High School Blessed In Fort Myers - St. Thomas University
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Transcript of High School Blessed In Fort Myers - St. Thomas University
Bishop Carroll's AppealFor Bishops7 Relief FundTo the Priests, Religious and Faithful:
As you know, each year at this time I bring your attentionto the heart-rending plight of our fellowman in other parts ofthe world not blessed with the kind of material resources withwhich God has so favored us. The Bishops' Relief Fundrepresents the united efforts of all bishops in the United Statesto bring desperately needed aid to the poor and needy inforeign lands.
In am happy to tell you in the past twelve months, theCatholics of our country have set a truly remarkable recordof charity. For instance, your donations have made it possiblefor Catholic Relief Services to give aid valued at $165,918,-948.00.*'"*'*'* %(v ;his huge sum of money was channeled into 77 differentcountries in order to help the destitute and homeless with food,clothing, bedding and medical care. It was also used, you willbe especially glad to know, in those unfortunate areas tocarry on an excellent program of teaching the illiterates andunderprivileged those skills and handicrafts that will enablethem to earn their own living. Furthermore it is a matter ofjust pride for us to recall that this vast program of charityhas been made available to the peoples of all these nationsregardless of race, creed or color.
At the Ecumenical Council I heard firsthand from mis-sionary bishops in many of these countries of the hardshipsand privations of their people and their exceedingly deepgratitude for the help made possible by your gifts and thegenerosity of our American Catholics. Needless to say, theirprayers are being offered daily that this year you will be assympathetic to their sad condition and as generous as in thepast. Our Holy Father himself has said that these needynations are looking to "the Holy See and to the continuedgenerosity of the Catholics of the United States for the main-tenance and furtherance of their various projects of zealand charity . . .
I commend most heartily to you these works of mercy| which are translating the mercy and charity of the Church in| a language understood by the people of all nations.
Very sincerely yours in Christ,
Bishop of Miami
(The collection will be taken up at all Masseson Sunday, May 19.) •
Hungary Expected To FreeCardinal Mindszenty Soon
VIENNA (NCi — Suspensevas almost visible in this gate-vay to eastern Europe as therama which could determinehe future of both Jozsef Cardi-al Mindszenty and the Church
Hungary was building up toclimax.
The fact that no one was talk-made the tension more
cute and the rumors more rife.
But what news was avail-able had led the general pub-lic to anticipate the emer-gence of the Cardinal Primate
"Tungary from his longof arrest and confine-
Cardinal Mindszenty, now 71,
JFeast Of Ascension,
iMay 23, Is Holyday§Thursday, May 23, is the
| Feast of the Ascension and I| a holyday of obligation.
Classes will be suspi nd< din observance of the feast Iin schools of the Dioce*-r ofMiami.
The faithful are urged toconsult their respective par-ish bulletins for the times |lof Masses.
entered the U. S. Legation inBudapest on Nov. 4, 1956 — arefugee in the face of the So-viet forces quelling Hungary'scelebrated but short-lived re-bellion against communist tyr-anny. Freedom fighters hadstormed the jail where he washeld and released him from hissentence of life imprisonmentonly four days earlier.
BISHOPS FREEDThe air of anticipation con-
cerning Cardinal Mindszenty'sfreedom had been building upever since April 18, when Fran-ziskus Cardinal Koenig, Arch-bishop of Vienna, went toBudapest and had a four-hourconversation with the HungarianPrimate at the American lega-tion. Cardinal Koenig had re-vealed earlier that he hoped topersuade Cardinal Mindszentyto go to Rome.
But what was viewed hereas the tip-off was the reportthat the Hungarian commu-nist regime had released fourbishops who had long beenunder house arrest. The freedprelates were identified asBishop Bertalan Badalik,O.P., of Veszprem, 72; BishopJozsef Petery of Vac, also 72;Auxiliary Bishop Mihaly En-drey of Eger, 57, and BishopJanos Bard, Apostolic Admin-
(Continued On Page 2)
^WOICETHE VOICE
6301 Biscayne Blvd.Miami 38, Fla.
Return Requested
Weekly Publication of the Diocese of Miami Covering the 16 Counties of South Florida
VOL. V, NO. 9 Price $5 a year . . . 15 cents a copy MAY 17, 1963
NAMED FOR BISHOP VEROT, FIRST VICAR APOSTOLIC IN STATE OF FLORIDA
High School Blessed In Fort Myers
Voice Photos
Bishop Verot High School Which Was Blessed Saturday In Fort Myers
Exterior View OS The Newest High School In The Diocese Of Miami
COMMUNION BREAKFAST FOLLOWS MASS SUNDAY
Catholic Teachers' Guild FormedPontifical Low Mass offered
by Bishop Coleman F. Carrollat 10 a.m. Sunday, May 19, inthe Cathedral will highlight therecent organization of the Cath-olic Teachers' Guild of the Dio-cese of Miami.
The first annual Communionbreakfast for the group, whichincludes Catholic members ofthe teaching profession at alllevels in parochial, private andpublic schools, will be held atthe Dupont Plaza Hotel indowntown Miami immediatelyfollowing Mass.
Father Francfs X. Canfield,president of the NationalCatholic Library Associationand professor of English atthe Sacred Heart Academy,Detroit, Mich., will preach thesermon during the Mass.
Principal speaker at the break-fast will be Dr. Howard Doolinof St. Hugh parish, CoconutGrove, a supervisor in the DadeCounty Public School system.
Father Francis Canfield
Charles O'Malley, a member ofthe faculty at St. Thomas Aqui-nas high school, Fort Lauder-dale, will be the toastmaster.
Membership in the new guild,formed by lay teachers fromCatholic, private and publicschools, includes representativesof various areas of the entireteaching profession. Its primarypurpose is the promotion of the
spiritual, cultural and civic in-terests of Catholic lay teachers.
In cooperation with the plan-ned campaign of the guild toacquaint Catholic members ofthe teaching profession withthe establishment and aims ofthe organization, all Catholicteachers in South Florida haveb e e n requested to registerwith their respective pastors.
Activities planned by the guildinclude quarterly meetings ofthe general membership; a cul-tural program including lecturesby outstanding speakers on edu-cational and other timely sub-jects; closed retreats and daysof recollection; and active par-ticipation in the teaching pro-gram of the Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine for the reli-gious education of Catholic chil-dren not attending Catholicschools.
The regular publication of abulletin will advise teachers ofcurrent activities and plans ofthe guild.
FORT MYERS — The 23rdhigh school in the Diocese ofMiami and the first Catholicsecondary school on Florida'ssouthwest coast was blessed byBishop Coleman F. Carroll Sat-urday and named for BishopJean-Pierre Augustin MarcellinVerot, first Bishop of St. Augus-tine, and representative of Flor-ida Catholics to the first Vati-can Council in 1869.
Bishop Carroll presided atLow Mass offered in the tem-porary school chapel by Msgr.William F. McKeever, Miamidiocesan superintendent ofschools. The sermon waspreached by Father JosephO'Shea, diocesan superintend-ent of high schools in the Dio-cese of Miami.
Speaking to parents and stu-dents from the counties of Char-lotte, Lee and Collier, BishopCarroll pointed out that thereare six million pupils in privateschools of this country becauseparents are exercising their fun-damental rights to send theirchildren to the schools of theirchoice.
EQUAL JUSTICEThe Bishop stated that it is
not fair for these students towalk to school while others rideand added that school boardsare not formed for the purposeof going into the bus business.Both public and private schoolsystems make substantial con-tributions to education, and eachshould receive equal justice andconsideration, he added.
He told the congregationthat they have a duty both ascitizens and Catholics to pro-vide the best education possi-ble. Bishop Carroll empha-sized that those in the Com-munist - controlled countries
(Continued On Page 3)
DDF Returns
Nearly CompleteWith returns nearly com-
1 pleted, books are now beingclosed on the 1963 DiocesanDevelopment Fund Campaign
, and it is expected that it willbe possible to announce thefinal result on Friday,May 31.
The minimum goal had; been set at $1,250,000 but that
figure has been surpassed, ashas been the $1,265,479.74 to-tal of the 1962 drive.
1 Those whose contributionshave been delayed must getin touch immediately withtheir pastors or with theDDF office in the ChanceryBuilding, 6301 Biscayne Blvd.
WILL BE ESTABLISHED WITH MONEY FROM AWARD
Pope To Create Peace Fund With Balzan PrizeVATICAN CITY (NO — Pope
John XXIII, the first individualto be awarded the Balzan peaceprize, will use the $160,000 prizemoney_to create what he called"a perpetual fund in favor ofpeace."
He made this announcementin the Quirinal Palace in thefinal phase of a three-partaward ceremony. The first twophases were held on the pre-vious day in the Vatican.In his speech at the Quirinal,
once the residence of the Popesand now the residence of thePresident of Italy, Pope Johnsaid to President Antonio Seg-ni: "Mr. President, you can wellimagine with what emotion thisBishop of Rome and humblePope of the Universal Churchcomes to this residence of thesupreme authority of the ItalianState."
These words appeared to drawa firm and clear line betweenthe spiritual authority of thePope and the temporal authori-ty his predecessors once heldbut which was wrested fromthem by Segni's political fore-bears.
The first part of the cere-mony was held in the Vati-can's Regal Hall in the pres-ence of Italian PresidentAntonio Segni, officials of theBalzan Foundation, other Bal-zan prize winners and mem-bers of the diplomatic corps,including U. S. Ambassador toItaly, G. Frederick Reinhardt.Then Pope John and the oth-
ers — except President Segniwho had a cold — went to St.Peter's basilica to hear, in thewords the Pope used in invitingthe others to join him, "the echoof the support all hearts giveto the sublime ideal of peace."
The following day Pope Johnwent to the Quirinal Palacewhere he arrived just after thewinners of other Balzan prizeshad received their awards.
A 21-gun salute by the Italianarmy thundered out as PopeJohn entered Italian territory.At the moment the Pontiff cross-ed the threshold of the QuirinalPalace, the papal flag was runup over the building's clocktower to fly next to the Italianflag.
The citation of the awardwas read to the Pope in theRegal Hall by Arangio .Ruiz,president of the Balzan Foun-dation's awards committee. Itsaid the prize given to thePontiff is intended to be "apublic recognition of your ac-tivity in favor of brotherhoodamong men and among allpeoples through appeals forpeace and to" the good will ofmen, and of your recent in-tervention at the diplomat- -ic level."The latter was taken as a ref-
erence to the Pope's appeal forpeace at the height of the Cubancrisis last October when Sovietships carrying arms were sail-ing toward a U. S. naval block-ade of that island nation.
The citation also praised thePope "for having promoted thebrotherhood of men and peo-ples, particularly during thelast year, inviting representa-tives of other Christian faiths,Orthodox and Protestant, to at-tend the ecumenical council andtake an active part in it, thusengendering between the mem-bers of the churches of theseconfessions and Catholics an at-
titude of greater future under-standing which will have mani-fold and important conse-quences, and for having estab-lished contacts which extend farbeyond the Christian commu-nity."
Frederick Fouquet, pres-
ident of the Swiss Senate,spoke of the Pope's work forpeace. The Balzan Foundationhas its headquarters in Switz-erland and is linked with theSwiss government.. President Segni then present-
ed Pope John with a scroll
stating he had won the prizeand stating the reasons why,as well as the insignia of theprize consisting of a gold chainand medal.
The Pope spoke briefly.He noted that while the Re-
gal Hall had welcomed kings
and emperors, it has also wel-comed "pilgrims of labor" whocame to Rome to thank PopeLeo XIII for his great encycli-cal on labor, Rerum Novarum.He closed with a blessing andremarked "after this little bless-ing here, now the great one inSt. Peter's."
A large but quiet crowd hadassembled in St. Peter's. Cardi-nals and diplomats took theirplaces informally.
There was applause as thePope arrived on a portablethrone, but no shouting.
Once the Pope had taken
his place on a throne beforethe Altar of the Confession,former Italian President Gio-vanni Gronchi, who is nowhead of the Balzan Founda-tion, spoke of Pope John's ad-dress of Easter when he saidthat the basis of internationalpeace is primarily truth.
Pope John in reply recalledthe five popes he had knownin his lifetime — Leo XIII, St.Pius X, Benedict XV, Pius XIand Pius XII. All of them were,he said, "true friends of hu-manity and courageu tisansof true peace."
Pope Has 'Lengthy Talk'With Cardinal Wyszynski
THE $160,000 BALZAN Peace Prize is receivedby Pope John XXIII at St. Peter's Basilica in theVatican from Giovanni Groncbi, present of the
NC Ptwrto
^Balzan Foundation and former Italian president.In the center is Msgr. Mario Nasalli Rocca d!Cornegliano, papal chamberlain.
VATICAN DAILY DENIES REPORT OF TRIP TO ABBEY
Pope Will Not Visit CassinoVATICAN CITY (NO — The
Vatican City daily L'Osser-vatore Romano, has --denied re-ports that Pope John XXIII willvisit soon the Abbey of MonteCassino, 75 miles southeast ofRome.
"Press agencies and dailieshave recently collected andspread reports which say thatthe Supreme Pontiff willshortly visit the Abbey ofMonte Cassino and evenother sanctuaries. We are au-thorized to declare that nosuch trip is foreseen for theHoly Father," the paper said.
The statement came on theheels of news reports on thePope's health. Although no offi-cial announcement of a trip toMonte Cassino was made by theVatican, it is known that such
a project was under considera-tion for some time.
However, it appears nowthat the Pope's doctors haveurged him to limit his activi-ties. The Rome newspaper IITempo reported that the Popesuffered a brief recurrence ofstomach trouble. However,the Pope held his usualWednesday general audiencein St. Peter's basilica. No con-firmation of II Tempo's reporthas been given by competentofficials. :The 81-year-old Pontiff ap-
peared somewhat pale, but hisvoice was strong as usual. ThePope talked at some length,touching mainly on the need fordevotion to the Rosary and:toMary.
The Pope's face showed thathe has lost some weight. His
audience schedule has been re-duced greatly although it isknown that the Pope finds itdifficult to comply with doc-tors' orders to limit his ac-tivities.
VATICAN CITY (NC) — Stef-an Cardinal Wyszynski, Primateof Poland, had a "lengthy" con-ference with Pope John XXIII,the day after he arrived inRome from Warsaw. '
The Thursday meeting tookplace despite initial reportsthat the Pope's busy schedulewould preclude his conferringwith the Polish Primate untilthe weekend.The meeting took place in the
Torre San Giovanni, ancienttower overlooking the VaticanGardens which was remodeledfor Pope John as a place ofretreat for the summer. Vaticansources said only that the twoconversed for a long time. Butno official would comment onthe subjects under discussion.One newspaper reported thatthe Pope and the Cardinal metfor two hours.
Cardinal Wyszynski arrived,at Rome's main railroad sta-tion accompanied by Arch-
, bishop Antoni Baraniak ofPoznan. Hundreds were onhand to greet the prelate, whohad conferred with Franzis-kus Cardinal Koenig, Arch-bishop of Vienna, when thetrain passed through the Aus-trian capital. Cardinal Koenighad conferred with CardinalWyszynski at length less thana week earlier during a five-day visit to Poland.As the Cardinal stepped off
the train platform, he pausedto acknowledge applause andsaid in both Polish and Latin:"May Jesus Christ be praised."
