Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 6
GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1964
Reverend Harold /. Rainey
P O. Box 12047
North Side Station
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
Telephone: 404-CE 3-2148
My offering to help a child $
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
STATE
ZIP CODE
Whatisachild?
A child is to love, be happy with, to cuddle and
to care for, A child is your reflection. Thousand*
of children don’t know what a full meal ii, how
warm a real bed feels, whether they will see
tomorrow.
' The Holy Childhood Adoption Program
help* them to laugh and love. Your $5.00 offer
ing gives them the opportunity. Will you help?
Note: Each $5.00 offering cover* the initial
care, education and baptism of one mission
child. Donors should include with each offering
a name with which they would like their mis
sion child baptized, and the name of the child
to whom the adoption should he credited,
Official Holy Childhood Adoption Certificates
will be sent to donors. For further information,
call or write:
25 YEARS IN THE PRIESTHOOD
ARCHDIOCESAN TEACHERS
Monsignor Dodwell, Fr.
Connell Observe Jubilees
School Faculty
Assignments
—
IGNATIUS HOUSE
RETREATS RV JESUIT TRIESTE
Weekends For Men
And
Weekends For Women
6700 Riverside Drive N. W. 255-0503
Atlanta. Georgia 30320
Presents
Monslfnor Edward J, Dodwell
and Father Patrick C, Connell
are observing the twenty-fifth
anniversaries of their ordina
tions to the priesthood this
week.
Tha Jubllarlans, both of whose
years as priests include ex
tensive service in the Archdio
cese of Atlanta and in the old
Diocese of Savannah-Atlanta.
are celebrating Masses of
Thanksgiving in the presence of
priests from Atlanta and Savan
nah this morning in the Chapel
of Our Lady of Perpetual Help
Free Cancer Home in Atlanta.
Fr. John Stapleton, pastor of
St. Jude's, Atlanta, is the
preacher.
A jubilee dinner for priests,
following the Mass, has Fr. R.
Ed Curtin
Donald Kiernan, pastor of St.
Michael's, Gainesville, as
toastmaster. Because of this
special observance, the Corpus
Chrlstl Procession at Our
Lady's Home will be held this
afternoon at 4:45 p.m,
Installs Staff
The Ladles Guild of St, John’s
Catholic Church, Hapeville,
held its last meeting for the
season, Tues, May 12th, at 8:00
p.m, in the school cafeteria.
Officers for the next term were
installed. Pres,, Mrs. Marion
Vuchetich, Vice Pres,, Mrs.
Betty Aeschlliman, Treas.,
Mrs. Ruth Hughes, Sec,, Mrs.
Beverly McGuire, Parliamen
tarian, Mrs. Peggy Hesse.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses for the even
ing, Mrs. Katherine Reed, Mrs.
Dorothy Astin and Mrs. Hilda
Bourdeau.
M«VI CMC 1ST-41 g|
HOLY CROSS
BROTHER
• BOYS’ IIP—|
• owta wom
• fORIMM MISSIONS
For Information Writot
IroMorTSonoid Jtansol, CSC
104 Holy Croat School
49SO Dauphioe Stroat
BOBBY DONATO
QUINTETTE
featuring
LITTLE GEORGE
ON THI SAX
PANCf AT THI
Scm&SoucC
/bUWtSIP IRLL H, 5 4251
Next Sunday, tha Feas^of Our
Lady Quean of tha UnlW3«»
Msgr. Dodwell will celebrate a
Mass of Thanksgiving at the
Shrine of the Immaculate Con
ception at 12:15 p.m. Follow
ing the Mass there will be an
informal reception in The Im
maculate Hall from 1 to 2 p.m.
to enable Monsignor's friends
among the laity to extend their
best wishes.
Msgr. Dodwell is a native of
Philadelphia and received his
training for the Priesthood at
St. Charles Prep Seminary,
Overbrook, at the North Ameri
can College in Rome (with the
Pontifical Atheneum of the
Propaganda), and at St. Mary's,
Baltimore. He was ordained in
1939 in Philadelphia by the late
Cardinal Dougherty and later
received the degrees of Doc
tor of Philosophy and Doctor of
Canon Law from the Catholic
University of America.
