The Georgia bulletin (Atlanta) 1963-current, January 09, 1964, Image 10

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PAGE 6 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1964 WOMAN’S WORLD MR. AND MRS. FRANK J. BRENNAN of Hapeville, have cele brated their Golden Wedding anniversary. Both were born in At lanta and Mrs. Brennan is the former Miss Edna Pearl Jones. Mr, Brennan is a retired conductor of the Atlantic Coast Line. The couple have five children, thirteen grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Mrs. Brennan is a member of Hapeville Methodist Church; Mr. Brennan belongs to St. John the Evange list parish. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION Plan Fashion Show And Dinner Benefit For all parents in the Im maculate Conception Home and School Association it’s going to be "all hands on deck’* for the coming month. The Annual Din ner-Fashion Show, promoted as the main charity and social event of the year for the As sociation, is scheduled to take place on Tuesday evening, Feb ruary 4th, from 4-8 o'clock in the Church Social Hall. Dinner will be served from four until eight; the Fashion Show and subsequent Entertainment fea tures will begin promptly at seven o'clock. Tickets will be $1.50 for adults, 85£ for child ren and may be purchased from any of the parents or at the door the night of the dinner. Colorful and fashionable Eas ter outfits will be modeled by the belles and beaux of the Im maculate Conception School, the clothes being furnished by courtesy of “Davison's of Dix ie", Added entertainment will enlist the varied talents of the students and will be carried out in their song and dance num bers according to the “Inter national” theme. The identical idea will be repeated in the decorations, costumes, even to the wearing of French chef hats hy the fathers, who will com prise the kitchen crew. A RAFFLE WILL BE held in connection with the night’s events and four valuable priz es will be awarded the win ners. A ceramic booth will be an added attraction and will be presided over by Mrs. Mar garet Garner. Rev. Father Rene Maynard, O.F.M. is General Chairman for this Benefit, be ing assisted by the following; Fashion Show and Entertain ment Chairman, Mrs, May belle Shikany, assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoger, Mrs. Thomas Perun, Mrs. Helen Young and Mrs. Clifton Dukes; Dining room- Mrs. Agnes Grant and Mrs. Helen Hudlow; Raffle Tic kets- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pam- palon; Program Booklets-Mrs. Kathleen Jackson; Tickets- Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Winter, Mr. Tom Zaworskl, Mr. Richard McDevitt; Ceramic Booth-Mrs. Margaret Garner. Publlcity- Mrs. William H. Adams. The success of the Dinner- Fashion Show depends on the re sponse and support of the loyal friends of our City who have al ways had a warm spot in their hearts for the Shrine of The Immaculate Conception and our School. NEEDLEWORK GUILD St. Anthony Group Has Banner Season At Thanksgiving the work of St. Anthony's Needlework Guild was brought to a successful close under the able leadership of Mrs. A, F. Campbell, pre sident, and Mrs. C. R. Mc- Entire, vice-president. Mrs. Campbell was the hos tess at the November meeting when all garments made during the yerfr were on display. WE WERE HONORED with the presence of Father Jarlath Burke and several ladles from St. Theresa’s Circle. The total number of garments Otfiontoit MOTOR HOTEL • FREE PARKINS • TV * AIR CONDITIONING • FAMOUS MIAMI BUFFET • ICC ft BEVERAGE STATIONS • COFFEE MAKER. EACH ROOM Hsrry DonoHum, Manager American Exprasa Cr.dit Card* Accepted LUCKIE AT CONE ST. A Good Add rats In Atlanta 11 made in 1963 was 377. Of this number 161 were given to the Atlanta Needlework Guild and 151 to St. Anthony’s