Rome papers have reportedrumors that the Cardinal mightbe here to discuss terms for aconcordat between the Holy Seeand Poland, a rumor which hasbeen privately denied by Vati-can officials.
The Polish Primate was driv-en directly from the station toRome's P o n t i f i c a l PolishCollege.
Hungary Expected To FreeCardinal Mindszenty Soon
(Continued From Page 1)istrator of the Archdioceseof Kalocsa, 54.The; reports of the four bish-
ops' new freedom came just twodays after news was publishedconcerning the arrival in Buda-pest of a Church dignitary. Hewas identified as Msgr. Agostf-no Casaroli, Undersecretary forE x t r a o r d i n a r y Ecclesi-astical Affairs in the PapalSecretariat of State.
Monsignor Casaroli had beenin Vienna as the Holy See's rep-resentative to an internationalconference on consular relations,sponsored by the United Na-tions:. Church sources neitherconfirmed nor denied that Mon-signor Casaroli had gone to
Budapest. But according to re-ports reaching here, he con-ferred with high officials ofboth the Church in Hungaryand the Hungarian government.
Cardinal Mindszenty wasunderstood here to be stronglyopposed to leaving the coun-try before receiving firm as-surance that the communistregime would relax its stran-glehold on the Church. ;Hungary's Deputy Premier
Gyula Kallai told a press con-ference last December that hiscountry was willing to negotiatewith the United States concern-ing ,the future of Cardinal Mind-szenty as part of a packagedeal looking toward betterU. S.-Hungarian relations. I
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Page 2 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
BLESSED BY BISHOP CARROLL At FORT MYERS
New Bishop Verot High School Dedicated
BISHOP JEAN-PIERRE AUGUSTIN MARCELLIN VEROTFirst Bishop of St. Augustine
(Continued From Page 1)have no choice of educationand reminded parents thatthey should cherish their dem-ocratic form of government inthe United States.
The new Bishop Verot highschool, the eighth built by Bish-op Carroll since the Diocese ofMiami was erected less thanfive years ago,, is a two-storystucture built around an open-air patio in the center.
Designed by Miami architectMurray Blair Wright, it frontson New Sunrise Drive at thecorner of Charles Rd. with alarge parking area. On the firstfloor is a large area which isbeing used temporarily as achapel, administration offices,clinic, library and boys' aridgirls' dressings rooms. .
Four large classrooms and ascience and biology laboratoryare located on the second floorwhere the architects have made
NEW HIGH SCHOOL NAMED FOR BISHOP VEROT
Fla. Vicar Apostolic In 1858Bishop Jean-Pierre Augustin
Marcellin Verot, the famousprelate for whom the Diocese ofMiami has named its newesthigh school in Fort Myers.,
; came to this country in 1830from Paris and assumed hisduties as a teacher in the Sul-pician College of St. Mary inBaltimore.
A great missionary in the. post-Civil War South who pos-sessed the depth of theologicalknowledge and vision whichhe was to demonstrate duringthe first Vatican Council, thethen Father Verot was ap-pointed Vicar Apostolic ofFlorida in 1858 and Bishop ofSavannah in 1861.
Recently described by a Eu-ropean historian as " the greatCatholic figure in the Recon-struction South," Bishop Verotwas an indefatigable student ofChurch affairs whose knowl-edge had been' broadened andenhanced by a wide pastoral'experience.. On June 26, 1867 Pope PiusIV announced his intention con-yoke an ecumenical council', thefirst such assembly since, theCouncil of Trent which wouldopen on Dec. 8, 1869 and beknown as the Vatican Council.In a lengthy pastoral letter to
Catholic people in Florida
and Georgia Bishop Verot pre-dicted that the forthcomingcouncil "will be etched in theannals of the Church as a glar-ing epoch and era where thefinger "of God , . . may be ex-hibited to the gaze of mankindwith new lustre and overpower-ing majesty for the . . . per-manent reign of order every-where in Church and State."
The prelate sailed for Eu-rope in October, 1869 and tookup quarters with 16 otherAmerican prelates at the oldNorth American C o l l e g ewhere his name may be seentoday- inscribed on a plaqueof Bishops resident there m1869-1870.During the council attended
by about 70 per cent of thehierarchy, around 70 prelates,Bishop Verot was the represen-tative American voice.
. In the first month of the ses-sions, Bishop Verot stresssedthe peculiarly American prob-lems that faced the Church inthis country, a dominantly Prot-estant culture, the rising in-fluence of pragmatic philosophyand increasing secularization inpolitics and education. On thequestion of papal infallibility,which the council unanimouslydefined as an article of Faith,the prelate's historical and ex-
egetical arguments helped re-fine the manner in which thedogma w a s ultimately ex-pressed.
In .addition, Bishop Verot dis-tinguished himself as one of thelearned prelates of his time dur-ing discussions on the physicalsciences, on the unity of thehuman race, on the rights and-essential dignity of the Negroesfor which he gave a brilliantand memorable defense, and onthe relationship of the Faith tomodern philosophy.
On Feb. 25, 1870, BishopVerot, who had since the closeof the civil war urged thatFlorida be made a separatediocese, received a communi-cation from Rome advisinghim that Pope Pius IX hadtransferred him from the Dio-cese of Savannah to the newlyerected Diocese of St. Augus-tine in Florida. On March 21,1870 a solemn Consistory inRome formally confirmedBishop Verot as First Bishopof the new See.
After his death in 1876 thefuture Cardinal Gibbons wroteof Bishop Verot, "He literallydied in harness and descendedbelow the horizon without a sin-gle fault to cloud his fairname."
Voice Photo
Bishop Carroll Presided At Low Mass Offered In School Chapel
provisions for future expansionand additional classrooms.
In his sermon at the Mass,Father O'Shea s a i d "all
houses of learning are terriblyimportant, but not all areequally important. That iswhy the first move of any
Voice Photo
NEW BISHOP VEROT High School, first Catholic secondaryschool on Florida's southwest coast, is blessed by Bishop Cole-man F. Carroll. At right is Msgr. Joseph DeVaney, V.F., pastor,St. Francis Xavier parish. At left is Msgr. David Bushey.
tyrant is to control the housesof learning. For it is thereinthat takes place the principalshaping of minds, the groov-ing of hearts, the molding ofcharacters for good or forevil.
"Not all houses of learninghave the same meaning, thesame promise as this one does,"Father O'Shea continued, "andI say that because not all housesof learning have The GreatTeacher to occupy its class-rooms and grace its corridors.
"God Himself came onearth to educate us. He toldus so. He said, 'Learn of Me,for I am the Way and theTruth and the Life.' And eversince that time the most im-portant question in determin-ing whether or not a man istruly educated does not con-cern the depths of his knowl-edge of mathematics, of lan-guages, or of history, but hisknowledge of, and following ofthe teachings of Christ. Thisis the philosophy which hasbrought this building into be-ing which explains why weare here today," FatherO'Shea declared.
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ENGLISH language teacher of Pope John XXIIT, Msgr. ThomasRyan, has been named Bishop of Clonfert. in Ireland
Polish Church Stands FirmOn Right To Teach Religion
BERLIN (NO — The Churchin Poland, its witness reducedvirtually to the two essential{unctions of worshipping andteaching, is determined it willnot yield its right to give re-ligious instruction.
But communist Poland hasbeen rdoubling its efforts toforce religious instruction intothe straitjacket the regimefabricated for it two yearsago.
The religious instruction issuewas seen here as an overridingreason for the reported recentmeeting between Stefan Cardi-nal Wyszynski, who as Archbish-op of Gniezno and Warsaw ishead of the Church in Poland,and Wladyslaw Gomulka, firstsecretary of the Polish commu-nist party and thus the coun-try's political chieftain.
The meetings followed hardafter the Catholic Bishops ofPoland jointly issued a pastoralletter declaring that religious in-struction would continue de-spite government harrassment.The pastoral, read in churchesthroughout P o l a n d , report-ed many cases of banning re-ligious instruction in privatehomes, parish property, chapelsand even in churches.
It said that fines of from 1,000zlotys ($43) to several thousandzlotys were being imposed bythe government on persons vio-lating the 1961 law restrict-ing religious instruction. It saidalso:
"Since the beginning of theschool year, state school in-spectors have been banningmen Religious from teachingreligion in nearly all dioceses.In the same way, Sisters andlay people are prohibited fromgiving religious instruction tochildren. .
"We will continue to teach re-ligion, because this is in con-formity with our conscience, ourvocation, and the highest lawcodes of our fatherland: theconstitution of the Polish Peo-ple's Republic, the decree aboutfreedom of conscience and pro-
fession of faith, the (1956) agree-ment between the governmentand the episcopate."
Puerto Rico FindsHomes For Exiles
SAN JUAN, P. R. (NO —The Catholic Migration Officehere found homes for 24 Cubanrefugees who fled the island ina fishing boat, were picked upnear the Bahamas by an oceanliner and brought here.-
There were eight men, sevenwomen and nine children in thegroup.
Manases Abella, 43, the fish-ing boat captain, said the groupmet at a prearranged spot ona Cuban beach and fled withonly the clothes they werewearing.
Pope's English jTeacher Named
i j| Irish Bishop |
VATICAN C I T Y (NO —Msgr. Thomas Ryan, popularEnglish-speaking Vatican prel-ate and a longtime personal as-sistant of Pope John XXIII, hasbeen named Bishop of Clonfert,Ireland. ,
He succeeds Bishop WilliamPhilbin who was transferred tothe Down and Connor diocese inJune, 1962.
Known to t h o u s a n d s ofpilgrims for his EnglM m-maries of Pope John,, re-marks at audiences, Bishop-elect Ryan has received widefame as the English languagetutor of the Pontiff.
The prelate's appointmentwas hailed by Archbishop An-gelo Dell'Acqua, Substitute forOrdinary Affairs at the PapalSecretarial of State, who call-ed the Irish monsignor bisd e a r e s t collaborator." TheArchbishop told the entire staffof the Ordinary Affairs sectionthat Bishop-elect Ryan hadworked in the secretariat "withgreat generosity and compe-tence" and that he had distin-guished himself by his deepdevotion to the Holy See andthe P o p e. Archbishop Dell'Acqua said he conveyed thePope's personal good •wishes.
Bishop-elect Ryan was bornFeb. 8, 1915, at Kilcommon,Ireland. He studied at theLateran University in Romeand earned degrees in theologyand canon law. He entered thediplomatic service of the HolySee in 1940 as an official of theSacred Congregation for Extra-ordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs.
In 1944 he was named secre-tary of the apostolic delegationin Turkey. It was there that hecame to know the future PopeJohn XXIII, who at that timewas apostolic delegate inGreece and Turkey. After hiselection to the papacy, PopeJohn chose Bishop-elect Ryanas his English teacher.
Pope Thanks Church In U.S.For S. America Missioners
BOSTON (NO — Pope JohnXXIII has expressed thanks forhelp given to the Church inLatin America by dioceses andreligious congregations of theU. S.
"The knowledge that thiseffort is not made withoutsacrifices touches Us deeply,"the Pope said in a letter re-ceived by Richard CardinalCushing, Archbishop of Bos-ton and chairman of the Bish-ops' Committee for L a t i MAmerica.
The Pope's letter was anacknowledgement of a report hereceived on a survey of effortsby the Church in the U. S. tomeet Latin America's need forreligious personnel.
The report said the numberof priests and Religious in Lat-in America rose from 2,530 inAugust, 1961, to 3,205 in Jan-uary, 1963, and gave other sta-tistics on U. S. Church aid toLatin America. It was includedin a letter sent to the Pope by
Archbishop Joseph T. McGuck-en of San Francisco, chairmanof the Subcommittee for Re-cruitment of the U. S. BishopsCommittee for Latin. America.
In his letter to CardinalCushing, Pope John said: "Werealize that it is not r -r-fluous personnel that i> Atto those countries, but thatgrave domestic needs are cur-tailed in order to grant laud-able aid to the Church inLatin America," which is "soimportant and imperiled amember of the Mystical Bodyof Christ."
The Pope said the Bishopsof the U. S. are doing "price-less work" for the Church inSouth America. They "not onlyencourage men and women Re-ligious to undertake new foun-dations in the South, thus de-priving themselves of such serv-ices," he stated, "but have,with their diocesan clergy, as-sumed the direction of numer-ous parishes."
Page 4 May 17; 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
AMONG BIRMINGHAM
Preplate Deplores Race RiotsMOBILE, Ala.- (NO — Arch-
bishop Thomas J. Toolen has de-plored the recurrence of racialstrife in Birmingham, but atthe same time has urged thatNegroes be reminded they haveobligations as well as rights.
The head of the Mobile-Bir-mingham diocese issued a state-
ment to theANCWC News Serv-ice the day a f t e r riots inBirmingham broke the momen-tary calm resulting from anagreement signed between whitebusinessmen-and Negro leaders.
On orders from PresidentKennedy, Federal troops mov-'ed into position south of the
THE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE of Medical Missionary Aspirants,founded and maintained by the diocese of Padua, Italy, hasover the past 13 years provided more than 80 medical mis-sionaries for the Church's missions in far-flung corners of the
. globe. At right, Archbishop Pietro Sigismondi, secretary of theSacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, blessesthe missionary crucifix assigned to Dr. Marco Faibbri as heprepares to depart for Nigeria. The Archbishop is assisted bymedical students from Kenya and India. '
Family Life Leader ScoresTax-Paid Birth Control Plans
NEW YORK (NC) — A fam-ily life leader expressed alarmhere at efforts by birth controlbackers to make government"a subdepartment of the Plan-ned Parenthood Federation ofAmerica."
Msgr. George A. Kelly, di-rector of the New York arch-diocese's Family Life Bureau,,cited efforts at the Federal,state and local levels to estab-lish tax-paid birth control pro-grams and commented:
"People who protest the man-agement of news by governmentwant government brought in tof~~ \ manage family life.
ed the physician of omittingfrom his book papal condem-nations of his opinions andignoring the views of "some ofthe best theologians of thecountry."
strife-torn industrial city.Archbishop Toolen said: "We
deplore that this violence hastaken place. Whoever did thisshould be punished for the de-struction caused. Our peoplehave been asked to pray forpeace, and as Catholics wecannot harbor hate in our heartsfcjr our Negro brethren. Ourpeople are not taking part inthis. We would like to see itall settled. We are glad that Ne-groes are obtaining some rightsbut do not approve of some oftheir methods."
"In the area of racial jus-tice," the Archbishop also said,"there are obligations as wellas_rights, and those in the civilrights field should remind theNegro race of their obligationto their fellowmen."
Earlier, in Birmingham,Bishop Joseph A. Durick hadappealed for "the best andmost peaceful techniques"to be used in resolving thecrisis.
The Auxiliary Bishop of Mo-bile - Birmingham, addressingsome 6,000 people — whites andNegroes — at an outdoor Mar-ian Day rally, had called"upon all people of both racesto do all possible to work to-wards a solution to our graveproblems here in Birmingham."
The agreement between whiteand Negro negotiators came aft-er five weeks of racial demon-strations that resulted in the ar-rest of more than 2,000 Negroes.
In his statement on the racialcrisis, Bishop Durick said:
"Even though those who arestaging these demonstrationsmay be convinced of the senseof urgency attending them, itdoes not mean that one can ig-nore the question of seeking thebest and most peaceful tech-niques . . .
