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THURSDAY, AUGUST 22 1963 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 3
AT CONVENTION
Knights Warned
On Atheist Gain
MILWAUKEE (NC) — A
bishop advocated concern about
a “small but powerful atheis
tic minority
successful in
from almost every phase of the
American way of life
*’ which has “been
eliminating God
Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste
of Belleville, Ill., in his ser
mon at a Solemn Pontifical Mass
at the 81 annual meeting of the
Supreme Council of the Knights
of Columbus here, also assert
ed: “There is another field of
action in which we must not be
found wanting. It concerns the
question of race relations and
civil rights."
SUPREME Knight Luke E.
Pope Protector
Visitation Nuns
GEORGETOWN, Ky„ Aug. 17
(NC)—Pope Paul VI has de
signated himself as Cardinal
Protector of the Visitation nuns.
It marks the second time
that a pope has held the of
fice. Pope John XXIII appoint
ed himself the protector in
1959.
The Visitation community is
a papal institute foundedin 1610
in Annecy, France, by St. Fran
cis de Sales and St. Jane de
Chantal. The community' now
has some 8,000 nuns in nearly
200 monasteries in 27 coun
tries. There are 21 Visitation
communities in the United
States,
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Oscar
Hart in an address at the con
vention dinner called for K. of
C. action against an effort to
have the words “under God**
struck from the Pledge of Al
legiance to the Flag.
Milwaukee's Archbishop Wil
liam E. Cousins also spoke at
the dinner on the role of the
layman in the Church today.
At the Mass offered by Bish
op Charles P. Greco of Alex
andria, La., K. of C. Supreme
Chaplain, Bishop
Zuroweste declared: “Like the
Church, our order must keep
abreast of the times and adopt
modern methods to compete
successfully w ith atheistic for
ces in the arena of today's
struggle."."
“THE problems facing the
Church are complicated and
serious," Bishop Zuroweste
continued. “The foremost is one
of Christian education. Recog
nition of God, freedom of re
ligion and dependence upon the
Supreme Being have charac
terized our country since its
founding.
“Recently we have been
shocked by the exclusion of God,
the Supreme Law-Giver, from
our land by the highest tribunal
in the country. A small but
powerful atheistic minority has
been successful in eliminating
God from almost every phase of
the American way of life," he
declared.
“If this legalistic trend con
tinues, the men in our armed
services w ill be deprived of the
consolations of religion as
chaplains no longer will be al
lowed to function as ministers
of religion and children w ill be
educated in a predominantly
atheistic atmosphere," the
Bishop said.
HE EXPRESSED concern
about the possibility of exclud
ing students of Catholic schools
from benefits which may be pro
vided by Federal aid to educ
ation legislation.
Bishop Zuroweste said
“every serious minded citizen
is aware" that the race relat
ions and civil rights issue “has
become one of grave concern."
“Our nation faces the chal-
lege to make full justice and
equal opportunity for all people,
regardless of color , race
or national origin, a reality
now," Bishop Zuroweste said.
OBITUARIES
THE SHORTAGE of clergy and religious is expected to be
one of the vital problems to be taken up by the bishops of the
world when they meet in St. Peter's Basilica for the second
session of the Vatican Council beginning September 29. All is
not hard work and study for the seminarian, as shown in these
Mrs. C. Almand
A Requiem Mass for Mrs.
Claude A. Almand , w'ho died
in a private hospital on last
Thursday w'as offered Saturday
at Sacred Heart Church, At
lanta. Father James Murray,
S.M. officiated. Burial was in
Crestlawn Cemetery.
Mrs. Almand, the former
Miss Evelyn Higgins, was the
wife of Dr. Almand who was
the head of the Veterans' Ad
ministration hospital in Atlanta
forthirty -nine years. A native
of Toronto, Canada, Mrs. Al
mand had made Atlanta her
home for forty-four years.
Survivors are her husband, a
son, Conroy W. Almand, At
lanta; three sisters, Mrs. J.R.
Wilson, Mrs. Frank Bremmer,
and Miss Ada Higgins, all of
photos. After a serious group discussion (left photo) there is time Toronto,
for recreation and relaxation. Just as in other schools, the ex
tracurricular interests are wide. Seminarians are shown (left Mffi C 1 Pppl^r
photo) warming up for a “pops concert". Others join in base- iT11 1 CC1C1
ball, basketball and touch football. SEE STORY PAGE 1-8
thew’s Church,
Georgia.
