The Georgia bulletin (Atlanta) 1963-current, August 06, 1964, Image 6

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PAGE 6 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1964 FATHER Joseph Drohan, who will be installed as pastor of Mother Of Our Divine Saviour, Toccoa and Sacred Heart, Hartwell, on August. 15, is shown (left) standing before Our Lady's Shrine at Toccoa, with Fr. Gino Doniney, F. S. C. J„ the depart ing pastor. wr-i ifi ift 11. r ■ 135 33 HJ L*i IJit f&t ivi rji l*j A A A I Im BUYS 33 ACRES Blessed Sacrament Adding Facilities Most Blessed Sacrament Parish has purchased 33 acres of land for church, school, and other Parish facilities. The purchase was announced to the parishioners before the Masses last Sunday by Mr. James Cal- lison, President of the Parish Council of Men, and Mr. Robert Schorr, Chairman of the Site and Architect Selection Com mittees. The site is located on Stone Writers Choose The Atlanta Writers Club re cently named Thomas Brannan winner of the first place award in the article competition spon sored by the Club. Robert Hackman, III tied for second place in the short story contest. Both boys are recent graduates of St. Plus X High School and members of Christ the King parish. Road in the Brentwood section of Southwest Atlanta at the future intersection of the new circumferential highway and proposed North Camp Creek Parkway. Construction will soon begin on a school building for kind ergarten through 8th grade which will be ready for class es in September, 1965. Part of the school will also be used as a temporary church. The Sis ters of St. Joseph of Caron- dolet will staff the school. Selection of the site, negoti ation for the purchase of the land, and appointment of an architect were handled by the lay people of the Parish over a period of about one year through the appropriate com mittees of the Council of Men. The pastor, Rev. Walter J. Don ovan, and Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan concurred with all these actions taken in develop ing Most Blessed Sacrament Parish. ONE HOUR “MODERNIZING" CLEANERS 3995 PEACHTREE ROAD IN BROOKHAVEN MARIST UNIFORMS A SPECIALTY 1 Hour S»rvie« Evry Day Til 3,00 F.M. FRED A. YORK PEST CONTROl SERVICE Our Slogan - Nearly Right Won't Do Our Service - Always Guaranteed Our Products On Sale At Office CALL FOR FREE INSPECTION OR INFORMATION 766~ State St., N.W, Phone TR 5-8378 Atlanta, Ga. The admission of women re sidents will alleviate the situa tion where a retired, convales cent, or infirm man wishes to bring his wife with him. Applications should be made to: Brother Administrator Alexian Brothers Rest Home Signal Mountain, Tennessee 37377 Savannah Sister To Guiana Post James S. Polk, 1963 gra- I duate of St. Pius X High School, has been assigned to Notre Dame University for ap pointment as Midshipman in the Naval Reserve Officers Train ing Corps. Upon successful completion of his college and Naval tra ining, Jim will be appointed to commissioned rank in the Regular Navy or Marine Crops. He is the son of Mrs. Alice Polk and the late John W. Polk and is a member of Our Lady of the Assumption parish. AT SIGNAL MOUNTAIN Alexian Rest Home Accepting Women El B. Roberts Eugene B. Roberts, Jr., of 141 Abernathy Rd.» NW Atlanta, died in an Atlanta Hospital Saturday. Mr. Roberts was regional man ager of Delco Division of Gen eral Motors. Born in Durham, N. C„ he attended Loulsburg College and North Carolina State College, He was a veteran of World War II and was a mem ber of the Chattahoochee Coun try Club and the Buckhead Elks Club, He was a parishioner of St. Jude's church. Survivors include his wife, the former Julia Kannan; sons Eugene B. Roberts and James Richard Roberts, both of Atlan ta; a sister, Mrs. D. A. Sutton, Raleigh, N.C.; and his mother, .Mrs, Eugene Roberts, Sr., Roiesville, N, C. Funeral ser vices will be held in Goldsboro, N. C. Mrs. Hammock A Requiem Mass for Mrs. W, L, Hammock, Sr., of 2309 Boulevard Granada, SW Atlan ta, was offered Saturday morn ing in St. Anthony’s church by Msgr, James E, King. Mrs, Hammock died W'ednesday at the residence of her daughter in Tampa, Fla, She is survived by her husband, a daughter, Mrs, J, K, Sullivan of Tampa; sons W, L. Hammock, Jr„ of Atlanta and Charles F, Ham mock of Satellite Beach, Fla., and seven grandchildren. On September first, the Alex ian Brothers Rest Home, at Sig nal Mountain, Tennessee, will open its doors to women as per manent residents, it was an nounced by Brother Peter, C. F. A., administrator. Heretofore, only men have been admitted as residents of the home. This departure from the past policy was decided upon in re sponse to many requests rece ived by the Brothers since the Signal Mountain Hotel, a former popular summer resort hotel, was purchased by the Order, and in 1938 converted into a rest home. THE ADMISSION of women will mark