Newspaper Page Text
GEORGIA BULLETIN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1967
Expansion Drive Report
January 31, 1967
Total Amount Pledged $2,314,796.23
" M Canceled 111.665.72
Net Amount Pledged 1/31/67
Total Cash Received 1/31/67
- 4.855
$2,203,130.51
1,215,349.81 - 55.2)5
it it * -
THE modernistic chapel steeple at the Village of St. Joseph and a
pine tree symbolize the Church in North Georgia.
Village Opening
Is Set In June
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
receive either individual or group treatment. Parents,
relatives.former foster parents, or the people to whom
the Child has been most closely ‘related’ will continue
to be of importance to the child.”
The village is a licensed child-care facility. “Hope
fully, in the near future it will also become a licensed
child placement agency. If this is realized, specialized
foster homes may be available for a limited number of
children so they can continue with their treatment while
learning to adapt to family living after a time of group
residence,” Father Scherer said.
Many of the children at the village will attend neigh
boring parochial schools. However, disturbed or delin
quent children will attend special classes at the village.
Additional tutoring outside the classroom will also be
provided. Psychological testing, psychiatric consultation
and counseling by a professional caseworker will be avail
able plus a complete medical program.
“We also hope to eventually set up a psychological
testing service in conjunction with the archdiocesan school
system,” especially with Our Lady’s Day School," Father
Scherer said. "The tests could be given to pupils when
the principals feel they need them.”
Another advantage of the village is'thetypeof cottages.
The dormitories will be smaller, more functional and will
have recreational areas.
Protests Cancel
Anglican’s Talk
\
I BELFAST, Northern Ireland
^NC) — Threats of a massive
protest march by Protestant
extremists caused the cancella
tion of a speech to be given by
ecumenically minded Anglican
Bishop John Moorman of Ripon,
England, in St. Anne's Anglican
cathedral here.
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More than 1,200 tickets'had
already been issued for tlfe Feb/'
6 talk when cathedral authori
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canceled the program. Accord
ing to Canon C. L. Peacock of
Belfast, cancellation of the talk
was the only solution to a con
flict that threatened to add un
rest and perhaps violence to
Belfast's already turbulent re
ligious situation.
The blame for the proposed
protest has been placed on the
shoulders of supporters of the
Rev. Ian Paisley, the anti-Cath-
olic and anti-ecumenical head
of the Free Presbyterian
Church.
PARISH
Net Amount
Pledged
1/31/67
Total
Paid
*
Paid
New Fledges
12/1/66 - 1/j
#1-Chrlst the King
425,853.88
270,405.19
63.5*
2,756.00
#2-Immaculate
Conception
38,565.00
20,091.48
52.1*
-
#3-Immaculate Heart
of Mary
159,654.75
83,248.79
52.1*
140.00
#4-Most Blessed Sacra
ment
33,686.00
15,255.00
45.3*
' -
#5-Our Lady of the
Assumption
174,390.19
77,839.30
44.6*
566.00
#6-Our Lady of Lourdes
14,203.00
3,680.00
25.9*
#7-Sacred Heart -
Atlanta
129,941.25
88,248.22
67.9*
575.00
#8-St. Anthony
77,422.23
42,389.73
54.8*
25.00
#9-St. John's Melklte
10,630.00
5,681.50
53.4*
-
#10-st. Joseph's
Maronite
8,464.00
4,725.00
55.8*
-
#11-St. Jude
106,157.30
56.733.96
53.5*
899.00
#12-St.Paul of the Cross
32,733.00
8,561.60
26.1*
-
#13-SS. Peter & Paul
74,878.26
32,667.66
43.6*
290.00
#14-St. Thomas More
147,605.35
75,239.08
51*
3,115.00
