The Georgia bulletin (Atlanta) 1963-current, April 02, 1964, Image 3

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( FROM EDUCATORS Pope, President Ask More Action Against Poverty ATLANTIC CITY, N.Y. (NC)- - Pope Paul VI and President Johnson both appealed to Catho lic educators here to increase their efforts to overcome ignor ance, poverty and disease. The Pope, in a message sent on his behalf to the 61st annual convention of the National Cath olic Education Association, spoke of the Church’s work to overcome poverty and "other ills of our wounded nature" so that men can devote themselves more completely to "the all im portant duty of caring for their souls.” PRESIDENT Johnson, in his greetings to the convention of nearly 12,000 Catholic educa tors, said that "the plagues of our contemporary society" can be made to yield through deter mination and persistence. The Pontiff, in a message sent by Amleto Cardinal Cicog- nanl, PapalSecretary of State, was described as following with "deep interest theded.cated ef forts of those engaged in the noble work of Catholic educa tion.” "The Catholic Church, through the centuries, has endeavored to diffuse the light of education in order that ignorance, poverty and disease and the many other ills of our wounded human na ture might be conquered, be cause in her wisdom she knows that men who are relieved of the anxieties afflicting the body and the mind can devote them selves the more to the all im portant duty of caring for their souls,” said the papal message. PRESIDENT Johnson noted the convention theme was "Catholic Education and Na tional Needs," He called this appropriate be cause "more than ever before in our nation's history, we turn hopefully to all of our educa tors, working harmoniously, to assist in resolving some of our MOTOR HOTEL •. 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At Roswell Wieuca Shopping Center BLackbum 5-5554 • For any occaslont Weddings, organizational meetings, any social events • 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 arrangid • China • Flatware • Napery • 'Decorations. • Walters 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. When Dinkier does except inviting the catering,forget the guests! about everything DINKLER-PLAZA In The Heart of Atlanta-90 Forsyth Strait, N.W., Atlanta For fm eeniuttatleR, call our Citering Department at JA 4-2481. Sand 'or fraa booklet, llatlni all Dlnkjir hotel* and motaia across the country. mi pressing national needs.” "We are faced today,” said the President, "with a modern counterpart of the Biblical Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. "But the plagues of our con temporary society—ignorance, disease, poverty and unemploy ment—can be made to yield like those of centuries ago if we ap ply our knowledge of science and arts with determination and persistence. "This is the major challenge of our day. It will require the best of our Joint efforts.” THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1964 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 3 Peachtree Road Pharmacy PICK UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE 1 CALL CE 7-6466 4062 Peachtree Rd. Atlanta NELSON RIVES REALTY INC. 3669 CLAIRMONT ROAD CHAMBLEE, GEORGIA REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE SALES, RENTALS RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL- PROPERTY PHONE: 451-2323 Ed Curtin Presents ALLEN COLLAY SEXTET 5:30 TO 7:30 BILL FARMER TRIO Chitter a Humor • Muno FIRST EASTER of his pontificate was marked by Pope Paul VI when he celebrated an open-air Mass from a portable altar on the steps of St. Peter’s Basilica. He Is shown as he was carried through the square on his portable throne, saluting the crowds gathered there to hear his first Ea ter message. Photo cabled from Rome. IN WASHINGTON Lat Our Lounge Ba Your Afternoon end Evening Retreof Rhythm Method Clinic To Open DANCE AT THE Seutd Souct 760 Waif P<tr*e TR. 5-4251 C & S REALTY COMPANY "Specialists in Commercial and Industrial Real Estate" Suite 200 Henry Grady Bldg, Atlanta 3, Ga. Warehouses, Stores, Mfg. Plants, Acreage, Shopping Center Dev,, Subdivision DeV, Industrial Dev„ Insurance 524-2052 MIKE & STEVE SERTICH WASHINGTON (NC) - The Archdiocese of Washington has announced it will open a free clinic here to provide counseling In the rhythm method of birth control. At the same time, Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. Hannan, de plored the decision of the