Newspaper Page Text
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LUCKIE AT CONE ST.
A Good Addrmmm In Atlanta
FIRST IN RECENT YEARS
Cana Conference Attracts
Record Attendance Here
NEW
ARRIVALS
Teresa Ann Gemazian
1796 Mt. Royal Drive, N. E.
Immaculate Heart of Mary
Boy Jan. 13, 1964
Martha Zitzelsbenger
PET
dairy division
For Convenient Home Delivery In
Atlanta Call 636-8677
PAGE 6 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, JANUARY 23, 1964
ST. JOSEPH'S INFIRMARY
SODA FOUNTAIN
COFFEE SHOP AND RESTAURANT
LOCATED NEXT TO GIFT SHOP ON MAIN FLOOR
IN NEW BUILDING
ATLANTA. GA.
Sn<Ui J iance in all iti l& imi!
9f iti written, ive uplite it . . .
Sutter & Mdel Ian
1422 RHODES HAVERTY BLDG.
JAckson 5-2086
WHERE INSURANCE IS A PROFESSION NOT A SIDELINE
OFFICERS OF Our Lady of The Mount parish Altar Socie^
Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, are shown after their in
stallation. Left to right: Mrs. Shirmer Brown, Retiring Pre
sident; Mrs. Herbert Kaiser, President; Mrs. Odon Von
Werssowetz, Vice President; Mrs. W. Houston Price, Treasurer,
and Mrs. John Willie, Secretary.
RE LA Y SECOND
Marist Swimmers
Make Good Start
•uy Your Slav From j9a*"
MAX METZEL. Owmr
MAX'S MEN'S SHOPS
3494 Peachtr** Industrial Blvd.
ChamMaa Plait Shopping Ctntar
Phone 431-1911
975 P«achtr«a, N.E.
Fhont rR. 4-9592 — At 10th Bt.
Now the cadets are looking
to the Southeastern Interschol-
astic swim meet at Emory with
high hopes.
The first Cana Conference to
be held in the Atlanta area in
recent years drew approximat
ely 350 people from metropoli
tan Atlanta and Athens last Sun
day afternoon.. Married people
of all ages, backgrounds and
states of life heard Rev. John
O’Sullivan, Ph.D., declare:
"you, with just what you have,
can be the happiest marri
ed couple in a place the size
of a large housing develop
ment. God wants you to be happy
in your marriage; follow His
plan for you and you need never
be lonely."
Fr. O'Sullivan’s talks dealt
with three basic thoughts: Mar
riage, Men, and Women. He
touched briefly on many essent
ial ideas which, it is hoped,
can be more closely studied in
succeeding conferences. In his
discussion of Marriage he
emphasized that marriage is
the only way of life in which
one finds life's greatest trea-
soure; "the un-divided love of
another person." Itisonlywhen
there are "dead areas" incom-
municition between partners
that trouble begins. He stressed
the six areas in which agree
ment is necessary for the hap
piest for marriages; money,
religion, in-laws, sex, child
ren, and social goals. As each
couple works out, in a spirit
of generosity, answers to these
facets of life they discover a
closness which sustains them
through good times and bad. All
marriages failures can be trac
ed directly to an excessive de
sire for power or affect
tearing down the whole rela
tionship.
"A MAN’S DESIRE forpower
over his wife can wreck his
marriage,” Fr. O’Sullivan
said. Women are basically In
secure and each one needs from
her husband a continuing show
of support, esteem and leader
ship. She has a right to expect
these things from her husband,
he stated, for God made her
personality the way it is. From
marriage both man and women
want the same things: affection,
acceptance and assurance. Men
tend to think on a rational, over
all level and a wife must not
expect her husband to have a
woman’s mental characteris
tics but must love and respect
him as he is.
"Women are purely emoti
onal; they don’t think ration
ally,” says the typical hus
band. The female mind, attun
ed to life's small details and the
un-conditional love of her
family is best suited to the
care of children and house
hold. She deals with life, and
battles death daily as she rears
her young. The young woman is
almost frightening in her gene
rous expenditure of herself.
