The Georgia bulletin (Atlanta) 1963-current, June 06, 1963, Image 6

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PAGE 6 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1963 Sacred Heart Left to right: 1st row- Angelina Basanta , Nancy Ann Hill, Therese Disney, Jean Fowler, Kay Wilson: 2nd row- Tommy Sawyer, Calvin Conklin, Lee Shannon, Frank Hammond, KenFlager, Byron Bettencount; 3rd row - Jo Ann Roucher, Mary Jane Northrop, Janice Cassidy, Marie Louise Darnell, Beatniz Blancej 4th row - Carl Tidwell, Sam Smith, Tommy Musinsky, Dennis Wilson. Father Thomas Roshetko S.M. said the 8 A.M. Mass for the graduates and presented the diplomas. FRED A. YORK PEST CONTROL SERVICE Our Slogan — Nearly Right Won't De Our Service — Always Guaranteed Our Products On Sale At Office CALL FOR FREE INSPECTION OR INFORMATION m State St.. N W Phone TR. S 1371 Atlanta. Ga. IGNATIUS HOUSE RETREATS Schedule fo next six weeks June 10-14 Priests June 20-23 Men June 27-30 Wo.oen July 11-14 Men July 18-21 Women July 25-28 Women Phene 255-0503 or Write 6700 Riverside Dr. N. W. Atlanta 5, Ga. ESTES SURGICAL SUPPLY CO. Free Customer Parking 410 W. PEACHTREE, N.W. JA 1-1700 ATLANTA, GEORGIA Warrant College Uoca f^aton, (or id a ★ the FIRST CATHOLIC TWO-YEAR * the FIFTH COLLEGE conducted LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE for by the RELIGIOUS OF THE Women in FLORIDA SACRED HEART OF WARY in the United States Opening September, 1963 MAILING ADDRESS: Box 370 W Boca Reton Florida Georgia’s Leading Block Company Georgia’* Largest Block Plant Georgia's Only All Autoclaved Plant Quality of Product Unsurpassed Bailey Autoclaved Lightweight Block - Holiday Hill Stone CONCRETE MANUFACTURING COMPANY a o*i Jackion 1-0077 0B0 747 Forrest Road, N.E. ATLANTA, GEORGIA Where Insurance is a Profession, Not a Sideline Saint Thomas More School John Stephen Almand; Nedom L. Angler; Richard Leslie Arnold: David Daryl Beane; Stephen Bernard; Thomas Conrad Bishop; Gabriel Jude Daher; Frank Henry Di Cristina III: William Neal Dunwoody; Michael Patrick Echemendla; James Patrick Galvin; Michael Stuart Harbin; Stephen Robert Hayden; John Carl Klinger HI: Jeremiah Glenn McCarty; John Groom Oliver III; Graham Malcolm Joseph Pratt; Thomas Gilliland Price; Joseph Francis Shoemaker III ; Terry Scott Sparks; William Joseph Staley; James Michael Tatum: Raymond Marshall Teske; John Richard Thoman; John Michael Weldon; James Robert Wilson; Gregory Lewis Wojolk; Leo Joseph Zuber; Paula Elizabeth Barton; Susan Elaine Beckham; Rose Ann Billingsley; Cynthls Lynn Cotton: Judith Ann Duffy; Mary Louise Ewing; Catherine Lynda Gadd; Nancy Elliott Harrington; Tina Jo Jenkins; Karyl Mildred Kuhn; Betty Rose Lynch; Bonnie Ruth Lynskey; Margaret Elizabeth Mann; Blalre Michael Neal; Donna Darlene Nuckles; Harri-Jean Richardson; Judith Anne Riley; Natalia Beatrice Scheock; Mary Paula Schulte; Margaret Mary Sharp; Anna Marie Shoemaker; Daphne Ann Smyke; Mary Margaret Tierney; Julie Louise Wehner; St. John The Evangelist School Seated - Lonnie Meloncon, Larry Schray, Thomas Buelterman, Ray Wehling, Martin Walker. Seated - Margaret Hollingsworth, Peggy McHugh, Loretta Martinez, Jane Jones, Joyce Gallagher, Rev. John O’Shea, Lee Boerner, Margaret Fulcher, Mary Capo, Juli Saxon, Carole Reynolds. Standing - Gary DuTeau, Edward Roberts, Ron nie White, Judy Anderson, Helen Jones, Linda Jones, Colleen Lancaster, Cynthia Samra, Thomas Waidner, Bertrand Hill, Timothy Keane. Last Row - Thomas Jac ques , Michael Fedack, Michael Lachapelie, John Knight, Albert Bahorlc, Gordon McLeroy, Terry Love. Melkite Annual Dinner The Ladles of the St. John’s Melkite Altar and Rosary So ciety will sponsor their Annual Lebanese Dinner on Sunday June 9. The dinner will be held on the church grounds fron Noon until Five o'clock As in the past, the public has been in vited to participate by enjoy ing the oriental delicacies pre pared by the women of the church. The Divine Liturgy will be