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1 2 GEORGIA BULLETIN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1968
Wilkinson-
Pawlik
Engagement
Mary Teresa Wilkinson
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Joseph
Wilkinson of Atlanta announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their ‘daughter, Mary
Teresa, to Mr. Raymond Gerald
Pawlik, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Marion Pawlik of
Buffalo, New York. The wedding
will take place at Immaculate
Heart of Mary Church on
November 28th.
Miss Wilkinson was graduated
from St. Pius X High School and
Rosary College in Chicago,
Illinois. She attended the
University of Fribourg,
Switzerland on the Rosary
College Junior Year Abroad
Program. She is teaching French
at Northside High School, in the
Atlanta Public School System.
Mr. Pawlik served with the Air
Force in Goose Bay, Labrador
and at Dobbins Air Force Base,
He attended the University of
Georgia and now attends
Oglethorpe College. He is
employed with Lockheed
Aircraft Corporation.
CALENDAR
NOVEMBER
14 - Adult religious discussions will be held at St. Mary’s Church,
Rome, on Thursday, Nov. 14, 7:30 p.m. All parishioners invited to
participate.
14 - The National Conference of Christians and Jews of Atlanta will
hold a conference on, “What Kind of City Do We Really Want?” on
Thursday, Nov. 14, 9:30 a.m.-2 p.m., at the Trinity Methodist
Church, corner of Washington and Trinity Ave. All citizens invited.
14-15-16 - The Nearly New Sale, sponsored by Our Lady’s Church,
Carrollton, will be held on Thursday, Nov. 14 through Saturday,
Nov. 16. Clothing and household items.
15 - The Discussion Club of Holy Cross parish will be held on Friday,
Nov. 15, 8 p.m. at the home of Don and Alyce Kopanoff, 3620
Northlake Dr., DoravUle.
16 - The Sacred Heart TV Program will present, “The Personal
Approach to God,” on Saturday, Nov. 16, 6:25 a.m. on WAGA-TV,
channel 5. Guest speaker will be Father Charles F. X. Dolan, retreat
master of New York.
16 - Cathedral Club of Atlanta (for single adults) will hold a special
party for new members on Saturday, Nov. 16, 8:30 p.m. in the
Cathedral of Christ the King Center. For further information call,
Patricia Speechley, 874-7288 or Bill Hewes, 377-6889.
17 - St. Jude’s School, Spalding & Glenridge Drives, marks the close of
its observance of American Education Week with an Open House,
from 3 to 5 p.m. on November 17th. at 3 p.m., during a brief
ceremony honoring its founding pastor & first principal, Father
John D. Stapleton, a portrait of Father, painted by internationally
famous portraitist Mr. Pat White of St. Jude’s, will be unveiled and
placed on permanent exhibition in the school hall.
17 - Community of Christ Our Brother (a Catholic parish without
territorial boundries) will meet to celebrate the Eucharist on
Sunday, Nov. 17, 5:30 p.m. at the Bethlehem Center, corner of
University and Capitol Ave., located in Gammon Theological
Seminary. Nursery available. For information call, Kathy Goedeckc,
451-0875.
18 - The Parish Council of Catholic Women of St. Thomas More Church
will meet on Monday, Nov. 18. Rosary at 7:45 p.m. prior to the
meeting. Father Henry Gracz will be guest speaker. His topic: “Will
. These Changes Ever Stop?”
19 - Inquiry classes will be held in the rectory of Cathedral of Christ the
King on Tuesday, Nov. 19, 8:15 p.m. Classes conducted by Father
Vincent Prcndergast. All interested persons invited.
19 - The Guild of St. Paul will meet on Tuesday, Nov. 19, 7:30 p.m. in
the assembly room of Sacred Heart Church.
20 - Insight (a weekly religious experience) will be held at Holy Cross
Center, 3175 Hathaway Court, Chamblce, on Wednesday, Nov. 20,
9:15 a.m. Mass followed by discussion until 11:15 a.m. and repeated
Wednesday night, Mass at 7:30 p.m. followed by discussion until
9:30 p.m. Topic: “The Church’s Digression in the Middle Ages.”
21 - A morning of Recollection will be conducted by Monsignor
Michael Regan at Holy Cross Church on Thursday, Nov. 21, 9
am-noon. All parishioners invited.
22-23 - The Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, 48 Hunter St., S.W.
will hold its Fall Festival on Friday, Nov. 22 and Saturday, Nov. 23,
from 5 p.m. Snack bar, country store, fancy fruit baskets, turkey
booth, lamps, dolls and more. Parishioners, friends and public
invited.
17 - A general meeting will be held by the Cathedral Club of Atlanta on
Sunday, Nov. 17, 6 p.m., at the Cathedral of Christ the King Center.
Folk Mass will follow. All interested single young adults invited.
17 - Dedication ceremonies for St Thomas the Apostle Church,
Smyrna, will be held on Sunday, Nov. 17, 7 p.m. Archbishop
Thomas Donnellan will be principal concelebrant. A public
reception will follow.