"It seems to me that it is in-cumbent upon the moderate ele-ment of our city, especiallythose of strong religious inspi-ration and leadership, to tryonce again to initiate programsof harmony and conciliation." \
1st Negro In Space ProgramPraises Catholic Education
People who believe that aniron wall must separate Churchand State so that no state mon-ey may subsidize the teachingof monogamy or chastity, areperfectly happy at departmentsof welfare subsidizing fornica-tion and adultery."
Monsignor Kelly also tookissue sharply with Dr. JohnRock, a Catholic gynecologistwho has published a book,"The Time Has Come," inwhich he argues that it ismorally permissible to useanti-ovulation pills for birth
' control purposes. '
Charging that Dr. Rock"speaks not at all out of aCatholic conscience," he accus-
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (NO -They couldn't get'Capt. EdwardJ. Dwight, Jr., first Negronamed to the country's mannedspace program, back here toaddress the graduates at hisalma mater, Bishop Ward HighSchool — but they got the nextbest thing.
Father Francis Maher,school principal, extended theinvitation to Captain Dwightonly to learn he will be goingto another type prep school— prepping for space flight.
But Father Maher was sotaken with Capt. Dwight's letterthat he now has circulated it
as a sort of address by remotecontrol from the would-be as-tronaut. It said, among otherthings:
"Never did I realize whentrudging through the halls ofWard that the education I wasreceiving there was so impor-tant and would take me so far.
The world we live in is abeautiful handiwork of God. Inmy work, I study the earth aswell as the vastness of spaceand its wonderful design. It isthen that the true meaning ofits purpose and our purpose be^comes evident.
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555 ALTON ROADM I A M I BEACHJE2-I444
May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 5
Ascensum
/rfs t//> ro as
A Lesson Of The AscensionFor A Space-Minded World
During these days when' the conquest of outer space is verymuch in everyone's mind, we are about to observe the feast ofOur Lord's" Ascension into heaven.
It is timely and interesting just now to realize that thisparticular Feast above all things reminds us that we havebeen created by God to strive for a goal beyond the confinesof this earth. We are indeed on a pilgrimage, and ourjourney's end will find us in another world, the world ofGod's Presence.
While we find fascinating the information on outer spacebrought back to us by_our astronauts, it should not be forgottenthat Sb Paul long ago spoke of the marvels of heaven as sofar beyond our comprehension that neither the eye has seen northe ear heard nor the human heart conceived what God hasprpeared for "those who safely reach the supernatural world ofheaven beyond the farthest star.
The Ascension helps prevent us from becoming earthbound.It compels us to look upward and to adopt an eternal viewpointand to see far beyond the vision of human eyes. It challenges uswith the uncomfortable question: Am I taken up more with thethings of earth than with the realities of heaven?
We have to be deeply involved with the problems of lifenow of course,-but in so doing we face a twofold danger.Either we may try to embrace ' all that the earth offers,good and bad, while still desiring the joys of heaven or wemay become so engrossed with the challenges of this lifethat we forget we re on az &j6urney with a destination beyondthe grave.
The Ascension jars us into remembering that spiritually wehave always 'been trained "from childhood on to be "spaceminded," as we seek the conquest of self in trying to reach thegoal of God's home in another world.
Marriage Is Still SacredThe continuing public outcry prompted by the remarriage of
New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller is a remarkable thing, nomatter from what angle it is analyzed. Perhaps it serves to prove-'that we are not as blase and unconcerned about the violation ofthe sacredness of marriage, as statistics of recent years wouldlead us to believe. «: -
It is now a matter of lamentable record that one in fourmarriages ends in divorce in the United States. Over theyears many religious groups gradually and regretfully havetowered the bars on divorce and remarriage so that member-ship, in the' church has not been affected, By the change ofmates. The divorcee in a neighborhood is no longer ap objectof curiosity as was the case a generation ago. In short, as anation we seem to have taken it for granted that the idealsof unity and indissolubility in marriage were losing their'force in our times.
Hence, to many the storm of disapproval set off by Gov-ernor Rockefeller's remarriage came as a surprise. And it has
Strange But True
POUNDEDTHE MISSIONARY SOCIETY orSX PETER CtA^Ed^ARNEb
KM HERSELF THE TITLE OfMOTHS/? OF AFRICA"
DEDICATED WORK.IN PKOMOTlHG
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ECCLESIASTICAL.CROSSES DISTINGUISH
[ DlfWREMT RANKS IMTHE CHURCH^
•d c«oss 'WITH TWO SAKSSIGMF4ES AH ARCHBISHOP t
WHILE me TK/PU coast.WITH THREE CXOSSOARS,IS USeO ONLY BY-mc
POPE.
THIS VIVID PICTURE OFBANISHINfi THE DEMONS FROMIRELAND IS TAKEN WOM"lU MOSE
T CENTURY1IFE OF THE SAINT-
Armed Forces Day Prayer
not yet abated. Religious leaders of many faiths did not mincewords in describing him "as a man who broke up a familyin which there were four young children." Methodist Bishop FredCorson who was an observer at the Ecumenical Council called it"an appalling shock to the moral sensibilities and sense of fairplay" of average Americans.
Perhaps Governor Rockefeller, whose ambition to becomepresident has scarcely been concealed, is betting on the timehonored adage that the public quickly forgets. Let's hope he
• loses his bet. And we believe he will. However nonchalantAmericans seem to have become with regard to divorce intheir neighborhood, they still expect better of their leaders.
' Most especially they expect the highest kind of example from^the man who occupies the presidency, an office about which
. they still draw a circle of reverence.
The great point is not the relevance of his marriage to hispolitical future but the harm done to young and old Americanswho look to governors and certainly to presidents for good ex-ample in leadership as well as in their private lives.
In Birmingham—A Reminder. The newspapers with black, unnerving headlines about the
Birmingham riots remind us of the days during World War II orthe Korean War when we hurriedly opened the morning paper toread the latest discouraging story on the battle fronts. Howsimilar is some of the news today — bombs destroying homes,troops ringing a city, pictures of bloodstained, injured citizens,packs of angry people roaming a terrorized city in the dark-ness, jails bulging- with men and women, the president issuing astatement emphasizing the stand of the government, and so on —with too many reminders of the day when we were fightingenemies on foreign soiL
This current war however is in our, homeland, in the land ofthe free- and the brave. It is a throwback exactly one hundredyears to the war between the States, a kind of Civil War inminiature, brother against brother, citizen- against citizen: It is acolored man fighting for a chance for education for his children. Itis a white man determined that social changes will not be forcedon him at all or at least over night. One demands his rightto better housing be honored, the other insists that the Negro *build his house in another part of the city. One demands equal jobopportunities in areas long denied him; the other sees no reasonto break with old traditions which restrict certain kinds ofwork only to the whites.
In this deplorable situation, perhaps most people can un-derstand readily enough that it is difficult for many white peo-ple to drain off .the prejudices against the Negro built up
. for many generations. But there is'no reasonable alternative.The law of God demands that we recognize all human beingsas equal and blessed with inalienable rights. Moreover, the,law of the land demands that citizens recognize this and putit into daily practice.
In the more > and more confusing picture of warfare inBirmingham, surely mbst Americans are anxious for two things:
• 1. That the rights of all citizens Joe respected and where therehas been injustice in education, housing and employment, stepsbe taken immediately to begin to correct the abuses. 2. Thatthose crusading for rights remember that they cannot quicklychange hardened attitudes and ancient prejudices and thereforethat they combine prudence: with their driving sense of justice.
If in the heat of anger, neither side could be persuaded toact by by the dictates of the Christian law of love of neighbor, ,at least as citizens let them respect and observe the lawsof the land.
Tomorrow, (Saturday)May 18, is Armed ForcesDay.
In connection with itsobservance the followingArmed Forces Day Prayerwas composed by the Arm-ed Forces Chaplains Board:
Almighty God, who hast com-mitted unto Thy people thesafeguarding of values and theperpetuation of peace and goodwill, we pause before Thee ingratitude on this Armed ForcesDay, 1963. In full recognition ofour responsibilities, we rededi-cate ourselves as the custodiansof this Nation's defenses.
We are cognizant that ourtask is insurmounable, if wewalk alone. In our own strengthwe can neither prevent a warnor win the peace. But in Thystrength we can experience"Forces in Depth;" we canstand as a bulwark of peace andsecurity; we can be the em-bodiment of Duty, Honor, Coun-try. We pray, therefore, thatThou will endow us with theability to take a hard look at
our future. Grant us the will-ingness to be one team; toaccept one mission; and to ac-.complish one objective. Witfithis dedication, we shall fulfillour role as an "Essential.Forcefor Freedom" in both peace andwar.
As a Nation," we have ac-cepted the challenge of prog-ress and recognized that it hasno visible boundaries. Throughthe unfolding of heretofore hid-den mysteries, man has plum-
-meted into, outer space and re-turned to give his testimony. InThine own Divine wisdom, Thouhas shared with man the abili-ty \o build an atomic subiri^Hneand penetrate the dep ofthe great waters. The ancientpoet said that these things are"too wonderful for me," yetThou has revealed them to thisgeneration."
Grant, O God, that this in-siglit, this power and this re-dedication may enable us totraverse-all "walls;" to expe-rience genuine brotherhood; andto live in peace in one world.Amen.
Msgr. Donald MacLeanThe Voice last week announc-
ed the death of Msgr. DonaldMacLean in his home Dioceseof Antigonish, Canada, wherehe had returned only a fewmonths ago^ He had served sev-en years as assistant in LittleFlower parish, Coral Gables,after his retirement from Catho-lic University of America wherehe had served on the faculty for33 years.
Brilliant, yet humble, Moa-signor MacLean never discuss-ed his long career in. the serv-ice of the Church. From theDiocese of Antigonish, however,The Voice has secured this ad-ditional information which themonsignor's many friends willbe surprised, yet happy, tolearn.
Monsignor MacLean wasspecial guest at the UnitedNations charter conference in1945. He took part in the Ge- .neva Naval Conference in1927; the 1932 Geneva Disarm-ament Conference and , theLausanne Conference.In recognition of his work he
was awarded membership inthe Academic Diplomatique In- -ternational with headquarters in
Paris. He had done post-gradu-ate work at Columbia, Harvard,McGiH and the Geneva Schoolof International Studies, andheld several degrees. He was arenowned author.
Among his many works are"The Morality of the Strike,""A Dynamic World Order,""Christian Industrial Democra-cy," "Pope Pius XII, Apostleof World Peace" and manyothers.
He had lectured throughoutthe world, including Austria,Denmark, England, Belgium,France, Germany, Switzerland,South America, Australia andNew Zealand.
In recognition of his laborsfor the promotion of a Chris-tian social order and worldpeace, in 1940 he was elevat-ed by Pope Pius XII to thedignity of Domestic Prelate.He was honored with severalspecial audiences by Pope '
.Pius XII and Pope Pius XI.Msgr. MacLean also enjoyed
the honor of carrying the can-opy .for Pope Pius XII on theoccasion of the canonization ofSt. Maria Goretti in 1950.
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Page 6 May 17, 1963 THf VOICf Miami, Florida
The Role of Mary as 'Queen of Converts' /S ALTAR BOY NAMED "SPECK"
VBy MSGR. JAMES J. WALSH
Every priest knows of con-verts who were led into theChurch mainly through their in-terest in our Blessed Mother.A M e t h o-dist minister,f o r instance,some time agoattributed h i sconversion to anintense study ofthe p l a c e ofMary in the Oldand New Testa-ments. Ronald MSGR. WALSHKnox, from thevery, day he was ordained anPf i;an, did a most astonish-ii%-<ning for a non-Catholic- —he vowed never to preach with-out making some mention ofOur Lady.
There are others, however,for whom the opposite is true.Some have found Our Lady aformidable obstacle in theway of conversion. The ex-perience of a certain manseveral years ago in this mat-ter is worth repeating. Wewill let him tell it in his ownwords:
"I hadn't given much thoughtto the Blessed Virgin, either infavor of her or against her, asI was wrestling with the prob-lem of the Church's claims tobe the true church.
EVIDENCE SURPRISING"I thought I would never be
able to accept so sweepinga claim, but I did. The reason-ableness of it, backed up by theevidence of miracles andprophecies, surprised me.
"And then just when I was
ready to relax and make the'great act of faith' I seemed tonotice for the first time the'problem of Mary.' All the crit-ical things I had ever heardabout the excesses in Catholicdevotion to the Mother of Christseemed to make sense, and inmy confusion I felt as far awayfrom the Church as ever.
"I had often heard that su-perstition played a great partin the Catholic cult of Mary.Thanking of people kneeelingbefore her statue, kissing themarble foot as if it were ameans of luck, wearing med-als about the neck, burningcandles and 'counting' beads— all this seemed to confirmthe charge that only the illiter-ate and the childish couldstomach devotion to theVirgin.
"I realize how snobbish thissounds now. But at the time Iwas irritated that the Church,could use this as a kind of sopfor the ignorant. It was stillmy belief that such sentimentaldevotion did not belong in thereligion of educated people.Mary had become a biggerproblem for me than all theother problems I had faced.
PRAYERS AN EFFORT
"The priest who was instruct-ing me advised me to do twothings — pray to Mary for herhelp and read all that I couldabout her. The reading I wasglad to do. The praying costirie much effort. I found it very
difficult to say even one HailMary without thinking of theobjections to such a practice.
"The very first jolt I gotcame from learning that therewas so much written about,her. It seems that every Cath-olic writer who touches on re-ligion, especially convert writ-ers, has to say something infavor of Our Lady, as they
v usually call her.
"At first I thought this wasmore or less expected of them,a kind of duty they were sup-posed to fulfill. But even Icouldn't believe that for long.
"I was really startled in read-ing Reissa Maritain's 'We HaveBeen Friends' to learn that es-teemed scholars were ferventdevotees of Mary. Mrs. Mari-tain tells of an incident that oc-cured before her conversion andduring a serious illness.
MARITAIN AND WIFE"Leon Bloy's wife came to
visit her and brought her a med-al of the Blessed Mother to theannoyance of Mrs. Maritain.But as the medal was placedabout her neck, she later ad-mitted: 'In a moment, andwithout realizing what I was do-ing, I was confidently appealingto the Blessed Virgin, and thenfell into a gentle and healingsleep.'
"I must admit I was im-pressed by the fact that thegreat philosopher Maritain andhis wife believed this.
"Soon I discovered that Gil-bert Chesterton arid HiliaryBelloc, those literary giants,were forever using their im-mense talents to describe therole of Mary in the world.Some of Chesterton's greatestwriting deals with the theme
, of Mary.
"He gave me a hard pushwhen he wrote: 'The instantI remembered the CatholicChurch, I remembered her;when I tried to forget the Catho-lic Church, I tried to forget her.'
CONFUSION DISAPPEARS"Soon my confusion began to
disappear. It was cleat thatMary was not being made intoa god, but that we were onlybeginning to understand howgreatly God Himself had hon-ored her.
"I came to see that all theexternals — medals, statues, ro-saries — while they can beabused by a few, were impor-tant and reasonable helps.
"I understand now that sheis the spiritual mother of allfollowers of Christ, saint andsinner, scholar and illiterate,and that each of them needsher.
"We need her, because Godhas planned it this way. Hedidn't have to. He could havegotten along very well withoutMary. But the fact is His planhad her in the top place amongcreatures.