branch of St. Vincent de Paul, 21 artic les were sent to St. Mary’s Home in Savannah and 44 shirts were sent to St. Joseph's Home in Washington. ST. ANTRONY'S is the only Catholic group affiliated with the Atlanta Needlework Guild. It was organized in the 1930’s during Msgr, Clark's pasto rate. Mrs. T. W. Dealy was the first president and is now President Emeritus. Officers elected for 1964 are; President, Mrs. C. R.Mc- Entire; vice-president, Mrs. A. F. Campbell; treasurer. Mrs. J. I. Oberst; secretary, Miss Mary Brisbane. St. Jude’s Host On Monday night, January 13, the Saint Martin’s Guild of the Archdiocese of Atlanta will pre sent its panel on Racial Under standing. All ladles of the parish are urged to attend this very informative meeting. The meeting will be held in the cafetorium of St. Jude's school. "•uy Your tlas From am - MAX METZIL. Owiui MAX'S MEM'S SHOW 5494 Pochtrw Industrial Stv4 ChftmblM Plata Shopping Center Phoiw 491*1911 9T9 Ptachtraa. N.l. Ytmnt TR 4*9593 — At 101ft St PA MO US ALl-PUMOSi DRESSING DELICIOUS OW •Meats-Seafood TOLD AT LIAOINfl STOCK' Nuns Study Everything, From Writing To Eating NEW YORK (RNS)--A Roman Catholic Sister walks into a po lice precinct headquarters not too far from Columbia Univer sity. She exchanges small talk with the desk sergeant, then takes notes on crime and com motions of the day. She’s a re porter. In Antlgonish, Nova Scoria, two Maryknoll nuns from the U. S. study "social leader ship” at the Coady Interna tional Institute — in a year they will be fledgling experts in a new but growing mission acti vity. They will establish cre dit unions in Chile and Korea. AND AT ST. LOUIS Univer sity, a Maryknoll Sister pre pares for her M.S. in nursing. Her thesis; “Change in atti tudes During Pregnancy.” All this adds up to an indi cation of the variety of service provided by the Maryknoll Sis ters, Catholic missionaries whose continuing education — before, during and after over seas mission service — can be summed up in their own words; “You name it — we study it." Maryknoll Sisters are cur rently registered at Harvard, San Francisco University, and Columbia — in 23 universities and two hospitals spanning the U. S. (and Hawaii). Sixty-four of them ar studying such diver sified fields as anthropology, modern art, journalism, medi cine, literature and history of the Far East, Oriental lan guages, social leaderships, and clinical psychology. Maryknoll Sisters are medical students, residents in surgery, dietitians. Some are students in European, Aslan and Latln-Amerlcan uni versities. A MARYKNOLL official puts it this way; ’The purpose of sending these Maryknoll Sisters into so many fields: to equip them in hand, heart and head with tool-i to help peoples all over the world, not so fortu nate as we; to give them ihe best of American technology so that they may give it to millions who desperately need The reporter at the New York police headquarters is Sister Maria Del Rey who is working toward her M.S. in jouc r.’. im at Columbia University. Her five-day school week involves various assignments at City Hall. Her travels as a Mary- knoller have included 11 years Lunch For Holy Family Chapter The membership of the Ho Family Hospital Auxiliary will hold its Annual Luncheon on Thursday, Jan. 23. The lunch eon will be at 12:30 in the Sky- room of the Dinkler-Plaza Hotel. Guest speaker will be Gerard E. Sherry, managing editor of the GEORGIA BULLETIN. Mrs. Thomas E.O’ Brien is general chairman. Tickets, at $3.50, are available from Mrs, 0. H. Jentzen, PL- 3-0043, and from Mrs, O’Brien, CE 7-0027. The luncheon will be pre ceded by a business meeting of all Holy Family Auxiliary chap ters at 10:30 in the hotel. Of ficers will be elected for the coming term. NEW ARRIVALS Mr. & Mrs. Noet Levy (Penelope Poage) 