the first time, in the more than six and a half cen tury history of the Order, that women have been received as residents of any of the var ious homes operated by the Al exian Brothers, both in this country and in Europe. How ever, since 1962, women have been admitted as patients of the Alexian Brothers Hospitals in Elizabeth, New Jersey, St. Louis, Missouri, and in Chi cago, Illinois. Initially, admission will be limited to women of retirement age who are ambulatory and do not require infirmary care. The rest home has infirmary care for men. Facilities for in firmary care for women have not yet been' added. However, a woman nurse will be in resi dence, after September first, to render first aid care during minor illnesses. A physician is on call night and day, and makes twice weekly visits to the rest home. Every resident may have his or her own physician at any time. APPROXIMATELY thirty rooms will be made available to women and married couples. Both double and single rooms will be included. All rooms have private baths. A limited number of suites, with single or double bedroom and sitting room, will be available. Rates, which include all meals, range from $180.00for a single bedroom; $300.00 for a Pi Hi Graduate To Naval Corps ELBERT FORESTER, Asst-Director, Georgia Dept, of Labor, made the address at one of the last meetings of the Student Gov ernment, St. Joseph's School of Nursing. Shown here are Toni Moran, program chairman, Sister Mary Kristen, RSM, Direc tor, Jimmy Chastain, president, and Mr, Forester. Miss Moran will continue studies at College for a Bachelor degree and Mr. Chastain will Join the Army Nurse Corps. St. Joseph Nurses Get Sabin Award Sister Mary de Montfort Sul livan, R. S. M. of Savannah was one of four Sisters of Mercy who received mission ary crucifixes from Arch bishop Lawrence J. Shehan at a Departure Ceremony held at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart Church, Baltimore, Three other sisters will em bark with Sister Mary de Mont fort for Mahaica, British Gui ana. Their apostolate in Ma haica will include the care of the sick and lepers, the educa tion of children, the conduct ing of religious instruction classes. First Friday "First Friday Club of Atlanta luncheon meeting on August 7 at twelve noon in the Medallion Room of the Piedmont Hotel. Guest speaker, State Senator Joseph M. Salone.'* SUMMER THEATER Williamsburg, Va. (NC)—An Atlanta actress, Miss Doris Bucher of 2872 Pine Grove Terrace, is spending her first summer in an outdoor drama. Cast as the beautiful Polly Pace in Wil iamsburg, Virgin ia’s ’The Founders - The Jamestown Story,” Miss Buch er is called on to act, sing, and dance. In addition to her work with 'The Founders,” Miss Bucher has used her offnight—Sunday— to Join the Williamsburg Shake spearean Players in their pro ductions each week. Miss Buch er played the leading feminine ‘ role, Lady Macbeth, in the Play ers' first offering, "Macbeth.*’ A recent graduate in drama from Catholic University, Miss Bucher began her acting ex perience at Christ the King High School in Atlanta, She is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. ‘OUTSTANDING’ St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing received an award last week in recognition of i its out standing participation in the Sabin-Oral Sunday vaccine pro gram. Sponsored by the Metropoli tan Atlanta Red Cross Chapter, Edmund A. Bucher of that city. ’The Founders” is a Paul. Green drama depicting the struggles of the early Virginia colonists in shaping a settle ment in the New World, It is this year’s alternate drama to 'The Common Glory,” another Paul Green show that was seen by over one million people. The Founders” is produced by the non-profit Jamestown Corporation and plays nightly except Sundays in the Lake Ma- toaka Amphitheatre on the cam pus of the College of William and Mary in Virginia. The sea son will run through September 5. Omission In the picture of Fr. Thomas O'Reilly Council 4358, Knight* of Columbus, Decatur on page 1 of the BULLETIN, the name of Grand Knight Charles L. Van Houje (third from left, seated) was inadvertently omittea. the trophy honored the local hospital having the highest per centage of nurse participation through Red Cross in the S.O.S. Program At St. Joseph’s, 35 the 38 seniors volunteered for the six Sundays. Of these, 24, or 63 percent, earned their Red Cross enrollment cards through their volunteer work. Miss Evelyn Murphy, Red Cross nurse enrollment chair man, presented the award to Sister M. Elizabeth Anne, R, S.M., head of the hospital’s vol unteer nurse enrollment, at a meeting of the Student Govern ment Society. Father Drohan To Be Installed Fr, Joseph Drohan will be in stalled, on August 15, as pastor of Mother of Our Divine Saviour church, Toccoa, and Sacred Heart church, Hartwell. Fr. Drohan will be installed by Msgr. Michael