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PAGE 10 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1966
TIRED BUT SATISFIED
Congress Ends With
Overtone Of Optimism
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
and not to write a new set of
rules.
At the banquet on Saturday
evening, Martin Work discus
sed the three crises of the
Church: dialogue and commun
ication, identification in the
, modem world and relevance to
the world. He pointed out that
the Church is indeed concern
ed with the griefs, anxieties,
hopes and joys of all people,
and that the Congress was tack
ling the three crises on the lo
cal level.
Satan Scauttf
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The Congress began its de
liberations on Friday night,
continued for 14 hours on Sat
urday, and again for ten hours
on Sunday. Essentially, its de
liberations were based on re
ports by committees which had
been at work for many months.
The full report pf the decisions
of the Congress will be pub
lished as soon as a transcript
can be made. In general, these
were the areas:
FUTURE EXPANSION AND
DEVELOPMENT
Henry deGive, Chairman. Di
vide parishes into local com
mittees with a priest and one
or more religious assigned to
the neighborhood. Seriously
consider tithing as a means of
financing parish activities. De
velopment the liturgical move
ment and ecumenism, with spe
cific activities in the parishes.
Develop dialogue between hier
archy, priests, religious and lay
people; stress training of all the
people; expand the Church's
role in the economic and social
life-again, of the Parish's own
community.
EDUCATION
Sam McQuaid, Chairman. De-
• velop an archdiocesan board of
education to supervise all ef
forts in this field. Develop
parish boards of educaton.
Laymen would be on these
boards in substantial number.
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CLEANERS
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Atlanta, Georgia
Emphasis on schools of re
ligion. Emphasis on adult edu
cation and the work of Newman
Clubs in colleges. Many of the
recommendations were con
cerned with efficient adminis
tration.
ADMINISTRATION
G. Albert Lawton, Chairman.
Establish a Department of Ad
ministration to coordinate ad
ministrative and financial af
fairs, with laymen in the major
ity. Establish departments in
such areas as development,
pastoral affairs, communica
tions, education and youth. Par
ish development of administra
tive councils. The intent was to
use the appropriate skills of
laymen and thus release pastors
for the spiritual duties for which
they were educated and to which
they devote their lives.
STEERING
Furman Smith, Chairman. Es
tablish an appraisal committee
to evaluate the work of the Con
gress.
RULES
Felmer Cummings, Chairman.
Presented six items not on
original agenda. Typical was
the recommendation that more
attention be paid to the needs
of young adults.
Reverend Conald Foust and
Reverend R. Donald Kiernan
were priest consultants to the
Lay Congress.
James W. Callison served as
President. The Congress sus
pended its rules and voted him
commendation by acclamation.
Mr. Cummings was Vice Pres
ident. Mrs. E. P. Faust, Jr.,
was Secretary and P. E. Sau-
erbrrge was Treasurer.
Planning committees includ
ed;
Banquet, Mrs. William T.
Dennon, Mrs. H. T. Mellon; Ob
servers, Mrs. Thomas Bock-
man, Mrs. George Gunning;
Seating, Mrs. Paul Smith; Reg
istration, Mrs. Foster Hotard,
Miss Mary Wells, Miss Lynda
Schladenhauffen; Floral Ar
rangements, Mrs. Furman
Smith; Parliamentary Proce-
. dure, Mrs. John Flack and Pro-
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Children $1.50
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OPEN 8 A.M. - 7 P.M. AIRCONDmONED - TV
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Richards Barber Shop
Twin Jltees Plaza P
1777 Columbia Dr.
Decatur, Ga.
HOLY
GROSS
BROTHERS
YOUNG CATHOLIC MEN . .. Work
with us today to educate youth
for the world of tomorrow!
► Write for booklet:
HIGH SCHOOLS
UNIVERSITIES
BOYS’ HOMES
MISSIONERS
TRADESMEN
BROTHER DONALD, CSC
104 HOLY CROSS SCHOOL
4050 DAUPHINE STREET
• NEW ORLEANS, LA. 70117
Martin Work, Executive Director of the National Council of Catholic Men, delivered the main ad
dress during the Lay Congress banquet Saturday evening. Mr. Work is shown flanked by James
W. Callison, president of the Congress (right), and Mrs. Thomas Bockman, ad hoc committee
member, and Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan (left).
gram, Mr. Frank McBrearity.