"And now it seems most nat-ural to me to keep her there inmy spiritual life, in the spot des-ignated by God, next to theplace only Christ can hold."
If W e Miss Heaven, Its Our Own FaultBy FATHER LEO J. TRESE
You are fairly sure that youwill get to heaven, are you not?
You should feel secure on thisscore. The divine virtue of hopewas implantedin your soulwhen you werebaptized.
You began toexercise t h i svirtue when youb e c a m e oldenough to un-derstand t h em e a n i n g of F a t h e r T r e s eGod's love foryou. You learned that God madeyou because He wanted youwith Himself in heaven. Youlearned that God has promisedyou whatever graces you may-need, throughout your life, inorder to come to Him in heaven.
£ j learned that, God is allgbnuirful; whatever Htf wants todo, He can do. You learned thatGod never breaks a promise;what He has said He will do,He will do.
You probably were not con-scious of .any formal chain ofreasoning. Yet, at some earlypoint in your spiritual develop-ment you wrapped all thesetruths together and made artact of hope. You knew then, asyou know now, that if you doyour reasonable best to cooper-ate with God, He will bring yousafely through all dangers. Hewill bring you to Himself inheaven.
It is easy to see why an actof hope is also an act of ador-
•lit*.jtion. B* hope we acknowl-edge God's infinite goodness,His infinite power, His abso-lute fidelity. Conversely, wecan see why despair is sucha grave sin.Despair (even undue anxiety)
questions God's power — Hisability to help us conquer ourtemptations — or questions Histrustworthiness. What is worstof all, despair questions God'slove; questions whether He real-ly cares what happens to us.
We can miss heaven, ofcourse; but if we do so, it willbe only because we have neg-lected to use God's grace. It willbe only because we have notreally tried. The sole uncertain-ty is the uncertainty of our ownperseverance. It is good to havea healthy mistrust of ourselvesand our own strength.
We should be idiots to thinkourselves incapable of sin. Yet,our mistrust of self is compen-sated for, overwhelmingly, byour trust in God. He wants usin heaven far more than we our-
selves want to get there. Shortof taking away our free will,there is just nothing God will notdo to get us there.
It is a rare thing for a per-son to sin by despair. It is arare thing for a person to de-cide, "I am lost. I cannot pos-sibly get to heaven." It even israre for a person to entertaingrave (as opposed to reason-ble) fears for his salvation. Suchstates of mind do occur. How-ever, more often than not suchmorbid feelings are symptomsof mental or emotional illness.Rational thought has been block-e d , or seriously disturbed. Insuch a state of unwilled depres-sion the sufferer is not guiltyof sin. He needs a psychiatristmuch more than he needs apriest.
Against the virtue of hope,sins of presumption are muchmore frequent than sins ofdespair. Presumption occurs
..if we expect God to do, notonly His own full part in get-ting us to heaven, but to do
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our part as well. Figurativelywe twist God's arm, trying toforce from Him graces towhich we have no right. Wemay neglect prayer. We mayneglect the sacraments.
We may expose ourselves un-necessarily to temptation. Wemay read books which we shouldnot read, see movies which weshould not see, cultivate friend-ships (perhaps a divorced per-son?) which can only spelldanger. When sin ensues, as in-evitabfy it must, we assure our-selves that God is good, Godunderstands our weakness, Godwill not cast us off.
What we really are saying, insuch an instance, is that Goddoes not care whether we loveKim or not. God will have uson any terms, even our own. Inshort, we say that God is a fool.This is the sin of presumption.
If God had to make a choice,doubtless He would prefer thatwe expect too-much of Him,than that we have no confi-dence at all.
. However, -the golden mean ofhope — secure but not presump-tuous — must be our aim andpractice. We shall make ourmistakes. Spiritually we maydwadle, wander, stumble, evenfall. If we fall a dozen times,still we reach for God's out-stretched hand and rise again.We do not give up. That is theimportant point: we do not giveup. We keep trying. We do ourhonest best and trust God tobring us safely to the end ofour zigzag path. He will.
"The church bells are ringing wet I"
'Labor Unions Are WorthPrice/ Magazine Asserts
MSGRHIGGINS
By MSGR. GEORGE G. HIGGINS
Fortune magazine, which ca-ters primarily to a select clien-tele of business executives, isjust about the last place in theworld that onewould expect tofind an articlein defense oft h e AmericanLabor m o v e-ment.
I'm p l e a s e dto report, how-ever, that theMay issue fea-tures such an
s article under the title "LaborUnions Are Worth the Price."
This article by Max Ways ismore sympathetic to the Ameri-can labor movement — andmore critical of labor's critics— than any article I have readduring the past few years. It isso sympathetic to organized la-bor that if Mr. Ways had pub-lished it in a less respectableperiodical, he probably wouldbe written off in many circlesas a stooge for the labor move-ment.
The "price", of labor unionsreferred to in the title of Mr.Ways' article is a certain de-gree of interference with the so-called law of supply and de-mand. Labor unions, he says,are worth this price if only be-cause the alternative — somesort of governmental interven-tion in the field of wages andprices — would be much morecostly in the long run.
BARGAINING"Although collective bargain-
ing as it is now practiced in the-United States," Mr. Ways pointsout, "does involve many seriousdepartures from an ideal marketsystem, it is a lot closer andmore responsive to marketsthan any system of governmentintervention could be." An un-derstanding of this fact, hestates, might convince Americanmanagement that its real inter-
ests . parallel those of GeorgeMeany and company.
Mr. Ways' defense of orga-nized labor is aimed principally,though not exclusively, at those"liberal intellectuals" who wereonce staunch supporters of theAmerican labor movement but,according to Mr. Ways, havenow turned against it.
"The same group," he says,"that ten years ago gave la-bor leaders too much creditfor the improved lot of theAmerican worker now heapson labor leaders too muchblame for the discords ofAmerican life. Unions are saidto belong to the past whilegovernment is seen as themain hope of the future in la-bor situations, as in so manyother fields."
In my opinion, Mr. Ways' re-peated criticism of this group ofso-called "liberal intellectuals"is somewhat doctrinaire. Not allof these so-called intellectualsthink that unions belong to thepast, and not all of them arelooking to government as themain hopeof the future in laborsituations. Some of them — themajority, in my opinion — arestill convinced that unions havean indispensable role to play inAmerican economic life.
ARBITRATIONThey are also persuaded that
compulsory arbitration wouldbe much too high a price to payfor stability and peace in thefield of labor-management rela-tions. The fact that some ofthese intellectuals are severelycritical of American labor un-ions doesn't necessarily meanthat they have turned againstthe labor movement — it maymean exactly the opposite.
In any event, Mr. Ways hasserved a useful purpose in de-fending the labor movementagainst some of the more ex-treme charges which the "liber-al intellectuals" and others arecurrently leveling against it.
May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 7
WQRK ON REVISED PRAJF1\NEARLY FINISHED BY LITURGICAL COMMISSION
Council Unit Completing Worship ProjectVATICAN CITY (NO — The
Vatican council's LiturgicalCommission virtually completedits work on the revised draftdeclaration on "worship in thefirst two weeks of its scheduledthree-week' meeting, accordingto Archbishop Paul J. Hallinanof Atlanta.
The Georgia prelate, the^©nly American member of thecommission, told the NCWCNews Service that the com-
mission had just about put thefinal touches on all seven ofthe remaining chapters of theproject on ' the liturgy.
Archbishop Hallinan indicatedthat some of the comingc h a n g e s surrounding t h eChurch's public worship will:
• "Close t h e vernaculargap" between the Roman Rite,now mostly in. Latin, and theEastern Rites, which mainly
use the languages of the people.
• Restore the y e a r -roundcommemoration of the eventsof the Redemption to its pre-eminent place in the liturgy.
• Give a more pastoral slantto the Divine Office.
• Lead toward more simple,less ostentatious, church art.
TO KEEP ACTIVEArchbishop Hallinan. said that
plans are already under way to
Voice PhotoEPISCOPAL BISHOP James L. Duncan, Suffra-gan Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of SouthFlorida, and Mrs. Duncan were hosts to Bishop
Coleman F. Carroll, right, during the banquetof the 41st annual convention of the EpiscopalDiocese held at the Hotel Deauville.
UN AGENCY IS TOLD
Individual Holds Peace 'Key'NEW YORK (NO — The en-
cylical Pacem in Terris stressesthat "international peace beginsin the souls of each one of us,"a representative of Pope JohnXXIII told the U.S. Committeefor the United Nations.
Leo Cardinal Suenens, Arch-bishop of Malines-Brussels, Bel-gium, said at the annual Aieet-ing of the committee, composedof 135 national organizations,that the Pope's encyclical pointsout that peace must begin at
, this first level of the individual.
The Cardinal was appointedby Pope John as his representa-tive at the committee meetingin response to an invitation is-sued toy Robert S. Benjamin,chairman of the committee. TheCardinal, who spoke in U.N.headquarters here, said he hadpresented "in the name of theHoly Father" a copy of Pacemin Terris to U.N. secretary gen-eral U Thant.
Among those present tohear the Cardinal were Mu-hammed Zafrulla Khan, presi-dent of the U.N. General As-
~ sembly; Adlai Stevenson, headof the.. U.S. mission to theU.N.; Archbishop Egidio Vag-nozzi, Apostolic Delegate tothe U.S.; and Auxiliary Bish-op James H. Griffiths, observ-er of the Holy See at the U.N.
,. Cardinal Suenens referred tothe Pope's call for establish-ment of a public authority ofworldwide scope to ensure thecommon good and to the Pope's
appeal for collaboration amongmen in certain spheres despitetheir opposing ideologies.
He dwelt much longer, how-.ever, on the role of the individ-iial in regard to peace, thethreat of nuclear war and theneed for aid to developing na-tions.
The Cardinal said there is afour-fold appeal in the ency-clical: for respect for the in-dividual, for collaborationamong nations, for the crea-tion of a supranational powerand for collaboration amongmen despite their ideologicaldifferences. ~~~
Cardinal Suenens said that thePope's pleas for collaborationamong nations means "that peo-ples do not close themselves offin narrow compartments andthat they place in common theirindividual riches, at all levels,and that they enter into broadmutual interchanges."
keep the council's commissionon worship active even afterthe council approves its liturgyproject. He cited as the think-ing of Arcadio Cardinal Lar-raona, C.M.F., president of theLiturgical Commission that theliturgy declaration will be the
' first item on the agenda whenthe council Fathers reconvene.
The Archbishop disclosedthat the council Fathers willreceive a printed booklet pre-senting the original schemaand the revised one in paral-lel columns. Major revisionswill be printed in bold facetype, and lesser ones initalics.
But Archbishop Hallinan saidhe believes that there will beno need for further conciliardebate on the liturgy.
. PROPER LIGHTArchbishop Hallinan spoke of
provisions for use of the lan-guage of the people in the LatinRite, And he said that whiledirecting the liturgy toward amore Christocentric approach,proper light will be kept on thefeasts of the saints.
"In sacred art," continuedArchbishop Hallinan, "thedominant theme will be sim-plification." He said there willbe an effort to have dignityin churches, but w i t h o u t
^ sumptuousness or ostentation.
"We won't tear down anychurches," he said. "We areonly looking to the future."
The prelate said that in thefield of music, the council willprobably encourage more con-gregational participation insinging.
He added:.
"We are not attempting to.dislodge Gregorian chant. Ifthe people can sing Gregorian,fine. If their singing must bein the vernacular we mustallow for that."
But in this regard, Archbish-op Hallinan said it is very hardto sing Gregorian chant withwords other than the originalLatin.
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Love YouMost Reverend
Fulton J. Sheen
When you read this column, I will be in Rome makingan annual report to the Holy Father and his Congregationof the Propagation of the Faith on how well we have ful-filled our stewardship during the past year.
As the representative of the Holy Father's PontificMission Societies in the United States, we are responsiblefor the following duties:
1. To inspire the bishops, priests and faithful of theUnited States to aid the Holy Father in caring for 80,000schools; 10,000 hospitals and dispensaries; 2,000 orphan-ages; 400 leprosaria; 500 homes for the aged; and 300,000missionaries in various parts of the world.
2. To inspire the faithful of the United States tofulfill the words of the Holy Father that he is to be"first and principally aided." The Pontiff does not saythat he is to be uniquely aided but that, as Vicar ofChrist, he is to be the first one thought of in missionaryaid; secondly, the principal part of the aid is to begiven to him.
Knowing the duties that have been imposed upon us aswe make our report, suppose we asked you to take overat this point. How w<$uld you feel if the Holy Father askedyou how much the Catholics of the United States gave himfor all the Missions of the world last year? Especially ifyou had to answer, "Twenty-eight cents!" Would you boast _of the fact by saying: "Your Holiness, every American Cath-olic so loves the Missions that he has-denied himself, through-out the 365 days, the equivalent of one package of cig-arettes or the equivalent of one-half a cocktail. The richest
. country in the world has sunk the Cross deep into its ownheart to make this generous offering of twenty-eight cents!"Would you say that? Well, how do you think we are goingto feel? Aren't there 100,000 of you who could send $10 toThe Society for the Propagation of the Faith right now?If you don't, I'm going to lose my job!
GOD LOVE YOU to J.E. for $5 "Today I was feelingabsolutely depressed and convinced that I wasn't goingto be able to dig out from under a mass of assignments.Then I read your column and my sense of/proportionwas restored. Use this as the Holy Father sees fit." . . .to Mrs. J.AX. for old gold and jewelry "It's only catchingdust around the house, so you might as well use it to'catch' souls." . . . to'C.A. for $13 "When my lost walletwas returned to me, I decided to give all the moneyin it to the Missions. I want to help the poor of theworld." . . . to M.A.R. for $30 "How can I buy a dressfor a graduation dance when so many in the Missionshave nothing to put on their backs! They need this moneymore than I need a prom dress."
At a loss for gift suggestion? Turn them into a g; ^for The Society for the Propagation of the Faith by selectingour smart cufMink sets (oval or square), tie clasp orladies' charm. Made of gold-colored Hamilton finish with theraised red insignia of the Society, these items are idealfor seminarians, class awards, graduation gifts. Specify thei^ems you desire, enclose a minimum offering of $3 foreach piece and send your name and address to The Societyfor the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, NewYork l, New York.
SHEEN COLUMN: Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice toit and mail it to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Di-~rector of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N.Y. or your Diocesan Direetor.Rev. Neil J. Flemming, 6301 Biscayne Blvd., Miami 38, Florida.
Page 8 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
'( CENT DINNER guests at the Catholic Children's Home,S-«rrine, were members of the board of directors for the home
as well as board of directors of the Catholic Welfare Bureau.Shown above at the speakers' table with Bishop Coleman F.Carroll are Mrs. Richard B. Roberts, Sir Richard B. Roberts,K.S.G., Mrs. Robert Wolf, Msgr. Bryan 0. Walsh, Robert Mackle
and Sister Mary Edith, S.S.J., children's home superior. Atcenter table are Mrs. Homer Briggle, Father John J. Nevins,Juvenile Judge Ben Sheppard, Joseph M. Fitzgerald, James W.McCaughan, John Foy and Stuart Patton. Guests viewed facili-ties at the home.
Two Men From Miami Diocese Ordained To PriesthoodMODERN FACILITIES at the new Catholic Children's Home inPerrine are pointed out by Bishop.Coleman F. Carroll to RobertMackle, Juvenile Court Judge Ben Sheppard and Joseph M. Fitz-gerald, during a recent visit to the diocesan institution.
