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PAOE .t. GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 21.19W
ANNUAL STATEMENT
Bishops See U.S.
Goals Unfilled
But Reachable
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
The Bishops expressed grati
tude for worldwide interest in
the council proceedings.
"In these days so full of
historic importance , we have
gratefully noted the prayers
and the cordial expressions of
good will toward the council
and the Church from Americans
of every faith, ” they said.
THE STATEMENT also in
cludes praise for American re
cognition of the right of con
science and notes how this re
spect parallels the words of
the late Pope John XXIII on the
subject.
On Dating
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (NC) —
“Steady Dating—Why Not?”
will be the topic of an essay
contest to be sponsored by the
Knights of Columbus Supreme
council Columbian Squires Di
vision.
Ed Cmlii
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“The recognition of the right
of conscience has been basic
to our civil traditions," the
Bishops said.
“Citizens have found in
this a bond of union and the
favor of the law in countless
cases'. No personal right has
been so fiercely defended by
public authority and so gener
ously construed in court.
'The tradition of our nations
corresponds with the words of
Pope John XXIII: 'Every human
beign has the right to honor God
according to the dictates of an
upright conscience and, there
fore, the right to worship God <
privately and publicly.' “
THE BISHOPS ALSO cited
American defense of private
property and praised Protest
ant leadership for an "enlight
ened Christian sense of
stewardship.*’
“Fortunately,” they said,
"the power to dispose of the
fruits of one’s labors has been
wisely controlled by the con
cept of the stewardship of
wealth. When our Protestant
fellow citizens, if only because
of their proportionately greater
numbers, were so largely
charged with setting the moral
tone, their best representatives
revealed an enlightened Christ
ian sense of stewardship which
redounded to the common good.
“Private education, volunt
ary welfare programs, medical
research and political idealism
were encouraged. We rejoice
when exemplary Catholics
bring, together with new in
sights into human need their
own beneficent influence on the
common good," they said.
HOME BURNED
Catholics Attacked By
Buddhists In Vietnam
MT HHHNh
STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS of Drexel High School meet fol
lowing Installation on the grounds of the latest addition to the
Archdiocesan High School System. Left to Right: George Terrell,
Diane Comer, Michelle Smith, and Robert Harris,
DREXEL HIGH
Student Council
Officers Installed
An impressive ceremony
marked the installation of stu
dent council officers at Drexel
Catholic High School last week.
The principal, Father Richard,
C. P., presided at the cere
mony.
The newly installed officers
are George Terrell, President;
Diane Comer, Vice-President;
Michelle Smith, Secretary; and
Robert Harris, Treasurer. All
4 are members of the Junior
class. Other members of
the student council who were al
so installed during the cere
mony included officers from
each class and club in the sc
hool.
EACH OFFICER was presen
ted with a lighted candle, the
color of which symbolized the
special virtues he must bring to
his office. Foil owing this they
made a promise to serve their
school faithfully and maintain
the honor bestowed on them by
their election.
The assembly closed with the
singing of the National Anthem
and a school song.
S ARSON — Catholics in some
country districts of central
Vietnam have been attacked by
non-Christian crowds during
recent weeks.
Assailants have ' been des
cribed as “Buddhists with oth
er elements’ in one region. In
another most of them were se
condary school students appa
rently following plans.
CATHOLICS HAVE been
beaten, some of them seriously.
Homes of Catholic families'
have been burned. In some vil
lages attackers have tried to
make Catholics renounce their
religion. Recent converts and
catechumens (persons taking
instructions for Baptistm)were
special targets. Some Catholic
families were forced to destroy
their religious emblems.
Hostile groups tried to force
Catholics to sign statements
accusing parish priests of stor
ing arms in churches. This
maneuver is regarded as sug
gesting communist influence.
In some places non-Chris
tians in the Dan Ve, self-de
fense corps, have forcibly tak
en away arms of their Catho
lic comrades.
IN ONE DISTRICT the non-
Christians ordered Catholics
not to go to Mass last Sunday.
The priest rallied his people
and they came. Some catechu
mens have shown notable forti
tude in refusing to give up
their Christian religion in spite
of threats.
