Newspaper Page Text
4
SATURDAY AT FOX THEATER
Georgia Bulletin, Thursday, May 25, 1967
Archdiocesan Graduates To Hear Dr. Noah Langdale
147 Grads
At Pi-Hi
St. Pius X High School will
# award 147 degrees to its senior
class at Saturday’s Ceremonies.
The graduates are:
Thomas Wayne Abraham,
James Joseph Ackermann, Nan
cy Ann Adamson, Theodore H.
Albenesius, Susan Marie An-
gelich, John Charles Arm
strong, Jon Michael Atchley,
Devron Randolph Averett, Al
len William Ballar, Paula E-
lizabeth Barton, Alexander Bo-
vard Beal Jr., Susan Elaine
Beckham, Rose Ann Elizabeth
Billingsley,
Therese Juliet Bindewald,
Thomas Conrad Bishop, John
David Brandt, Edward Paul
Braun, Roy Leonard Brown, Jr.,
Lyle DaWayne Carlson, Jr.,
Thomas Patrick Carr, Janice
Patricia Cassidy, Stephen Ger
ard Cheek, Nancy Elaine Clark,
Robert Joseph Collins, Susan
Kathleen Conley, Mary Beth
Connor, Karen Lane Conrads,
Kathryn Dianne Cooper, James
William Corbett, Cynthia Lynn
Cotton, Paula Jean Craig, Re
gina Marie Dailey, Frank Ri
chard DeLuca, Donna Marie
Dlugos, John Michael Doran,
Thomas Francis Douglas,
Mary Kathleen Duffy, Patri
cia Ann Dufries, Jack Thomas
Duncan, Clair Elaine Eberenz,
Lana Linda Edelen, Janice Lee
Erickson, Mary Louise Ewing,
Dennis George Fleming, Char
les Frederick Flynn, Jeffrey
Folinus, Nancy Dean Frierson,
Catherine Lynda Gadd, Patrick
Gerard Gillis, Mary Louise
Griffin, Teresa Lillian Griffin,
Janis Marie Haddad, Michael
Stuart Harbin, Kent Michael
Harbin, Kent Michael Harper,
Nancy Elliotte Harrington,
Mary Elizabeth Hastreiter, Ste
phen Robert Hayden, Roberta
Claire Heilker, Ann Louise Hig
ginbotham, Robej-t Charlaa,|lat:.^
lubik, Kenneth.
Charles M. Huguley ilk, Bonnie
Grant Hunter, Ralph Anton Hut,
Helen Louise Hynes, Tina Jo
Jenkins, Mary Alicia Justen,
Elizabeth Anne Kane,
Ronald D. Kazmier, Susan
Mary Kingsbury, Christopher
Leo Knouse, Stephen Andrew
Kramer, William Charles Kuhn,
Mary Carol Kupecky, Susan
Frances Kupris, Kathryn Lou-
ARCHB1SHOP HALL IN AN
ise Kuzy, Paul Jerome Langs-
feld, Stephen Ross Lee, Marian
F. Lewiecki, Linda Anne Litt-
ler, Janeice Marie Long, Mar
garet Anne Lorenz, Bonnie Ruth
Lynskey, Karen Ann Mackel,
Cynthia Ann Mackool, Douglas
William Mackool, Diane Jaimel
Macy, Beth Veronica Major,
Timothy Edward Mallon,
John Maloof, Marilu Martin,
Ralph Francis Martino, Susan
Ellen McKane, Susie Lynn Mc
Lean, Ottis Vern Moore, Dan
iel Richard Moran, Robert Mi
chael Mulvihill, Patrick Red
mond Murphy, Theresa Mar-
iene Myers, Gaye Ann Nevius,
Brian Everett Newton, Mich
ael Kenneth O'Day, John G.
Oliver, Harry Leo Ollinger,
Sheryl Eileen Orr, Linda Ma
rie Ory, Lee Erskin Osborne,
Timothy Joseph Ott, Rebecca
Eleanor Panter, Graham Mal
colm Pratt,
Edward Louis Prevost, Karen
Frances Paproski, Daniel Den
nis Quinn, Brian James Reddy,
Patricia Joan Ryan, J. Pat.