Msgr. Dodwell's first* ap
pointment in Georgia was as
assistant to Fr. Barr at St.
Mary's-on-the-Hill, Augusta.
He later served in Savannah,
Savannah Beach and Port Went
worth, as Administrator of St.
Miahael's, Gainesville, and as
Official is of the Savannah-At
lanta Diocese. He was assign
ed to Immaculate Conception
here in Atlanta until taking
residence as Chaplain at Our
Lady of Perpetual Help Free
Cancer Home.
Fr. Connell is a native of
Rochester, N.Y. and was edu
cated in parochial schools in
that city and at St. Andrew's
and St. Bernard's Seminaries,
He was ordained by Bishop
Kearney in 1939 and his early
priestly career included parish
and Newman Club assignments
in upstate New York.
Fr. Connell came to Georgia
in 1946 and was attached to St.
Patrick's, Augusta, where he
also taught at Boy's Catholic
High School and served as auxi
liary chaplain at Fort Gordon.
He then went to St. Mary's,
Romu as Administrator and as
Newman chaplain at Shorter
College. Following an assign
ment as Administrator of St.
Peter's , LaOrange, where he
was also chaplain for the Warm
Springs Polio Foundation, ha
camr to Atlanta as Resident
Chaplain of Oar Lady of Per
petual Help Free Cancer Hom*i,
JFK INTFKFAITH CHAPEL—This 71-year old former Catholic Church cf Our Lady, at
Carrollton. Ga.. will be removed to the campus of West Georgia College, and renovated
for use as an interfaith chapel. It was donated to the college by the Catholic Archdio
cese of Atlanta and will be known as the John F. Kennedy Interfaith Chapel.
The Archdiocesan Education
Office, is sending Sister Mary
Severine, C, S, J„ Supervisor
of Elementary Education, to
Notre Dsme University this
summer to study the latest
trends in elementary ad
ministration and curriculum
development. Sister now holds
a Master of Education degree
from Saint Louis University,
The Education Office is also
sending Sister Gabriel Marie,
G.N.S.H,, Saint Jude the Apostle
School to Mobile, Alabama to
participate in a four - weeks
Workshop on Revision of the
Teachers’ Guides, Guides four
through eight will be revised
this summer and Sister will re
present the Archdiocese of At
lanta in taking an active part
in the revision.
AT CARROLLTON
Hold Interfaith
Chapel Ceremony
CARROLLTON, Ga. (NC) —
Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy
took part in groundbreaking
ceremonies at West Georgia
College here for an interfaith
chapel named for the late Pres
ident Kennedy and donated to the
Students
Honored
At St. Pius X High School,
Mary Muessle, junior, Gayle
Deckbar, sophomore, and Roy
Leonard Brown, freshman, re
ceived medals for the highest
grade average in their respec
tive classes. Msgr. P. J.
O'Connor, Secretary of Edu
cation, presented the awards
at the May 13 Honor Banquet,
Site of the banquet was the At
lanta Hellenic Center, Those
receiving gold medals for four
years on the honor roll are sen
iors Christine Murphy and
Charlene Cherry, John Oliver,
senior, and Mary Shoemaker,
senior, received silver medals
for three years of honor rank
ing.
Sophomores Maureen Dailey
and Gayle Deckbar received
bronze medals for two years,
Scholastic letters for one year
went to Ro y Leonard Brown,
freshman, Sarah Almon, senior,
Patricia Errlgo, sophomore,
and Ann Roberts, sophomore.
Archbishop O'Hara American
History medals went to Juniors
Jerome Quin and Marilyn
Hines, Christine Murphy, sen
ior, Jon Lorrain, Junior, Fran
ces Sullivan, sophomore, and
Paul Langsfeld, freshman, re
ceived the prizes for French
for fourth, third, second, and
'tret year respectively.
ICAAY SANDERS
Television, Radios
Stereos
SALES AND SERVICE
|3759 Roswell Rd., N.E
Phone 233-4275
a four-ytar liberal arts college
FLORIDA’S
CATHOLIC COLLEGE
of
distinction
Co-Educational
Write: Director of Admissions
SAINT LEO COLLEGE SAINT LEO, FLORIDA
college by the Catholic Archdio
cese of Atlanta.