Statesboro,
Survivors include her hus
band, a son, Lee Peeler: three
daughters, Gayle, Ceei, and
Jane, Atlanta; her mother, Mrs.
Lee H. Stiles, and one brother,
Lee H. Stiles, Jr. of Winnetha,
Illinois.
VATICAN SAYS:
Native Clergy Increasing In Missions
ROME (NC) — There are
now about 9,000 native Catholic
priests and more than 150 native
bishops in mission lands.
These figures, revealed by
International Fides Service,
agency of the Sacred Congre
gation for the Propagation of
the Faith, represent only small
percentages of the world tot
als of 422,000 priests and 2,300
bishops.
But Fides called the statis
tics for the indigenous clergy,
as well as the fact that sen
ior and junior seminaries exist
“more or less" everywhere,
a “consoling picture."
THE AGENCY Included var
ious statistics in a special fea
ture issue devoted to “reflect
ions for Mission Sunday, 1963".
This year's observance of Mis
sion Sunday falls on October
20.
The service noted that one of
the aims of the Pontifical Soc
iety of St. Peter Apostle is to
give every country at least a
senior seminary, and every Ch
urch circumscription its own
junior seminary.
This work has reached the
point— 14 new seminaries were
opened in 1962 alone-that only
three countries in Asia and six
in Africa are now without sen
ior seminaries of their own.
The lands still without major
seminaries are Laos, Cambodia
and Formosa in Asia, and the
African nations of Gabon, Gui
nea, Mali, the Central African
Republic, Sierra Leone and
Chad.
WITH seminaries existing
virutally everywhere, the
stress of today is on the qual
ity of training, according to
Fides. It said the goal is to
provide training not only on the
same level as that afforded
at the best scholastic centers
in the various countries, but al
so to provide both spiritual and
intellectual training equivalent
to that given by seminaries in
countries where Christianity
has long been well established.
The agency indicated that the
Society of St. Peter Apostle dis
tributed about $8,150,000 to aid
in training native clergy in
mission lands in 1962 — about
$1.4 million short of the re
quests made of it. It said that
funds available for the society's
work in 1963 come to only $8,
250,000 — half of this contri
buted by the Pontifical Society
for the Propagation of the Faith
This figure is $1.5 million short
of this year's needs, it esti
mated.
FIDES stressed the strong
SCIENTISTS AND PHILOSPHERS
Benedictine Academy To Meet
Outstanding scientists and
nationally known philosophers
will gather at St. Bernard Col
lege, Cullman, Alabama, for the
biennial meeting of the Philo
sophy and the Natural science
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and Mathematics sections of the
American Benedictine Aca
demy 26-29.
Among the participants in the
program at which over thirty-
five papers will be presented
are a number of scientists, both
clerical and lay, who have been
the recipents of U. S, Govern
ment grants for scientific re
search.
THE REN'. THOMAS Ostdlck,
OSB, Ph.D., St. Meinrad Col
lege, St. Meinrad, Indiana, will
present a paper “An Introduct
ion to the Calculations of Quan
tum Mechanics with Special
Reference to PMR." The paper
will deal with the methods of
calculating energy levels of
Hydrogen atoms in certain com
pounds. Father Ostdick receiv
ed his MS and Ph.D. in chem
istry and Mathematics from
Notre Dame University.
An Indiana Nun-mathema
tician, Sister M. Victoria, OSB.
St. Benedict's College, Fer
dinand, Indiana, will speak on
"Regular Polytopes in four
dimensional Geometry." A
regular Polytope is a four
dimensional closed figure
whose boundary figures are re
gular congruent polyhedra and
whose four-dimensional angles
are all congruent to each other.
AN AUTHORITY on honey
bees, the Rev. August Jones,
OSB, Marmion Military Aca
demy, Aurora, HI., will deliver
a paper entitled, “Longevity of
Honey Bees as Affected by Ch
emicals Commonly Used in
Beekeeping,"
A paper entitled “Analysis of
Lead-Tm Mixtures by Cooling
Curves" will be presented by
the Rev. Leo Noll, OSB, the
theory of cooling curves, their
use in constructing a phase
diagram, and the use of these
tools in the analysis of lead-
in mixtures.
Participants in the meeting
at St. Bernard College include
a number of prominent philos
ophers.
