Newspaper Page Text
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PAGE 10 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17,1964
OLTSTANDING ACHIFVFMFX r
Vatican Observer Praises
U.N. Rights Declaration
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(RNS)—The Vatican's first per
manent observer to the United
Nations cited the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights
as an outstanding achievement
of the U. N. General Assembly.
Commenting on the document
prior to the official U. N. cere
mony marking the declaration’s
16th anniversary, Msgr. Alber
to Giovannetti lauded the U. N.
for supporting the recognition
and respect of human rights and
liberties as an ideal to be pur
sued by all peoples everywhere.
HE recalled that the late Pope
John XXIII in his encyclical,
termed the declaration "an im
portant step on the path towards
the juridical political organi
sation of the world community."
Pope John, he said, found in
the document "in most solemn
form, acknowledgement of the
dignity of all human beings; and
as a consequence there is pro
claimed, as a fundamental right,
the right of free movement in
the search for truth and in the
attainment of moral good, of
justice, also the right to a
dignified life, while other
rights connected with those
mentioned are likewise pro
claim 3d."
The Vatican representative
observed that a considerable
portion of the encyclical was
dedicated to a definition of
human rights, which were ex-
MOISE TSHOMBE
amined in the light of their
correlative duties.
"FOR every fundamental hu
man right draws its indestruct
ible moral force from the na
tural law, in the words of the
encyclical, he continued. "And
this law imposes a correspond
ing obligation. Those who claim
their own rights, yet altogether
forget or neglect to carry out
their respective duties, are
people who build with one hand
and destroy with the other.
"Hence, racial discrimi
nation can in no way be just
ified. And this is of fundamen
tal importance and significance
for the formation of human so
ciety. For if a man becomes
conscious of his rights, he
must become equally aware of
his duties, as the late Pope
John explained. He who
possesses certain rights has
likewise the duty to claim those
rights as marks of his dignity,
while all others have the obli
gation to acknowledge those
rights and respect them."
This view was supported in
the commemorative message
later delivered by the newly-
elected president of the 19th
General Assembly, Ambassa
dor Alex Quaison-Sackey of
Ghana. As the second African
to head the U.N. Assembly, he
was able to speak "for all Af
ricans and all those who be
lieve in the nobility of the
cause enshrined in the Uni-
Pontiff Confers
WithCongo Head
VATICAN CITY (RNS>—Pope
Paul VI, at a private audience to
Prime Minister MoiseTshombe
of the Congo, appealed to "all
responsible persons" to help
restore peace and bring an end
to the "sanguinary disorders"
which afflict that country.
He said "our thoughts go out to
the whole Congolese people and
especially to all the unfortu
nate victims of the recent
events, to all, without distinc
tion, who have suffered under
such tragic circumstances."
TSHOMBE, who stopped in
Rome while enroute to the Unit
ed Nations in New York, spent
about 20 minutes with the Pope
in the pontiff's private library
and later called on AmletoGio
vanni Cardinal Cicognani, Vati
can Secretary of State, with
whom he conversed for 15 min
utes.
in his talk, intended as a mes
sage to be relayed to the Congo
lese people through Mr,
Tshombe, the Pope made spec
ial reference to "the many mis
sionaries and members of the
religious who had given testi
mony with their blood of their
loyalty to the Gospel and to
their love for the Congolese
nation."
He said these victims had
gone to the Congo "to place their
best efforts in the service of
the new nation and they were
only wishing well for the na
tion's prosperity and peaceful
development."
POPE Paul went on to call up
on "all men of good faith to unite
their efforts and coordinate
their strength to overthrow the
discord and the hatred which
undermine the very roots of
society."
