate restaurateur to operate, if
he pleases, on a segregated
basis is obstensibly left un
touched, the court In truth ef
fectually deprives him of that
right in any state where a law
like this Greenville ordinance
continues to exist."
VOCATION
PRAYER
0 God, Who wills not tne
death of a sinner * but rather
that he be converted and live
* grant we beseech Thee *
through the Intercession of the
Blessed Mary, ever Virgin *
and all the saints * an increase
of laborer* for Thy Church *
fellow laborers with Christ *to
spend and consume themselves
for souls * through the same
Jesus Christ Thy Son * Who
liveth and relgneth with Thee *
in the unity of the Holy Spirit
• world without end.
OLYMPIA
Portable Typewriters
Finest Of Quality
OEOROE STRUPE
fypowrittr
Service Co.
1083 Peachtree St., N. E.
Phone 875-5368
ATLANTA'S MOST PRESENTS THE
UNUSUAL PIZZERIA Original
4 INK SPOTS
Oponing Monday, Juno 3rd
For Tho Cocktail Hour
no cover Monday Thru Saturday
NO MINIMUM 6-9:30 P.M.
NO ADMISSION
CAUL FOR RESERVATIONS
Music -
four Favorito Beverage
OPEN 5 P.M. to 2 A.M.
1891 PEACHTREE RD.
NEXT TO POT O'GOLD
AMttf
PaRKINO
TR, 6-6912
' PARTY
LOUNGE
I SUBSCRIBE
I TO THE
GEORGIA
BULLETIN
$5.00 PER YEAR
Mail to P. O. Box 11667
Northside Station
Atlanta 5, Georgia
Name .
Address
City
State
GROUP of Marist Seniors who recently won $40,000 worth of scholarship grants.
• See story page 7.
AT ST. BERNARDS
McGill,Archbishop Cody
To Get Culman Degrees
Cullman, Ala. - Ralph Mc
Gill, Atlanta Constitution Pub
lisher and author, and Arch
bishop John P. Cody Apostolic
Administrator of New Orleans,
will be awarded honorary de
grees by St. Bernard College
here Sunday as "distinguished
exemplars" in the cause for
racial justice and equality.
In colorful campus gradua
tion exercises, McGill, a com
municant of the Episcopal
Church, will deliver the com
mencement address, and Arch
bishop Cody, who served six
years In the Vatican Secretar
iat of State, will give the ser
mon at the Baccalaureate Mass
preceding the graduation exer
cise.
THE VERY Rev. Brian J.
Egan, O.S.B., president of St.
Bernard, will celebrate the
Baccalaureate Mass. The
senior class will receive bache
lor degrees marking completion
of study at the four-year higher
education center operated by
monks of the historic Bene
dictine Order.
St. Bernard College and Fa
ther Egan have won national
attention for enriching inter
faith and intercultural pro
gram! in this north-central
Alabama area, some 50 miles
from Birmingham. The student
body normally approximates 50
per cent Protestant enrollment,
drawn largely from the small
towns and cities of Alabama,
Tennessee and Georgia.
An honorary doctor of let
ters degree will be awarded at
the same graduation exercise
to the Rev. Mother Susan Se
vier, O.S.B., president of Sac
red Heart College in Cullman
and president of the Congre
gation of St. Scholastics, an
association that includes all
the Benedictine convents in this
country.
RALPH McGILL
ARCHBISHOP CODY
of this great Republic as a
leading Roman Catholic prelate
engaged in building the City
of Man in such fashion that it
mirrors the eternal truths and
values of the City of God."
IT POINTS out that he was a
key figure in bringing about
successful desegregation of pa
rochial schools while holding
high diocesan posts in New
Orleans, St. Louis and Kansas
City, adding that "in each of
these great urban testing
grounds for the children of God,
Archibishop Cody has acted
forthrightly for community ad
justments that provided dignity
for all races and creeds."
The citation also notes that
Archibishop Cody has put his
"advanced scholarship, diplo
matic training and humble wis
dom in support of the plight of
man in search of meaningful
community" because he knows
that when children are brought
together In "common search
for right reason and the flower
ing of each individual intellect"
then the modern society is bol
stered by "a vital source of
redeeming grace."
"In honoring him, St. Ber
nard College underscores the
message of Pope John XXIII
that it Is men of goodwill every
where who must save the world
In this age of great unrest and
shattering transitions," the ci
tation adds.
New Director
NEW CANAAN, Conn. (NC)
—•Father Theodore Weneck, O.
F.M., has been reelected to t
three-year term as Provincial
Superior of Franciscans of the
Byzantine-Slavonic Rite in the
United States. His election, dur
ing a Franciscan meeting in
Rome.