Schliessmann, Loretta Ann
Schmidt, Kathleen Ann Sedlack,
Diane Elizabeth Seeley, Mary
Shipley, Anna Marie Shoemak
er, Cynthia Ann Smith, Daphne
Ann Smyke, Thomas Quinn Spit-
zer, Jr., James Andrew
Strauss, Mary Ellen Sullivan,
Deanna Mary Swint, Cynthia
Webster Taylor, Marie Ellen
Terhorst, Raymond Marshall
Margaret,*Tier-
Gwendolyn Louise Travis,
Thomas Joseph Trotochaud,
John Thomas Vonesh, Helen
Sharon Wall, Joseph Barry
Wall, Charles William Wallace,
Jr., Raymond Paul Warrell,
John Michael Weldon, Thomas
John White, Jr., Mary N. Wim-
Msh, Gregory Lewis Wojcik,
Joyce Elaine Youngs, and Leo
Joseph Zuber.
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% 1980
Drexel
Grads
Drexel High School will award
degrees to 35 seniors at
commencement Saturday. The
graduates are:
Benita Carmell Beckum,
Constance EleaseBuckins, Wil
liam S. Cannon, Carmen
Francine Comer, Angelyn
Loretta Couch, Deloris Barbara
Fluellen, Ingrid Charmaine
Frazier, Claudia Susan George,
Connie Antoinette Goolsby,
Amaryllis Naomi Grogan, Kurt
Anthony Hill, Arthur Eric Jack-
son, Pamela Aurelia Jackson,
Michael Tate Jenkins, Berneda
Casimus Johnson,
Roy Michael Johnson, Janis
Marganna Jones, Adolphus
Lester, Jr., Theodore Collins
Lyons, Kathy Elaine McCree,
Harold Mclver, Kenneth Edward
Mannings, Neeka Lorraine Mil-
sap,
FATHER O'CONNOR
Gregory Lawrence Reid, Rita
Van Robinson, Reginia Lynn
Rogers, Eric M. Saxon, Melinda
Denise Sellers, Ginger Em el la
Sinclair, Karen Rockelle Smith,
Lyde Nathaniel Smith, Anita
Louise Thomas, Carlton D.S.
Turner, Danny D. Ware, and
Judy Yvonne Watkins.
31 Set To Graduate
D’Youville Academy
Commencement exercises for
the fifth graduating class of
D’Youville Academy will be
Sunday, at 3 p.m. in the Christ
the King Cathedral Center.
Father Daniel J. O’Connor,
secretary of education for the
archdiocese, will confer the
diplomas and address the grad
uates. Camille Wells will de
liver the salutatory and Judith
Dieterle the valedictory. There
are 31 members of the class.
Class Day exercises will be
held in the Academy gardens on
Saturday, at 4 p.m. Speakers
will be Laura Lagerquist, Diane
Mix, and Denise Simons. Kim
Hexter and Ellen Adams will
present the graduates.
Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan,
Father Jerry Hardy, and Rev.
Georgd’ iM Meiluta will concele-^*
brate the Baccalaureate Mass^
at Our Lady of the Assumption
Church on Thursday, May- 25,
at 5 p.m.
Members of the class are
Mary Louise Capo, Alison
Chase, Nancy Cook, Nataliede-
Golian, Judith Dieterle, Kath
leen Dwyer, Jacqueline Ed
wards, Starr Faber, Sophie Gat
ins, Marjorie Giesler, Suseen
Graham, Barbara Hart, Betsy
Hotchkiss, Kathryn Hutchison,
Eleanor Jones, Laura Lager
quist.
Also, Mallory Langan, Pa
trice McParland, Dane Mix,
Sara Moorman, Mary Ellen
Murphy, Denise Podes, Mar
guerite Rice, Karen Roach, De
nise Simmons, Karen Skaggs,
Rosemary Stafford, Susan Stra-
cener, Nell Troutman, Camille
Wells, and Virginia Wrigley.
St. Joe’s
Seniors
St. .Joseph High School will
award 87 degrees during com
mencement exercises Saturday.
The graduates are:
7 Helen Craig Alexander, Ben
, Gibson Almond, Judith Monahan
Anderson, Brenda Ann Azar.