The John F. Kennedy Inter-
fatlth Chapel will be available
to all faiths and religious groups
at the college.
The 71-year-old chapel build
ing, at present located in down
town Carrollton, is the former
Catholic Church of Our Lady.
The Catholic parish has moved
to a new building.
A committee of laymen rep
resenting major denominations
in the west Georgia area is
raising funds to move the build
ing to the college campus and
renovate it for use as an inter
faith chapel.
The building was constructed
in 1893 and for 60 years was an
Episcopalian church, it was
purchased by the Catholic par
ish in 1953 and has been used
as the parish church for the past
decade.
THE SISTERS of St. Joseph from Baden, Pa., when stationed in
the South wear a white habit during the warm months. Sister
Stephen and Sister Gemma are shown with children of the first
and second grades at St. Paul of the Cross School, Atlanta.
AT FOX THEATRE
Pius X, St. Joseph Graduation
On Saturday the Fox Theatre,
Atlanta, Georgia provided a
beautiful setting for the joint
commencement exercises of the
Archdiocesan High Schools,
Saint Plus X Catholic High
School graduated one hundred
forty-ilx seniors at its sixth
graduation, while Saint Joaeph
Catholic High School graduated
one hundred aeniora at its firit
graduation ceremonial.
The Commencement Addresa
ST. GERARD’S
was given by The Right Rev
erend Monsignor Alfred M.
Wataon, P.A., M,A,, Rector,
Saint Peter'a Cathedral, Erie,
Pennaylvanla. Monilgnor Wat
son's keynote thought was Per
sonal Integrity, which he said
could not be taught as a sub
ject, could not be found in a
laboratory but, if the graduates
had it, they picked it up from
their mother or dad, brother
or sister, teacher or friend.
Fr. McCrief Marks
Silver Jubilee
The Rev, Robert McCrief,
C, SS, R, celebrated his silver
jubilee of priesthood on. Sun
day, May 24, by offering a
High Mass at Saint Gerard’s
Church, Fort Oglethorpe where
he is assistant pastor, A re
ception was held in the School
Hal for the parishoners after
the Mass. The Ladies of the
Altar Society decorated and
Operetta
The children of Christ the
King School will present
Humperdinck's Operetta Hansel
' and Gretel for the benefit of the
Cathedral Carnival Fund May
31 and June 1. Tb* curtain
will rise at 8:15 p.m. in the
Cathedral Auditorium, Prices
for tickets are Adults, $1.00,
Children. 75£.
'Xuji Y-ur ■*, from Mu"
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made arrangements for the af
fair.
Father McCrief, a native of
Poughkeepsie, N, Y, attended
the minor seminary of the
Redemptorlst Fathers at North
East, Pa, In 1934 he made his
religious profession at the
Novitiate in Uchester, Md, and
was ordained at Mount Saint
Alphonsua, Esopus, N, Y. in
1939.
After spending five years on
the foreign missions in Brazil,
Father McCrief taught briefly
before coming south aa pariah
priest in Wilson, N,C, and
Salem, Va. For the paat four
years, Father McCrief has been
assistant at Saint Gerard’s and
priest-in-charge of Saint Peter
Chanel Mission in Summer
ville.
At the jubilee Mass the ser
mon was preached by a class
mate, the Rev. Bernard Krimm,
C.SS.R. former pastor of Saint
Joseph's Church in Dalton and
now pastor in Salem, Va.
Personal integrity, he went on
to say, is hard to define but it's
touchstone is sincerity, Certain
things they do or do not do, a
sense of self-reliance, confi
dence in self Is not given to
them but muat be built up in
themselves. If the graduates do
not have personal Integrity they
are In constant conflict with
themselves, But if they live up
to their convictions, if they are
true to themselves they have
Integrity,
"We muat remember," Mon-
aignor Wataon said, "That there
la no new morality today, The
■ame moral law that guided
Adam la guiding them, They can
take string!, aa it were, and
tie them around morality for
ten, fifteen, twenty years but in
the end 'chicken* com* home to
roost', " Monslgnor Watson
concluded his address by say
ing, "At our last commence
ment day-judgment day—may
we be able to say, 'My Cod, I
sincere to You. I was sin
cere to my fellowman."