Dis trict of Columbia Commission ers a week earlier to offer free contraceptive advice at the mu nicipal clinic to anyone who seeks information. IN A letter to Dr. Murray Grant, director of health, Bis hop Hannan said the public clinic, financed by a $25,000 congressional appropriation, contained elements that are "morally repugnant to many citizens." The municipal clinic had previously been open only to the indigent. The trchdiocesan clinic, to be located at a local parish, will be similar to Catholic clin ics in New York, Buffalo, San Francisco and several other cities. Private counseling will be available two evenings a week when the clinic opens May 5. Father James G. Gillen, mod- NY SENATOR erator of the clinic and director of the Archdiocesan Family Life Bureau, said married couples will be trained to work with doctors and priests in the pri vate counseling sessions. He said he is hopeful that the gov ernment and Church clinics would cooperate to provide as sistance for those who cannot in conscience accept advice in artificial contraception. It Is believed the government clinic will refer such persons to the Church clinic. THE CATHOLIC clinic will be directed by Dr. George Stev- LEADERSHIP GROUP: Rights Bill Aim Is Educational WASHINGTON (NC)—The aim of the civil rights bill pending in the Senate Is "not to make bad people good but rather to make good people safe," according to a leading civil rights organi zation. "Laws cannot and should not dictate a man’s private thoughts and wishes. They can and should prevent the harmful consequen ces of those thoughts and wish es,” says a new pamphlet on the rights bill published by the Leadership Conference on Civil Urges Prayer Day For Civil Rights WASHINGTON (NC) — Sen. Kenneth B. Keating of New York has called for a national day of prayer for civil rights. Keating said such an obser vance would underline "the fun damental moral issues involved in this struggle,..the impor tance of our religious heritage to America’s commitment to human freedom and individual dignity.” HE MADE the suggestion for a national prayer day for civil rights on a radio and television program recorded for broad cast on stations in New York (March 29). “The commands of equal Jus tice and equal opportunity in the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence are firmly rooted in our moral law,” Keat ing said. "OUR NATION'S Catholic, Protestant and Jewish spiri tual leaders have all joined in condemning racial discrimina tion and have repeatedly under scored the moral basis for civil rights legislation,” he added. ANCIENT PRACTICE Natural Wheat Hosts Increase SUPERIOR, Wis, (NC)—The Franciscan Sisters who make most of the hosts used at Masses In the Superior diocese are now producing natural wheat hosts in response to their growing use here. The hosts produced by the Sisters at their motherhouse in Rice Lake, Wis., are made with unbleached flour and are thick er than white hosts, FATHER ROBERT M. Ur ban, editor, Catholic Herald Citizen, newspaper of the Su perior diocese, wrote (March 4) in the paperthat "the prac tice is growing in many parishes of reverting totheuseofnaturak wheat flour, that is, flour that Is not bleached and has a tan or beige cait to the bread." He said that the new host “impresses one with the idea that this bread has a closer re semblance to the bread of the Cenacle and of all the ages of the Church prior to the intro duction of the thin, ahiny-white hosts we have been uelng," Father Urban wrote th«t no where in Church law is there any definite law insisting that the bread to be used at Mass be of white color. “NATURAL GROUND wheat flour," he said, “does not have the whiteness we now associate with wheat flour. Due to Im provement of milling proces ses, such as bleaching, wheat flour today is white due to technique and not nature." Rights. THE LEADERSHIP Confer ence brings together more than 80 national organizations Inte rested in winning passage of the rights bill in this session of Congress. Among the cooperat ing organizations are the Na tional Catholic Social Action Conference, the National Cath olic Conference for Interracial Justice, the National Council of Catholic Men, and the Na tional Council of Catholic Wo men, as well as many Protes tant and Jewish groups, labor organizations and civic groups. In a statement accompanying Its pamphlet, "Some Questions and Answers on the Civil Rights Bill," the conference said the provisions and possible effects of the rights bill have been "misstated, distorted and mis interpreted.” It called the 24- page pamphlet an effort "to supply the corrective of fact and sober comment.” AFTER outlining the provi sions of the bill and answering objections to them, the pamphlet makes some "general observa tions” on the issues. To the argument that "educa tion” not legislation, is the real solution to discrimination, It replies that "the law Itself is a powerful instrument for education.” "After thousands of years,” it adds, ”it Is still necessary to have laws against murder to enforce the ethical teaching of ’thou shalt not kill.’ ” THE PAMPHLET urges indi viduals and organizations to work for passage of the rights bill. In contacting their sena tors, it says, people should "be specific.” "Don’t just say you’re for civil rights. Urge your senators to: 1) support the bill in its present form; 2) vote against all weakening amendments,” the pamphlet says. It calls for write-in cam paigns and similar efforts on behalf of the bill by "chur ches, unions, lodges, sorori ties, fraternities and civic groups.” Noted Choir To Perform The Singing City Choir of Philadelphia, a group acclaim- ed by music authorities throughout the nation, will pre sent a concert at Emory Uni versity's Alumni Memorial Building on April 23rd at 8:30 p.m. Dr. Elaine Brown, found er and director of the group, will conduct. The concert is being sponsored by Quaker House. Each year, the Choir per forms with the Philadelphia Or chestra under the direction of Eugene Ormandy and has per formed with such renowned con ductors as Leonard Bernstein, Erich Leinsdorf, Alfred Wal lenstein, and Igor Stravinsky. Tickets to this outstanding event are priced at $2.00 and $1.25 for students. Tickets are available on all college cam puses, Jim Salle's in Buckhead, Emory Camera Shop and Rhodes Salon of Muaic. Mail ordera and make checks payable to Quaker house, 1384 Fairview Road, NE, Atlanta, Georgia. Call DR 3-7986 for informa tion. ens, assistant professor of ob stetrics and gynecology at Georgetown University Hospi tal. Dr. Benedict Duffy, direc tor of the Center for Popula tion Research at Georgetown, will be a consultant. Bishop Hannan said the clinic would provide "a total approach to the problems of Christian family living in a modern so ciety" by offering "a balanced program to raise the moral, psychological, physical and eco nomic plane of family relation ships." In regard to the public clinic, Bishop Hannan said: 'The Church opposes vigorously the use of public funds for the pur chase of contraceptive devices and their distribution to indi gent mothers. She deplores es pecially the increased moral laxity Involved In distributing such contraceptives to mothers regardless of marital status.” However, he added: "While expressing the doctrine of the Catholic Church, 1 recognize that in our pluralistic society every citizen has the right to a free expression of his religious convictions." Altarians Will Hear Fr. Mayhew The Altar Society of the Cathe dral of Christ The King will meet Monday, April 6, at 1 o’clock in the Parish Hall. Highlight of the program will be comments by Rev. Leonard F. X. Mayhew on the main points of the Liturgy Constitution. Father Mayhew is Associate Editor of the Georgia Bulletin and Pastor of St. Peter’s Church in LaGrange. Refreshments will be served preceding the busi ness meeting. All ladies of the Parish are cordially invited to attend. FLAMENCO DECOR A new collection of fine, henel-forged wrought Iron and handcrafted, wood article* with the romantic touch of’Spaniah daalgna to pleaee tha American last*. 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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 Dauphin* St.*New Orleans, La.70117 IT’S MARIST FOR SCHOLASTIC EXCELLENCE Because The Mar- ist School provides a hard-core curri culum which pro duces top scholas tic records inmaj or colleges throughout the country. The aver age Marist teach er holds at least an M.A. degree with graduate study in a secular field. This extensive training is the backbone of quality education. If your son is ap proaching the sev enth or eighth grade, now is the time to decide on Marist, the best education in which you can invest. Write for a detail ed brochure or call 457-7201 for aper- sonal interview and dates of the Open House at which time you can see the school and meet the faculty. April 18 is the date of the next enlranee examina tion for fall admis sion.