J, Regan, Dean of the Northwest Deanery. The installation will take place at the 10 a,m. Mass at Toccoa and, weather permit ting, will be celebrated out of doors, at Our Lady’s shrine. The former pastor, Fr. Gino Doniney, F.S.C.J., has been as signed to the Seminary of the Sons of the Sacred Heart, Cin cinnati, Ohio, Obituaries Atlanta Girl Playing In Starring Roles TENSE MOMENT AT AUDIENCE. As Pope Paul VI was being carried into the new audience hall at the papal summer villa of Castelgandolfo, this small boy was held up by his elders, somewhat precariously as it turned out. to receive the blessing of the Holy Father. Pope Paul leaned far out from the gestatorlal chair on which he was being car ried to put his hands on th*. child's head and bless him. Just a moment after the Pope had passed by. the boy nearly toppled over, and gasps from those who were watching could be heard throughout the audience hall. bedroom and sitting room, single occupancy; to $360.00 for a bedroom and sitting room occupied by two women or by a man and his wife. WOMEN’S EMPLOYMENT Men Still Hold Most Top Jobs WASHINGTON (NC)—Women •re not replacing men in top Jobs in the United States, not rapidly at any rate. This is brought out in a study oy a government agency, which idvises that college women and heir counselors give more at- :ention to planning careers. WOMEN now “take Jobs’* rather than "make careers,” aecause they "expect or hope” heir attachment to the labor market will be "intermittent,” says the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. But, in contrast to the "old days,” women's “attachment to the labor force” is now high; 8 in every 10 girls between 20 and 30 years of age work at one time another. And, the propor tion of college women in the lab or force "is much higher” than for women with less education. The percentage of all women with a college degree who were employed rose from 50% to 70% in 10 years. The Commission on the Status of Women appointed by Presi dent Kennedy drew attention to the availability of room at the top for women, that is, in jobs paying $10,000 a year or over. But the Bureau of Labor Statis tics says how much room at the top is going to be available to women may well depend upon how much thought women give to planning careers and esti mating the competition they face in the labor market. “DESPITE the publicity given the growing acceptance of wo men in the occupations once reserved exclusively for men, the number of women in these occupations is still small and not increasing significantly,” the study reveals. Engineers, accountants, natural scientists and pharmacists are listed among these occupations. other occupations in which col lege women are employed will be growing rapidly between now and 1975, it is stated. If college women were to maintain the same proportaion relative to men that they now hold in each professional and managerial occupation, "the supply-de mand situation in these fields would augur well for women.” "The outlook, however, is not as rosy as this would suggest,” the study continues. "How col lege women actually fare will depend on their career plan ning, the attitude of employers toward hiring women, and the competition for available jobs from the large number of col lege trained men.” IT IS expected that 7 million men with college degrees will be in the labor force in 1975- over 2 million more than in 1962. "In the years ahead, many of these men may be competing for jobs in occupations in which women have long predominat ed,” it is observed. Between 1950 and 1960, the proportion of men high school teachers increased from 43% to 50%; the proportion of men social work ers from 31% to 37%; men in library work from 11% to 14%, and men teachers in grade schools from 9% to 14%. On the other hand, women are primarily employed in the traditional women’s occupa tions. Coach Of Year By vote of the Georgia Athletic Coaches Association, Coach Bill Daprano of Saint Joseph High School has been chosen Coach of the Year in track for Region IV, Class B- for the year 1963-64. Women predominate in sev eral large professional fields, such as teaching nursing, library work and social work. These four occupations account for nearly 70% of all women in professional and technical oc cupations today. Incidentally, the need for personnel in these four occupations is expanding and replacement requirements are substantial “because of the size of the occupations and be cause turnover is high among women (far exceeding that among men),” BEWARE AIT ^ TERMITES MANPOWER requirements in f-j u urien 14/ KNOWS LI INSURANC Suite 715 '270 Pchtr Bldg. N.W.,Atl.. Home BU 4 1191 Office 688-2600 Southland Life INSURANCE [SLJ COMPANY Horn* Ofi«e« « Southland Ctnttf « Q«im WHAT \ REALLY WANT IS A PAIP A*>COMFORTABLE AS THE RIVIERA ReStMlRMT OFFICIAL CATHOLIC DIRECTORY ARCHDIOCESE OF ATLANTA