"THE ARCHBISHOP’S Award
for Scholastic Excellence" giv
en for the first time since this
joint graduation was establish
ed to proclaim to all the inte
rest the Church has In scholas
tic excellence: given for work
exceptionally well done to a boy
and girl from each high school.
The aw ard for Saint Joseph High
School was presented to Rich
ard Cavallo and Jean Sutherland
while Saint Pius X's was award
ed to John Oliver and Charlene
Cherry.
Archbishop Paul J. Hallirun,
still a patient at Saint Joseph's
Infirmary Hospital, made his
first public appearance at this
graduation since his illness on
December 29, 1963. He told the
graduates that he wanted to be
with them on this first joint
graduation day.
Rev, Daniel O’Connor, Secre
tary to the Secretary for Edu
cation and Principal of St.
Joseph High School, will con
tinue his studies at the Catho
lic University of America. Sum
mer assignments of other St,
Joseph faculty members are:
Sister Mary Magdala, Vice
Principal, will teach at Font-
bonne College, Sister Charlotte
will attend St, Louis University,
Sister Mary Helen, Marquette
University, Mrs, Enid Kaler,
Georgia State and Mrs, Mary
Lynn Eckl, Oglethorpe Uni
versity.
At Drexel Catholic High
School Sister Mary Donatus,
Vice Principal, has received a
grant from Lilly Endowment,
Inc, to attend an Institute on
Communism and Constitutional
Democracy at Vanderbilt Uni
versity, Sisters Vincent and
Francois will continue their
studies at the Catholic Uni
versity of America, Sister
Marie Immaculee at Fordham
University and Sister Maureen
Patricia at Villanova.
Rev. John Cotter, Vice Prin
cipal of St. Pius X Catholic
High School, will study at the
University of Georgia. Summer
assignments of other St. Pius
X Faculty members include
Rev, Allan Diliman, Emory
University, Sister Thomas
Margaret, C. S, J. who will
teach journalism at the Catho
lic University of America,
Sister Ann Bernadette, G.
N.S.H. received a grant to study
at the University of Georgia,
Sister Louis Martin, C.S.J.will
continue her studies at
Marquette University and Mrs.
Hair at Georgia State.
A great many of our elemen
tary teachers, both religious
and lay, are also attending sum
mer schools and workshops in
various parts of the country.
Meeting At SS.
Peter And Paul
The regular monthly meeting
of the Ladies Auxiliary of SS,
Peter and Paul waa held Thurs
day night, May 21. At this time
the new slate of officers forth*
year 1964-1965 was installed.
The new officers ire si fol
lows: President, Mrs, John F,
Betslll; Vice President, Mrs,
William P, Heilln} Secretary,
Mra, G, Davis;Treasurer, Mra,
Donald Stubbs,
Father Manning addressed
the group briefly, expressing
his gratitude for the work ac
complished by the outgoing of
ficers, and thanked everyone
for their cooperation during
the past year.
Senior Class
Night Held
Joaeph Bean Stadium was the
sight of the Senior Class Night,
This was the first affair of tills
kind to be held at Saint Plus X,
Paul Falettl received the
Journal-Constitution trophy for
the best all-round student,
Christine Murphy won the Sis
ter Kathleen Marie O'Leary
Medal for excellence In reli
gion.
Catherine Hynes, senior class
president presented Father
James Harrison, principal, with
a check for seven hundred dol
lar*. T' s was the class gift to
the school. Father Harrison
commended David Slbertforhis
achievement in tennis, David is
the Region AA Champion. Fath
er also commended the National
Merit Finalists, the National
Honor Society, the Freedoms
Foundation winners and the De
bate team.
Chriatine Murphy, girl co
president of the Student Coun
cil, gave the senior Address.
Paul Faletti, boy co-president,
was the Master of Ceremonies.
Group To Assist
Rights Workers
NEW YORK (NC)--The dean
of Boston College law school
and representative* of seven
major civil rights groups have
formed a "legal corp*” t0 de
fend civil rights campaigners
in the Deep South this summer.