Herbert Farnsworth, Chair
man of the ad hoc committee
made the address of welcome,
and Mrs. John Kesler respond
ed, A Bible service was con
ducted by Father Hein S.J. on
Friday evening. Mass on Sat
urday was celebrated by Fath-
MAY24TH
ers Foust and Kiernan. Paul
Smith introduced Martin Work
at Saturday's dinner. Pontifi
cal Mass on Sunday was cele
brated by Archbishop Hallinan
and Bishop Bemardin, with
Bishop Bemardin delivering
the homily. The formal, rec
ommendations were presented
to the Archbishop by Mr. Calli
son, and the Archbishop assur
ed the delegates that the rec
ommendations would be eval
uated and discussed openly at
the Synod, with lay auditors in
attendance*. The choir from
Sacred Heart Church sang at
the Pontifical Mass.
D’Youville Academy Honors
Students For Excellence
D’Youville Academy's annual
Honors Program, May 24,
brought recognition to many
students for outstanding a-
chievement in a variety of acti
vities.
Camila Capo merited the Sis
ter Mary Raphael award as the
senior chosen by vote of the stu
dent body for loyalty and de
votion to the ideals of the school
and outstanding generosity In
school activities. She also won
special recognition for perfect
attendance during four years at
the Academy.
The Atlanta Journal Cup, pre
sented to the senior judged out
standing In loyalty, leadership
and scholarship by vote of the
faculty was won by Student
Council President Leslie Laird.
Leslie writes a weekly column
for the Atlanta Constitution and
will be a junior reporter this
summer.
SCHOLASTIC AWARDS
For outstanding scholarship
in the school, bronze medals
went to Anne Farnsworth and
Leslie Laird, seniors; Judy
Dieterle and Camille Wells,
juniors; Anne Applegarth and
Lanier Hart, sophomores; and
Katherine Kerwin and Jann Pas-
ler, freshmen.
SPORTS, SERVICE WINNERS
Student vote named senior
Camila Capo, junior Sally
Moorman, sophomore Anne Ap
plegarth and freshman Allison
Wrigley deserving of awards
for achievement in sports. Also
Rosemary Hurayt, Judy Die
terle, Karen Sandys and Nancy
Arroyo won service awards.
Other awards went to Candy
Mitchum, Lynda Ryckeley, Ber
nadette Latz, Sophie Gatins, De
nise Simons and Virginia Wrig
ley for service to the school
annual. Rosemary Hurayt, Les
lie Laird and Cathy Hare won
similar awards for work with
the school paper.
Summer School Session
ELEMENTARY LEVEL
ADULT EDUCATION PROGRAM
Uniforms
Supp-Hose
Store No. 2 !
Ansley Mall I
Piedmont & ;
Monroe ;
ST. JOSEPH HIGH SCHOOL - 320 Courtland St., N.E.
Teaching Staff—SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH
MRS. LOUISE MONAGHAN
SUBJECTS:
REMEDIAL: Reading
English
Arithmetic
CREATIVE THINKING AND DOING — GRADES: 3 thru 8
FEE — $25 per subject.
CLASSES — MONDAY thru FRIDAY — 9:00 A.M. to 12:15
P.M.
SIX WEEKS SESSION — JUNE 13 to JULY 22 inclusive.
SECONDARY LEVEL
ST. JOSEPH HIGH SCHOOL - 320 Courtland St., N.E.
(0OWNTOWN ATLANTA)
PERSONAL TYPING— (SEVEN WEEKS COURSE)
THREE NIGHTS EACH WEEK — MONDAY, WEDNESDAY
and THURSDAY —7:00 to 9:00 P.M.
BEGINNING JUNE 13 — ENDING JULY 29.
TEACHER: MRS. NELL WHITE, M.A.
FEE — $25.00. NO CREDIT GIVEN.
ECCLESIASTICAL LATIN— (For aspirants to the Priesthood)
MONDAY thru FRIDAY — 7:00 to 9:00 P.M.
BEGINNING JUNE 13 thru JULY 29
FEE — $10.00. NO CREDIT GIVEN.
Courses at both high school sessions begin on June
13 and end oh August 5, except where noted.
ST. PIUS X HIGH SCHOOL - 2674 Jphnson Road, N.E.