Beginning the day already tir
ed, she may end it almost in
a state of shock. Many jobs are
such that the young man rarely
becomes really tired at work
while his young wife becomes
increasingly exhausted and
frightened. Together they must
learn to share the Cross in
married life. They willfindthat
"happiness is un-regretted
Martha Zitzelsbenger (Duschl)
1 Kimberly Lane, NE, Apt. 6
Boy Jan. 14, 1964
Madalyn Machin (Sweeney)
1127 Arlington Pkwy.
Immaculate Heart of Mary
Boy Jan. 15, 1964
Dolores O’Kelley (Daprano)
3227 Wesloek Circle
St. Peter and Paul
Boy Jan. 16, 1964
Donna Stevens (Petit)
1038 Oglethorpe Ave., S.W.
St. Anthony's
Girl Jan. 19, 1964
Mary Sharpe (Sellitto)
2877 Hillwood Terrace, Apt. I
Our Lady of Assumption
Boy Jan. 18, 1964
ATLANTA FIRST FRIDAY CLUB officers for 1964 are Left to
right; Charles A. Simons, President. Bernard F. Whitham,
Vice President. Matthew J. Dwyer, Treas. & Secty. Reverend
Eusebius J. Beltran , Moderator. New location for the First
Friday meetings will be the Piedmont Hotel.
FIFTH WIN
CANA CONFERENCE at Immaculate Heart of Mary parish
pleasure" — found in doing
well what one ought.
"AT ANY age, a marriage
must be maintained as carefully
as the priesthood. To partners
who work at their marriage,
God constantly discloses more
of the fullness of His love. Love
is expressed in many ways; sex
is one but not the most impor
tant one. The rarest exper
ience of a lifetime is when we
meet another person whose live
will liberate the prisoner (our
best) within us."
Refreshments were served at
the three breaks in the after-
WOMEN TOLD
noun's session, giving those at
tending time to meet infor
mally. Personal questions were
answered late in the afternoon
and the Conference ended in Im
maculate Heart of Mary Church
as the couples renewed their
marriage vows in the presence
of the Blessed Sacrament.
Before leaving, many couples
sought out Fr. O’Sullivan to ex
press to him their appreciation
for giving them a new look at
their lives, Immaculate Heart
of Mary's C.F.M. groups are
especially grateful to their pas
tor, Msgr. Regan, whose efforts
made their hopes and plans a
reality.
Education A Must
In Race Problem
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (NC)
—Education is of extreme im
portance as a factor in elimi
nating racial discrimination.
This point was stressed in a
cne umtea muons auuuuuuma-
slon on the Prevention of Dis
crimination. The subcommis
sion is engaged in drafting the
text of a convention on the eli
mination of racial discrimina-
ton.
THE WORK OF THE subcom
mission, Mrs, Cass said, will
benefit most of all the youth
of today and of tomorrow. She
noted that youth has already
profited by efforts of the last
decades to eliminate racial dis
crimination. She stated;
"Perhaps this is why so many
of them—in a generation which
has known the widespread pro
mulgation of the Universal Dec
laration of Human Rights—have
been in the forefront of grass
roots movements to eradicate
this form of discrimination
wherever it exists."
IN STRESSING THE impor
tance of education, Mrs. Cass
declared it has been the ex-
ARCHBISHOP DECLARES
Newman Catholic
Membership ‘Must’
CLEVELAND (NC) ~ Arch
bishop Edward F. Hoban, Bis
hop of Cleveland, cautioned
Catholic students they may not
attend a secular college unless
it has a Newman Club program
on its campus.
But even a Newman program,
the Archbishop warned in a let
ter read (Jan, 19) at all Mas
ses in all churches of the dio
cese, “does not safeguard the
Faith unless students actively
participate, especially by at
tending the educational clas
ses.”
FATHER CHARLES Albright,
C.S.P., coordinating secretary,
National Newman Apostolate,
Wash ..gton, D. C,, estimated
there are some 900 secular uni-
versiies and colleges in the
U, S. with Newman Club pro
grams.