Rose Ann Bastian, -Marlene
Elizabeth Becker, Billie Ann
Bennett, Charles Frederick
Beysiegel, Terry Joseph Bis-
coglia, Beatriz Ana Blanco,
William Earll Brown,
Silvia Katherina Burgin,
Marie Louise Daniell, Maria
de las Mercedes D’Arcourt,
Anthony Daniel Davis, Therese
Ellen Disney, Kenneth Wayne
Fraley, Margaret Ann Fulcher,
David Lee Gaddis, Joyce Susan
Gallagher, Catherine Elizabeth
Gardner, Joan Marie Gipe,
Joseph Keyes Gipe, Rodney
Grantham, III, Sue Ellen Gregg,
Mary Frances Grube, Linda
Jeanette Hall, Barbara Ann
Hamilton, Phyllis Elizabeth
Harrison, Nancy Ann Hill,
Christopher Joseph Holland,
Carl Phillip Houck, Theresa
Marie Huey, , Helen Esther
Jones, Jane Anne Jones, Linda
Yvonne Jones,. Sandra. Helen
Keith, Patrick Michael Kelly,
Susan Marie Lamb,
Mary Colleen Lancaster,
Anna Catherine Lee, Anthony
Alfonso Lentini, John Leonard
Maddock, Jr., Donnie Elizabeth
Maher, Joseph Anthony Maloof,
Ronald Richard. Mass, Jo Anne
McCarthy, Jeremiah Glinn Mc-
DR. LANGDALE
Carty, Barry Lee McDonald,
Linda Gail McEntire,
Geraldine Kathryn McGuire,
Gordon Eugene McLeroy, Mary
Elizabeth Meyer, Marvin C.
Moreland, Thomas Joseph Mus-
insky, Joseph Anthony Najjar,
Mary Jane Northrop, Donna
Darlene Nuckles, Dan Reynard
Odom, Colleen Bridget O'Kon,
Cheryl Lynn Pauli, Tokmyo
Peters, Jo Ann Poucher,
Thomas Gilliland Price, Carole
Ann Reynolds, Patricia Ann
Richardi, Harri-Jeanne Rich
ardson, Edward Franklin
Roberts, Jr., John EdwardSad-
ler, Cynthia Sofia Samra, Wil
liam Paul Sapp, Jr., Mary Alice
Schemmel, Theresa J. Shep
pard, Samuel B. Smith, Ann
Ruth Steltenpohl,
Judy Ann Sutherland, Claude
Thomas Waidner, Frances Lor
raine Waldron, J. Gregory
Walker, Sandra Elayne Wash
ington, Carlton Lee Watkins,
Jr., Peggy Loretta Werner,
Damian Patrick Whitaker,
Ronald Earl White, Raymond
Williams, Alexine Marie Wyn-
delts, and Ronald Raymond Zuk-
owski.
1967-68 School Schedule
Omits Holy Day Holidays
The Archdiocesan Board of V
"“Education has ahnOunced major
changes in next “year*!” scliooT
calendar. Most radical is the^.
omission of half-days at the be—
ginning of the school term and
of all holidays on Holy Days dur
ing the school year.
This change will enable all
archdiocesan and parochial
schools to meet the legal state
standards requiring 180 full
class days. School attendance
on Holy Days will assure stu-
Cut References
Offending Jews
NEW YORK (RNS)--A world-
wide movement to remove hos
tile references to Jews and ot
her non-Catholics from Catho
lic textbooks has been unusual- '
ly successful in Spain, accord
ing to PhilipE. Hoffman, chair
man of the board of governors
of the American Jewish Com
mittee.
Hoffman, an attorney and ex
ecutive of the U.S. Realty & In
vestment Co., Newark, N.J.,
made his assessment of the'
textbooks situation at the 61st
annual meeting of the Com
mittee.
His findings were based on a
recent visit to Europe and on
data supplied by the Commit
tee’s Foreign Affairs Depart
ment, much of it from the
European office under the di
rection of Zachariah Shuster,
and by its Department of In
terreligious Affairs, headed by
Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum.
In Spain, according to Hoff
man more than half of allCatho-
lic religious textbooks that pre
viously had expressed marked
hostility to Jews and Judaism
have been revised or eliminat
ed.
Hoffman reported that this
year research study into
Spanish and Italian texts at the
Leonard M. Sperry Center for
Intergroup Cooperation in
Rome.
This center, named for a de
ceased American Jewish Com
mittee. official, was established
in 1964 at thelnternationalUni-
versity for social Studies Pro
Deo.
Ip other parts of the world,
Hoffman reported the following
developments:
Intensive studies
of
French—.language Catholic
books, used in France, Bel
gium, Switzerland, andCanada,
have been virtually completed
at Louvain University in Bel
gium, under the sponsorship of
Leo Joseph Cardinal Suenens.
--An investigation of Aus
trian books has been started
by an interreligious commis
sion attheUniversity of Vienna,
under the patronage of Franz
Cardinal Koenig.
—Other studies are under
way in West Germany, Porgu-
gal, and England, andinatleast
one country behind the Iron
Curtain, Poland.
—Catholic educational cen
ters in Europe are sending re
vised textbooks to predomi
nantly Catholic countries in
other parts of the world, not
ably Latin America. In addi
tion, Catholic authorities in
several Latin American coun
tries have conducted textbook
studies leading to significant
revisions.