Two young men whose fami-lies are residents of the Dioceseof Miami were ordained to thepriesthood in Superior, Wis., andCullman, Ala., while a third willbe ordained in Camden, N.J.
Father James D. Richards,son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold J.Richards of St. Elizabeth par-ish, Pompano Beach, was or-dained a priest for the Dioceseof Superior by Bishop George A.Hammes in the Cathedral ofChrist the King in Superior.
Father Gregory Fleischer,O.S.B. received the sacramentof Holy Orders from ArchbishopThomas J. Toolen, Bishop of theDiocese of Mobile-Birminghamat the Sacred Heart Church inCullman.
Father R i c h a r d Will iamPhelps, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed-ward Joseph Phelps of St. Do-minic parish, Miami, will be or-dained a priest Saturday, May25 in the Cathedral of the Im-
U.S. Bishops Plan
To Convene In RomeWASHINGTON (NC> — The
1963 annual General Meeting ofthe Bishops of the United Stateswill be held in Rome, Italy,where the cardinals, archbish-ops and bishops will be attend-ing the second session of theSecond Vatican EcumenicalCouncil.
The announcement was madeat the National Catholic Wel-fare Conference headquartershere. Dates for the meetinghave not been fixed.
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May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 9
THIS FOOTBRIDGE which crosses Minnesota Route 494 be-tween Richfield /and Bloomington was constructed by the fed-eral and state governments for the students attending Assump-tion parochial grade school in Richfield. While this safety devicewas built solely {or the protection of Catholic school children incrossing busy highways, parochial school students in Minnesota,as in many areas of the U.S. are not allowed to ride publicschool buses designed to protect school children from traffic.
House Committee ApprovesPublic-Private College Aid
WASHINGTON (NO — TheHouse Education Committeehas approved a $1,195,000,000program of Federal aid for con-struction at public and privatecolleges and universities.
Church - related institutionsof higher education are on anequal footing with others inthe measure which was apf-proved 25 to 5 and sent tothe House Rules Commitee.
The proposal would help fi-nance academic facilities suchclassrooms and laboratories.
Excluded are facilities to beused for "sectarian instructionor religious, worship" or those"to be used primarily for aprogram of a school or depart-ment of divinity."
DECISIVE FACTORThe committee action was
tantamount to rejection of theKennedy administration's re-
peated requests that Congresskeep intact its "omnibus" billof 24 proposals for all levelsof education.
The measure was introducedby Rep. Edith Green of Oregon,chairman of the House sub-committee on higher education.
Mrs. Green also sponsoredlast year's college aid billwhich died on the House floor.A decisive factor was the last-moment opposition of the in-fluential National EducationAssociation which took excep-tion to proposed equal treat-ment of public and privateinstitutions.
The Green bill (H.R. 6143)authorizes Federal aid for fiveyears, but proposes that moneybe set aside for only threeyears. It says Congress shouldreview .the program at the endof its third year.
AGREES ON REF^NbUU TO AMEND CONST ftUt ION
Missouri To Vote On Private School BusesJEFFERSON CITY, MO.
(NC) — The Missouri Househas unanimously agreed to in-troduction of a bill to amendthe state constitution and pro-vide a referendum which, ifapproved by the voters, wouldestablish state aid for trans-portation of private schoolpupils.
By RHEA FELKNOR
ST. LOUIS (NC) — Thou-sands of Missouri Catholic par-ents are aware of a new feelingof solidarity after mass protestsover the legislature's action ofa school bus bill.
Protesting what they took tobe unfair discrimination in thekilling of the bill to permitnonpublic school pupils to ridetax-paid school buses, theparents demonstrated spon-taneously in more than 30 dif-ferent towns.
There were no incidents dur-ing the enrolling of hundreds ofchildren from parochial schoolsinto public schools. Nearly allthe demonstrators seemed con-cerned with preserving a goodimage of themselves as Cath-olics and citizens.
The parents' movement be-gan in the tiny all-Catholic com-munity of St. Martin in centralMissouri.
It can be traced there to theconviction of one man — a 35-year-old engineer and father ofeight who believed that the statelegislature was going to shelvethe school bus bill and' the timewas • ripe for protest.
"We had talked for yearsabout pulling our children outof school all at one time andenrolling them in publicschools," said the man whoasked that his identity be keptsecret to protect his job.
"Everybody was just waitingfor someone to come along andpull the string," he told an in-terviewer. "All at once I beganto realize that if anyone pulledthe string — anyone at all —the thing just might go state-wide."
The engineer and other par-
A GROUP OF CATHOLIC mothers led by Mrs.Albert J. Van Hoecke (left) registered theirchildren for public school classes in the KansasCity suburb of Raytown, Mo., in protest'againstthe Missouri legislature's refusal to permit paro-
chial school students the use of public schoolbus transportation. A widespread influx ofparochial school children in Missouri schoolscaused overcrowding and forced some schoolsto close their doors.
ents — keeping their intentionssecret — began their planningfour days before the JudiciaryCommittee of the Missouri Housekilled the bill in a secret vote.
On the day after the bill'sdeath, when two public schoolbuses from the nearby Cen-tertown Public High Schoolrolled into St. Martin, theywere met by many parentsand 75 of the 150 pupils fromSt. Martin's Catholic school.
The demonstrators rode thebuses to Centertown publicschool, swelling that school's en-rollment to 225. The St. Mar-tin's children remained for threedays.
By the time the St. Martin'sparents called off their demon-stration, it had spread throughCole and Marie Counties;brought the complete closure ofthe public school at OsageBend; resulted in enrollment —for the September term — ofsome 3,000 children from a doz-en communities in Franklin and
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Washington Counties; and movedtoward metropolitan St. Louis,putting some 600 pupils in pub-lic schools in Florissant, Berke-ley, Hazelwood and Ferguson.
The St. Martin protest bearsexamination because it haselements that were commonin most of the others:
• Demonstrations in generalwere held only in heavily Cath-olic communities. There wereno protests in heavily Protest-ant areas, for example, the Di-ocese of Springfield-Cape Girar-deau which borders on Arkan-
• Converts played an impor-tant role. "I've only been aCatholic two years and I wantmy kids to have what I had,"said one Franklin County par-ent. The converts, unaccustom-ed to acceptance of conceptssuch as no school bus rides forCatholics, see this as out-and-out discrimination.
• In no instance did the pro-testing Catholic parents get 100per cent cooperation from theirfellow Catholics. " T h e wholething was uncoordinated, undis-ciplined. We at least shouldhave known what we were go-ing to do exactly," s a i d oneparent.
• The demonstrations werecompletely orderly. Laymen in-terviewed stressed the progressmade Jong ecumenical lines inrecent months. "We didn't wantto upset that balance," said one',father.; "We don't want to marchdown to the public school likea bunch of stupid hunger march- :ers," said another.
Generally, the p a r e n t sagreed to carry no signs inthe beginning. It was only to-
ward the end of the demon-strations that "professional or-ganizers" from Citizens forEducational F r e e d o m —caught off-guard earlier likeeveryone else — painted signsbearing slogans such as:"Give us transportation or re-fund our school taxes."
• While summary defeat ofthe bus measure by a secretvote was the spark that touchedthings off, it did not appear tobe only the bus issue that irri-tated parents. "It is just thatwe are tired of being treatedlike second-class citizens," saidone parent.
• The clergy, from parish as-sistant right up to Joseph Car-dinal Ritter, Archbishop of St.Louis, stayed out of the picture.The Cardinal set the tone withhis "no comment" at the startof the demonstrations. .
"The Cardinal neither ap-proves nor disapproves," hissecretary of education, Msgr.James E. Hoflich, said in theonly statement that came fromthe St. Louis chancery.
"The Cardinal has nevertaken a stand on the issue.He feels the parents are act-ing on their own as individualsand that they have a perfectright to do it," the statementsaid.
end the
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May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 11
DIOCESE OF MIAMIPILGRIMAGETO THE OPENING OFSECOND SESSION
OF THEII VATICAN COUNCIL
ROME, September 8, 1963Departing Miami September 2, 1963,Returning M i a m i September 18,1963. Visiting LONDON, P A R I S ,ROME, MADRID, LISBON. Totalprice $1180.00 from New Y o r k ,$1293.00 from Miami
For information contactyour Local Travel Agent
OR
AIRLINES245 S.E. FIRST STREETMIAMI 32, FLORIDA
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fcDISTINGUISHED visitors to St. Mary Hospitalfor the silver jubilee observance included BishopColeman F. Carroll, center; Rev. Mother JoanMarie, O.S.F. Mother General of the FranciscanSisters of Allegany, N. Y., who staff the hospital,at left of Bishop; Mother Magdalena, O.S.F.,
administrator, St. Francis Hospital, MiamiBeach, and Sister M. Paracleta, O.S.F., admini-strator, Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, Camden,right. At left is Mother Josephine Marie, O.S.F.,administrator of St. Mary Hospital, opened inWest Palm Beach in 1938.
25th ANNIVERSARY of its founding was ob-served by St. Mary Hospital, West Palm Beach,last Saturday where Bishop Coleman F. Car-
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roll offered Pontifical Low Mass in the hos-pital chapel for the Sisters of St. Francis ofAllegany, N.Y. who stafff the institution.
Training Sessions PlannedFor CCD Fishers, HelpersFour Mission Helpers of the
Sacred Heart will be in the Dio-cese from June 1 to June 10 tohelp parishes train Fishers andHelpers for their Confraternityof Christian Doctrine units.
Msgr. R. E. Philbin, Dioce-san Director of the Confrater-nity of Christian Doctrine,urged that parishes encourageeveryone to attend these train-ing sessions.
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HELEN and BOB689 N.E. 79th St., Miami
Phone 751-5632Open Doily 9 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.
The dates for the sessions arebeing set up far enough in ad-vance of Fall registration forC.C.D. School Year of Religionclasses so that parish units canput their training to the test toincrease student attendance inthe classes next year.
The complete schedule oftraining centers which has beenarranged, is as follows:
June 1-5—St. Mary Star of theSea, Key West
June 6—San Pablo, Marathon
June 7—San Pedro, Tavernier
June 8—Sacred Heart, Home-stead
June 9;10—St. Michael t h eArchangel, Miami
Concurrently, two of the fourSisters will be training Fishersand Helpers in Dade and Brow-ard Counties under the follow-ing schedule:
June 1, 2—Little Flower, CoralGables
June 3, 4—St. James, MiamiJune 5—St. John the Apostle,
Hialeah
June 6, 7—Epiphany, SouthMiami
June 8—St. Clement, Ft. tau-derdale
June 9—Little Flower, Holly-wood
> Mercy Hospital
Cites EmployesForty employes of Mercy Hos-
pital were cited for outstand-ing service to the diocesan in-stitution during a buffet supperTuesday evening in the hospitalcafeteria.
Sister Mary Emmanuel, S.S.J.administrator of the hospitalstaffed by the Sisters of St. Jo-seph of St. Augustine awardedfive and 10-year pins in observ-ance of National Hospital Week.
Those receiving 10-year pinswere Lillie Harper, Ellen Wad-dell, Lois Hatcher, Helen Ham-il, Nina Fisher, Jeannette Van-deboncoer, Euzell Rainy, r-garet Markey and Edith Ttawnp-son..
Five-year pins were presentedto Norma Brenton, John Irwin,Anna Ferguson, Judy Borkows-ki, Nell Abercrombie, DorotheaSamuels, Eric Goltz, AudreyLaMarr, Susie Mae Simmons,Grace Bush, Earnest Harris,Nathan Stringer, Maria Uruski,Ethel M. Martin, DorothyEvans, Alice Felteau, WilliamEvans, Janie J. Folsom andArthur Jones.
Also Madeline Lover, RebaChamberl'in, Sara Nester, Thom-as Williams, Elizabeth Lievano,James Hampton, George Du-maine, Lucy Nolin, Betty Vogt,Gennie Green, Raymond Carr,and Varlonus Wright.
Knights Donate
To Burse FundA check for $1,000 toward a
$15,000 burse fund was present-ed to Bishop Coleman F. Car-rol last night (Thursday) at aspecial dinner held by the Fa-ther Andrew Brown General As-sembly of the Fourth DegreeKnights of Columbus at theMarian Council Hall in NorthMiami.
In addition to the Bursemoney, the Assembly alsomade their annual presenta-tion of a chalice which thisyear was given to Saint Law-rence Church through FatherJohn S. Lorenz, assistant pas-tor. The chalice was presentedby Domenic Di Mauro, chair-man of the Chalice commit-tee.Serving as toastmaster at the
"Bishop's Dinner" was JosephA. Sweeney, vice supreme mas-ter of the DeSoto Province ofthe Fourth Degree.
The burse, to be used in theeducation of young men for thepriesthood, was started by theGeneral Assembly in 1960 when$7,000 was given toward apledged fund of $15,000. A ' 1of $10,000 has been donate ,Jtthe fund thus far.
Among guests invited to thedinner were: Msgr. WilliamBarry, P.A., pastor of St. Pat-rick Church, Miami Beach, andfaithful friar of the Assembly;Msgr. Robert W. Schiefen, Fa-ther Edward J. McCarthy, O.S.A., Rector of Biscayne. Col-lege; Father Donald F. X. Conrnolly, assistant pastor at theCathedral.
ROOF COATINGS BY MURRAYUSING
GENERAL ELECTRIC SILICONESNo. Dade PL 9-6604 So, Dade CE 5-1351
Page 12 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
'S* '<.*. t.'.:;
Stress On Social TeachingsHelps To Win Chile ElectionBy Father John J. Bradley, M.M.
SANTIAGO, Chile (NO . —Stepped-up emphasis on.. theChurch's social teachings wasthe main reason for the Chris-tian Democratic party's re-sounding success in recent elec-tions in this.Soufch American na-tion.
Mario Sanchez, director ofthe Catholic-oriented party'selectoral ' department, de-clared:
"We owe our growth to three«f ' : '
^T. The encyclical Mater etMagistra.
"2. The vigorous social pro-gram of the Catholic Hierarchyunder the direction of Raul Car-dinal Silva JHenriquez, S.D.B.,Archbishop of Santiago.
"3. The joint pastoral letterof the Chilean Bishops, 'TheChristian's Duty in the PresentHour,' which last year in-augurated a -whole new socialprogram in Chile."
VOTE SOAREDIn the April 7 nationwide mu-
nicipal elections — regarded asa forecast of the 1964 presiden-tial election — the ChristianDemocrats emerged as thecountry's largest political partyafter campaigning under t h eslogan: Revolution without Vio-lence.
In the 1961 elections theChristian Democrats received16 per cent of the votes. InApril, with almost twice ' asmany ballots cast, they wonmore than 22 per cent. Theirvote soared from 214,000 to453,000 as more than two mil-lion, people, 80 per cent of theelectorate, went to. the polls.
The Marxist Popular Front— made up of the communists,socialists and a number of splin-ter parties — declined slightlyfrom their 1961 level of a littlemore than 30 per cent of thevotes to 28.2 per cent. The So-cialist party dropped from 11.2per cent to 10.9 per cent of thevotes while the Communist par-ty increased'its percentage from1198 to 12.4.