#15-St. John
84,616.00
41,172.59
49.6*
10.00
#16-St.Joseph-Marietta 76,086.00
St.Thomas the Apostle
37,376.04
49.1*
90.00
#17-H01y Cross
83,640.12
32,537.04
38.9*
-
#l8-Holy Spirit
108,278.00
66,660.00
61.5*
187.50
#19-St.Jo s eph-Athens
43,611.00
23,517.33
53.9*
1,563.00
#20-St. Bernadett e
Our Lady
13,253.00
6,934.00
52.3*
-
#21-St. Mark
1,472.00
343.00
23.3*
-
#22-St. Luke'
4,316.00
2,359.00
54.7*
11.00
#23-St.Joseph-Dalton
9,869.00
5,603.00
56.8*
-
#24-St. Gerard
13,540.00
8,277.00
61.1*
90.00
#25-St. Michael
26,654.10
13,619.30
51*
1,751,00
#26-Sacred Heart -
Griffin
42,124.00
18,781.60
44.6*
35.00
#27-St.Peter-LaGrange
24,184.00
12,795.34
53*
-
#28-0ur Lady of the
Mount
14,345.00
9,871.40
68.8*
-
#29-Sacred Heart -
Mllledgeville
22,268.00
10,526.50
47.3*
-
#30-St. Mary - Rome
45,269.00
18,895.93
41.7*
' 20.00
#3l-i(other of Our
Divine Saviour
' K cjr'te b
*>,959.00
3,17*8.00
53®3# 1
A M.
1-
#32-St. Joseph -
Washington
9,369.00
4,315.50
46*
20.00
Unclassified Special
Gifts
56,395.70
54,915.70
97.4*
1,471.00
Friends of the
Archbishop
58,697.38
58,697.38
100*
500.00
Totals
2,203,130.51
1,215,192.16
14,114.50
Cushing Now ‘Amicable 9
With America’s Editor
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NEW YORK (RNS) -- Richard
Cardinal Cushing of Boston, who
charged Jesuit-edited America
magazine with disseminating “a
colossal lie” has conferred
amicably with the editor of the
national Catholic weekly.
The prelate's charge, sup
ported by several Latin Ameri
can ' churchmen, followed
America's publication ofamis-
Sion priests article which held
that U. S, expenditure of mis
sionary priests and great sums
of money had done more harm
than good in Latin America.
Father Thurston Davis, S.J.,
editor, told newsmen: "I have
talked to him on the phone, and
we had a very amicable conver
sation."
He would make no comment
other than to correct a figure
quoted by news services in re
porting on Cardinal Cushing's
address before a missionary
conference in Boston. The pre
late had been quoted as saying,
**I gave the Jesuits $100,000 to
build their offices, and the least
they could have done was to call
me up and tell me I was the only
person mentioned' in the arti
cle."
Father Davis said: "Cardi
nal Cushing contributed
$500,000, not $100,000, to the
building fund for our new head-
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Students Agree
Newman Movement Must
Be ‘Church On Campus 9
The relevance of Newman Clubs on college campuses and the
role of Newman in the development of the Christian community
was the theme for the 35th annual southeastern Province Conven
tion.
club mentality, should be drop
ped completely and that “the
Church on campus” should ne
ver again be solely a social
retreat for Catholic students
as it has been in the past on
many campuses.
These are just a few of the
ideas the students and priests
discussed at Rock Eagle. Many
participants wanted more free
dom for experimentation in li
turgy. They also favored a clo
ser alignment of the bishops to
the college apostolate and more
: emphasis on substance rather
than structure.
The convocation of 117 stu
dents and chaplains met at Rock
Eagle 4-H Center on Jan. 27-
29. This gathering of student
leaders from the four - state
area of North Carolina, South
Carolina, Georgia, and Flori
da was hosted by the Catholic
students at the University of
Georgia.
Ronald N. Del Bene, theo
logy professor from Mary
Manse College in Toledo, Ohio,
was the guest speaker. He
stressed the fact that Newman
Is dead and that what was
Newman must now be “the
Church on campus.”