116 East Lake Dr. St. Thomas More Boy 12/28 Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Andrews (Catherine Lynch) 2808 Thompson Rd„ N.E. Our Lady of The Assumption Boy 1/1/64 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Nalen (Agatha Schaffer) 3129 Lees Mill Rd. College Park Boy 1/1/64 Mr. & Mrs, William Yarzinsky (Marianne Bartos) 97 Peachtree Park Dr., N.E.,* Apt. H-4 Girl 12/31/63 Dr. & Mrs. Charles Johnson (Rita Treadwell) 118 Lakeland Cir, Morrow, Ga. St. John The Evangelist Boy 12/28/63 of mission service in Asia (three in a Japanese interment camp), a year in South Ameri ca and a 10-month round -the- world trip. FOR SISTER MARIA Del Rey to study news writing would seem to be carrying coals to Newcastle — she has written several books, many magazine articles — but Maryknoll wants its journalists up-to-the-min- ute in modern methods, techni ques. In Cincinnati’s Good Samari tan Hospital, Sister Myra is listed (u serving her dietetics internship: she’s being taught to plan and carry out the feed ing of large numbers of people. Meanwhile, at Fontbume Col lege, St. Louis, one of Mary knoll’s Negro nuns, T.i.er Mary Agneta, is working toward her B. S. in dietetics. AT ST. LOUIS J liversity, three Maryknollers are regis tered — two are working to ward their M.D.’s, a third is seeking her M.A. in hospital administration. Harvard University current ly has a student whose specia- II:/ is witchcraft. Sister Blanche Marie, working for her Pn.D in anthropology, spent five months among Mayan witch doc tors in the Yucatan peninsula, gathering material for her mas ter's thesis. NOTRE DAME THIS year has a student in chemistry who al ready has performed _':usual work in the field. Sister Grace Frances in 1959 won an appoint ment as a pre-doctoral re search assistant on a radiation project supported by the Atomic Energy Commission. There are now 1,600 Mary knoll Sisters. They serve in five Asian countries; six Latin American nations; Hawaii, the Marshalls and the Carolius in the Pacific; and Tanganyika in Africa. Their work in the U. S. is devoted to Chinese, Japanese, Negroes and Mexicans. A TENSE MOMENT in Saturday nigh’s Pius X-Lovett game shows James Darden (left) and Thomas Angelich (right) in white uniforms of the Pi-Hi victors. Game ended in 43-41 score in favor of St. Pius, ending the school’s season with six wins, seven losses. OBITUARIES Mrs. E.M. Kirby Funeral services were held Monday at Spring Hill for Mrs. Eloise M. Kirby of 314 Fifth St., NE Atlanta. Fr. Vincent J. Meaney officiated. Mrs. Kirby, USAF, Maine; a sister, Mrs, Gertrude M. Tadlock, At lanta; a granddaughter, Amanda Sue Kirby of Maine, and several nieces and nephews. Martin Carroll Funeral services for Martin P. Carroll, formerly of Atlanta, were held on Saturday at St. Anthony’s Fr. Jarlath Burke offered the Mass. Mr. Carroll, who lived in Atlanta until 1951, died in Kansas City. He is sur vived by his widow; his daugh ter, Mrs. Joanne Peck, New Milford Conn,; son, Vincent Carroll, Miami; and his sister, Rev. Mother Mary A. Carroll, Dublin, Ireland. Mrs. C.F. Lord A Requiem Mass was offer ed Tuesday for Mrs. C. F. Lord, Father Alin Dilman said the Mass at Immaculate Heart of Mary and interment was at Ar lington. Mrs.’ Lord is survived by her husband. Dr. C. F. Lord, a son, Clifton Lord Ill, a bro ther; Dr. Frank East of Natick, Mass, and her mother, Mrs. Frank East, of Boston, Mass. Mrs. C. Terrell A Requiem Mass was offered Monday at St. Jude the Apostle by Fr. John Stapleton for Mrs. Clare Pavlovski Terrell. Mrs. Terrell, who lived at 388 Lon donderry Rd., NW Atlanta, is survived by her daughter, Mrs. J. Norman Berry, Atlanta; her sister, Mrs, Mary P. Brady, Atlanta; and her grandchildren, interment was in Adairsville, Mr., Mrs. DuPre Joint graveside services for Mr. and Mrs. Walter E.DuPre, who died in the Jacksonville hotel fire, were held in West- view Cemetery on Jan. 3, fol lowing a Requiem Mass for Mrs. DuPre. The Mass was offered by Msgr. Joseph Cassidy at the Cathedral of Christ the King. Mr, and Mrs. DuPre lived at 2777 Arden Rd., NW, Atlanta. Mrs. C. Lehner A Requeim Mass was offered Monday by Fr. Noel Burtenshaw at the Cathedral of Christ the King for Mrs. Curtis Warren Lehner of 150 Blackland Rd., NW Atlanta. The Rosary was offered Sunday evening at Spring Hill. Mrs. T.A. Harris A Requiem Mass for Mrs. Thomas A. Harris (Mell Wright O’Brien) 78, was celebrated Saturday morning, December 28th, in the Church of the As sumption, Jacksonville, Flori da, with Father Quinn as cele brant. Burial was in Green- lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Harris, a native Atlan tan, was a convert of many years and was a member of Sacred Heart Church before moving to Jacksonville. A grad uate of Pharmacy College, she was a gifted writer and em ployed this talent to write inspi rational letters to shut-ins all over the country. Her skill at needlework was used to make altar linens for Missionary priests in foreign lands. Mrs. Harris is survived by her hus band, Dr.Thomas Ansel Harris, a pharmacist, a sister, Mrs, Eugene Holler, Atlanta, and a brother, Mr. Wade Wright, At lanta. MARIST'S BASKETBALL TEAM took all laurels in the Atlanta Jaycee Invitational Tournament atO’Keef Gymnasium, defeating three Atlanta City League opponents, Murphy, O’Keef and Brown, in succession to take the title. CLEAN SWEEP Cadet Cagers Take Tournament BY PAUL APPLEGRATH The Marist basketball team lived up to pre-tournament adu lation by taking all the laurels in the Atlanta Jaycee Invitat ional Tournament at O’Keef Gymnasium. They defeated three Atlanta City League op ponents in succession to take the title. In the first game, Murphy jumped off to an early lead ag ainst the Cadets, but the Mar ist attack settled down, and it regained the advantage. Led by Reitmeier, the game’s leading scorer with 17 points, Bob Bockman, with ten points in the first half and 13 altogether, and Mike Hurst, the Cadets stret ched a third quarter lead into a 55-48 victory. AGAINST O’KEEF in the se cond game, Marist took an early lead and held it for the dura tion of the game. Showing a balanced attack, the Cadets had four men in double figures. Bill Reitmeir’s 19 points and Ed Mattingly’s 15 markers led the game’s scoring; Hurst and Bockman followed closely with 14 and 11 respectively. On the boards, David McDuffie was high with 9 rebounds. In the The Holy Name Society of the Shrine of the Immaculate Con ception will again this year sponsor the annual Family Communion Breakfast, Sunday, January 12th. This will make the 5th consecutive year the Soceity has encouraged the parishioners of the Shrine to receive Communion in family groups on the Feast of the Holy Family. A breakfast meeting will be held immediately after Mass in the social hall at which time, Sister David of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Cancer Home Discuss Career In Engineering Dr. Joseph Vidosic, noted professor of Mechanical Engi neering at Georgia Tech will present a discussion on 'The Challenge of a Career in Engi neering" on Tuesday evening, January 21 in the cafeteria of St. John’s School in Hapeville. Dr. Vidosic’s talk, which will begin at 7;30 pm, is being sponsored by Explorer Post 148 of St. John’s Parish. All young men interested in an engineering career as well as any other interested parties are cordially invited to attend this informal discussion. For addition information, call Mark McLeroy, Post President at 766-0471. game, Marist hit on a pheno menal 23 24 free throws to win by 14 points: Marist 69, O’Keefe 55. The Championship