The monks, from 25 Trappist
and Benedictine Monasteries in
this country and Canada, have
for five years participated in
a study originated by the Geo
rgia Department of Public He
alth attempting to define the re
lationship between diet and ath
erosclerosis - hardening of the
arteries.
DR. CARROLL B. Cuinlan,
Chief of Cardiovascular Re
search and project head, and Dr.
J. Gordon Barrow, Director of
the Cardiovascular Disease
Control Service, both from the
State Health Department were
quick to point out that the meet
ing was not called to report
final results.
Dr. Quinlan said, "We have
learned a great deal since the
project originated in 1957, but
it is far too early to draw sig
nificant conclusions."
THE ONE day meeting at
tracted members of the Trap
pist and Benedictine Orders of
Catholic Relief
Resettled Half
Cuban Refugees
MIAMI, Fla. (NC)—Catholic
Relief Services—National Ca
tholic Welfare Conference has
resettled well over half of all
Cuban refugees resettled in the
U.S. since January, 1961.
Since that date, 58, 540 Cu
bans have been resettled, with
CRS—NCWC accounting for 33,
636—almost 57 per cent of the
total.
These figures were made
public here by the Cuban Re
fugee Center conducted by the
U.S. Department of Health, Ed
ucation and Welfare.
Resettlement figures for
other agencies, according to the
center, are: International Res
cue, 12,761; Church World Ser
vice, 10,239; and United HIAS,
1,903.
BENEDICTINES-TRAPPISTS
Street
Citv Zone .... state ....
dfr < I2ear'£ast(nissi©nsj&i
MANCIS CARDINAL SHUMAN, Pra.ldent
Miff. Jotopk T. I yea, Rat’t Wy
Seed ell tat
CATHOLIC NEAR IAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
*40 Uxlngfon Avt. of 46th St. New York 17, N. Y.
THE TRAGEDY OF THE MISSIONS
Monks Take Part in State
Heart Research Project
THE citation for the doctor
of laws degree to McGill de
scribes his as "a voice of
Christian conscience illumina
ting the human intelligence
through the virtue of hope." It
acclaims him as "one of this
nation's foremost spokesmen
for the development and enrich
ment of Interfaith and inter-
cultural dialogue that brlngr
man into greater bonds of com
munity under God."
The citation also notes that
McGill "In time of great change
and travail in his beloved South
land has ennobled the concept
of the word as the bearer of
truth - he has provided dyna
mic leadership In the advance
ment of racial justice and equa
lity, but always with a prose
made eloquent and moving be
cause it Is embedded in the
Eternal Truth that brotherhood
and love must unite the human
family if God's will is to be
done."
IT ADDS that while McGill
has won high honors from the
academic world and now serves
in advisory capacity to the
White House, "yet all his career
has been In the service of the
lowly, the impoverished and the
poor in spirit, whom he has
witnessed and articulated on-
the-scene throughout the
world."
"In honoring him (McGill),
St, Bernard College under
scores the contributions of all
who propagate truth with humi
lity and love for their fellow
man," the citation reads.
Tie Holy Father) Mission Aid
for tit Oriental Church
In a recent magazine article, Father Nicholas Maestrinl, for
mer Director of the Catholic Truth Society of Hong Kong,
describes the dismaying difficulties
of the missionaries. The average mis
sion diocese receives 812.000 yearly
help from Rome. With this altogether
Inadequate sum of money, overworked
priests, brothers and Sisters are try
ing bravely to bring the faith to mil
lions. even bllliona of people who do
not know Christ. He writes: "Innumer
able lives and sacrifices of mission
aries have been almost wasted be
cause they have been deprived of the
necessary tools to do their job" . . .
An appeal from Mother Margaret,
Superior General of the Daughters of Mary in Trivandrum, In
dia. vividly pictures some mission hardships. She writes: "At
present a small room, 20 by 30 feet, is used for services. It can
hold only 20 persons. There are 48 Sisters in the Novitiate.
Next year the number will be over 55. Since there la no parish
church nearby the people are coming to our chapel for Hol>
Maas and the other Sacraments. It is extremely necessary to
have a chapel built" ... A moderately-sized one with n wing
large enough to accommodate the neighboring faithful will
coat $3,000 to build. Will you be generous in helping these
Sisters and faithful to have the essentials to carry on their
work? Send your help now. Thank you.
A CHILD LOVES THE CHURCH
Jo Ann H. of Los Angeles, writes: "I have now been a Catho
lic for seven months. 1 had no religion until I became a Catholic
on May 3, 1962. I am eleven and love the Church. 1 think It is
wonderful. I have started a little collection for the mission. Thh
Is the first time I have sent money so the more I save the more
I will be able to send you. I would like to write to a priest oi
Sister or even more ao you. Love” ... Of course, wo replied,
thanking her and deeply moved by Iter wonderful enthusiasm
for the faith . . . Would you like to help too with a prayer and
a $1 a month to one of our clubs, such as:
DAMIEN LEPER CLUB (cares for lepers) ORPHAN’S BREAD
• feeds orphans); PALACE OF GOLD (provides for aged) BA-
SILLIANS (supports mission schools); MONICA GUILD (fur
nishes chalices, altars, etc., for mission chapels).