Del Bene explained the idea
of Christian Community and
how he thought it could be at
tained on the college campus.
In the formal and Informal dis
cussions that followed, the stu
dents and priests sought to
apply this idea of community
to their own campuses. They
spoke of how Newman as Its
exists today on most cam
puses must be reevaluated to,
as Del Benen put it, meet "the
signs of the times.’*
On the question of what role
the Church on campus should
play, most students agreed that
on the large residential cam
puses the church must be a
true student parish — a chance
for students to take an active
part in the Church. On the
smaller commuter campuses
where the students belong to
their own home parishes, the
Church on campus must be a
disseminating point of Chris
tian love and example.
Many thought that the name
“Newman,” which is too often
aligned with the small Catholic
A3H J
vid O’Brien, the convention
chairman, expressed somewhat
the same idea when attheclos-
ing of the convention he said he
hoped the meeting would act
as the seed from which "the
Church on campus” would grow.
During the weekend Steve
Nlmmer, outgoing chairman of
the Southeastern Province,
turned over the gavel to the
newly elected chairman, John
Schaffer from Georgia Tech.
Charles Scott a student at More
house College in Atlanta will
serve as vice chairman.
At Mass Sunday morning a
representative from each
school made a symbolic offer
ing to God at the offertory.
A1 Mangin from Georgia Tech,
when presenting a pine cone
to the celebrant, said that the
Church on campus was like
the pine cone. It may look dead
or at best dying, but with pro
per care and nourishment it
can produce a great tree. Da-
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The incident envolving Car-
; dinal Cushing and America had
the following chronology:
In the Jan. 21 issue, in a de-
; partment called "To Be Per-
' fectly Frank" and specifying
that "the opinions expressed
are not necessarily those of the
editors," Msgr. Ivan Ulich,
director of the Center of Inter-
, Cultural Documentation, Cuer
navaca, Mexico, questioned
‘ many of the assumptions under-
I lying U.S, Catholic programs
V in Latin America,
His thesis included the fol
lowing points:
That U.S. missionaries, wit
tingly or not, often worktosup-
' port U.S, political and economic
interests in Latin America;
That they help to perpetuate
* the status quo in a social and
f economic system that despo
ts rately needs changing; and
That they carry "a foreign
) Christian image, a foreign pas-
) toral approach."
Bishop
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
St. Anselm in 1958 and in 1960
at the Latern University.
On May 31, 1962, he was ap
pointed auxiliary bishop to Car
dinal Cmaera, archbishop of
Rio de Janeiro, for all the
Maronites of Brazil.
In August of 1962, Msgr.
Zayek was consecrated Maron
ite bishop at the Patriarchal
Palace at Deeman, Lebanon by
his Beatitude, Paul Peter Meou-
chi, Maronite Patriarch of An
tioch.
Bishop Zayek came to the
United States in May, 1964, to
ordain the first American-born
Maronite priests wholly educat
ed according to the rite in the
United States. On March 9,
1966, Pope Paul VI created the
Maronite Exarchate and ap
pointed Bishop Zayek as the
first Maronite Exarch of the
United States.
Persons interested in attend
ing the reception honoring Bish
op Zayek should call Mrs. Tom
Peters, 451-2747; Mrs. Joseph
Ashkouti, 233-4010; or Mrs.
Joseph Salome, 622-2106.
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1 On Jan. 27, at a general as
sembly of the fourth national
■ conference of the Catholic In-
* ter - American Cooperation
, Program (CICOP), Cardinal
Cushing gave an unscheduled
t address in which he denounced
the article as "a colossal
: lie,” said he was "shocked"
that .the Jesuits published it
without consulting him since he
: t was "referred to by name,"
, and conjectured that "it was
' written to pull the rug out from
unddr this convention."
The cardinal also read a let
ter from Archbishop Egidio
Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to
lithe U.S., which praised U.S.
Catholic programs in Latin
America and re-emphasized
papal support for them.
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