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PAGE 2 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1964
COGGINS
SHOE STORE
SHOES FOR THE FAMILY
46 W. PARK SQ.
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
PHONE 428-6811
Trmvr
SCOUTS
FIND
ADVENTURE...
WHY wOOim WILL M ALON4
■urVT? *** T WMK WITH A COLUMN
* OAQUlfTlOHS AHSWtaiO
0 BOM TMB Mi ART
* Dear loretta young"
LIONS, PUMPKINS
Pi-Hi Boys, Girls
Rack Up Cage Win
c & s
REALTY
COMPANY
"Specialists in Commercial
and Industrial Real Estate*'
Suite 200
Henry Grady Bldg.
Atlanta 3, Ga.
vVarehouses, Stores, Mfg,
Plants, Acreage,
Shopping Center Dev.,
Subdivision Dev.,
Industrial Dev.,
Insurance
524-2052
MIKE & STEVE
SERTICH
St. Pius X*s Golden Lions ed
ged the Chamblee Bulldogs Sat
urday night 53-52. Jimmy Dar
den sank two free throws af
ter the final whistle had soun
ded to give the Lions the win.
Chamblee jumped off to a
quick 14 to 5 first quarter
lead. A great team comeback
cut the Chamblee lead to three
points, 26 to 23, at halftime.
Steve Raville did a good job
rebounding and tallied 7 points.
Joe Mulvihill and Denny Wig-
bels had 7 and 6 points res
pectively.
St. Joseph’s Fighting Hawks
defeated the Lions for the first
time on a varsity level in any
sport Friday night. The final
score was 50 to 44.
HYBERTA
COMPANY
e MINTING
# LITHOGRAPHING
Serrini
530 fOitEST ROAD. N, R.
2 ATLANTA. GROtGIA
Atlanta State ISIS
a four-year liberal arts college
FLORIDA’S
CATHOLIC COLLEGE
of
Taking an early lead the
Hawks had a 22 to 18 halftime
bulge. They widened their ad
vantage to 39 to 30 at
the end of the third quarter.
Denny Wigbels, who had 12
points and Jimmy Darden, who
added 15 points, headed a late
charge for the Lions which fell
short.
DISTINCTION
Co-Educational
Write: Director of Admissions
SAINT LEO COLLEGE
— BA
• For any occasion:
Weddings, organizational
meetings, any social
•vents
• Formal or informal
• Special menus custom-
prepared to your
requirements
• Piping hot foods—
meat and fish
• Sandwich platters
• Hors d'oeuvres
• Gourmet canapes
• Beverages of all kinds
• Bar service arranged
• Chine
• Flatware
• Napery
• Decorations
• Waiters and waitresses
• Butlers
• Personal attention of
catering consultant
• Instant service. We’re
ready, willing, and able
•to do the catering
right away.
• Budget terms. Affairs
tailored to your budget.
Nothing too big...
nothing too small.
V /
SAINT LEO, FLORIDA
When Dinkier does except inviting
the catering,forget the guests!
about everything
DINKLER-PLAZA
In Th« NMrt of Atlanta-90 Forayth Straat, N.W., Atlanta
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St. Pius X Girls "B” Team
racked up their fourth straight
basketball win by defeating
D'Youvllle Academy freshmen,
29-22. Alexine Wyndelts led In
scoring for Pi-Hl with 9points.
Pi-Hi’s "Pumpkins’* claimed
another victory last week over
D’Youvllle sophomores, 23-13.
Top scorer for Pius was Millie
Lunt with 11 points.
Alexine Wyndelts held top
scoring honors with 15 tallys
in second game of season with
Cook Roberts School. Fourth
quarter score saw St. Pius vic
torious, 42-24.
In the game with Arlington
School,. Jan Jenkins swished
the basket with 13 points. The
final score was 47-13 in favor
of the "Pumpkins’*. Starting
defensive players were guards
Mary Branca, Peggy Kassinger,
and Betty Ann Wyndelts.