Expressing concern for high
school seniors now investigat
ing colleges they may attend,
Archbishop Hoban wrote: "We
feel an obligation to bring to the
attention of Catholic students
and their parents that one of the
most important considerations
in choosing a college must be
preservation of the Faith.
Altarians Meet
At Assumption
Mrs. John W. Turner, who
recently returned from a Euro
pean trip, will be the guest
speaker at the Altar and Rosary
Society meeting of Our Lady of
the Assumption Church, 1406
Hearst Circle, NE, Atlanta, on
Tuesday, February 4th. Mrs.
Turner will show color slides
taken in Italy with emphasis on
Rome and the Coronation of
Pope Paul,
Pictures will also be shown
of the Christmas Pageant given
at the 8;30 Mass on Christmas
Day by the First Graders of Our
Lady of the Assumption School,
Mary Margaret Hotard portray
ed The Blessed Mother and
Bill Kinsland portrayed St. Jo
seph,
Pius X Girl Cagers Trim Hawks
The St. Pius Lady Lions
dampened the wings of the St.
Joe’s Hawks with a score of
56-36. This was the fifth time
the Lions have defeated the
Hawks in varsity play.
In the first game with the
Hawks this season, the Lions
cut their flight with a 56-34
margin. In this game, how
ever, the Lady Hawks slipped
by the defense to add two more
points for the tally.
Leading scorer in both games
was Kitty Hynes. Following
next in line were Kathy Szabo,
Mary Kane.
These two teams will meet
Jan. 31 for the final of the Pi
High-St. Joe’s contests. Sacred
Heart Gyn will provide hard-
court.
perience of educators every
where that there is no discri
mination in the heart of a small
child. It is a practice learned
from precept and example.
Education which gives "not
only the knowledge of one’s
rights but also of one’s obliga
tions to oneself, to one’s fel-
lowman and to the society in
which one is privileged to live,"
Mrs. Cass told the subcommis
sion’s experts, is the best anti
dote to bad precept and bad ex
ample.
THIS TYPE OF education, she
stated, is also an answer to the
problem of reconciling the
rights of the individual with
those of society, the problem of
achieving the greatest common
good with the "minimal inter
ference In the rights of the in
dividual."
Mrs. Cass’s statement was
geared to support of an article
in a draft text submitted by Mor
ris B. Abram of the United
States.
This article provides: "Each
state party shall take immediate
steps through educational and
other means, including legisla
tive measures as appropriate,
to promote or encourage the eli
mination of racial discrimina
tion in any form and to promote
understanding, tolerance and
friendship among all nations
and all peoples."
SUCH GOVERNMENT action
would be supported particular
ly by youth organizations, Mrs.
Cass said. But while legislation
can achieve the legal elimina
tion of racial discrimination
this will continue to persist in
fact without support by non
governmental organizations of
government activities in this
field.
The problem requires the
"combined efforts of govern
ment action within its sphere
and salutary nongovernmental
educational programs" in order
to achieve "that human commu
nity toward which we all as
pire and toward which our work
is directed,"
THE NEXT WORLD congress
of the World Federation of Cath
olic Young Women and Girls, to
be held in April, has as its
theme "Efforts of Christian
Youth toward Solidarity," One
of the three main topics to be
studied is solidarity among na
tions and races, its meaning, its
implications, and the obstacles
thereto.
A CATHOLIC PRESS EFFORT IN KOREA. This new monastery at YVue Kwun in
has as a principal work the advancement of the Catholic press. It is a house
Benedictines of St. Ottilien (Bavaria. Germanyi. During the Korean war. the
prisoned the Benedictine priests and Brothers, foreign and native, and many died
imprisonment. Those who survived, some returning from Germany after repa
founded this new monastery. Although still under construction, it already
press and bindery. This is a rear view, showing the chapel.
FAITHS HELP
Church Fire Helps
Ecumenical Spirit
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (NC)—
A five-alarm fire swept through
St. Edward’s church here—and
quickly spread the ecumenical
spirit.