WANT CHANGEThe older traditional parties of
the right, the Conservative andLiberal parties, dropped from31.2 to 23.7 per cent of the to-tal vote. The moderate Radicalparty that governs in coalitionwith them dropped to secondplace after being Chile's largestparty lor 20 years. Its'vote de-clined from 22.2 to 20.8 per centof the total.'
ng to the Christianhocratic official, Sanchez,
.the election results show: thatmost people in Chile want achance in its social structure:but do not want communism.
The words of Pope John•*- XXIII and the actions of the, Chilean Bishops, he said, con-'.t ;vinced many that it is possible
to achieve radicarchanges with-iu. a Christian' frameworkthrough the Christian Dem6cra--tic party.
LEADER of the ChristianDemocratic Party in Chile,Sen. Eduardo Frei credits theincreased emphasis on thechurch's social teaching forhis party's recent success.
The encyclical Mater et Mag-istra of 1961 was widely publiciz-ed in Chile. Explanations of itwere printed in comic book formto reach the simplest people.Conferences and forums wereheld, sermons were preachedand study groups formed to dis-cuss it. The poor were convinc-ed that the Church is deeplyinterested in their problems ofunemployment, lack of housingand schools, malnutrition andinflation.
Inflation has made life forthe Chilean worker very pre-carious. At the close of WorldWar II the dollar was worth32 Chilean pesos. Today itis worth 3,570 pesos.
The poor felt trapped.
Then the Chilean Hierarchypublished a joint pastoral letterspelling out for Chile just howMater et Magistra 'should beapplied here. Land-reform, taxreform, and educational reformwere demanded in precise termsand not as vague generalities.Statistics were given to provethat th# situation was gettingworse, not better. Liberalismwas condemned as vigorously ascommunism. When politicianstried to soften the blow by in-terpreting the letter to their fa-vor, the Bishops answered inthe daily press that these inter-pretations were erroneous.
Even the most skeptical be-gan to sense that here wassomething really different. Thecommunists called a meetingin the largest arena in Chileand had their best orators at-tack the pastoral letter, butthis only served to publicize itmore.
Next the Bishops began to putinto concrete practice whatthey were teaching. They all
. agreed that the agriculturallands belonging to all the dio-ceses in Chile should be soldto the people working on theland on terms which these peo-ple can pay. The Santiago andTalca dioceses already havethe plan working.
Schools have been startedto train 2,000 labor leaders.A nationwide literacy cam-
pagin tpt-iteach- the 730,000 "il-literates in Chile was inaugurat-ed by Cardinal Silva. It is func-tioning in every part of thecountry.
ROOF COATINGS BY MURRAYUSING
GENERAL ELECTRIC SILICONESNo. Dade PL 9-6604 So. Dade CE 5-1351
BARRY COLLEGE1963 SUMMER SESSION
For Men and Women Undergraduate and Graduate Classes11300 N.E. 2nd AVE., MIAMI 61, FLA;
P L 9.2414
REGISTRATION — 9:00 11:30 A.M. — 1:30-4:30 P.M.June 2 1 — J u n e 22
CLASSES — June 24 through Aug. 1 . Classes on Saturday,July 6 (Friday classes). No classes July 4 .
SUMMER GRADUATION - August 1 , 7:30 P.M.All students planning to enter the summer session at Barry
College must have received an admission or re-admission cardwhich must be presented at time of registration. Admission orre-admission card will be sent upon completion of pre-registration.
No. DescriptionART
102 Graphics105 Design131 Lettering375 Art Education381 Crafts for Teachers496 Creative Contribution
BIOLOGY130 Health Education116 Zoology221 Comparative Anatomy of
Vertebrates445 Microtechnique
CHEMISTRY257 Analytical Inorganic (1st half)
EDUCATION130 Health Education252 Introduction to Education262 Teaching Arithmetic265 Introduction to Kindergarten
Education318 Educational Psychology322 Methods of Teaching Reading343 Teaching Phys. Ed. in Elem.
School353 Philosophy and History of
Education366 Teach. Soc. Studies in Elem.
School420-520 Tests and Measurements441-541 Elementary School Curriculum442-542 Secondary School Curriculum455-555 Evaluatioa of Current
Curriculums462 Principles and Gen. Methods of
Teaching Elem. School463 Principles and Gen. Methods of
Teaching Secondary School482-582 Child Psychology484-584 Diagnostic and Remedial
Reading485-585 Principles of Guidance601 Educational Research625 Advanced-Educational Psych.642 Modern Math, for Elem. Teacher
- 653 Occupational Information654 Administration of Guidance672 Elem. School Administration673 Secondary School Administr.696 Seminar in Elem. Admin, and
Supervision697 Seminar in Second. Admin, and
Supervision •698 Seminar in Guidance and
Counseling;
ENGLISH102 Freshman Composition (2nd half)213 English Literature (1 st half)214 English literature (2nd half)310 English Language, Grammar,
and Composition320 • Children's Literature325 American Literature (1st half)402-502 Introduction to Literary Theory470-570 History of Literary Criticism476 Teaching English in High School487 Honors Course (Instructor's
permission required)620 Chaucer ,622 The Age of Milton
FRENCH210 Elementary (1st half)203 Intermediate (1st half)213 Survey of French Literature401 French Phonetics, Diction
and Conversation
GENERAL SCIENCE101 General Science for Teachers
GEOGRAPHY102 Conservation ».f Nat. Resources
GERMAN204 Intermediate (2nd half)213 Survey of German Literature
S.H. Time Days Rm.
2 1:10-4:45 M W F 1542 8:05-12:25 T T 1522 1:10-4:45 T T 1542 10:20-12:25 T T 1163 10:20-12:25 M W F 1543 8:05-12:25 M W F 155
3 3:20-5:25 M W F 1024 8:05-12:25 M W F 204
4 1:104:45 M W F 2043 (8:05-12:25 T T 202
(1:10-4:45 T 202
4 8:05-12:25 M W F 104
3:20-5:251:10-3:158:05-10:10
M W F 102M W F 137T T 208
8:05-11:25 T T 1483:20-5:25 M W F J15
3 10:20-12:25 M W F 215
3 8:05-10.10 M W F 137
3 1:10-3:15 M W F 102
2 1:10-3:15 T T 2083 10:20-12:25 M W F 2163 1:10-3:15 M W F 2163 8:05-10:10 M W F 216
3 8:05-10:10 M W F 115
3 3:20-5:25 M W F 116
3:20-5:25 M W F 21510:20-12:25 M W F 117
3 10:20-12:253 1:10-3:15
1:10-3:158:05-10:108:05-10:108:05-10:10
10:20-12:258:05-10:101:10-3:15
M WM WM WM WM WM WM WM W FM W F
208215218116201215217209209
3 3:20-5:25 M W F 209
3 3:20-5:25 M W F 210
3 3:20-5:25 M W F 211
3 1:10-3:15 M W F 1173 8:05-10:10 M W F 1173 1:10-3:15 M W F 115
2 8:05-10:10 T T 1153 8:05-10:10 M W F 1483 1:10-3:15 M W F 1163 10:20 12:25 M W F 1163 3:20-5:25 M W F 1482 1:10-3:15 T T 2152 1:10-3:15 T T 116
2 10:20-12:25 T T 1152 1:10-3:15 T T 148
3 . 1:10-3:15 M W F 2103 10:20-12:25 M W F 2103 10:20-12:25 M W F 209
3 8:05-10:10 M W F 210
3 8:05-10:10 M W F 102
3 8.05-10.10 M W F 132
3. 8:05-10:10 M W F 2113 10:20-12:25 M W F 211
No. DescriptionHISTORY
102 Survey of Western Civilization 3 3:20-5-25 M W F 217210 History of the U.S. (1st half) 3 8:05-10:10 M W F 208222 »-» R e n a i s s a n c e a n B Religious Revolt 3 10:20-12.-25 M W F 132442-542 American Colonial History " ' "476 Teaching Social Studies in
High School675 Seminar in European History
HOME A N D FAMILY LIFE326 Nutrition328 ' Consumer Education
S.H. Time Days Rm.
3 1:10-3:10 M W F 211
8:05-10:10 T T 2091:10-3:15 M W F 217
3 8:05-12:25 M W F C 22 8:05-10:10 T T 116
LATIN201 Survey of Latin Syntax213 Latin Essay304 Roman Drama412 Roman Satire
3 1:10-3:15 M W F 1323 1:10-4:15 T T 1153 10:20-12:25 M W F 2063 8:05-10:10 M W F 206
LIBRARY SCIENCE303 Classification and Cataloging
Children's Literature3208:05-10:10 M W F 2178:05-10:10 M W F 148
MATHEMATICS116 Analytic Geometry and
Calculus (2nd half)206 Fundamental Mathematics215 Intermediate Calculus (1st half)
MUSIC101 Harmony I102 Harmony I (Part 2)109 Aural Theory (1st half)305 Counterpoint376 Fundamentals of Music for
Elementary Teachers377 Music Methods in the
Elementary Classroom485 Choral Organization
PHILOSOPHY252 Logic283 Philosophy of Man332 General Ethics456 History of Modern and
Contemporary Philosophy
POLITICAL SCIENCE101 American Government
SECRETARIAL SCIENCE.476 Teaching of Secretarial Science
in High School
SOCIOLOGY335 Child Welfare446 The Family
SPANISH203 Intermediate (1st half)204 Intermediate (2nd half)213 Survey of Spanish Lit. (1st half)350 Advanced Conversation and '
Composition (1st half)
SPEECH ;101 Fundamentals of Speech102 Public Discussion
THEOLOGY314 Moral Virtues
4 1:10-4:45 M W F 2083 10:20-12:25 M W F 1483 1:10-4:45 M W F 201
fr 3:20-5:25 MWF140A3 8:05-10:10 MWF140A2 8=05-12:25 T T 140A2 1:10-3:15 MWF140A
2 8:05-10:10 T T 132
10:20-12:25 T T1:10-3:15 T T
132137
3 10:20-12:25 M W F 1153 1:10-3:15 M W F 1303 3:20-5:25 M W F 117
3 1:10-3.-15 M W F 206
3 3:20-5:25 M W F 216
2 8:05-10:10 T T 213
8:05-10:10 M W3:20-5:25 M W
3 8:05-10:10 M W3 10:20-12:25 M W3 10:20-12:25 M W
218218
208218102
3 1:10-3:15 M W F 213
2 10.-20-12:25 T T 1302 8.05-10:10 T T 130
2 10:20-12:25 T t 117
400 - 500 Courses open .to advanced undergraduate andg r a d u a t e s t u d e n t s , •,.• , '.•, • . :
600 Courses open to graduate students only.
CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP, Novel and Short StoryMonday and Wednesday 6:45-8:50 P,M,' June 24 through July 31
Credit or non-credit 2 sent. hrs. Room 115
FEES:Matriculation Fee (payable anee) . . . . * . . . . $10.00Undergraduate Courses, per semester hour 20.00Graduate Courses, per semester hour 25.00Laboratory Fee (each lab. course) IS.OOLate Registration Fee (after June 22) 5.00
ACCOMMODATIONS:Limited facilities for resident students are available on the
" campus. For reservations, carl PL 9-2414. ,'
May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 13
Requiem Offered For Mrs. OrthPOMPANO BEACH — Re-
quiem Mass was offered in theAssumption Church Saturdayfor Mrs. Irene D. Orth, 74, pastpresident of the East CoastDeanery of the St. AugustineDiocesan Council.
A pioneer worker in Catholic
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women's organizations in SouthFlorida, Mrs. Orth came here15 years ago from Detroit andserved from 1950 to 1951 aspresident of the East CoastDeanery. She was also a pastpresident of the AssumptionGuild and at the time of herdeath was chairman of Circle 12of the Holy Cross HospitalWomen's Auxiliary.
Mrs. Orth is survived by herhusband, John, with whom sheresided at 3257 NE Tenth St.
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Individual registrations accepted. Non-Catholics mostwelcome. $5.00 registration fee with application.
NEW CHURCH of St. Michael in Wauchula wasrecently blessed by Bishop Coleman F. Carrollwho offered Pontifical Low Mass for more than250 parishioners and visitors from Arcadia,
Fort Myers and the Homestead area. The newstructure was built under direction of FatherEsteban Soy and provides accommodations for250 persons as well as choir facilities.
Open House Set For Deaf HereAn open house for the Catholic
deaf of South Florida will beheld at 7:30 p.m., Saturday,May 18, in the Cathedral parishhall, 7540 NW Second Ave.
Various games are plannedfor the open house sponsored bythe South Florida Catholic Deaf-Association of wMch Father
Laurence Conway, assistant pas-tor, the Cathedral parish, is themoderator. A magician also willentertain during the evening andrefreshments will be served.
An invitation has been extend-ed to all Catholic deaf to attendby Anthony Rubano, presidentof the association.
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GENERAL ELECTRIC SILICONESNo. Dade PL 9-6604 So. Dade CE 5-1351
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8SOO ON THB TRAIL-JUST 0J*F TftM PALMETTO
Dr. Annis HeadsWorld DoctorsDr. Edward R. Annis, presi-
dent - elect of the AmericanMedical Association, was elect-ed Saturday as president-electof the World Medical Associa-tion., The world-wide honor wasgiven to Dr. Annis, a mem-ber of Corpus Christi parish,during a meeting of the Coun-cil of International MedicalOrganization held at Opatija,Yugoslavia.The Miami physician, who
will be installed as head of theAMA during the June 18 con-vention of the group in AtlanticCity, has been an active mem-ber of the Holy Name Societyhere, serving on the organiza-tion's speakers' bureau, «ndwas a charter member of theMiami Serra Club and theDiocese of Miami Catholic Phy-sicians' Guild.
For several years he servedas a director of Family Serv-ice and the Senior Citizens'Division of the Welfare Plan-ning Council in Miami. From1954 to 1961 he was chief ofthe department of surgery atMercy Hospital and servedannually for four years withhis wife, Betty, as co-chair-men of the Bishop's annualCharily Dinner for the hos-pital.Dr. and Mrs. Annis have four
daughters and four sons, includeing Joseph, who is completinghis junior year at MarquetteUniversity, where his father re-ceived his medical degree.
BUILDER* DEVELOPER'8340 NORTHEAST SECOND AVE.
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JOHN McGOWAN, Mgr.PRAYER BOOKS
" ROSARIESPICTURES
BIBLES, MEDALS
MISSALSSTATUARY
All Night Vigils HeldBy Adoration Groups
Men from nine parishes wererepresented at an all-night vigilheld on the First Friday of thismonth at SS. Peter and PaulChurch by the Nocturnal Ador-ation Society in Dade County.
Parishes represented includedImmaculate Conception, CorpusChristi, St. Rose of Lima, St.Hugh, Blessed Trinity, The Ca-thedra], Holy Rosary, St. Timo-thy, and Visitation.
The Nocturnal Adoration So-ciety at Our Lady Queen ofMartyrs Church, Fort Lauder-dale, also held a vigil on theFirst Friday.
Anyone interested in joiningthe Nocturnal Adoration Socie-ties which hold their all-nightvigils on the first Fridays ofeach month is asked to contactFrank Merger of SS. Peter andPaul parish at FR 4-2085 or Dr.Paul Houle of Our Lady Queenof Martyrs parish at LU 3-1449.