The more isolated the vill
age or the Catholic households
the worse were the attacks. In
cities and towns except for a
few threatening actions that
were not carried through, Ca-
RACIAL JUSTICE
tholics and Catholic institutions
have not been assailed.
THE SITUATION in the rural
villages where the attacks oc-
cured has improved in the last
week. Authorities have declared
their intention to give all pos
sible protection to all classes
and religions.
But Catholics, especially in
remote villages, still are ap
prehensive, fearing Buddhist
hostility in addition to commu
nist Vietcong night raids.
Faiths Make Joint
Appeal For Peace
FRENCH CATHOLIC philoso
pher Jacques Maritain has re
ceived France’s national grand
prize for letters. A convert to
Catholicism, he has been on
the faculty of the Institute Ca-
tholique, Paris; the Institute of
Medieval Studies, Toronto and
at Columbia and Princeton Uni
versity. Now 81, he is living
at his retreat near Toulouse,
France.
SEARCHING LOOK
Convention Links Poverty,
Racism As ‘Ugly Twins’
WASHINGTON (NC)— Two
"ugly twins" — poverty and
racial prejudice—came in fora
searching look at the annual -
convention of the National Catho
lic Conference for
Justice.
Interracial
The interacting relationship
of these two social blights was
ST. ANTHONY'S SCHOOL
St. Joseph’s Club
Is Given Charter
The St. Joseph's Civics Club
of St. Anthony's School this week
received its official charter
from the Commission on
American Citizenship in Wash
ington, D. C.
The Charter formally recog
nizes affiliation of the local
unit with the national organizat
ion at the Catholic University
of America. Pupils of Grade
Seven comprise the local Club
membership.
THE OFFICERS of the newly
organized Club are: Tim. H.
Epperson, president; Carol E.
Frick, vice-president; Jimmy
Mathews, recording and cor
responding secretary, and
Richard A, Krilla, sergeant-
at-arms, and Pamela Marie
Therese Love, Treasurer.
SufavtifitfoK 0{, *7%e Cfetvu}i<% “SuUetiK
A gift subscription to the Georgia Bulletin might be just the
thing for a boy or girl away from home, a relative in the reli-
gous life, a friend who moved but wants to keep up with doings
in Atlanta.
A SPECIAL CARD WILL BE ENCLOSED ANNOUNCING THE GIFT
SUBSCRIPTION. ORDER THAT GIFT SUBSCRIPTION NOW.
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Address
City.
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Gilt From
St. Joseph’s Civics Club is
one of the thousands of Catholic
Civics Clubs chartered in the
United States for the express
purpose of developing informed,
responsible young citizens.
The theme of this year’s pro
gram is “Guard the Freedoms
They Won.’’ Club members get
help in developing this theme
from Young Catholic Mess
enger, national current-affairs
weekly for students in grades
6-9. Monthly articles in the
periodical point up the funda
mentals of good citizenship and
suggest practical projects for
the club members.
Dialogue Is
Way To Unity
NEW ORLEANS (NC) — The
Methodist Bishop of Philadel
phia said here that both Pope
John XXIII and Pope Paul VI
told him the way to promote
Catholic - Protestant under
standing is through “dialo
gues."
Bishop Fred Pierce Corson,
who headed the official Metho
dist observers at the Second
Vatican Council, said both
Popes “asked me personally
to promote Catholic-Protestant
understanding on the diocesan
level."
THE PRESIDENT of the
World Methodist Council, who
took part here in a Festival of
Christian Faith and Witness,
said if it were possible he would
spend all his time participating
in Protestant-Roman Catholic
dialogues.
Such discussions, he added,
should be carried out care
fully and “by people who know
what they are talking about."
He said such dialogues should
be conducted on the diocesan or
community level between
church leaders.
In the past year, Bishop Cor
son stated, he has participated
in eight dialogues with Catholic
Bishops.
the focal point of the meeting,
whose theme was "Poverty,
Race and Religion: Challenge to
a Catholic Community,’’
IN A TELEGRAM to the con
vention, President Kennedy
said “a heritage of disability
from years of racial discrimin
ation hampers interracial jus
tice."
