Newspaper Page Text
t
Students stamp the Music Books which the Eighth Graders at
St. Anthony's School purchased for the entire school. The books
will be labeled with the words “donated by the Class of 1964“
The money was obtained from the proceeds of the annual Eight
Grade Carnival. The Carnival entitled “We Sing and Praise",
is one of the adopted texts of the Archdiocese.
ARCHBISHOP KROL:
PROTESTANT SCHOLAR
Asks Statement
On Liberties
NEWYORK (NC)~A noted Pro
testant scholar has written an
open letter to the American
Catholic Bishops • urging them
to support a wide range of topics
in the Second Vatican Council,
including statements on re
ligious liberty and anti -
Semitism.
Robert McAfee Brown, pro
fessor of religion at Stanford
University and an official Pro
testant observer at the council,
told the Bishops their “vigor
ous advocacy" of a statement
endorsing religious liberty
would be “your most signifi
cant contribution as American
Bishops to the Second Vatican
Council."
HIS LETTER appears in the
June 26 issue of Commonweal,
a Catholic weekly edited by
laymen.
The open letter also urged the
Bishops to press for a wider
role in the Church for laymen,
reforms in seminary education,
abolition of the Index of For
bidden Books, and a statement
on collegiality—the concept that
all bishops share with the pope
in the teaching and governing
authority of the Church.
Brown, a Presbyterian, asked
the Bishops to change Church
law so that marriages between
Catholics and Protestants per
formed by Protestant ministers
could be considered valid. On
the subject of birth control, he
said he is aware the Church
will not "change" its teaching,
but he added: "I must hope. , .
you will not prematurely silence
the moral theologians who are
struggling with a matter on
which the last word has not been
said."
Responsibility Is Mark
Of The Mature Christian
JAMAICA, N.Y. (NC)--A sense
of responsibility is the mark of
a mature Christian, Archbishop
John J. Krol of Philadelphia
told the graduates of St. John's
University at the university's
annual baccalaureate Mass.
“Human freedom and its con
sequent responsibility are cen
tral to God’s plan for us," the
Archbishop said. “He looks to
us to complete that plan. As
St. Augustine said, God made
us without our help, but He
cannot save us without our co
operation."
“ALL irrational creation,
animate and inanimate, pursues
SPANISH WEDDING VEILS
Exquisite handmade with silk
thread, Imported directly
from Spain. Also mantillas.
Assorted designs, sizes and
colors. Call or write:
LOPEZ IMPORTERS
Tel. 237-7998
Box 13954 St. K Atlanta, Ga.
its course of existence and
achieves its goal automatical
ly, in accord with the irresisti
ble laws of nature," the Phila
delphia prelate continued.
“Many alone is a rational
creature ... He alone has
freedom and the power to shape
his own future as well as that
of history.
"Your commencement,"
Archbishop Krol told the gradu
ates, "inaugurates the as
sumption of full responsibility
whic h is the mark of Chris
tian maturity.
“YOU are responsible to God,
to the Church, to your diocese,
your parish, your community,
yes, even to the world.
"You do not satisfy this re
sponsibility by indulging in the
adolescent sport of criticizing
the efforts and work of your
elders. You can no longer plan
an impersonal role in the world
. . .You share the responsi
bility for the social, economic
and political order in the
world. ,,
“YOU will not satisfy your
Remodeling
Frea
Estimates & Planning
Room Additions
Kitchens Modernized
Roofing-Siding
Painting
Concrete & Block
References Gladly Given
F.H.A. Terms
ME 6-5945
responsibility by an easy or
impatient gesture of disgust, or
by a weary nod of approval
of mediocrity. You will not
satisfy it by conspicuous pro
nouncements or self-assured
fault-finding."
Archbishop Krol reminded
that beyond personal responsi
bility lie the claims of social
commitment:
'THE DAY is long past when
the flip, the cynical or the naive
among your elders might say:
'Say your prayers, save your
soul, and be neutral to the rest
of the world.’ Onlv the stars
can remain neutral. Christian
men are not an island to them
selves. Christian men must be
aware of and must meet the de
mands of personal and social
responsibility.. .responsibility
that derives from your mem
bership in the Mystical Body
of Christ.
“When the short-term lease
on our earthly life has ex
pired," said the Archbishop,
“we will be asked to give an
accound of our stewardship—
of our responsibility. How will
you answer God’s question:
"watchman, what of the night?’
"It is my prayerful wish that
you may be able to answer:
'Lord, I tried. Unlike the stars,
I was never neutral. I was not
a critical bystander. I became
involved and I tried to fulfill
both my personal and social
responsibility as a mature
Christian.”
Explaining why he, a Pro
testant, presumed to offer the
Catholic bishops advice, Brown
said: “We Protestants have a
stake in (the council) at two
points: because Vatican II will
either tremendously help or
tremendously hinder the ecu
menical dialogue that Pope John
helped to inaugurate, and be
cause whatever the council
does, for good or ill, will re
dound to the glory or shame of
all Christendom."