In a discussion of the Sperry
Center in Rome, Mr. Hoffman’s
report cited this quotation from
one of the study center’s pre
liminary findings:
“Quantitatively and qualita
tively one is struck by the large
amount of hostility not only
against Jews but against other
groups as well. Equally sub
stantial, however, are the
number of positive items, like
ly to produce attitudes of
friendliness toward other
groups...
"Whatever may have been
true of Christian teaching in
the past, the material now in
use does not constitute sys
tematic, official, coherentpre-
sentatioj, but, on the contrary,
evidently depends a very great
deal on the idiosyncrasies and
viewpoints of the individual
writer.
"The conclusion is inevit-
dents of participation in the lit
urgical celebration ofjiie. feast
days and an opportunity to at
tend Mass.
The schedule will provide ad
ditional advantages to faculty
members and students: a long
er Christmas vacation, two long
weekends in February and
March, plus two other weekends
when there will be no classes,
although teachers must attend
school.
The final registration date for
the school term is set for Au
gust 23. Classes will begin
August 28. This date coincides
with the opening of all public
schools in the greater Atlanta
area. Two Teachers’ Work
Days will preceed the fall term
able that Catholic writers could
deal positively with other
groups ‘without' sacrificing
anything of what, from their
own religious standpoint, they
would regard as the truth.’’’
Hoffman added: "Such stud
ies by Catholic priests, nuns,
and scholars of the way in which
Catholic texts portray Judaism
—and often other religions as
well—represent a major on
going result of the Ecumeni
cal Council."
In the United States, accord
ing to Hoffman, a number of
new textbooks have been pub
lished which have eliminated
hostile statements against
Jews.
Abbey College
Awards Degrees
To Atlantans
Two Catholic students from
the Archdiocese of Atlanta were
among the 129 seniors who were
awarded the Bachelor degree at
Belmont Abbey College, Bel
mont, N.C.
Receiving the Bachelor of
arts degree were Michael Tho
mas Daniels of Decatur, major
ing in Economics and Business,
and Dan Morey Parker, Jr. of
Marietta, majoring in History.
The 89th Annual Commence
ment exercises were held
Tuesday in Haid Gymnasium on
the.college campus.
and two work days will conclude
the school year. — - «... >
The new calendar was ap
proved by the Archbishop and
the Archdiocesan board of edu
cation. It still provide s the pas
tor with one free day which he
may assign himself. This again
provides an opportunity for an
additional long weekend during
the school year.
The schedule for die year fol
lows:
August 23, registration; Au
gust 24-25, teachers’ work
days; August 28, classes begin;
Sept. 4, Labor Day holiday;
Oct. 13, liturgical workshop
Nov. 23-24, Thanksgiving holi
day; Dec. 20-31, Christmas va
cation; Jan. 1, New Year's Day;
Jan. 19, teachers’ work day;
Feb. 16, teachers' institute;
March 18, secretary’s holiday;
April 11-15, Easter vacation;
May 25, graduation; May 31,
school ends; and June 3-4,
teachers’ work day.
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6 WILL RECEIVE
SCHOLAR HONOR
Dr. Noah Langdale, Jr., president of Georgia State College,
will address the 269 graduating seniors at the Archdiocesan
Commencement exercises, Saturday, at the Fox Theatre.
Archbishop Paul J.Hallinanwillpresideattheceremonies, and
present the Archbishop's Award for Scholastic Excellence to
the boy and girl in each Senior Class, who has maintained the
highest scholastic average over seven semesters.
Rev. Daniel J. O’Connor, Secretary for Education, will deliver
the invocation and welcome.
The principals of each of the high schools, Fr. Cotter, St.
Pius X, Fr. Kelley, St. Joseph, and Fr. Hoffman, Drexel
Catholic High School, will present their graduates to the
Archbishop to receive the<~ diplomas.
Bishop Bernardin will close the exercises with words of
congratulations to the graduates. Bpb Van Camp, a well-known
radio personality with WSB will provide music for the occasion
on the Fox Theatre’s famous organ.
Samuel McQuaid, Chairman, Archdiocesan Board of Education,
will present Monsignor Clancey Award to the senior boy chosen
by the Board of Education.
St. Pius X will have the largest number of graduates with
147.
St. Joseph High School will graduate 87, and Drexel High
School’s last graduating class will be composed of 35 Senior
boys and girls.
Drexel is being consolidated with St. Joseph High School
next year.
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