SUBJECTS:
REMEDIAL ALGEBRA MR. GEORGE MALOOF
REMEDIAL ENGLISH . . : SISTER OF ST. JOSEPH
•DRIVER EDUCATION MR. MORRIS MITCHELL
PERSONAL TYPING SISTER OF ST. JOSEPH
FEE — $25.00
•Drivers' Education Course will consist of 30 hours class
room instruction and 6 hours behind-the-wheei training.
Enrollment will be limited to 40:
FEE — $35.00
ST. % JOSEPH HIGH SCHOOL - 320 Courtland St., N.E.
SUBJECTS:
REMEDIAL ENGLISH SISTER OF ST. JOSEPH
PERSONAL TYPING SISTER OF ST. JOSEPH
♦DRIVER EDUCATION MR. WILLIAM DAPRANO
REMEDIAL READING MISS MONDEAR WINFIELD
FEE — $25.00
♦Beginning June 20, by appointment only, enrollment
limited to 30.
No classroom work will be included in this course.
V2 Credit will be given to those who have already
successfully passed the classroom course.
FEE — $35.00
St.' Pius X High School and St. Joseph High School
are accredited by the Southern Association and meet the
requirements of this accrediting agency for summer schools.
Pupils expecting credit for their courses must have
the written permission of their high school principals.
All courses except Driver Education consist of 120
class hours.
On July 4 school will not be held—classes on the first
three Mondays will run for four hours to make up this
time.
All courses are subject to cancellation if minimum
enr&jlment is not reached.
LECTURES IN THEOLOGY
SERIES I — MONDAY NIGHTS
THEOLOGY OF LITURGY
LECTURER: REV. LEONARD F. X. MAYHEW, S.T.l.
SERIES II — TUESDAY NIGHTS
RENEWED LITURGY AND MUSIC
LECTURER: REV. ELLIS L. DePRIEST, S.M., M.Mus.
SERIES III — WEDNESDAY NIGHTS
GOD, SCIENCE, AND GOD’S OWN WORD
LECTURER: REV. WILLIAM CALHOUN, M.A., S.T.L.
SERIES IV — THURSDAY NIGHTS
THE NEW CATECHETICS — JUST HOW NEW?
LECTURER: REV. MATTHEW KEMP, A.B., M.Ed.
EACH LECTURE SERIES WILL RUN FOR 5 WEEKS—
JUNE 13 thru JULY 14.
TIME — 8:00 P.M.
Discussion Period will follow each Lecture.
FEE PER SERIES — $10.00
REGISTRATION
PRE-REGISTRATION MAY 9 THROUGH JUNE 3
TELEPHONE 524-8559
REGISTRAR — MRS. H. B. WINFIELD
Final Registration — First Day of Classes at Each School
Payments due at time of registration or by mail to the
Department of Catholic Education, 320 Courtland St., N. E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30303
A refund of $15 will be mofto during the first week of summer
school If student withdraws during that time.
NO MONEY will be refunded after June 17.
iimmHiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiimiiMmmmiiiiiiMmiMiiumiimimimiiiinMilimiiiiiMmiiiiiiKiiiimimiiiiimiiimMHiiiiHiiiiHHiiii
Prevost- Ruffin
Engagement
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Louis
Prevost announce the engage
ment of their daughter, Beryl
Ann, to Henry Franklin Ruffin
Jr. son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Franklin Ruffin Sr.
The bride-elect is the grand
daughter of Mrs. Lena Landry
of Baton Rouge, Louisianna and
the late Mr. A.J. Landry and
Mrs. Catherine Prevost of New
Orleans, Louisiana and the late
Mr. Harry Prevost Sr.
Mr. Ruffin is the grand-son of
the late Rev. aqd Mrs. Alfred
A. Heath of Forsyth, Georgia
and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F.
Ruffin of Macon, Georgia.
The future bride is employed
at Blackstock’s Inc. The future
bride-groom attends Georgia
State College.
The wedding will be August
20th at Immaculate Heart of
Mary Church.
JUNE 8
Northeast
Deanery
Hie Northeast Deanery of the
Archdiocesan Council of Catho
lic Women willhold its quarter
ly meeting at Our Lady of the
Assumption Church on June 8,
1966. Most Rev. Joseph L. Ber-
nardin, Auxiliary Bishop of At
lanta, will be the guest speaker.
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