FATHERS DAY IS COMING. On June 16, Sunday, Dan
comes Into his own. In your exuberance over Mother, don’t for
get Father. He too would like to be remembered. What nicer
way than to have a missionary aay a Mass for his Intention? Oi
enroll him ns n MEMBER of our association <$1 a year; $20
for a lifetime. Then he will participate in the graces of the
Masses of 15.000 missionaries. Other suggestions are a FOOD
PACKAGE for a Palestine Refugee family, costing $10, a
STRINGLESS GIFT to be used where most needed. Or per
haps a MEMORIAL GIFT to a mission chapel.
NEAR EAST COUNTRIES RICH WITH VOCATIONS
Yes, but money is needed for the education of seminarians
and Sisters. We have many names of ones needing help, such
As EMANUELE YOUSEF BOJI and SALIM ABBU ATTISA,
Chaldean students in Baghdad. Iraq and SISTER MAJELLA and
SISTER GILBERT of the Sisters of the Destitute, Always,
India. Will you adopt one of theae?
Dear Monsignor:
I enclose S of the $3M needed to educate a Sister or
!••• of the $600 needed for the training of a seminarian.
I’ll send $ .. monthly or $ once a year. I will pray for
him or her.
Name
Monks, from points as far dis
tant as Monte Cistello Monas
tery in Rome, Italy. Other Mo
nks in attendance were from
the Trappist Monastery In Con
yers, Our Lady of the Holy
Ghost, from 19 other states and
three Canadian provinces.
The research project began
as a comparative diet study bet
ween the Trappist Monks In
Conyers and those of the Bene
dictine Order at St. Bernard's
Abbey in Cullman, Alabama.
For scientific purposes the two
orders, Trappist and Benedic-
time, afforded a natural ex
periment. The Trappist diet is
simple and vegetarian, totally
devoid of meat, fish or fowl.
The Benedictines eat a typically
varied American diet.
SOME 2000 monks, all volun
teers, are currently engaged in
the diet study. All have supp
lied the research teams with
medical, social and family his
tories. Each has had a com
plete physical examination in
cluding an electrocardiogram
and chest X-ray. Numerous
Notre Dame
Men To Meet
Father Joyce
Father Joyce, executive vice
president of Notre Dame Uni
versity, will be the featured
speaker of Universal Notre Dame
night dinner to be held at 6:30
p.m., May 26 at the Fulton Roof
of Castlevlew Town and Country
Club.
Incoming officers of the At
lanta Notre Dame Alumni Club
will be Introduced at the dinner
and Father Joyce will present
the organization's Man-of-the-
Year Award.
blood and diet studies have
been made.
The meeting Monday, bring
ing together participating
monks and physicians, was
called primarily to coordinate
and standardize reporting and
interpretation techniques.
The atherosclerosis study is
being sponsored cooperatively
by the Georgia Department of
Public Health and the National
Heart Instutute, United States
Public Health and the Nat-
Public Health Service. The
meeting Monday was sponsored
by the Heart Institute and in
cluded a tour of the State He
alth Building. Simultaneous tra
nslation of the technical sessi
ons was provided for non-Eng
lish speaking monks from Can
ada.
Pastor Honors
Altar Society
The ladies of St. Jude's At
tar Society of Sandy Springs
were guests of their pastor,
Father John Stapleton, at a din-
given in their honor on Monday
evening May 13, to show his
appreciation and that of the par
ish for the many services they
had performed in the past year.
In addition to the dinner, the
ladies were also entertained by
the combined choirs of St.
Jude’s and of Our Lady of Assu
mption, North Atlanta, under the
direction of Mrs. Warren Tay
lor and Mrs. Howard C. Smith,
respectively. The musical pro
gram of ecclesiastical music
was dedicated to Father Staple-
ton in honor of his tenth anni
versary in the Priesthood.
The doctor of laws degree
citation for Archbishop Cody
describes him as one who "has
•merged on the pluralistic stage
From tho colorfully-bedecked shrimp boat, Capt. Jeffry, a priest blesses the line of
moored vessel* along the bayou at Grand Caillou, La. Behind the lead vessel, a string
of shrimp boat.s proceed down-bayou and out to sea. This particular shrimper has a Ro
sary painted on its hull on the port side among several varieties of fish and seafood.
A little-publicized meeting
between Catholic monks and
physicians, held in Atlanta last
week summed up the progress
of a long term research pro
ject which may eventually of
fer a solution to medicine's bat
tle against heart disease, the
nation’s number one killer.