Irish In Mass
TUAM, Ireland (NC)—Arch
bishop Joseph Walsh of Tuam
said here that Irish will be
used In parts of the Mass In
Irish-speaking districts.
• FREE PARKING
• TV A AIR CONDITIONING
• FAMOUS MIAMI BUFFET
• ICC & BEVERAGE STATIONS
• COFFEE MAKER. EACH ROOM
Marry Donohue, Manager
American Eaprti*
Credit Cards Aceaptad
LUCKIE AT CONE ST.
A Good Addros* In Atlanta
MOTOR HOTEL
'TEAM EXAMPLE
Girl’s Home Run
Ten New Converts
BRIDGEPORT, Mich. (NC)—
A peppy, 14-year-old girl Join
ed a softball team here—and
belted a spiritual home run.
As a result of her athletic
adventure, Candy Delaney and
nine members of her family
today are converts to the Ca
tholic Faith.
THE GIRL JOINED the
Bridgeport Swans softball team
last spring. Candy Delaney said
it was the good example set by
her fellow players and the team
coach, Robert Rutherford, that
got her interested in the Catho
lic religion.
Then, too, there’s Father Sig
mund Zalewskl, O.F.M., pastor
of Assumption of the Blessed
MICHAEL SCHLIESSMAN, a
senior at St. Pius X, is the
Metropolitan Atlanta Junior
Chess champion. He won this
honor at the Atlanta Tourna
ment, in which he placed first
in the junior division and sixth
in the city division.
Modern Dress
LONDON (CN)—A picture of
Christ preaching the Sermon on
the Mount in modern dress has
been greeted here by England’s
ranking Catholic prelate as an
interpretation that is not dis
torted and as a welcome change
from abstractions that defy ex
planation.
‘GREAT IDEAL’
Virgin Mary parish here, who is
a fan of the softball team. He
became acquainted with Candy
Delaney after watching her play.
Eventually, she approached Fa
ther Zalewskl and asked for
more information about the Ca
tholic religion.
AS A RESULT, the girl's pa
rents, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Delaney, and her brothers and
sisters — Mary, 13, Michael
Shawn, 10, Bernard Gerald, 9,
Michele Audrey, 8, Beth Alli
son, 6, Craig Steven, 2, and
Tiege Aaron, 18 months — were
received into the Catholic
Church. There’s another De
laney—Mrs. Edwin Boyke of
Saginaw, Mich.
Encouraged by Candy Dela
ney, Father Zalewskl began
calling at the Delaney home
once a week, giving instruc
tions. He said he never met a
family more eagerly interested
In the Catholic religion. Often
at the urging of the family he
overstayed his usual two-hour
weekly instruction period.
FATHER ZALEWSKI put
most of the Delaney youngsters
into parish Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine classes. He
cautioned the teachers to go
easy on them, since they didn’t
have the religious background of
other students. The reply came
back from the teachers that the
Delaney youngsters were among
the best students.
After six months of instruc
tion, Father Zalewskl received
the family into the Church. Mrs.
Delaney with Tiege Aaron and
Craig were baptized absolutely,
while other members were bap
tized conditionally since they
had been members of the
Bridgeport Community Church.
ON CHRISTMAS EVE the De
laneys who were old enough
made their first Communion,
And Michael and Bernard, Jr„
now are members of the pa
rish's Knights of the Altar
Pope Praises Goal
Of Unified Europe
VATICAN CITY ^C)— Pope
Paul VI has praised the "great
ideal” of a united Eruope,
He has also defended the
Church's right to judge politics
according to the moral law.
THE POPE MADE both points
in addressing (Jan. 31) leaders
of the International Union of
Young Christian Democrats.
He told them he was glad to
see them "because you are now
bending your lofty thoughts and
your youthful vigor to the ideal
of an Integrated and united
Europe. It Is worthy of you.
It merits engaging your hearts
and firing your enthusiasm. It
represents the happy ending of
an unhappy story: the nations of
Europe must no longer have
any pretext for setting them
selves against one another.