He began his talk by saying
that "the sight of an African
nation, free and aiming toward
its moral, cultural and econo
mic development, is present in
our mind as an ideal and a hope
which will find its best and up-
to-date fulfillment in the Con
go.*’
It was for this reason that the
disorders in the Congo are "so
sadly reflected in our heart,"
he said, adding:
'THE anxiety of our pastoral
mission induces us to address a
strong appeal to all responsible
persons so that they may under
stand that nothing can be built
ou t of a fratricidal struggle, and
that only a true peace based on
truth, justice, charity and lib
erty can permit the young Con
golese republic to establish for
her sons a solid future and to
maintain the honorable position
which it deserves in the as
sembly of nations."
Declaring that “too many ma
terial and moral ruins have al
ready been accumulated" in the
Congo, Pope Paul went on to
stress:
"May each individual begin
again to respect his brother as
one who, like him, is a son of
the same Father, It is time to
place a ban on passions and to
prevent their fires from burning
further."
NOTING that no efforts have
been spared by the Church to
restore peace to the Congo, the
Pope concluded by saying: “At
this sad moment, we solemnly
appeal to all our sons and to ali
men to dedicate themselves with
every means in their power to
undertake the task of peace. We
pray the Almighty to coordinate
their peaceful efforts and to
bless them."
HELICOPTER MEW of a village in Phu Bon province,
South Vietnam, where 5,000 people lost their lives in recent
Photo by Fr Patrick O’Connor. NC correspondent.
floods
versal Declaration of Human
Rights in addressing once again
this call for brotherhood, un
derstanding and love."
HE called upon all govern
ments to respect fully human
rights: "Those few who do not
understand this clear obligation
must once and for all accept
the victory of a crusade which
is second to none. There is not
a more urgent, more worth
while and loftier cause than
that of human rights.
"All other efforts directed
to improving economic, social,
political, juridical and cultural
standards are secondary to the
central task of making man’s
short journey on earth a better
and free one."
MONSIGNOR Joseph G. Cassidy, P.A., V.R., is shown with group of 39 recently confirmed at St.
Mary’s, Rome. Father Dale Freeman, pastor of St. Mary?s is on extreme left.
Catholic Parochial
League Basketball
19645-65 SCHEDULE
TEAMS
BOYS
1- St. Paul 1-St. Paul
2- IHM
3- OLA
4- St. Anthony
5- St. Thomas More
6- CKS
7- St. Joseph
8- St. John
GIRLS
2- IHM
3- OLA
4- St. Anthony
5- St. Thomas More
6- CKS
1:00 - 1 v 9 Boys
Dec. 26
10:00 - 9 v 8 Boys
1:00 - 3 V 7 Boys
9:00 - 6 v 3 Boys
9- Lourdes
10- Marist 8th
Dec. 19.
9:00 - 2 v 4 Boys
10 - 3 v 8 Boys
11:00 - 5 v 10 Boys
12:00 - 6 v 7 Boys
9:00 - 4 v 6 Boys
11:00 - 1 v 5 Boys
12:00 - 2 v 10 Boys
Jan. 2
9:00 - 2 v 3 Boys
10:00 - 7 v 1 Boys