While Father James A. Foley,
O.S.B., pastor, was watching
firemen battle the flames which
destroyed the sanctuary and al
tar, a messenger boy handed
him a telegram. It was a tele
gram of condolence from the
local Council of Churches (Pro
testant).
NE XT DAY USE of the Temple
B’Nai Israel for Sunday Mass
es was offered Father Foley and
another message of sympathy
came from a Methodist pastor.
The fire damage was covered
by insurance, but three persons
stopped by St. Edward’s rectory
Our Lady’s Day
School Meeting
Our Lady's Association for
Exceptional Children held its
quarterly meeting on January
19th at 2;30 p.m, in the cafe-
torium of Immaculate Concep
tion School. Mrs. Richard Car
ey, who is a volunteer speech
teacher for Our Lady’s Day
School, spoke about her work
with the children. Mrs. Carey
pointed out that it was very im
portant for parents of children
with speech difficulties to en
courage these children to speak
as much as possible. Father
Drohan, spiritual advisor for
the Association, gave an inspi
rational talk encouraging the
parents of retarded and handi
capped children to seek their
strength in prayer. Following
the program refreshments were
served with Mrs. Lionel Le-
Juene and Mrs. 5. G. Lawrence
serving as co-hostesses.
and insisted on making dona
tions.
One was a Negro woman who
gave Father Foley $100 and
said: "Now I’m broke, Father,
but I always feel better when 1 m
broke."
Father Foley said until re
pairs are completed Masses and
other services will be held in the
school gymnasium.
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MIKE & STEVE
SERTICH
BY ED BOSBYSAELL
The Marist cadets appear to
have a first class swimming
team this year, they have a
3-2 Dual meet record, and
have placed second in the
Georgia Interscholastic relay
championships.
The cadets began the season
workouts in the chilly waters
Marist Seminary
Guild Benefit
The Marist Seminary Guild,
Atlanta Chapter, will sponser a
benefit card party, Sat., Feb.
8, from 1;00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
in the Assembly Room of Sacred
Heart Church.
Tickets are $1.00, and may
be purchased by calling Mrs.
Elizabeth Conway, Ma. 7 -3626
or Mrs, Ruth Schaefle 636-
7249. All who purchase tickets
are eligible to win door prizes.
Carmelites Meet
The monthly conference of the
Third Order of Our Lady of Mt,
Carmel will take place at 8 pjn.,
Jan. 29, in the Cathedral of
Christ the King. Fr. Alexis Mc
Carthy, O. Carm., of Ayies-
ford, Downer's Grove, III., will
speak on the growth of the
Carmelite Third Order, All are
invited. Further information
can be obtained from Mr, Louis
A. Schnurre, CE 7-4748,
of the Fritz-orr pool under
the new coach, Chester Graham.
They practiced five weeks be
fore their opening meet with
G. M. A. Marist lost, but not
without Impressing the G. M. A.
Swimmers with the winning ef
forts of Bryan Starr, Tony Sa
xon, Ed Bosbyshell and the
freestyle relay.
In the Georgia inter3cholastic
championships the cadets rank
ed second only to G, M. A. and
superior to the teams of Sandy
Springs and Westminster,
The Cadets utilized a well
balanced team i effort, espec
ially that of Neal Alexander
Gerald Lambert, Neal Howard,
George Woalper, Terry Flynn
and Greg Flynn defeating the
Sandy Spring Panthers.
The cadets swimmers re
turned to the G. M. A. Campus
to find the rival cadets as strong
as before. Nevertheless, the
Marist freestyle relay highligh
ted the meet with a new state
record.
January 18th the cadets laun
ched an attack on the Univer
sity of Georgia and Athens
High School leaving them in the
wake of a 51-44 and 58-37
defeat respectively. Victory
was due largely to the fine
swimming of Ed Westlake and
the freestyle relay team com
posed of Tony Saxon, Steve Dic
arlo, John Chapman and
Bubba Holland broke their third
straight state record.
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