SECOND IN ROW
"TO ELIMINATE the danger
and the temptation of some other
conflict which could become
tragic and fatal, there is a need
to create—we would like to say
recreate— single family of
brother peoples. We would not
say Europe would be divided
among these peoples, but rat
her that it is composed of
them.”
Pope Paul denied that the
"negative purpose” of avoiding
war is the only reason Europe
today seems ripe for integrat
ion and said there are "so many
other positive reasons.”
HE STATED THAT politics
are "outside the specific field
fo our religious competence.”
But he added that the Church’s
teaching authority extends to
"every manifestation of human
activity, seen under the moral
aspect.’’
Slumping Marists
Bow To Bulldogs
BY PAUL APPLEGARTH
The Marist Cadets lost their
second game in a row last Fri
day night. They were defeated
by the Decatur Bulldogs, 55-49,.
after a hard-fought game at the
Oglethorpe gymnasium. Fifth-
ranked in the state following a
twelve game winning streak
earlier in the year, the Cadets
had dropped to seventh after
losing a 76-53 decision to sixth-
ranked Osborne two weeks ago.
With this loss, the Blue and
Gold team will probably be
pushed out of the AAA top-ten,
A recap of the games of the
last three weeks follows:
Having completed mid-term
exams, the Cadets traveled to
Charlotte, North Carolina,
where they defeated Sacred
Heart of Belmont Abbey 63-41
and Charlotte Catholic 64-44.
Returning home to Georgia,
they Journeyed to Gainesville,
whipping the Red Elephants for
their eleventh consecutive vic
tory. Then the Cadets took
Sandy Springs, before bowing
to Osborne 76-53 in a region
battle.
Against Decatur last Satur
day, Marist felt the frustration,
for the second straight game, of
being unable to put the ball into
the basket. The Cadets ended up
hitting only 32 per cent of their
shots, many of which were hit
during a third quarter scoring
spree in which Marist pulled up
and passed Decatur for a brief
time. Injured Bob Bockmanwas
high scorer with 16 points.
This Saturday night, the Cad
ets, with a 21-5 over-all record,
collided head on with Westmins
ter at St. Joseph’s gym, before
heading into the region tourna
ment next week.
KOREAN BORDER MASS FOR JFK—At Guard-post “Dort” adjacent to the MDLr—the
boundary that separates South Korea from North Korea (in background) U. S. Army
Chaplain Capistran Borley, O.F.M., celebrates a memorial Mass for the late president of
the United States, John Fitzgerald Kennedy. A captain in the Army, Father Borley is a
priest of the Franciscan Province of St. Barbara, Oakland, Calif. Hejias served in Panama
and Korea.
‘MORAL, LEGAL'
Priest-Jurist Endorses
Negro Protest Movement
NEW YORK (NC)— A priest
who heads a Catholic law school
has emphatically endorsed the
morality and legality of the
Negro protest movement, in
cluding civil disobedience of
laws Negroes consider unjust
and the use of children in civil
rights demonstrations.
Father Robert F. Drinan, S.
J„ dean of Boston College law
school, said the present injus
tices suffered by Negroes
create a "presumption” that
ordinary legal and social means
are not enough and "direct,
supra-legal, non-violent action
is the only alternative way” for
Negroes to win redress of their
grievances.
FATHER DRINAN, a widely
known author and lecturer,
spoke (Feb. 1) at a national le
gal conference conducted by the
Congress of Racial Equality
(CORE), one of the leading civil
rights organizations. His sub
ject was "The Changing Role
of the Lawyer in an Era of Non-
Violent Action.”
The Jesuit priest said the de-
.mand of Negroes for "all, here
now” is "not the impatient cry
of citizens irked at some tem
porary injustice.”
"IT IS RATHER the ex
pression of the Negro’s belief
that the ordinary legal and po
litical processes of America
in a white civilization,” he said.