11:00 - 6 v 9 Boys
12:00 - 10 v 4 Boys
1:00 - 5 v 8 Boys
Jan. 9
10:00 - 7 v 8 Boys
11:00 - 4 v 9 Boys
12:00 - 10 v 1 Boys
1 ;00 - 5 v 2 Boys
St. Joseph’s Gym
9:00 - 1 v 5 Girls
10:00 - 2 v 8 Boys
11:00 - 6 v 2 Girls
12:00 - 6 v 10 Boys
12:00 - 6 v 10 Boys
Jan. 23
St. Joseph’s Gym
9:00 - 9 v 10 Boys
10:00 - 1 v 2 Boys
11:00 - 2 v 3 Girls
12;00 - 4 v 7 Boys
9;00 - 2 v 5 Girls
10:00 - 2 v 6 Boys
11:00 - 6 v 3 Girls
12:00 - 4 v 5 Boys
9:00 - 2 v 9 Boys
10:00 - 1 v 2 Girls
11:00 - 7 v 10 Boys
12:00 - 1 v 8 Boys
9;00 - 1 v 3 Girls
10:00 - 3 v 10 Boys
11:00 - 2 v 4 Girls
12:00 - 4 v 8 Boys
Jan, 16
9:00 1 v 4 Boys
C, K. S. Gym
10:00 - 3 v 4 Girls
11:00 3 v 9 Boys
12:00 - 5 v 7 Boys
C. K. S. Gym
9:00 - 1 v 6 Girls
10:00 6 v 8 Boys
11:00 - 5 v 4 Girls
12:00 - 3 v 5 Boys
Jan. 30
9:00 - 7 v 9 Boys
10:00 - 4 v 1 Girls
11:00- 1 v 3 Boys
12:00 - 10 v 8 Boys
Feb. 6
10:00- 3 v 4 Boys
9:00 - 3 v 5 Girls
3
11:00-4 v 6 Girls
12:00 - 5 v 6 Boys
Feb. 13
9:00 - 2 v 7 Boys
10:00 - 5 v 6 Girls
11:00-5 v 9 Boys
12:00 - 1 v 6 Boys
Feb. 20
First Round Play Offs (St. Joseph’s Gym)
9:00 - 2nd Place v 3rd Place Girls
10:00 - 3rd Place v 2nd Place Boys
11:00 - 1st Place v 4th Place Girls
12:00 - 4th Place V 1st Place Boys
Feb. 27
Final Play Offs at St. Joseph’s Gym
9;00 - 3rd Place v 4th Place Girls
10:00 - 4th Place v 3 rd place Boys
11:00 - 2nd Place v 1st Place Girls
12:— - 1st Place v 2nd Place Boys
LEGION OF DECENCY
MOVIE RATINGS
A-1-Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage
Alakazam, The Great
Boy Ten Feet Tall. A
Boy Who Caught a Crook
Brass Bottle. The
Capture That Capsule
Cavalry Command
Circus World, The
Disorderly Orderly, The
Dream Maker, The
Fall of the Roman Empire
Flipper’s New Adventure
Flight That Disappeared
Francis of Assisi
Gladiators Seven
Goliath and the Sins
of Babylon
Hard Day’s
Night, A
Heroes Island
Honeymoon Machine
•Incredible Journey
Incredible Mr. Limpet, The
Invasion Quartet
It’s a Mad. Mad. Mad.
Mad World
Lively Set, The
Mary Poppins
Mediterranean Holiday
Misadventures of Merlin
Jones, The
Moonspinners, The
Mysterious Island
Niki, Wild Dog of the
North
One Man’s Way
Patsy. The
Pirates of Tortuga
Purple Hills
Queen of the Pirates
Raiders. The
Raiders of Leyte Gulf
Sampson and the Slave
Queen
Search for Paradise
Sergeant Was a Lady
Seven Faces of Dr. Lao
Snake Woman
Son of Captain Blood
Summer Holiday
Swinging Maiden. The
Tarazan’s Three Challenges
Teenage Millionaire
Thief of Bagdad
Ticklish Affair, A
Tiger Walks. A
Titans, The
Three Stooges Go Around
the World in a Daze. The
•Thomasina
Unearthly Stranger, The
Voyage to the Bottom of
the Sea
When the Clock Strikes
•Who Is Minding the Store
World Without Sun
Yank in Vietnam, A
You Have to Run Fast
Young and the Brave
A-2—Morally Unobjectionable for Adults & Adolescents
633 Squadron
Amazons of Rome
And Suddenly It’s Murder
Any Number Can Win
Atlantis, The Lost Continent
Behold a Pale Horse
Captain Newman, M.D.
