The Georgia bulletin (Atlanta) 1963-current, July 02, 1964, Image 7

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t St. Pius X. sophomores Quinn Spitzer and Marcia Hair have won trophies for Best BoyDeba ter and Best Girl Debater res pectively during a two-week high school debate workshop at Carson Newman College, Jef ferson City, Tennessee. Marietta Staff To Be Installed St. Joseph’s Council of the Knights of Columbus, of Mari etta, will install newly elec ted Officers for the Year of 1964-1965 at a Dinner Meet ing at the home of Atlanta Council #660 on Thursday, July 9th. Installing officers will be State Deputy John A. O'Con nor, Past State Deputy Joseph J. Zwicknagle. Officers to be installed are Walter Clark, Grand Knight; Huey Hammond, Deputy Grand Knight,; Ron Boyle, Warden; Curtis Douglas, Recorder; A. J. Pauli, Chancellor; . Chas. Appel, Advocate, HughWilson, Treasurer; inside Guard, Cliff Schornak; Outside Guards, Jos eph Besig and Geo. Lowery; W. S. Purdy, Freddie Spears, and W. M. McMullin, Trus tees. General Program Chairman Huey Hammond has appointed as Committee Chairmen Wm. Jas- comb, Catholic Activity; Fred die Spears, Council Activity; James Smith, Fraternal Acti vity; Frank Manes s, Youth Activity; Ron Boyle, Member ship and Insurance; W. S. Pur dy, Publicity. Thomas Nerney won second place in boys’ extemporaneous speaking. Marcia Hair placed third in the girls’ division of the same category. OTHER AWARDS to St. Pius X students were: third place, boys’ debating, Thomas Ner ney; superior debater certifi cate, Raymond Warrell; fina list certificate in extemporane ous speaking, Quinn Spitzer. ST. PIUS X students who par ticipated were Lyle Carlson, Thomas Carr, Michael Harbin, Paul Langsfeld, Quinn Spitzer, Raymond Teske, Raymond War rell, Thomas Nerney, and Mar cia Hair. CAUTIOUS OPTIMISM FAITHFUL NAVIGATOR TUCSON, Ariz. (NC) — James E. Aikens of Tucson is the first Negro in Arizona history to be elected Faithful Navigator and head of the Knights of Colum bus Fourth Degree. Aikens, a wounded Korean veteran em ployed by an aircraft firm, was the unanimous choice to head Archbishop Daniel J. Gercke General Assembly, Fourth De gree Knights of Columbus. Catholics Help WASHINGTON (NC)--Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtzhas enlisted the services of three major nationwide Catholic or ganizations and a number of Catholic colleges and univer sities in a crash program to train 2,000 counselor aides and youth advisors in conjunction with President Johnson's war on poverty. Tensions Seen Eased In South CLEVELAND (NC) — Much of the racial tensions are begin ning to subside in the South — with the conspicuous exception of Alabama and Mississippi — a Catholic leader in the struggle for racial justice said here. Mathew Ahmann of Chicago, executive secretary of the National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice, here June 18-19 for a meeting of the Religious Research As sociation, said that the South’s biggest change has been the full-scale arrival of the in dustrial revolution there. HE ADDED that the changing South is beginning to feel the impact of the more or less color - blind big corporation employment policies. That emerging industrial South, he continued, also is moving political power away from the traditional rural areas COUNCIL TIES and toward the big cities. The U. S. Supreme Court’s recent decision for reapportion ment of state legislatures will, he added, hasten the movement toward urban political control. Ahmann said he is confident that the new civil rights law will not be defied as was the U. S. Supreme Court’s 1954 de cision against school integra tion. ONE REASON, he continued, is that enforcement of the civil rights law involves the pre sident and his administration politically ~ in a way that the court's school integration decision did not. Compliance with the civil rights law will come almost automatically, he said, because resistance to Negroes in the South is beginning to break down — especially in the key areas of public accommodations and employment. Jesuit Honored Jewish Committee Defends Activity TOKYO, Japan (NIC)--Father Aloisious Civisca, an Italian Jesuit, who translated canon law into Japanese, was given an Italian government decoration for his contribution to promo ting cultural relations between Italy and Japan. NEW YORK (NC)—The presi dent of the American Jewish Committee, Morris B. Abrah, MOVING? PLEASE NOTIFY US SEND US THIS NOTICE TODAY: THE GEORGIA BULLETIN P.O. BOX 11667-NORTHS IDE STATION ATLANTA 5, GEORGIA NEW ADDRESS; NAMF- ADDRESS, CITY-— .ZONE. has defended his organization against charges by Orthodox rabbis that it should stay out of Catholic theological discus sions. In particular, said Abram, the AJC feels it has a “pri mary objective’’ to persuade Christian bodies to change their teaching of Jews as big “Christ- killers.” He said the committee was willing to work with offi cials of the Vatican council to achieve this end. Abram said the AJC has not entered into areas of Christian theology, but has concerned it self rather with the need for good intergrou relations. He said AJC studies in the field of Christian theology', but has con cerned itself rather with the need for good intergroup rela tions. He said AJC studies in Christian-Jewish relations has had the support of Orthodox,*' Conservative and Reform rab bis. GREEK THEOLOGIAN ASSERTS Primacy, Episcopacy Studies Called Vital THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1964 