DIAL FORCOOL
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air-conditioning
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. 7. it's cheaper, too
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HEARING AIDREPAIRS
— State Licensed —
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Next to Rosetta Theatre
CONTRACT HARDWARELIGHTING FIXTURES
MODERNFOLD DOORSPL 4-5451
FARREY'S7225 N.W. 7th Avenue
MIAMI
}4 May .17, 1963 VOICE .Miami, Florida7 V * S
Handsomest Seafood Restaurantanywhere in the world!!! \
LUNCHEON from 85CSERVED FROM U:4S A.M.
DINNER from. SERVED FROM 5:45 P.M.
Same ownership as C O C K T A I L . L O U N G E Ampletfis famous Tony Sweet's PHOH E: parking space on
Restaurant • 8 6 5 - 8 6 8 8 * premises1900 N. Bay Causeway (79 St Causeway) Miami Beach
Looking For An Unusual Place To EatTry The
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(ADJOINING COCONUT GROVE PLAYHOUSE)
Enjoy lunch or dinner in oiir authentic "Old West"atmosphere or enjoy our fully screened outside patio.
LUNCHEON & DINNER SPECIALS DAILYOPEN EVERY DAY SERVING LUNCH OR DINNER
(CLOSED SUNDAY FROM MAY 12 TO JULY 1st)
PL 9-6825 COD ON BISCAYNl BAY
On the79th St.
Causeway
SEAFOOD RESTAURANT
• MAINE LOBSTERS• NEW ENGLAND SEAFOOD• CLAMS, OYSTERS & STONE CRABS '
MIAMI'S OLDEST SEAFOOD RESTAURANT OUR 16th YEAR
RESTAURANTDaily and Sunday 6 A.M.-9 PM.
"BRING THEFAMILY"• . • . Your Hosts Gen & A l
coukLSE HOME COOKED
1415 So. Store Rd. No. 7 W. Hollywood, Flo. YUkon 3-5141
FOR THE BEST IN DINING
VOICE GOURMET GUIDEGive-
The WholeFamily
A Treat
ON HALLANDALE BEACH BLVD.t(At the Bri
1944 * y IJT - g . H. JOHANSEKMember Diners Club %MJ Proprietor
AUTHENTIC SCANDINAVIAN
PRIVATE DINING FACILITIES FOR 250* WEDDINGS * CONFIRMATION * GROUP AFFAIRS
Located Opposite City Hall — Opa-LockaFor Directions JU1 I I Q Q 2 4 0 C r e d i t Carcls
Please Phone Honored
Something New at
LA PEN AGenuine South African
ROCK LOBSTER TAILSNew Orleans Style
POMPANO ALMONDEVESTONE CRABS
BANQUET FACILITIES FOR LARGE OR SMALL PARTIES
7400 BIRD ROAD MO 1-3456
SPECIALSof the week
MondayBROILED FISH FEAST1!
All the fish you can eat!Complete meal—plus yourchoice of one of our famousdesserts and beverage!
Thursday.ANGLERS PLATTER
Specialty of the houseI S ( I Shrimp • Oyster • Lobster Tail
m^/\J r i a m s . ,. 5jmei t . CraHClaw ,
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$1.60to$2.25You'll be pleasantly surprised!Saturday specials alternate each
week to bring you the bestof in-season seafare.
CONVENIENT LOCATIONSPerrine—16915 U . £ lCoral Gables — 280 Alhambra CircleNorth Miami —12727 Biscayne BoulevardDania — 760 Dania BoulevardFtLauderdale — 900 S.W. 24 St. (Rt. 84)Pampano — 3108 North Federal Highway.
Including the famous Chesapeake.Seafood House, 3906 N. W. 3£Ui St,, Miami, under same management.
8 minutes from Beach viaAirport Expressway
PETERSON'SSTEAK PLACE
7140 S.W. 8th ST. • CA 1-4563
THE SAME — THE ONLY ONE
13205N.W. 7th AVE.
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For The Best In . . .
ITALIAN^ H O M E COOKING^ Also Try Our PIZZA
• COMPLETE MENU OF . . .ITALIAN & AMERICAN.
SEAFOODSPECIALTIES
^ M I A M I BEACH VISITORS!^ T Take Julia Tuttle Causeway and^ North-South Expressway to 125t»A St. Exit. Turn left to 7th Ave.
•and then right 7 blocks toGIGI'S. Only 28 minutes away.
SUMMER SPECIAL$295
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ISPANISH - MEXICAN - AMERICAN RESTAURANT
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DINE IN AN OLD WORLD ATMOSPHERE
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THE CAFETERIA ^THAT CHANGED"EATING INTO DINING"
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DINNER 4:15 P.M.-S:00 P.M.
PLENTY OF FREEPARKING AT REAR
OF CAFETERIA83rd STREETENTRANCE
HOLIDAY CAFETERIABISCAYNE BOULEVARD at 83rd ST.
17, tki V6lCf Miami, Florida Page 15
Advertisingane
with
HONEYMOONERS! Take acamera along on your weddingtrip! Use color film and a fine
camera from ATLANTIC PHOTO SUPPLYCO., 8011 N.E. 2nd Ave., Little River andNorthside Shopping Center, 119 N. Court,79th and 27th Ave. They have a completeline of Camera and Photographic supplies
. and all types of film. A camera is a lovelywedding gift. PL 7-7848 and OX 1-4771.
RENT A GORGEOUS WEDDINGGOWN! Beautiful, exquisite gownsat SHAVERS, 7910-16 N.E., 2ndAve., Little River. They're notcheap in quality, home made orsecond grade in any way but Qreextremely fine stock. Rental prices*""from $40 up. Hoops and veils alsofor rental. Bridesmaid's dresses anddresses for mother o f bride andgroom available. Call for appoint-ment. PL 4-9022.
RELIEVE YOURSELF OF THETROUBLE! They will get your
I travel tickets anywhere! By airor steamer! NO COST for thisservice. M I A M I SHORES
TRAVEL-CENTER, INC., 9723 N.E. 2nd Ave., MiamiShores, gives complete travel service to anywhere inthe world. They take care of all reservations and ticketsfor tours, cruises, independent trips. They are highlyexperienced in this business. PL 1-6529.
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SWEDISH MASSAGE! SPOTREDUCING! Steam Cabi-nets, relaxing and stimulat-ing. Special back massages.Ladies Only. 3 massages for$10.00. ELSIE DEMARCOMASSAGE STUDIO, 7915N.E. 3rd Ave., Little River. Miss Demarco is a memberof Dade County and'Florida State Massage Association.By appointment only. Telephone PL 4-7893.
I HAVE NEWS FOR YOU ART-ISTS! Conveniently located inLittle River at MIAMI STATION-ERY CO., 8222 N.E. 2nd Ave.,you will find the' New Duro Art
h Supply Center, they now have instock. Available are oils and color sets, palettes, a broadselection of brushes, mediums and fixitives, temperas,canvas panels, sketch and drawing pads, etc. See theirfine social stationery, greeting cards, party paper goods,gift items. PL 4-4656.• II—II MM II — I I MM II ! • •
ALL MAKES! ALL MODELS!Only $4.00 for a servicecall, too! For an honestestimate on radio or TV re-pair call MID-CITY RADIOSHOP, 9713 N.E. 2nd Ave.,Miami Shores. They have a complete supply of jiationallyknown parts and trained technicians to do the work. Theygive a 3 months guarantee and are a reliable shop. For1fast service call PL 7-7615.
^ WITH YEARS OF LONG DEPEND-& A B L E SERVICE in North Dade, LEAR
j : P E S T CONTROL, 10870 N.E. 6th* Ave., will spray your yard every 60* days or more if necessary for a year,* for chinch bug control. Army worms
^ : : ^ included at no extra cost. This is rec-ommended by the Agriculture Dept., Univ. of Fla. Also6 months or single spray contract, if desired. They havemodern and efficient equipment. PL 4-7588.
Bill \
GET OUT THOSE TREASUREDHEIRLOOMS! Have them re-plated and repaired. They aresomething the bride would nodoubt treasure because theyhave some special meaning.
"tSTES SILVERSMITH^ 2196N.W. 17th Ave., have been inbusiness 40 years and do aperfect job. They will call for,deliver, give free estimates.NE 4-0119.
THROUGH 17th ANNUAL APPEAL OF BISHOPS' RELIEF FUND
Diocese To Aid Poor Of World SundayCatholics of the Diocese of
Miami will join their fellow-Catholics throughout the UnitedStates next Sunday, May 19, in
a united effort to help the poorand suffering throughout theworld.
It will be the 17th annual
appeal of the U.S. Bishops'Relief Fund which maintainsthe world's largest voluntaryrelief agency, the Catholic
WORLD-ENCIRCLING PROGRAMS OF CHARITY
AFRICAM-m-m. Hot soupmore on the way.
INDIACans of powdered milk bringnourishment . . . and hope.
PERUA look of expectancywill be filled."
yes, his plateHONG KONGHunger was his daily lotburden has been eased.
now the
In every corner of the globe, children like these are eating a little better, living a little bettertoday because of the world-wide aid program of Catholic Relief Services. Without regard to race,color-or creed, this American voluntary overseas aid agency dispenses food, clothing and medicalassistance to the needy, the homeless and the destitute in 67 countries. When disaster strikes,emergency supplies are sent within hours. You can help maintain these works of charity bysending your contribution' to the Bishops' Relief Fund, Empire State Building, N. Y. 1, N. Y. oryour nearest Catholic Church.
"In vain you will build churches, preach missions, foundschools: all your good works, all your efforts will be destroyed, if youcannot at the same time wield the defensive and offensive weaponsof a press that is Catholic, loyal and sincere." — St. Pius X.
SUBSCRIBE TODAY TO THE VOICEYOUR CATHOLIC NEWSPAPER
VOICE Circulation Dept.
6301 Biscayne Boulevard, Miami 38, Florida
D I wish to subscribe to THE VOICE
D I wish to renew my subscription to THE VOICE
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Address
n subscription price enclosed • bill me
Rates: $5.00 per year in the United States$7.50 per year in other countries
Relief Services — NationalCatholic Welfare C o u n c i l ,which in 1962 operated a pro-gram valued at $165 millionand brought aid to some 30million hungry and homelesspersons in more than 70 coun-tries.
Aid given by CRS throughoutthe world is dispensed solely on'the basis of need, without re-gard to race, creed or color.
PROGRAMS EXPANDEDDuring 1962, CRS for the sixth
consecutive year sent ovf sshipments totaling more dnone billion pounds of food, cloth-ing, medicines and other reliefsupplies.
CRS programs of food andclothing distributions in Asia,Africa and Latin Americahave been expanded in recentmonths. In supervising theexpanded programs, t h eagency's relief and welfareworkers have been active inimplementing long-range andself-help projects designed tohelp the socio-economic de-pression problems in under-developed countries.
CRS has been instrumentalin establishing community de-velopment centers, housing andhealth programs, farm coopera-tives, training schools, hospi-tals, dispensaries and otherprojects in many countries.
-In cooperation with the U.S.government's Alliance for Prog-ress program, CRS has expand-ed •child feeding programs inLatin America, enabling thou-sands of children to gain healthand strength.
Bishop Edward E. Swan-strom, CRS-NCWC executivedirector, said that since theagency of U.S. Catholics wasestablished in 1943, it has dis-tributed more than 4,500,000tons of relief supplies to thehungry, haggard and home-less throughout the world.
In an address on the Charityof American Catholics, deliver-ed in November, 1962, PopeJohn XXIII said:
"Your charity and the bountygiven to you by Providence re-mind Us of the words of theGospel, 'Seek ye first the king-dom of God and all else will begiven to you.' You have takencare of continents by your char-ity and your substance has re-mained and increased. Also, Wehave given more jobs to you asyour charity increased so ^iatnow We have almost given youthe world to look after."
During the first sessio^ .-the Second Vatican" Council,Pope John repeatedly express-ed to the. U.S. Bishops hisgratitude for the generosity ofAmerican Catholics in chari-table endeavors, according toArchbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle,of Washington, who is chair-man of the National CatholicWelfare Conference adminis-trative board. He said;
"In the audience that the HolyFather granted to us, he em-phasized time and again hisdeep appreciation of the world-wide charily of our -AmericanCatholics and told us how heav-ily he leans upon us in the greatneeds that the Church mustmeet d a i l y throughout theworld."
Page 16 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
OVERSEAS •
Collection In Every Church and Chapel of Diocese of Miami, Sunday, May 19May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 17
Summer Reading ProgramSet For Students And Adults
An experimental program inreading, already tested in twoschools, will be continued duringthe summer months for interest-ed students and adults in threehigh schools of the Diocese ofMiami.
Known as "PAR" — Pro-grams for Achievement inReading — voluntary experi-mental classes will be held atChristopher Columbus High,Miami; Chaminade High, Hol-lywood, and St. Thomas Aqui-nas High, Fort Lauderdale.
Classes will be limited to 25each and will meet each day fortwo hours for two periods ofthree weeks each, the first ses-sion from June 10 to*28 and thesecond from July 1 to 22. Class-es will be held from 8 to 10a.m. or from 10:30 a.m. to12:30 p.m.
For those unable to attendduring the day, special eveningclasses also will be set up from6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. from June10 to 21 and from July 8 to 19.
Students, parents friendsand all others interested may
enroll in the program, onefeature of which is the teach-ing of seventh graders to col-lege graduates in the sameclassroom at the same time.
Cost of the program will be$20 for each one enrolled. Thisincludes the "PAR" set of fivebooks which can be utilized fora year after completion of theprogram. Since enrollment willbe limited, those interested intaking the course are asked tonotify the office of any of thethree schools before May 31 andan enrollment blank will be sup-plied.
The course is offered by Pro-grams For Achievement inReading, Inc., of Providence,R. I. The regional director isDr. Harold Liberman, located atCharron - Williams CommercialCollege, Miami.
FIRST ANNUAL Mass and Communion break-fast is discussed by a committee of the newlyorganized Catholic Teachers Guild. .Shownabove with Msgr. William F. McKeever, .Miamidiocesan superintendent of schools are Myrna
Gallagher, Fort Lauderdale; Dolores Aocourey,Prof. Richard Hansler, Gerald Bennett, Dr.Gilbert J. Farley, Robert Stevens, Harold Mc-Mullen, Pat Tornillo, Catherine Dinnen, FortLauderdale; Don Pierce and Pauline Belanger.
i
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Late Mons ignor Pace
Praised By Card ina lThe late Msgr. Edward A.
Pace, after whom Pace HighSchool in North Miami is nam-ed, has been praised by thePapal Secretary of State as a"good and pious priest and aneminent scholar."
Amleto Cardinal Cicognani,formerly Apostolic Delegate inthe United' States, describedMsgr. Pace in those terms in aletter commemorating the 25thanniversary of Msgr. Pace'sdeath.
A 25th anniversary RequiemMass was offered for Msgr.Pace in St. Edward church atStarke, Fla. by Archbishop Jo-seph P. Hurley, Bishop ' St.Augustine.
Msgr. Pace was born inStarke July 3, 1861. Ordained inRome in 1885, he was a profes-sor at the Catholic Universityfrom 1924 to 1935. He died April26, 1938.
State Commitee KillsBirth Control Measure
SACRAMENTO, Cal. (NO —The State Senate Public Healthand Safety Committee haskilled a proposal calling for astate-supported birth controlprogram.