"While it is vital that the
basic civil rights of all our ci
tizens are protected and defen
ded, it is also exceedingly im
portant that all have the oppor
tunity for full and equal emplo
yment in our rapidly changing
work force. . .Securing full jus
tice for all will be speeded by
full employment,” Mr.Kennedy
said.
Author and critic Dwight Mac
donald sketched the dimen
sions of the problem of pover
ty at a general session (Nov.
14).
Macdonald, whose essay-
review ‘The Invisible Poor”
attracted wide attention when it
appeared in the New Yorker last
Jan. 19, cited studies that put
the number of Americans living
in poverty or "deprivation” at
77 million. The commonly
accepted poverty line is a year
ly income of $4,000 for a fam
ily of four and $2,000 for a
single person.
“The poor are really differ
ent from the rest of us,” he
said. They have more chronic
illness and poorer mental heal
th ("the poor can’t afford bre
akdowns, but they have them
anyway”). They live in "social
isolation” and political "a-
pathy," he stated.
Macdonald spoke with al
arm of a tendency for pover
ty to become "institutionalized
or frozen,’’ The children of the
poor lack motivation to improve
themselves, they grow up in po
verty, marry and raise their
own families in poverty, he
said.
Negroes “by their admirable
militant campaign” have forced
politicians to take note of the
race problem, Macdonald said.
But so far, he added, there is
no corresponding sensitivity to
the problem of poverty.
Poverty and unemployment,
he remarked, lack "political
sex appeal.’’
Macdonald called for a mas
sive Federal effort to stimulate
the economy and reduce unem
ployment. He also urged direct
government action to aid the
poor. It should be “taken for
granted” by Americans he said,
that every person should
be. provided with a decent "min
imum standard of living” re
gardless of any other consider
ation.
WASHINGTON—Catholic and
Episcopalian racial justice
groups jointly appealed here to
Christian clergy and laymen in
Chester, Pa., and Williantston,
N. C., to support antisegrega
tion movements in the two ci
ties.
The two groups, noting large-
scale arrests and heavy bail
requirements, promised “our
prayers, our alms and what
ever other sources are avail
able to us within our respec
tive disciplines” to help “those
who have suffered or been im
prisoned."
THE RESOLUTION was adop
ted unanimously (Nov. 15)by the
National Catholic Conference
for Interracial Justice and the
Episcopal Society for Cultural
and Racial Unity.
It was presented to delegates
attending the annual conventions
of the two groups by Mathew
Ahmann, executive director of
the Catholic group. Presenta
tion came at a banquet, one of
several joint sessions the two
groups held.
Chester has been the scene of
protests by Negroes over what
they allege are overcrowded,
unsanitary and unsafe condi
tions at Franklin Elementary
School there.
MORE THAN 240 persons
were arrested Nov. 13 and 14
after picketing the school. On
Nov. 15, demonstrations were
halted as negotiations began
■with city and school officials.
"The Christian clergy and
lay leaders in Chester have
neither shared in nor support
ed this witness and this suf
fering," said the resolution.
‘Youth Sacred
Cow In U.S.’
NEW YORK — A “peculiar
idea of freedom" in this
country has resulted in plac
ing American youth in a dog
matic but morally precarious
position, a priest-expert on
family life said at a Catholic
youth convention here.
In VVilliamston, N. C., 11
white ministers from the North
joined Negro demonstrations
since they began over four
months ago,” said the resolu
tion.
ETELSON RIVES
REALTY INC,.
3669 CLAIRMONT ROAD
CHAMBLEE. GEORGIA 1
REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE,'
SALES. RENTALS,
RESIDENTIAL AND
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PHONE: 451-2323,
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r Up N E
233-4491
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3136 ROSWELL ROAD. N.W
REXOLl.
PHOtsI E
233-4491
IGNATIUS HOUSE RETREATS
There will not be any
more Retreats in 1963.
1964 Retreats will begin
Jan. 9th 1964. (Women)
Phone 255-0503 or Write 6700 Riverside Dr. N.W. Atlanta 5, Ga.