Cat Burglar
Chalk Garden. The
Children of the Damned
Chushringura
Company of Cowards
Convicts 4
Cow and I, The
Dark Purpose
Devil at 4 o’clock
Devil Ship Pirates, The
Distant Trumpet, A
Dr Blood's Coffin
Ensign Pulver
Escape by Night
Evil Eye
Frantic
Fury of Smuggler’s Bay
Gold for Caesars
Good Neighbor Sam
I’d Rather Be Rich
Horror of It All. The
Ladies Who Do
Ladybug, Ladybug
Lancelot and Guinevere
Man from Rio
Man Who Died Twice
Mary, Mary
Muscle Beach Party
My Name Is Ivan
Naked Edge
Night Train to Paris
No. My Darling
Daughter
Old Dark House. The
Pit and the Pendulum
Point of Order
Roustabout
Robin and the Seven Hoods
Sardonicus
Scream of Fear
Seance on a Wet Afternoon
Send Me No Flowers
Seven Days in May
Sing and Swing
Sound of Trumpets
Stage Coach to Thunder
Rock
Stolen Hours
Suitor
Surf Party
Swingin’ Affair, A
Thunder Island
Train 349 from Berlin
Twenty Plus Two
Walls of Hell
Weekend with Lulu
World of Henry
Orient. The
Young Doctors
A-3—Morally Unobjectionable for Adults
Ada
America, America
Armored Command
••Becket
Bikini Beach
Buddha
Cartouche
Cardinal. The
Ceremony, The
Claudelle Inglish
Come September
Couch, The
Dead Ringer
Eyes of Annie Jones. The
Flight from Ashlya
For Love or Money
For Thoie Who Think
Young
Global Affair, A
Great War, The
Guest, The
Guns at Batasi
Hellfire Club
Hustler, The
Killer. The
Love with the Proper
Stranger
Mafioso
Man's Favorite Sport
Man Who Couldn't
Walk
Mamie
Move Over Darling
Murder, Inc.
Muriel
Nightmare in the Sun
Panic Button
•Paris When It Sizzles
Prize, The
Rampage
Rebel with a Cause
Rocco and His Brothers
Satan Never Sleeps
Season of Passion
Strange Bedfellows
Summer and Smoke
Sundays and Cybele
Susan Slade
Take Her, She’s Mine
•Tamahina
Three on a Spree
Third Secret, The
Thunder of Drums
To Bet or Not to Bed
Topkapi
Twilight of Honor
Two Women
Victors, The
Wall of Noise
Where Love Has Gone-
Wives and Lovers
Young Lovers. The
A-4-Morally Unobjectionable for Adults, with Reservations
Advise and Consent
Best Man, The
Circle of Dec^tion
Cleo From 3 to 7
Cool World, The
Devil's Wanton
•Divorce Italian Style
Doctor Strangelo'»e
Easy Life, The
Eclipse
Freud
Girl with the Green Eyes
Important Man
Intruder
Lilith
Lolita
Long Day's Journey into
Night
Martin Luther
Mondo Cane
Night of the Iguana
Organizer. The
Pressure Point
Sky Above and the Mud
Below, The
Storm Center
Strangers in the City
Suddenly, Last Summer
Tom Jones
Too Young to Love
VUit. The
Young and the Willing. The
B—Morally Objectionable in Part for All
A House is Not a Home
Americanization of
Emily, The
Conjugal Bed
Curse of the Living Corpse
Day the Earth Caught Fire
Dementia No 13
Devil and the Ten
Commandments
Explosive Generation
•Four for Texas
•From Russia with Love
Goodbye Again
Gun Hawk, The
Head. The
He Rides Tall
Honeymoon Hotel
House of Fright
House of Women
John Goldfarb. Please
Come Home
Kitten with a Whip
Lady In the Cage. The
Leda
Long Ships, The
Lover. Come Back
Man in the Middle. The
Man Trap
Masque of the Red Death
New Interns, The
Night Must Fall
No Love for Johnny
Palm Springs Weekend
Paris Blues
Peeping Tom
Psyche it
Purple Noon
Racing Fever
and Eve
Shot in the Dark
Soldier in the Rain
Splendor in the Grass
Strangler. The
Sunday in New York
Under Age
Vice and Virtue
Viva La Vegas
Wild Harvest
World by Night
Yesterday. Today and
Tomorrow
An Affair of the Skin
And God Created Women
Baby Doll
Bed of Grass
Breathless
Christine Keeler
Come Dance With Me
Doll. The
Empty Canvas
Expresso Bongo
Five Day Lover
Green Carnation
Green Mare