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 7 ST. PIUS X debating team is shown on their return from Carson Newman College, in Tennessee, where they won several awards. Front row, left to right; Paul Langsfeld, Quinn Spitzer, Marcia Hair, Raymond Warrell. Back row, left to right; Lyle Carlson, Michael Harbin, Raymond Teske, Thomas Carr, Thomas Nerney, Quinn Spitzer and Marcia Hair were top winners in the meeting. TENN. WORKSHOP Pius X Sophomores Win Debate NEW YORK CITY (RNS)— A Greek Orthodox theologian warned here that the current dialogue between Eastern Or thodoxy and the Roman Catholic Church will “bring forth fruit” only if it considers “seriously the “great ecclesiological is sues,” the primacy of Rome and the Pope and a definition of the role of bishops. The Rev. John Meyendorff of St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theo logical Seminary, Yonkers, N.Y., told some 350 clergy and lay delegates to the annual meeting of the Catholic Theolo gical Society of America that those participating in the dia logue must avoid “one of the temptations of the ecumenical age. ..to become pragmatic and superficial.” “MANY BELIEVE,” he said, “that our unity can simply be brought about by a few liturgi cal and canonical adjustments. But such an attitude may ulti mately bring disillusion and actually harm the ecuemnical movement.” In defining the “ecclesiolo gical issue” which must be dis cussed by Catholic and Orthodox theologians, Father Meyendorff said; “The Apostles, spreading the kergyma of the Resurrection, established everywhere local communities where Christ could be present sacramentally among those gathered in His Name. “And St. Ignatius of Antioch called each of those communi ties the ‘Catholic Church’— that is, a church in which the fullness of the Undivided Body is present, which is headed by a bishop, image of God, and the presbyters representing the Apostolic college. “THIS IS still the very foun dation of Orthodox ecclesiology today. The concept of ’Body of Christ,’ is to be applied to the sacramental, or eucharistical aspect of the Church, to that which makes the Church to be the Church, and not to its nec essary, but changeable organi zational, administrative or jur idical superstructure. . . “The unity of the Church is a divine, not a human, organi zational unity. . .” Father Meyendorff told the assembled Catholic theologians that, in Orthodoxy's view, that “individual Churches may have had more authority than others, but their qualifications for such a major authority lay in the personality of their bishops, in the political importance of the cities, in the theological tradi tion which they represented, not in any divine institution. “Rome, indeed, always en joyed the first place of authori ty among the Churches, but only a purely Western doctrinal de velopment could have led to the idea that the Church of Rome is the last resort of all issues and the criterion of all truth.” “In fact,” he added, “it is the search for such a criterion, a search for security, which was the major mover in the de velopment of the Medieval Pa pacy, and it eventually led to the definition of Papal infal libility and immediate epis copal jurisdiction over all the faithful in 1870...” IN URGING a realistic ap proach to the dialogue, the Or thodox scholar said; “I do not want at all to be pessimistic. We have — Roman Catholics and Orthodox — a millennium of common tradition and as soon as we refer to it, we begin to understand each other. “The momentous reign of Pope John XXIII, his under standing of some of the major ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE issues, his desire to counter- made, balance — somehow — the de cisions of Vatican I, and also the memorable meeting be tween Pope Paul and Patriarch Athenagoras change the whole atmosphere of our relations. But these events are to be In terpreted theologically, in their true spiritual, and not only emotional, dimension.” Father Meyendorff said that during the Holy Land meeting Pope Paul projected an image similar to the traditional view of Orthodox on the Bishop of Rome. “If nothing of it remains, it is probably better to avoid any doctrinal decision, and wait for further results of our present day search for the true mean ing of the words ‘primacy’ and 'episcopacy' in the church.” Father Meyendorff said “great harm” could result if the Coun cil were to define episcopal ‘collegiality* in a manner which “would simply envisage the uni versal episcopate as a consul tative body around the Pope.” “FOR US Orthodox the broth erly meeting of Jerusalem means, first of all, that the Pope, for the first time in cen turies accepted to be seen by all as an equal of the other bis hops, that is to give of himself an image which comes closer to the idea that we traditionally have of the Bishop of Rome: that of the elder brother. “If this image is somehow preserved in the decisions of the (Second Vatican) Council, a great step forward will be DUTCH CARDINAL THE ORTHODOX view would be “undermined” by such a finding, he held. It holds the “historical and theological ori gin and foundation of the epos- copate as the body of those who in each place preside over the Catholic Church , that is, the Church in its sacramental full ness. . . “It is a theology of the local church -- ‘local’ being under stood in its sacramental, more than geographical sense—which would help further understand ing between us, not simply a concept of ‘collegiality’ on the universal scale.” Cautions