Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 2—The Georgia Bulletin, August 19,1971
BELL & THOMPSON COMPANY, INC.
Chamblee, Georgia 30341
458-4321
"Sporting Goods”
Chamblee Plaza
5444 Peachtree Industrial Bird.
PACEMAKER FINANCIAL
CORPORATION
(A Georgia Investment Corp.)
'Jew Issue June 30, 1971
300,000 SHARES COMMON STOCK
PRICE $1.50 PER SHARE
PACEMAKER invests in multiple housing in th<
greater Atlanta area, buys mortgage loans, de
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invests in undeveloped and commercial properties.
UNDERWRITERS
Securities Specialists, Inc.
Suite 1915 230 Peachtree Street, N. W.
Atlanta, Georgia
Phone 577-4880
This announcement is not an offer to sell or solid
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Gentlemen: Please send me a Prospectus.
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Bishop-Elect Brings Faith In
Catholic Education To New Post
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By Sue Cribari
WASHINGTON (NC) -
Bishop-elect Raymond A.
Lucker will leave his post as
director of the U.S. Catholic
Conference (USCC)
education department armed
with a set of personal
“credos” on Catholic
education.
“I believe that Catholic
education will continue to
play a vital role in the Church
in this country,” Father
Lucker told NC News in an
interview.
“I believe that the teaching
office of the Church is
essential to its mission.
“I believe that Catholic
education will be conceived
of in a broader way than we
have conceived of it in the
past.”
Education department
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director since 1969, Father
Lucker will be ordained
auxiliary bishop of the St.
Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese
on Sept. 8.
When he came to the
newly-reorganized education
department, Father Lucker
said, “all the then existing
divisions had had a long, and
I think fruitful existence as
separate entitites. They were
used to operating on their
own, and yet the mandate of
the USCC was that all these
divisions-and two new
ones-had to learn to work
together as a department.”
The priest holds a
doctorate in sacred theology
from the University of St.
Thomas in Rome and a Ph.D.
in education from the
University of Minnesota.
He has been “Msgr.
Lucker” for the past two
years, but rarely used the
title. “I never had any of that
red cassock stuff when I was
a monsignor,” he confided,
adding that he was appalled
at the price charged for that
item when he had to buy one
for his episcopal ordination.
Other episcopal trappings
have caused him similar
dismay. “Not one of those
big chunky things,” he
instructed the artist who is
looking for a simple silver
chain to match the pectoral
cross he will wear.
The bishop-elect finds
cause for optimism about
Catholic education even in
the U.S. Supreme Court’s
recent decisions voiding
nonpublic school aid
programs in Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island and
Connecticut-a trio of
financial blows which has
driven some of the most
seasoned optimists to the
pessimist camp.
“I think the Supreme
Court is forcing us to clarify
our educational philosophy,”
Father Lucker said, puffing
thoughtfully on his favorite
pipe. “We are forced to say,
‘Yes, we are for a school in
which religion is taught as an
integral part of the
curriculum.’... If we can’t
get certain kinds of aid with
that kind of school, then we
still have to stick to our
Catholic educational
philosophy.”
The priest added that he
thinks constitutional ways
can still be found to aid
nonpublic schools, citing as
possibilities aid to parents or
students rather than to a
school itself.
Father Lucker said he
believes Catholic education of
the future “is going to be
conceived in the very broad
sense as the total teaching
mission of the Church.”
“I thiuk we will continue
to encourage and support
Catholic schools to the extent
Priests Sue
C.U. Over
Salaries
WASHINGTON (NC) -
Two priests have filed suit in
federal district court here to
challenge a university’s right
to pay clerics less than their
lay faculty counterparts.
Father David J.K.
Granfield and Father Joseph
A. Broderick, the only priest
professors on the faculty of
Catholic University of
America’s school of law,
charged Aug. 2 that the
university refuses to pay
them salaries fitting their
professional qualifications.
Instead, the law professors
said, they have received
automatic salary cuts because
they are priests.
One issue involved in the
case is the vow of poverty
taken by most members of
religious orders - a
commitment which some
priests say pertains to an
individual but does not
preclude him from handing
over his salary for the support
of his order.
Catholic University
officials were not
immediately available for
comment on the suit.
possible, but that Catholic
people will also want to place
emphasis on other aspects of
e d u ca t i o n--like adult
education, or family
education, or the liturgy as a
communication of the word
of God.”
Two areas in this
broadly-conceived
educational picture which
need beefing up are programs
for minorities and programs
for students on college
campuses, Father Lucker
said.
Among the “many really
positive things happening” in
Catholic education, he said,
are:
-“Many, many more lay
people taking an interest in
educational questions and
becoming involved in
decisions affecting Catholic
education.”
-“A growing number of
Church-sponsored adult
education programs. “It’s just
fantastic the number of adult
education programs that are
developing all over the
country.”
-A large increase in the
number of “trained, qualified
directors of religious
education at both the parish
and diocesan levels.”
-A widespread interest in
the continuing education of
priests. “Not too many years
ago, most of us priests
finished our seminary training
and then, apart from reading
here and there, we didn’t feel
the need to go back and get
re-schooled.”
--The maturation of
Church-sponsored youth
activities. “Catholic youth
activities are breaking out of
the stereotype of just a social
or athletic program and
moving ahead in leadership
training programs ... en
couraging the idealism found
in young people for working
on such problems as racism,
war, drugs, the environment.
I think that’s great.”
The bishop-elect is also
enthusiastic about the worth
of the Catholic school and its
contribution to American
education.
“It’s not just a wild
statement to say that
Catholic schools are free of
bureaucratic red tape in
trying out experimental new
programs. They actually are.”
Catholic schools pioneered
use of the “new math” in
many areas, Father Lucker
said, and have also been
leaders in establishing
“middle schools,” where fifth
through eighth graders get
specialized instruction from a
number of teachers; and
“ungraded primary schools,”
where first through fourth
graders advance at their own
rate instead of being assigned
a set amount of material for
any one grade level.
“I know of a Catholic
school which combines a
Montessori-type pre-school,
an ungraded primary school
and a middle school,” Father
Lucker said, “all of this is
in an inner city serving
Mexican-Americans, Indians,
black students, and poor
white children.”
Father Lucker, 44, is going
home in the broadest sense of
the phrase as he begins his
duties as St. Paul-Minneapolis
auxiliary bishop. He was born
in St. Paul, attended the
archdiocesan seminary there,
and served as archdiocesan
Confraternity of Christian
Doctrine director six years
after his ordination there in
1952.
He was also a professor of
catechetics at St. Paul
Seminary and served as
archdiocesan superintendent
of schools from 1967 until he
assumed his USCC education
post in January 1969.
The bishop-elect’s interest
in Catholic education will not
cease when he goes to St.
Paul since he will be named
episcopal vicar for education
there.
Also unchanging will be a
long-nurtured conviction
about “wh at we’re really in
this whole business for”~the
development of “mature,
dedicated men and women of
faith.”
Seminarians Party
A patio party was given by Lee Wieland, president of the
Atlanta Metropolitan Serra Club, and his wife a their home on
Club Drive to honor the Atlanta Archdiocesan seminarians and
their parents.
Best Wishes St. Joseph’s Parish
now OPEN
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