"One of America’s sacred
cows is its youth," Msgr,
George A. Kelly, director of
the New York Archdiocesan
Family life Bureau, told a young
adult session (Nov. 15) at the
National Catholic Youth Organi
zation Federation convention.
"IN NO OTHER country are
the young better washed, more
inoculated, better understood,"
Msgr. Kelly said. "And yet
nowhere else are they so much
a problem. Almost everywhere
else youngsters are afraid of
their parents, the cop on the
corner, the priest in or out
of the confessional.
'TT TAKES MORE THAN a
Catholic family background or
a Catholic college education to
provide the lay leadership we
need,” he said. “To under
take apostolic work in the world,
you must have proper moti
vation, spiritual formation,
technical skills and the abili
ty to work effectively with
others.”
"What we need then,’’ he
concluded, "is more and better
Catholic action groups of single
people."
'Even The Hindus Have Much Confidence
la the Slater*,” writes a member ot the community at ANIKAD
la southern India, “la delivery cases they get much relief when
entrusted to the care of «» Sisters.
Many patients are coming daily and
getting medicine. Many must re
ceive special attention. But without
a place to put enough beds, it is dif-
f** 9 fioalt. There are many diseases
** such, as tuberculosis and dysentery,
etc. uioni the villagers. A year age
we opened the dispensary. At prea-
eat In eases of urgent necessity, we
keep patients in the corner of the
dispensary. A building with 20 or
39 beds is badly needed. The people
will do the manual labor. We need
$2500 for materials. Benefactors are our sole hope.” . . . The
Archbishop warmly adds hla plea. WU1 you help these struggling
Bisters? Any amount will he appreciated.
Ti# Hob fotboTt Mutton Aid
for lhr Orimtd Chord
GLASTONBURY HAWTHORN
This hawthorn of England blooms twice yearly, an unuaueL
thing, once in May and once around Christmas time. Legenft
has it that Joseph of Arimathea and his 11 companions were seal
there by St. Luke. Joseph's staff, placed in the ground, bloomed.
. . . Sorry we cannot send you slips from it but we will send e
eard of pressed flowers from the Holy Land and a GIFT CAHN
to anyone in whose name you send a mission gift. Some sug
gestions:
Mass Kit
$100
Chalice
$40 Stations
$25
Altar
75
Ciborium
40 Censer
20
Vestments
50
Statue
30 Sanc’y Lamp
15
Confessional
40
Tabernacle
25 Altar Linens
1!
Monstrance
40
Crucifix
25 Sanc’y Bell
1
OTHER GIFT SUGGESTIONS
1. Perpetual membership ($20) or annual membership
$1) in the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE
ASSOCIATION.
S. A DONATION for the care of the aged, orphans,
lepers or refugees in our care. FOOD PACKAGE
costs $10.
S A STRINGLESS GIFT for an urgent mission need.
RING THE BELLS AND TELL THE PEOPLE
the words of the pop«k* »«ng. Doesn’t NOVEMBER—the month
of the Holy Souls ring a bell with you. Our priests will remem
ber your loved onee In Masses if you wish to send MASS
STIPENDS.
BINE DISASTERS
These recurring disasters and rescues of the last five years
draws our mind to another miner—St. John, once condemned
to the lead mines of Patmos where he wrote the Apocalypse . .
Perhaps we should pray to him today ... One thing that certainly
would please him is to sponsor the training of a Sister-to-be or
a seminarian in his beloved Middle East, a student or Sister
auch as JOHN SOUDI SANSOUR or SISTER MARY ELAIZ.
Cost: for the seminarian—$100 a year'for six years. For a
SUter-to-be: $150 a year for two yean.
Dear Monsignor Ryan.
Enclosed please find for
Name
Street
City
Zone State
rf^Dear fist OlissionsjMl
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPILLMAN* President
M««r. Jeaeph T. Ryee, Met 4 ! lee*?
I#mI bH iiwwiiliitltiH Mis
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
480 Uxington Ava. of 44th St. N«w York 17, N. Y.