About Intercommunion LAREN, the Netherlands (RNS)— Bernard Cardinal Al- frlnk, Archbishop of Utrecht, hailed here the “great gains” being made in the ecumenical movement, but warned of the “lack of reality in some ex periments • in intercommunion. The cardinal addressed a meeting of the St. Adelbert Society, made of up leading Catholic priests and laymen. HE EXPLAINED that his warning involving intercom munion had been prompted by so-called “agape” meals in which Catholics had taken part with Protestants. Cardinal Alfrlnk said he could appreciate that such meals helped to strengthen a community spirit, but he stre ssed there was a danger in serving bread and wine at them because this suggested “a unity of faith which does not exist.” “EVERY theological activity demands a great spirit of love for all fellow Christians,” he said, “but also a sound theo logical background.” In speaking of ecumenical gains, the cardinal said the time had passed “when we should be grumbling about old grie vances.” “Nor,” he added, “is It of any use to have sterile de bates about guilt. Both sides must confess their guilt and strive for unity.”’ “WE HAVE a long way to go,” he continued, “but it is heart ening to see that Christians of different denominations have begun to appreciate one another. Catholics have realized that the Christians of the Reforma tion have preserved certain turths neglected in their own Church. We can learn from each other, “The reunion of Christians should, however, never be a matter of giving and taking. What we want is a fuller sight of the totality of truth. We must not strive after some ge neral Christianity pleasing everybody. That would lead to indifferentism. “We must strive after the un ity Christ willed. There is no sense in partaking in each other’s sacraments when there is not unity of faith.” Moscow Chaplain Is College Head WORCESTER, Mass. (NC)-- Father Louis F. Dion, A,A,, former chaplain for Catholics in Moscow, USSR, has been ap pointed president of Assump tion College here. Father Armand H. Desautels, A. A., provincial superior of the Assumptionist Fathers, who an nounced the appointment, said it is the first time the presidency has been held by someone other than the superior. Father Dion, a native of Wor cester, has spent most of his priesthood at the college. He Hungary Accord BONN (NC) — Diplpmatic talks between the Holy See and the communist government of Hungrary may bear fruit soon. served from 1959 until 1961 in the Moscow post. Since 1962 he has been registrar and assis tant to the president at the col lege. Unjugt Steward? WASHINGTON (NC) — A trial examiner for the National Labor Relations Board has ruled that an employer cannot refuse to bargain with a labor union even though he may think the Bible forbids it. The ruling was made in con nection with a Grand Junction, Colo,, meat packing executive who declined to talk with a union representative on the grounds that the Bible warns against dealing with “in fidels,” SUBSCRIBE TO THE GEORGIA BULLETIN *5.00 PER YEAR Mail to P. O. Box 11667 Northside Station Atlanta 5, Georgia Address City State CLASSIFIEDS BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS SELL HOUSE FOR SALE Well arranged one floor house on secluded street with private pool membership available. 5 large bdrms., 3 1/2 bths., study, 16x16 screened porch with bro ken tile floor, mahogany panel led fam. room - kit. comb, with fireplace. Utility room & basement. Ideal play ground lot. 1418 Knollwood Terrace, Leaf- more Hills, Decatur. ^OR SALE For Salb: Range 36“ Roper, gas, 4 birner, ping pong table, Several gJ^s refrigerator, gui tar. GL 7-J2706 FO£ RENT For rent u^L.dshed apart ment, ideal fcn«K?tired couple. 653 Peeples S®>Vest End. 1st floor bungalow Bjlex. Right at stores, banks, b«. Two blocks Sears and St. 'Anthony’s. 3 rooms. Everything orivate. Kit chen furnished. $50.<K), includes water. Phone 355-6131 or 355- 5623 BUSINESS SERVICES BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS 231-1281 Dressmaking. Suits, coats, for- mals “etc” reasonable rates. Phone 233-7012 for further in formation. Painting- 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 All type conrete work, patios, steps, walks, etc,, Stone Mountain granite, re taining walls. 636-0834 or 443-6137 Metal desk and Speed-rite check writer for sale 636-0834 HOUSEKEEPER WANTED Live-in housekeeper required . Send all particu-. lars, including references, to Dept. A, P. O. Box 11667 Northside Station, Atlanta, Georgia, 30305. THE DOWRY CHEST COMPLETE BRIDAL SERVICE Bridal and attendant gowns made to order, 1365 Peachtree St. N.E, 872-4343 or 766-7634 DRESSES &Y ESTER Can copy originals of from magazines, Also wedding dresses, Or fine wearing apparel. 378-9579. Society of St. Vincent de Paul Salvage Bureau 326 Ivy St, N. E. Atlanta (Opposite Sacred Heart) Desires to receive all USABLE furniture, clothing, appliances, books, etc., forthe poor and needy. Scheduled peik-ups will be made by Tele phoning: 524-0343. SALVAGE Bureau of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul - 326 Ivy St, N.E. (opposite Sacred Heart) Atlanta. Send or Plione Your Classified Advertising To The Georgia Bulletin P.O. Box 11667-Northside 1 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. . . 4 consecutive times with no copy change. DISPLAY CLASSFIED (WITH BORDER $1.00 PER INCH .25£ per line . ,23£ per line 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..*. f *4 • I • • • • I • %••••#••••• .State ..... ............