Discussing direct non-vio
lent action, he said there are
"many actions and activities of
minority groups which tech
nically might be deemed illegal
but are or will eventually be
judicially declared to be legally
protected by the First Amend
ment or by similar con--
stitutional categories.”
THUS, HE SAID, a one-day
protest stay - out from school
may not be illegal truancy if
done for a legitimate purpose,
and non-violent demonstrations
for the redress of grievances
may not be disorderly conduct
but rather a form of constitu
tionally protected freedom of
association and assembly.'
"We simply do not know the
outer limits of the basic First
Amendment rights to have free
dom of religion, speech, the
press, assembly and of petition
to the government for a redress
of grievances,” he commented.
"THE FIRST AMENDMENT
may be the treasury of more
freedoms than a newly plura
listic America has yet dared to
imagine.”
Father Drinan denied that
civil disobedience of laws
deemed to be unjust implies
disrespect for the law.
RATHER, HE SAID, such be
havior "involves the highest
possible respect for the law.”
”lf an individual or a group
secretly or violently sought to
overthrow such a law, such con
duct would be disloyalty to the
idea of law itself,” he said.
"Thoreau’s words are appli
cable to these persons: 'They
are the lovers of law and order
who observe the law when the
government breaks it!.”
FATHER DRINAN called it
"most misleading" to say that
civil disobedience is justified
"only as a last resort.”
"In hundreds of grievances,”
he said, "there is no legal
machinery to process the com
plaint, much less bring it to the
state of ‘the last resort.*
"SOME INJUSTICES, fur
thermore, place their victims
in such pain, humiliation and
moral peril that the minority
group...has not merly a right
but conceivably a duty to bring
them to public attention by some
dramatic or even spectacular
conduct.”
Father Drinan also disputed
the views of those who counsel
a go-slow policy for the Negro
rights movement lest it alien
ate whites.
"IF APATHY turns into anti
pathy the Negro cause has not
been harmed, since nothing
beneficial to the Negro com
munity can come out of apathy
...At least his claims have been
heard—for the first time—and
if the first white reaction to
them is antipathy or anta
gonism, the second white reac
tion may be a reluctant willing
ness to make concessions,” he
said.
The priest was critical of the
"emotional outbursts” of those
who object to participation by
children in rights demon
strations. He said these out
bursts come from "many in
dividuals who...never cared en
ough to say what they now pro
claim about the Negro children
of Prince Edward County.”
(PRINCE EDWARD County in
Virginia closed down its public
schools rather that integrate
them. Up until recent months
Negro children in the county
have been without schooling.)
Assuming there is no physi
cal danger to the children and no
question of prolonged absence
from school, Father Drinan
said, "there is no good reason
why children should not partici
pate in the Negro’s march for
equality and justice.”
HE SAID THE presence of
children in rights demon
strations can be an effective
way of penetrating the "blind
ness and deafness” of the white
majority, and added: "It is al
ways an ennobling experience
for children to learn at an early
age of true moral principles and
to protest their violation.”
Father Drinan said lawyers
must "recognize the fact that
demonstrations, boycotts, sit-
ins and other forms of direct
action as yet unimagined will
be here until integration of a
significant nature has been
achieved." He said the legal
profession can be "enormously
helpful to the nation" if it takes
a sound approach to the legal
and moral issues raised by such
direct action.
^A^NVESTMEItn^OUMOH^UTUR^N
TiOCV m CROSS
IN NEW ORLEANS. LA.
A Leading Preparatory School for Boys,
conducted by the Holy Gross Brothers.
Grades 7 - 12, both Boar dint and Day.
► Character Training and
Christian Doctrine
► College Preparatory Courses
► Supervised Study Periods
► Training in the Fine Arts
► Complete Athletic Facilities
For information write:
Dir. of Admissions, HOLY CROSS SCHOOL
Box 64, 4950 Dauphine St.*New Orleans, La.70117
CLARK
1AUNDRY-DJLY cleaningi
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