Men’s Council
Installs Staff
Officers of the Council of
Men of the Church of the Most
Blessed Sacrament were
recently installed by Rev. Wal
ter Donovan, Spiritual Direc
tor, to serve for the 1964-
65 operating year. Mr. James
Callison is president; vice pre
sidents arc ; Spiritual, Max
Bips; Existing Parish Fac
ilities, Thomas Bergen; New
Parish Development, Maurice
de Varennes; Parish Finance,
Douglas Young; and public Re
lations, Thomas Horeff; Char
les Biddulph is secretary; Tho
mas Scruggs is treasurer; and
Roy Gunter is Diocesan De
legate.
Altarian Party
St. Anthony's Altar and Ros
ary Society in West End is hav
ing a benefit Dessert, Card
Party. It will be held in the
Church auditorium , June 23,
7:30 p.m. Many prizes will be
given away. Mrs. J. Duffy, Mrs.
A. Norton and Mrs. J. Rosen
thal are in charge of arrange
ments.
NEWLY installed Immaculate Conception Holy Name officer!,
moderator and guest speaker at breakfast meeting. Left to
right: Mr. Joe Paris!; Mr. Logan Harrison; Mr. Roger Meehan;
Father Leonard Kelly, OFM; Senator Joe Salome; President
Eddie Gasperini and Mr. Jerry Giordano.
PAPERBACK BOOKS FOR YOUR
SUMMER READING PLEASURE
. . .Shoes of the Fisherman, West
. . .Council Speeches of Vatican
II edited by Hans Kung
. . .This Tremendous Lover,
Boylan
. . .Imitation of Christ
. . .A Memoir of Mary Ann
Add 3% sales tax and 10 cent handling
Name
.7!
1.2!
1.5<
.41
Address.
NOTRE DAME
BOOK SHOP, INC.
115 Peachtree Rd., N.E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30303
PARISHIONERS of St. Joseph's, Marietta, will hold a farewell
reception in the school cafeteria June 21, 7:30 through 9:30 p.m.,
to honor the departure of Father Clarence Biggers, S.M., St.
Joseph's pastor (left) and Father Timothy Sugrue, S.M., As
sistant Pastor, Fr. Biggers is going to St. Joseph's church in
Paulina, La., on July 1, Fr. Sugrue will be stationed in St.
Francis Xavier’s, Brunswick.
PRELATE SAYS
Glamor Not All
In Mission Work
LIMA, Peru — Missionaries
should be willing to forego
"the glamor and the drama"
of pastoral activity and take up
vital administrative posts in
stead, according to the Papal
Nuncio to Peru.
Archbishop Romolo Carboni
told a group of new missioners
from the United States, Cana
da and Ireland that "getting
mud on one’s shoes working in
the slums of the big cities and
in the isolated hamlets of the
mountains is not an infallible
proof that the missioner is
performing the most needed
work of the moment."
THE RECENTLY arrived
priests, Brothers and Sisters
are studying at the language
school of the Missionary Society
of St. James the Apostle near
Lima. Archbishop Carboni, ad
dressing them (June 9), praised
those who work with the poor
and those doing catechetical
work among the masses.
But he said that f’very often
it is extremely difficult for the
hierarchy to find missionary
personnel for key positions
which, while they lack the gla
mor and the drama of the pas
toral apostolate are absolutely
essential to the progress ofthe
Church here."
ARCHBISHOP Carboni point
ed out by way of example that
seminary work is extremely
taxing and that it perhaps lacks
the motional satisfaction that
parochial work brings. "But
what," he asked, “is more im-
Plan For IHM
Summer Fete
The First Summer Festival of
I. H. M. Parish will be held
this Saturday, June 20, at
8:00 p.m. outdoors on the parish
grounds. This is a joint effort
of all the organizations within
the parish, each one taking part
in the arrangements for the
party. Some of the groups to
be represented are the Men’s
Club, Usher's Club, C. C. D.
Parents Club, Altar and Rosary
Society, St. Gerard's Guild, Chi
Rho Club, and all other adult
organizations in the parish.
There will be dancing, refre
shments, food, and entertain
ment planned for the evening.
A large turnout of adults of the
parish is expected for this
First Summer Festival. Pro
ceeds from the event will go to
the Permanent Convent Fund of
LH.M.
portant for the future of the
Church in Latin America than a
highly prepared, holy, dedica
ted clergy, and where is it go
ing to come from if not from
seminaries staffed by cultured,
zealous, saintly, experienced
superiors and professors?"
He said that Peru is also
in urgent need of priests com
petent in the fields of educa
tion, hospital and charity work
and Church finance and admi
nistration, in addition to the es
sential apostolate in the field.
“We will make very little last
ing progress unless we begin
to do some elementary study
ing, planning and organization
in the areas of schools, social
service and Church support.
But to do this we need com
petent personnel," he said.
'THE MISSIONER of today,"
he said, “must not come to the
mission field with preconceived
ideas. It is not the missioner's
Job just to teach catechism,
Just to run a dispensary, just
to establish a parish, just to
run a seminary. The missioner
of today must take the situa
tion as he finds it and serve
the Church in the most urgent
needs of the hour. The mis
sioner cannot say, 'this or that
is not my work.' Everything
is the work of the missioner
which is necessary to the pro
gress of the Church in the area
in which he is laboring."