23 - A workshop on “Person” in reference to Religious education will
be held at Our Lady of the Assumption on Saturday, Nov. 23, 9
a.m.-noon. All teachers, parishioners and parents invited to
participate.
24 - Youth Activity, sponsored by the High School of Religion will be
held at Cathedral of Christ the King Center, on Sunday, Nov. 24.
Fold Mass at 10 a.m. Breakfast at 10:45 a.m. A talk entitled; “Grape
Pickers Strike,” will be given by Luis Melindez.
17 - Legion of Mary Curia, Archdiocese of Atlanta, will meet on
Sunday, Nov. 17, 2:30 p.m. in the assembly room, Sacred Heart
parish house. Richard Beckman will show colored slides of his trip
to Ireland. Refreshments.
V " SL Johns Melkite Church will hold its annual social and Hafti
(dance) on Sunday, Nov. 17, 7 p.m. at the Hellenic Center, 2124'
Cheshire Bridge Rd., N.E. Arabic and American entertainment. $5
per person. Everyone welcome. For information call, 373-5922.
17 - Le Son Sacre, Marist’s liturgical folk group, will take part in the
liturgy of Immaculate Heart of Mary Church on Sunday, Nov. 17 1
p.m. Mass.
17 - The Parish Council meeting of Our Lady of the Assumption
Church will be held on Sunday, Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m. in the cafeteria.
17 - Our Lady of the Assumption Fraternity, Third Order of Mary, will
be held on Sunday, Nov. 17,4 p.m. at the church.
17 - Our Lady of Perpetual Help Fraternity, Third Order of Mary, will
meet at St. Anthony’s Church on Sunday, Nov. 17,4 p.m.
DECEMBER
6 - The Snoball Dance of Holy Cross parish will be held at the Holy
Cross Center, 3175 Hathaway Court, Chamblee, on Friday, Dec 6
8:30 p.m. Music by, “The Notables.” $3.50 per couple!
Kciresnments. All parishioners and friends invited.
Another World
Each moment of our lives is the time for expressing our love. All
too often, however, our love is reserved for our own little world. But
there is another world in which our missionaries live and work and
serve. And what a vast difference between the two! We have so very
much and this other world has so very little. One billion of its citizens
are fully occupied with the daily struggle-to stay alive.
SISTER Mary Hilda (left), known in medical circles as Dr. G
Hester, discusses the stark realities of hunger in Biafra with
superior, Mother Stanislaus of Dublin, Ireland. A member of
Missionary Sisters of the Holy Rosary, the nun is finishing
residency m Memphis, Tenn., city hospitals and at the famed St. J
Research Hospital for Children. Sister Hilda, of Winona Miss
K t0 u j0i V" e n 0f ‘ he 23 cogent-hospital commun
operated by her order m Biafra. (RNS)
World Council
Delegates
Praised
ARNOLDSHAIN, Germany
(NC)--Dr. Eugene Carson Blake,
general secretary of the World
Council of Churches (WCC),
praised the attitude of the
delegates to the WCC’s fourth
assembly at Uppsala in July
toward the “new, intimate
collaboration” with Catholics.
Dr. Blake was speaking at a
post-Uppsala evaluation meeting
for German delegates to the
assembly and ecumenical
secretaries from German
Protestant Churches.
He said those who had
predicted that Latin American
Protestant churches and
Orthodox churches in Eastern
Europe would criticize
collaboration with Catholics had
not seen their predictions
fulfilled.
He added, “This fact should
not be cited to prove that no
such concern is felt by these or
other churches. We know that the
effects of nine centuries of
polemics, East and West, do not
disappear in five years.”
What has the Church to do with all of this? Of and by itself it is
never going to be able to solve the economic and social ills of the
world. Yet, the Church has a mysterious and unique role as mankind
struggles to solve the problem of social justice and development.
The Church carries out this mission principally through a gigantic
missionary task forces men and women like yourselves who are so
filled with the love of Christ in their neighbor, that they have gone to
every part of the globe to be God’s instruments of salvation and signs
of His love to all men.
These missionaries are teaching; they are healing, they are
comforting, they are instructing in developing Africa, in teeming
Asia, in the city slums and the jungles of Latin America. They are
indeed turning something loose in the world; something mysterious
and powerful - the love of God for man. These missionaries are living
breathing proof of that love, for they are witnesses to it with deeds as'
well as words.
*?° w w y ° u help them? ° ne of the most effective of ways is
assisting The Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Genuine
concern is not confined, it is universal. So is the Society! Its concern
? e f Ch i UfCh , an d the whole of humanity makes it your ready
vehicle for lessening the gap between the two worlds. Through it your
love and awareness are universalized. Your continued sacrifices will
other worid. COnCern OSC Wh ° SUff6r and those wh0 sewe in that
SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the
3SKNS2*/ - * Tsr o “' «*»i38S»5;
366 F^fth a 8 R M Vere " d Edward T - O’Meara, National Director
niL F f h n A e ’ New York> N - Y - 10001 or directly to your local
Diocesan Director, The Rev. Noel C. Burtenshaw P O Rnv nna7
Northside «... 2699 Pe.ehrtee Road, iS?aS* SI