third game against Brown was a thriller from start to finish. Led by McDuffie’s 11 points, Marist held a 29-28 first-half advantage. At the end of three quarters, it was 43-42 Marist. In the fourth quarter, Marist lost the lead and, with two minu tes left, was trailing by four points. Suddently, the Cadets FIRST TOURNEY BY THOMAS BRANNAN Receiving a first taste of in terscholastic competition, the two St. Pius debate teams found experience at the Cross Keys Invitational Debate Tourna ment. In its first open encoun ter, the varsity team compiled a five win, three loss record. Sophomore Thomas Nerney will deliver the principal talk. To help defray the cost of the breakfast, a charge of 50<f per person will be made. St. Mary’s Altarians The January Meeting of St. Mary’s Altar Society was held Monday morning at the Rectory with Mrs. Robert Brierly, pre sident, presiding. Committee reports were heard and routine business conducted. Of interest to all women of St. Mary’s parish was an an nouncement by Mrs. George Briggs that there will be an open meeting of the Northwest Deanery of the Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Women at Christ the King Cathedral in At lanta on Jan. 11th, All women of the parish are invited to at tend. Mrs. Briggs and Mrs. Robert Breirly will represent St. Mary’s Altar Society. Foil wing the meeting Mrs. John Accamasso served lunch to these members: Mrs. Briggs, Mrs. Brierly, Mrs. C. W. Flan agan, Mrs. George McMahon, Mrs. Joe Diprima, Mrs. Lee C. W. Flanagan, Mrs. George Battle, Mrs. Louis Curry, Miss Janie Fahy, Mrs. Edmund Ces- cutti, Mrs. Robert Cescutti, and Mrs. Robert Woodruff. caught fire again and grabbed the lead. The game ended with Marist winning it and the tournament, 53-51. BOTH REITMEIER and Hurst were elected to the five-man tournament team, and Reit meier, with 48 points in three games, was chosen the Tourna ment’s Most Valuable Player. He was also picked as captain of the Atlanta Tipoff’s Club Team of the Week. He was hono red as such at a luncheon, Jan uary 4th. and senior Raymond Smith, the first and second negative spea kers respectively, won two of four debates. Seniors Michael Iredale and Martin Gussman, the two negative speakers, won three of four debates. ALSO ARGUING the resolv ed, that Social Security should be extended to include comp lete medical care, was a second team. Freshman Raymond War- rell and junior Catherine Case argued the affirmative issues. Senior Thomas Brannan and freshman Quinn Spitzer repre-% sented the second negative team. Of a possible total of 100 speaker's points, Thomas Ner ney and Martin Gussman both achieved scores of 72 points. Raymond Smith compiled a 71 total while Michael Iredale ad ded 61 points. The affirmative team totaled 143 points and the negative compiled 133 points at the Jan. 3-4 meet. LAST YEAR'S debate team won first place in over-all de bating at Emory Uncversity’s Barkley Forum. Future con tests include the Barkley For um and the University of Geor gia competition. For Information Writat Honwh CSC 104 Holy Croii School 4950 Dauphin* Street New Orleans. 70T1T Cancer Home Nun To Speak At ICS St. Pius Debaters Take 5 And Drop 3 St. Anthony’s Host Deanery St. Anthony’s Parish Council will be hosecaa to a meeting of the South Deanery, ACCW, on Sunday, January 19 t 1964 at 2:30 P.M. According to Mrs. Jack Kesler of LaGrange, President of the South Deanery, an in teresting program has been planned by Mrs. Florence Beaton and her committee on Cooperating with the Con fraternity of Christian Doc trine. This will be an open meeting and all ladies of the area are cordially invited to attend. a four-yeor liberal arts colle9 e FLORIDA’S CATHOLIC COLLEGE of DISTINCTION Co-Educational Write: Director of Admissions SAINT LEO COLLEGE SAINT LEO, FLORIDA