Archbishop Carboni also laid
emphasis on the need for
expanding the slowly growing
network of parchial schools in
Peru, which he labeled “the
most promising source for the
vocatiorts of the future of which
we are in dire need."
COMMENTING on the semi
nary situation here, the Apos
tolic Nuncio stated that too
little importance has been given
to the minor seminary.
ANSWER TO
LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE
THE SACRAMENT of Baptism was administered to a group of
seven adults, thirteen children and three infants recently at
Sacred Heart, Griffin, by Fr. Govern. The group included the
entire Proctor family, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Proctor and their
three children.
THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1964 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 7
CLASSIFIEDS
BULLETIN
CLASSIFIEDS SELL
MOVING?
PLEASE NOTIFY US
SEND US THIS NOTICE TODAY:
THE GEORGIA BULLETIN
P.O. BOX 11667-NORTHSIDE STATION
ATLANTA 5, GEORGIA
NEW ADDRESS: -
NAME —
ADDRESS
rrrv_.
HOUSES
FOR SALE
St. Jude parish, Sandy
Springs, 1 yr. old. 2-
sty, brick and frame. 4
bdrms., 2 1/2 bths., den,
family room with fireplace.
Separate L-R. & D-R. Full
basement. Nice lot on dead
end street. Community
pool available. Low 30's.
Must see. John Johnson
255-7730. Askew Nations
Co. 3088 Piedmont Rd.
wanted
Wanted, Part time, Male
over 21 years, grocery,
Cheshire Bridge Road.
$1.00 per hour. Me. 6-6650
Lovely contemporary. For
sale by owner in Sexton
Woods. 3 bdrms, 1 1/2
bths. Built-ins. Beautiful
brick fireplace, fenced
back yard on dead - end
street. Ideal for children,
appraised for 17,500. Will
sell, for 17,000. low down
payment, rugs & drapes in
cluded. Mrs. Irle. GL 7-
7409
FOR SALE
For sale, cheap, students’desks
on runners, all sizes. PI 5-
8869, PI 3-1526
SUMMER CLASSES
BULLETIN
CLASSIFIEDS
231-1281
Qualified piano teacher in As
sumption Parish has opening
for beginners and advanced
students for summer and fall.
Call Mrs. Alexander457-6941
BUSINESS SERVICES
All type conrete work,
patios, steps, walks, etc,,
Stone Mountain granite, re
taining walls, 636-0834 or
443-6137
Fainting- Interior-
Exterior
Thoroughly experienced expert
does own work. Hundreds of ref
erences furnished with each es
timate. All windows and gutters
cleaned free with job. Call Mr.
Caldwell 622-6076
THE DOWRY CHEST
COMPLETE BRIDAL SERVICE
Bridal and attendant gowns
made to order, 1365 Peachtree
St. N.E. 872-4343 or 766-7634
HOUSEKEEPER
WANTED
Live-in housekeeper required
for rectory. Send all particu
lars, including references, to
Dept. A, P. O. Box 11667
Northside Station, Atlanta,
Georgia, 30305.
Dressmaking. Suits, coats, for-
mals “etc" reasonable rates.
Phone 233-7012 for further in
formation.
DRESSES BY ESTER
Can copy originals of from
magazines, Also wedding
dresses, Or fine wearing
apparel. 378-9579.
ENGLISH CLASSES FOR
LATIN AMERICANS
Morning (10 a.m. to 12 p.m.)
Monday and Wednesday
Christ the King Parish Center
Evening (8 p.m. to 10 p.m.)
Monday, Tuesday and Wed
nesday Sacred Heart School (old
Marist Building)
For further information, tele
phone 231-4168
WRITERS
*• J- pufelliMr want* feMki m all latitats,
flctiM, naatlctlM. Nt fat far araftiilaiiai
Mlalaa. Milt Iracburti that skew ktv *t*r
kwk can it pukllsktf, puklicliai, itll: Yin
aal art HI* rapriati m writing, pXlMlS!
eta tract*. Wrlta 0apt;<*p”
EXPOSITION 111 bark III. la.. N.Y. 11
Send or Pfione Your Classified
Advertising To The Georgia Bulletin
P.O. Box 11667-Northside Station
Atlanta 5, Georgia
Phone: 231-1281
Ads accepted by phone, mail and at the office up to Monday,
3 line MINIMUM CHARGE Count 5 Average Words to a line.
RATES
1 Time 25? per line
4 consecutive times
with no copy change 23£ per line
DISPLAY CLASSFIED
(WITH BORDER $1.00 PER INCH
Legal Notices 50£
Deaths 50£
In Memoriam 50£
Acknowledgment 50 £
PUBLISHED WEEKLY
Print your classified ad on this form. Slip it into an envelope
along with remittance and sent it to:
THE GEORGIA BULLETIN
Classified Department
Your Name
Address ...
City;.. *. r .......... -State