Heroes and Sinners
Image of Love
I Love. You Love
Knife in the Water
k ‘Avventura
I a Nolle (Night)
'•ady Chatterley's Lover
C—Condemned
Law, The
Let Liaisons Dangereuses
Liane, Jungle Goddess
Love Game
Love Is My Profession
Love on a Pillow
Lovers. The
Mademoiselle Striptease
Maid in Paris
Mating Urge
Miller's Beautiful Wife
Molesters, The
Mom and Dad
My Life to Live
Moon Is Blue. The
Never on Sunday
Nude Odyssey. The
Oscar Wilde
Pa»sionate Summer
Port of Desire
Pot Bouiile (Lover of Paris)
Prime Time
Private Property
Question of Adultery
Saturday Night and Sunday
Morning
Sex and the Single Girl
Seven Capital Sins
Silence. The
Sins of Mona Kent
Slave Trade in the World
Today
Trials of Oscar Wilde
Truth, The (La Verite)
Weekend
Wasted Lives and the
Birth of Twins
Woman in the Dunes
SCHOOL BAN
Christmas Pageant
Is ‘Too Religious’
BOONTON, N. J. (NC) —
Christmas carols and a pageant
on the coming of Christ were cut
from the Christmas concert
given (Dec. 12) by the Boonton
High School Glee Club.
The cut portions were "too
religious," William Lowther,
school superintendent, said. He
said he saw last year's concert
and called it "a religious sei>*
vice that I didn't think should
be continued." He ordered the
deletions.
"I WOULD rather have the
pageant myself, but when you
are running a public school you
have to think of everyone," said
William Potter, high school
principal.
The pageant last year com
prised two-thirds of the con
cert, which ended with the sing
ing of “Silent Night," but that
finale, too, has been eliminated.
The concert is renamed "A
Winter Festival" and features
selections from "Babes inToy-
land," a medley from “Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs'*
and similar numbers.
The Montville Board of Edu
cation which sends high school
students to Boonton, attacked
the deletion as a negation of
"our traditional cultural herit
age."
GLEE CLUB members were
unhappy with the change. One
said: “We’re upset by it. I don't
know of any schools around that
are singing this other stuff.
When you think about, what is
Christmas without Christ?"
Seek Volunteers
PATERSON, N. J. (NC>—Re
cruiting and selection have
opened for the 1965 training
program of overseas service
volunteers with the Association
for International Development,
said James Lamb, director of
the lay Catholic organization
that seeks to render profes
sional service to emerging na
tions.
Poverty Council
TOLEDO, Ohio (NC)—Bishop
George J. Rehring of Toledo
has appointed a committee of
five priests to consider ways
in which Catholic agencies in
the diocese can cooperate in the
nation’s war on poverty pro
gram. Msgr. M. J. Doyle, To
ledo Catholic Charities direc
tor, is chairman.
ARTHRITIS PAINS?
*.. rr -V
• «ooa nousenteping
V
’%*ra
J
NOW... GET RELIEF OR
GET YOUR MONEY BACK
Rush out pain ... rush in relief. That’s
what you want whenever nagging, mod
erate pains of Arthritis, Rheumatism or
Muscular Aches occur. And that’s just
what can happen when you take
DOLCIN Tablets. What’s more WE
GUARANTEE you must get quick, sat
isfying relief or you get your money
back. But don’t try just one or two tab
lets and expect miracles. Take all the
tablets in the bottle ... the way the di
rections tell you. And ... if you don’t
get wonderful results you get your
money back. How do we dare make
this absolute guarantee? Because we
know DOLCIN has helped
millions of other suffer
ers. We feel sure that, if
you give DOLCIN “ a fair
trial, it may help you. So
you see, you have nothing
to lose but your pains.