celebrated by the pastor, Father William Haddad, at 10:30. The Mass will be celebrated in three languages, Arabic, Greek, and English. The St. John Choir di rected by Mr. Herbert Azar and accompanied by Mr. Homer Ed wards will assist Father Haddad by chanting the beautiful By zantine responses. The dinner will be served immediately following the Mass. Among the treats in store for those who attend will be one of the traditional Lebanese dis hes—Rolled Grape Leaves. St. Jude’s Men’s Club Alex Clarke, Marketing Man ager of Armour & Co. and mem ber of the Men’s Club of St. Jude the Apostle, Sandy Springs, Ga. was the principal speaker at a dinner held at the school cafetorium Sunday evening June 2. During the business session, among the reports given by committee chairman was a summary of the diocese-wltle Census recently completed. In the Sandy Springs area, tabu lation Indicates 9 % of area re sidents are Roman Catholic with variations by neighborhood from almost nil to 15% in the newer sections. Denie Guinan who headed this work made the report in some detail. ARCHBISHOP HALLINAN Graduates Hear Homily On Importance Of Truth The following is an extract from the baccalaureate sermon given last week-end by Arch bishop Paul J. Hallinan to the graduating students of Belmont Abbey College, Belmont, North Carolina. The young Catholic today, breathing the ecumenical spirit passing part of his senior col lege year in the warm and holy liberty of the second Vatican Council, finds today’s challenge a rather startling combination of the old and new, the tra ditional and the progressive, the conservative and the liberal. Some of the old cliches no lon ger suffice: that Catholicism is best known as a strong bulwark against Communism, that error has no rights, that prudence is the Catholic virtue, or even the greatest of virtues. Certainly, Catholicism and Communism are incompatible , certainly truth and error are in con- tradition, certainly prudence is one of the virtues. But we are entering an era of Catholic history where the old cliches must be re-examined. And the man who has pushed us into this era is the beloved pastor, the man who came from God whose name was John. In this homily we are not speak ing of his magnificent treaties on Justice or on peace, his devotion to Our Lady of St. Joseph, or his overwhelming desire that ball might be one in the Church of Christ. BECAUSE your college has an authentic intellectual tradition, rooted deeply In the long Bene dictine affinity for the expansion of the mind, because this is the climax of your formal higher education, and because this na tion and the world need the SUTTER <Sc McLELLAN Mortgage Guarantee Bldg. JA 8-2086 A CHARTER for the Newman Club at North Georgia, Dahlone- ga, was recently presented by Reverend August Guppenber- ger, Saint Luke’s Church. Left to right are John Schneid er, vice-president, David Ray, president, Father Guppen- berger, chaplain, and Suzanne Cameron, secretary-treasurer. dedication of our best minds,— this homily is on truth. This Is why we beg God, Just before the Gospel, to cleanseour hearts and lips - why we seek the Word in Whom life and light could be overcome by darkness. Truth is not a great rock, nor a fixed star,—life is not that simple. Truth Is the real bond between God’s mind and things that exist; between these things and our minds; between what is in our mind and what is on our lips. We reach truth by experi ence, by trial and error, by observation and experiment ation, by the witness of true men, and the witness of Supreme Being revealing Himself to men. No one can be comfortable or complacent about holding the truth, but no man can afford to forsake its search, and no man dare hold it except in humble responsibility. WHEN Pope John opened the Second Vatican Council, he spoke of the permanance of di vine truth. "It is necessary fi rst of all that the Church sh ould never depart from the sa cred patrimony of truth re ceived from the fathers.’’ It is not suprising that those who are young and restless hear these words with dismay. The prodigal son walked out of It is Father's home; so did young Augustine, so today do college men who ask petulantly like Pilate, "What is truth?" and turn aside with their diploma, not waiting for an answer. It Is the Impatience of the im mature spirit, the rejection of tradition as a living source. Yet in the sciences we tre still standing on the shoulder of Mendel, Darwin and Pas teur. History has its faults and literature its moods, but they bear witness to the painful, •- volving civilization that we have reached. A Catholic priest has recently satirized the notion that "we are a perpetually in nocent people," walking up to every problem and crisis as "if we were the first men whoever walked the earth". A Catholic layman has called this "the tendency in American life for every new generation to play Robinson Crusoe." If this la foolishness in human know ledge, It is utter tragedy in our effort to learn about God. The deposit of faith comes from Christ, guaranteed by His pro mise to the Church that the Holy Spirit would bring to her mind ail that he had taught. YET IN the same paragraph in which Pope John spoke of not departing from the patrimony of truth, he used the word "new" three times. (The Church) "must ever look to the present to the new conditions and new forms of life introduced into the modem world which have opened up a new avenues to the Catholic apostolate." This is the Christian dynamism that produced a St. Paul, a St. Bene dictine, a St. Thomas Aquinas, a Frederick Ozanam, a John Henry Newman, and in our ge neration, a Pope John and a growing vanguard of young Cat holic thinkers, some priests, some sisters, some laymen. This is the possession of that abundant life mentioned in to day’s Mass, the evidence of the ferment that is inevitable when the deposit of faith is plunged into the w hirlpool of world cares and concerns. Pope John used the word "new" many times when he spoke of the Coun cil: "new energies from spiri tual growth...a new order of human relations to which Divine Providence is leading us. This is the paradox you gra duates face, this is the recon- cilation of the apparent contra diction that is your chief burden as Christian witnesses. It will be a lonely work because, un fortunately, docility is some times thought a more respect able virtue than curiosity, and conformity has almost replaced independence as the American hallmark. To take one example of the new order,—religious liberty. Unaccountable, many Catholics entered the pluralism of the present century unmindful of the dignity of the human con science. Conformity was an easier aproach. From Lac- tanltua to Pope Plus XII, there have never been lacking Chris tian teachers who recognized the rights of the non-Cathollc conscience, but the textbooks did not alwsys reflect this Ch ristian tradition of liberty and the exigencies of a changing world. Too often our attitudes followed the texbooks. St. Paul Altar Society Meet The Altar Rosary Society of St. Paul of the Cross, Atlanta, sponsored its sscond annual May Breakfast in the School Cafetorium. The guest speaker was Sister David from Our Lady of Perpetual Help Cancer Home. Sister spoke on the life of newly beatified, Mother Eliza beth Seton. Sister David in sim ple and dynamic delivery ex plained how each mother, wife and single lady could sanctify her life each day by offering up her dally chores and exper iences to God. Father Dennis, the pastor, presented the Woman of the Year Annual Award to Mrs. Charlotte Maddox past presi dent of the Altar Rosary So ciety*. Members and guests gave a warm ovation in approval of the selection of Mrs. Maddox, in recognition of her many ye ars of devoted service to and sacrifices for the spiritual and material growth of the parish. COGGINS SHOl hTOKL SHOLS FOR Till FAMILY 46 W. PARK SQ. 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