Dr. Jude Dougherty, Bellar-
mine College, Louisville, Ken
tucky, will deliver a paper en
titled “Ernest Nagel's Concept
of Science," Nagel is one of
the most prominent living
American naturalists and a
long-time professor of philo
sophy at Columbia University.
Dr. Dougherty received his
early college training at St.
Bernard College, and holds his
doctorate from the Catholic
University. Dr. Dougherty re
ceived his early college train
ing at St. Bernard College, and
holds his doctorate from the
Catholic University of America.
SOME REFLECTIONS on the
Relationships of the Good Man
and the Good Citizen" will be
discussed by the Rev. Linus Mc-
McManaman, OSB. Ph.D., St.
Benedict’s College, Atchison,
Kansas. This paper is an at
tempt to refute the idea that
a man is a simply good man
just by reason of the fact that
he is a good citizen of a given
state.
Join Marchers
NEW YORK (NC)-The Asso
ciation of Catholic Trade Un
ionists (ACTU) has announced
it will join the Cathdlic Inter
racial Council of New York and
other Catholic groups for the
“March on Washington for Jobs
and Freedom " on August 28.
impact of radio on African coun
tries, especially those where
the newspaper press Is in its
infancy. In this connection it
quoted Archbishop Jean Zoa of
Yaounde, Cameroun, as stating
during the Second Vatican Coun
cil last fall that there is a grow
ing use of transistor radios even
in th e bush. Archbishop Zoa
told the council Fathers that
through communications media
the Church in Africa has the
opportunity of Christianizing a
new civilization from the start.
The news agency warned,
however, that the Soviet bloc and
communist China have moved
vigrously into the radio propa
ganda field in Africa. Commun
ist bloc broadcasts to Africa
began in April, 1958, with
a weekly total of three and a
half hours of broadcasts in
English and French from Mos
cow, the agency said. It added
that today the total each week
is 320 hours and 50 minutes
in 10 languages.
FOR
said:
the other side, Fides
"The Church has not been
silent. Her voice can be heard in
many lands and In many lang
uages over Vatican Radio and
missionaries are not slow to
take advantage of occasions to
preach the Word of God over
local radio stations when they
have the opportunity. But
it would be shocking if we were
to make a; comparison between
the funds that communist pro
paganda can devote to this pur
pose and those that are at the
disposal of the Church for the
mission."
A Requiem Mass was offer
ed at St. Thomas More Church,
Decatur, Monday for Mrs. Cla
rence L. Peeler, of Atlanta,
who died in Evanston, Illinois,
on Friday. Mrs. Peeler was
visiting her mother and bro
ther of Winnetka, Illinois, at
the time she was taken ill.
The Rosary was said at 8:00
P. M. on Sunday at Trinity
Chapel. Funerals services, with
Rt. Rev. Monsignor Patrick J.
O’Connor pastor , officiating,
were at 1:00 A.M. Monday.
Father John F. Loftus, a
close friend of the family, gave
a eulogy at the Mass. Father
Loftus is Pastor of St. Mat-
Bowling League
St. Joseph's, Marietta,
Knights of Columbus Mixed
Bowling League will hold Its
first meeting on Monday (Aug
ust 26) at 8:00 P. M. in the
school cafeteria. Discussion
will center on formation of
teams and league rules. All
inquiries to Dolores Maness,
telephone 428-4048.
CYO NEWS
CHRIST THE KING CYO will
hold a fiesta supper from “;00
until 8:00 P,M. on Sunday (Au
gust 25) in the school cafeteria
.Afterwards there will be a dance
until 10:30 P.M, with music by
“The Jokers". Admission is
75<£. Casual dress is permitted
but no shorts.
IMMACULATE HEART of
Mary CYO is looking for parents
or other adults in the parish
who wish to offer their ser
vices to the organization Those
interested should conduct Fa
ther Alan Dillman at the Rec
tory.
ST. JOSEPH'S MARIETTA C-
YO has scheduled a skating and
swimming party at the Cre
scent on the Austell Road on
Sunday (August 25) from 7:30
until 10:30 P.M. The cost is
$1.00 per person, and buses
leave the parish parking lot at
7:00 P.M.
ALL PARISH CYO'S are re
minded of the Archdiocesan -
wide fiesta which will be held
on Sunday, September 1, from
1:00 until 10:00 P.M. at the
Fritz Orr Camp on West Paces
Ferry .
J n invitation 3ro m OaUiff
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