Buy a bottle at your drug
store today. * ,,mz.
A BIRTHDAY GIFT FOR CHRIST?
Vi’ %
CHRISTMAS IS CHRIST’S BIRTHDAY. TO SHOW HIM
THAT YOU LOVE HIM, give something to the poor . . . Refugee
parents in the Holy Land need milk
and eeg* to feed their children. $10
wilt feed a family for a month! . . .
l»fan»s in makeshift Bedouin tents
shiver at night on the desert sand
v ^ will buy three blankets . . . Hopc-
I ; t/i ftii little girls at our orphanage in
Bethlehem look for a dress, new
shoes, a doll, in their Christmas
stocking. You can “adopt" an
orphan for only $10 a month .
Christ’s Birthday is next Friday.
The Holy Tether s Mission Ad what you give the hungry, the
for ihe Oriental Church shivering, the abandoned, He said
you give to Him. This week especially, your gift to the missions
says to Him. “I love you.” . . . What are “the missions?” They
are people, not place-names. They are lepers, cancer sufferers,
the blind, the aged, foundlings, homeless refugees. They are
the people for whom Christ became an infant, and was crucified.
Three out of four people alive right now are hungry . . . Won’t
you share with others what God has given you? Send us your
gift. Your Christmas will be happier!
GIFT SUGGESTIONS
+ A STRINGLESS GIFT.—Twice this year the Holy Father
went overseas to see the missions for himself. Your gift “no
strings attached” in any amount helps him to help where help is
needed most.
4- MEMBERSHIP.—Enroll yourself, family, and friends, in
this Association. All will benefit in the Masses, prayers and
sacrifices of our missionary priests and Sisters. Your enrollment
offering (For an individual. $1 a year, $20 for life; For a family,
$5 a year, $100 for life) helps us help the destitute. We’ll send
you a certificate.
4- NEW CHAPELS.—In memory of your loved ones, why not
build a mission chapel all by yourself? We’ll tell you where
it’s needed, and you may name it for your favorite saint. A
small chapel costs $1,800, payments to suit yourself. Write to
us.
4- SACRED ARTICLES.—Mission chapels need chalices ($40),
altars ($75), vestments <$50», statues ($30), tabernacles ($25),
sanctuary bells ($5). Like to give one in memory?
4- NEW SISTERS.—As your personal representative, train a
native Sister. She will write to you, you may write to her, and
you’ll be part of the good she does for lepers, orphans, the blind.
Her training costs only $12.50 a month, ($150 a year, $300
altogether) payable at your convenience.
4- NEW SCHOOLS.—The Holy Father asks help to build a
school ($3,200) in eight villages which have no schools. You’ll
enable youngsters to become self-supporting.
4- MISSION CLUBS.—Help the missions all year long by
joining, and asking others to join, one or more of our mission
clubs. The dues in each are $1 a month. Tell us now which club
(or clubs) you want to join: □ DAMIEN CLUB (for lepers),
□ BASILIANS (for mission schools), □ PALACE OF GOLD (for
the aging), □ ORPHANS BREAD (feeds orphans), □ MONICA
GUILD (for mission churches), □ CHRYSOSTOMS (for native
priests), □ MARY’S BANK (for native Sisters).
THE MIDNIGHT MASS IN BETHLEHEM WILL BE
OFFERED FOR THE MEMBERS OF THIS ASSOCI
ATION. THIS IS OUR CHRISTMAS GIFT TO YOU.
A HAPPY CHRISTMAS!
Dear Monsignor Ryan:
Enclosed please find for.
Name
Street
City.
State Zip Code #
iMlIlcar East OlissionsjMi
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President
M»er. J«Mpk T. kyea, Nofl Sac’y
fund alt comatualcoHoai fa:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
ISO Madlioa Ave. at 42ad St. Naw York. N. Y. 10017