WE HAVE MOVED
ENORMOUS REDUCTIONS
on All Admiral Floor Models
TELEVISION, STEREO
ADMIRAL TABLE MODELRADIOS FROM $11.88
Admiral Air ConditionersFloor SamplesDrastically Reduced
We Service All Makes of Television and Radios
GUARANTEED SERVICE23-25 N.W. 8th ST.
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STOC LIQUIDATIONEntire Inventory Of New And Used Cars To Be Turned
New '63 Fords — All Models — Factory Fresh — Some Air Conditioned
HIGHEST TRADES -BEST TERMSDon't Get Frus-Traded ^ Trade At Fred's
FRED \Y \ 11 \ OC li1300 N. Federal HighwayHomestead, Florida Cl 7-5112 CE 5-0673
Page* 18 May «\% T9S3V TM VOICE Miami, Florida
PARISH UNITS ASKED TO SUBMIT LIST' OF MEMBERS
'Census' Of CYO Members Launched In DioceseFirst official "census" of the
•apidly growing Catholic YouthDrganization in the Diocese nows under way.
Eacfi parish CYO is beingisked to compile a list of theirnembers and submit it to theChancery CYO office.
The "census," initiated at the
request of Bishop Coleman F.Carroll, is aimed at determiningthe number of CYO members inthe Diocese. It also will providean accurate file of members'names and addresses.
The CYO in South Florida,only two years old, has had aspeedy and consistent growth.
Formed in October, 1961, at ameeting of some 300 teenagersat the Roney Plaza Hotel onMiami Beach, the CYO quicklymade its influence felt oh Cath-olic youth in the parishes.
At that organizational meet-ing the teenagers heard Bishop
F O R T LAUDERDALE —tfsgr. James J. Walsh, Director»f Vocations for the Diocese oftfiami conferred Knights of theMar Awards on 117 altar boysit Our Lady Queen of Martyrs3iurch Wednesday night.
Twenty members of the 5th;rade class received the Order
of Page, and 11 the rank ofKnight of the Order.
Fifteen boys of the sixthgrade also were accepted asKnights. Ten members of thesixth grade class were raisedto the rank of Knight Command-ers while 16 candidates of theseventh grade class wereawarded the same honor.
A STATUE of the Blessed Virgin is crowned by Michele Melsopp,assisted by Torn Tayge, during the traditional ceremony held atCardinal Gibbons High School jn Fort Lauderdale last week.
3irl Scout Marian AwardsTo Be Given At CathedralAll Girl Scouts in the Diocese
irho have, completed workaward the Marian Award andpho have not yet appeared be-»re a Board of Review aresked to contact the ChancerylYO Office at PL 7-5714.
The Girl Scouts wilL receivelie'Marian awards in a specialeremony at the Cathedral onunday, June 9. Presentation ofid Altare Dei awards to Boyc^ also is scheduled at theM»r .ceremony.
The Marian Award was es-tablished to help Catholic GirlScouts broaden their knowl-edge of their faith and to helpthem become active, and in-terested members of theirparish and community.
In order to be eligible for theledal, a Girl Scout must be2 years of age or be in theeventh grade; attend Catholicchool or the parish religiousistruction classes provided forer and to have a knowledge ofle fundamentals of. her re-gion.
Among the things she mustisplay a knowledge of are:
The principal parts of theMass, the vestments used forvarious ceremonies and thesacred vessels used by thepriest.
The spiritual and corporalworks of mercy.
The importance of a nuptialMass and of a Catholic mar-riage.
xThe highest earned awardof Grand Knight was given to18 members of the seventhgrade class, while 27 altarboys completing the eighthgrade received the GrandKnight award for four yearsof service at the altar.Two altar boys:, Joseph Steele
and Charles Carter, receivedspecial awards from the SerraClub of Broward County.
Medals of Honor were con-ferred on Joseph Steele, su-preme-grand knight; CharlesCarter, vice supreme-grandknight; Richard Lewis, secre-tary; Vincent Johnson, treasur-er; William Hurley and DavidThompson, Sgts.-at-Arms; andAllan Donahue.
Monsignor Walsh spoke onvocations to the many parentsattending, and also the ap-prentice class of over 40 boysfrom the fourth grade. Theceremony closed with SolemnBenediction.
Following are the awards:ORDER OF PAGE :• George Brault,
Robert Caraenas. ,Donald Chalaire,Daniel Dery, Michael Dow, RobertDurant. James Farrell, Dennis Fos-ter, Robert Habig, Joseph Judge,James Leake, Patrick Maher, DavidMassar, Thomas McManus, RichardParman, Daniel Pfendler, JamesQuinn, Harold Salvino, Robertsehmid, and Drew Worthen.
KNIGHTS OF THE ORDER: Tim-othy -Ahearn, "Francis - Clougherty,James Esposito, John Hackett, Frank'Hoefner, Gregory Langley, John Lov-ell, Benedict Martorelli, Dennis O'-Shea, Stephen Pope, David Ritten-house, James Bristow, Robert Buck-ram, James Campbell, David Dan-naher, Joseph Ebner, Gregory Handi-
,bole. John Kirkendall, Hal Knabb,Michael Lynch, Dennis Maher, RexMiller, Timothy Nelson, MichaelSchell, Robert Simac and ThomasTosch.
KNIGHT. COMMANDERS: PeterDouglas, Patrick Duggan, DennisGraham, Paul Judge, Michael Miller,
- Barry McBurnett, Martin Powers,Robert Quinn, John Standley, DavidSzymanski, John Bero, Joseph Col-lum, Raymond Dow, Michael Harper,Mark Herron, Thomas Hidding, Pat-rick Hishon. Kenneth LaPlante, Hen-ry, Martell, Richard Pfeifer, JohnPage, Kenneth Roberts, Robert Rus-sell, Kevin Sause, Mark Zidar, andRoger Ward.
GRAND KNIGHTS OF THE OR-DER: Joseph Steele, Charles Carter,Richard Lewis, Vincent Johnson, Wil-liam Hurley, David Thompson, JamesBrandenburg, Joseph Brooks, StephenCiancio, Darrell Conrey, BernardCleaveland, Russell Hayes, WalterKurlin, Richard Maher, Robert Mil-ler. William Nolan, Kevin O'Kane,Peter O'Kane. Thomas Parman, Tony-Riedel, John Rivard, ChristopherRoss and Kenneth Welker.
Broward 'CYO Day' Held;Officers Elected, InstalledBroward County Deanery of
the CYO recently elected BobHeberstreit of St. Clement aspresident at a "CYO Day"meeting attended by some 200members.
Other officers named were:Rita Mary Covacs also of St.Clement, vice president; Pris-cilla Lessard, Nativity, secre-tary; Paula Johnson, St. An-thony, treasurer; Diane Oolan,Our Lady Queen of Martyrs,deanery delegate; Susan La-Monte, Little Flower, spiritualchairman; Bob Telfer, St. Greg-
ory, cultural chairman; MikeMartin, St. Elizabeth, physicalchairman and Ronnie Falco,St. Stephen, social chairman.
Following the election theCYO'ers went on a swimmingparty at the South BrowardPool.
A chicken dinner was servedat 5:30 p.m.
Later in the evening, FatherWalter J. Dockerill, director ofyouth activities for the Diocese,led the members in a Holy Hourof Prayer and Benediction ofthe Blessed Sacrament
Carroll tell them that "the fu-ture of the Diocese dependsupon boys and girls like your-selves."
Prior to the teenagers' meet-ing more than 60 priests hadgathered at an' all-day confer-ence to help launch the diocesan
wide program for establishmentof CYO units.
Shortly afterwards, the firstDiocesan CYO Council was es-tablished with W. MichaelWittman of Sacred Heart par-ish, Lake Worth, now a studentat Loyola University, New Or-
AT OUR LADY QUEEN OF MARTYRS CHURCH
r\7 Altar Boys Given Awards
CENTRAL CATHOLIC High School at Fort Pierce held an as-sembly in observance of Law Day, U . S . A., recently. Includedin the program were, from left, Mayor O'Laughlin, Diane Noga,
' and Robert Tuerk.
Diocese High Schools PlanCommencement ExercisesCommencement exercises
have been scheduled by thefollowing high schools in theDiocese of Miami:
Notre Dame Academy— 8p.m.-, Thursday, May 30, TheCathedral. Msgr. David E.Bushey, speaker.
Madonna Academy, West Hol-lywood — 8 p.m., Friday, May31, Annunciation Church. FatherJoseph O'Shea, diocesan super-intendent of high schools, speak-er;
Rosarian Academy, W e s tPalm Beach — 8 p.m., Friday,May 31.
Central Catholic, Fort Pierce— 7:30 p.m., Friday, May 31.St. Anastasia Church.
Cardinal Newman, West PalmBeach — 3 p.m., Sunday, June2, St. Mark C h u r c h , BoyntonBeach. Father Edward McCar-thy, O.S.A., rectory BiscayneCollege, speaker.
La Salle and ImmaculataAcademy — 8 p.m., Sunday,June 2, Church of Little Flower,Coral Gables. Father BernardReilly, CM., St. John VianneySeminary, speaker.
C h r i s t o p h e r Columbus— 8 p.m., Monday, June 3, St.
Brendan Church. Father Ber^nard Reilly, CM., speaker.
St. Thomas Aquinas, FortLauderdale — 8 p.m., Monday,June 3, Our Lady Queen ofMartyrs Church.
Archbishop Curley — 8 p.m.,Tuesday, June 4, the Cathedral.Father Edward McCarthy, O.S.A., speaker.
Classes Are PlannedIn Remedial Reading
A remedial reading course forelementary school students inDade County schools will beheld at the Academy for theAssumption from June 24 toJuly 26.
Registration for the classeswill be held at the Academy onSaturday, May 25, from 9:30a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and on Sat-urday, June 1, from 9:30 a.m.to 11:30 a.m.
The classes will be open tostudents from the first to theseventh grades.
Parents of students in the Di-ocese who need extra help intheir reading are urged to reg-ister them in these classes.
leans, serving as its firstpresident. Establishment ofthe Deanery CYO Councilsfollowed.
Altogether, a total of 50 par-ishes formed CYO units underthe direction of Father WalterJ. Dockerill who had been ap-pointed direetor of youth activi-ties at the Diocese on Sept 191960.
In the fall of 1961, the Dioce-san CYO sent a delegation tothe national convention in Buf-falo, N.Y., with Michael runningas a candidate for president of
. the National CYO.
Parish CYO's lost no time inputting into action the four-fieldaims of ihe organization: spir-itual, cultural, social and physi-cal.
Most of the emphasis, ofcourse, was placed on the spir-itual.
Members took part in the"Perfect Weekends" duringwhich CYO'ers were urged toassist a t Mass and to receiveCommunion on the First Fri-day, First Saturday and FirstSunday of every month.
One meeting of every monthwas set aside for spiritual devel-opment.
On Youth Adoration Day eachyear the CYO'ers were urgedto receive Communion and tospend 20 minutes in prayer be-fore the Blessed Sacrament.
Participation in communitylife particularly was stressed.
Members pitched in to helpon area drives such as appealsfor funds to combat multiplesclerosis, leukemia nad othercauses.
Social activities were notneglected by the CYO's. LastDecember, a diocesan widedance was held at the DnpontPlaza Hotel following . thediocesan convention. Some 650teenagers attended.
On the athletic side, 28 teamstook to the basketball courtsthis past winter to vie for thechampionship trophy of first theDiocesan CYO BasketballLeague in the Diocese. Thechampionship game proved athriller with St. Stephen's ofWest Hollywood eking out St.Theresa of .. Coral Gables inovertime.
Now under way is a Softballleague with some 16 teams see-ing action each Sunday.
Following is a list ofparishes that have CYO's:
the
DADE COUNTY: St. Monica, Oparlocka; Little Flower, Coral Gables;St. John the Apostle, Hialeah; Im-maculate Conception, Hiaieah; Sa-cred Heart, Homestead; CorpusChristi; Epiphany; Holy Redeemer;St. Anees: St. Brendan: The Cathe-dral: Visitation; St. James; .St. Roseof Lima; Blessed Trinity; Holy Fam-ily: Our Lady of Perpetual Help,Opa-Iocka; St. Vincent de Paul; OurLady of the Holy Rosary, Perrine;SS. Peter and Paul; St. Thomas theApostle, St. Hugh, Coconut Grove andSt. Dominic
BROWARD COUNTY: Our LadyQueen of Martyrs, Fort Lauderdale;St. Anthony, Fort Lauderdale: St.Clement, Fort Lauderdale; St. Sebas-tian, Fort Lauderdale; church of theLittle Flower, Hollywood; Nativity,Hollywood: St Coleman. PompanoBeach; St. Elizabeth. PompanoBeach; St. Stephen, West Hollywood;
PALM BEACH COUNTY: St. Joanof Arc, Boca Raton; St.~ Luke, LakeWorth; St. Clare. Riviera Beach; St.Francsi of Assissi, Riviera Beach JSt. Juliana, West Palm Beach; St.
OTHER AREAS OF DIOCESE:St. Francis Xavier, Fort Myers; St.Anastasia, Fort Pierce; St. MaryStar of the Sea, Key West; St.Marearete, Clewiston; St. Charles,Port Charlotte; St. Paul, Arcadia.
May 1 / , 1963 THE VO/CE Miami, Florida Page 19
Notre Dame Council NamedBy VIRGINIA DUKE
Reflecting on a small scalethe traditions of our democraticsociety, Notre Dame Academystudents cast their votes onWednesday, May 8 for the 1963-64 Student Council officers andmembers.
Mary Elizabeth Schwarzemerged victorious as presi-dent-elect; Mary Fbrtino,vice president; Valerie Moul-ton, secretary; Elizabeth Car-ter, treasurer. Many formerCouncil members won theright to retain their "blue rib-bons" next year.
Announcement of. election re-sults was made by Mother Ma-rie Stanislaus at the beginningof seventh period, when the 30successful candidates reportedto the cafetorium, either to re-ceive or to exchange their blueribbons, and to be congratulatedby Mother and Sister Marie Ag-nese, Student Council modera-tor.
Stephanie Hefferrian, 1963president, reminded the girlsthat with die honor goes agreater responsibility. T h e ymust lead the school by theirexample of scholarship, integ-rity, dependability and co-operation.
The Council members-electare now on probation until nextSeptember when they will beformally installed.
* * *The University of Miami
awarded a four-year scholar-ship to NDA senior Olga Gar-cia, as a result of competitiveexaminations administered atthe University'during the monthof March.
"Nautical Night," NDA'Ssemi-formal Student Councildance, held in the cafetoriumFriday, May 10, celebratedelections and welcomed newmembers.
From the ceiling hung a gold-en "moon" and glittering silver"stars" interspersed with red,white, and blue triangular flags.A unique feature of the dec-orations, which were under thecapable direction of ChristineSims, was a six-foot lighthousewith multi-colored revolvinglights which danced on the
sparkling stars. The nauticaltheme was also carried out bybrightly colored cardboard fishthat "swam" on a backdrop ofauthentic fishing net, and blueand white crepe paper anchors,draped with Spanish moss.
Tickets this year were alsosold to members of various Ac-tivity groups. Girls and theirescorts danced from 8 to 11:30p.m. to the music of "The Roy-als."
NEWS FROM DIOCESAN SCHOOLS
'^Officers Elected1!%At Immaculata "\
By JANET RENUART
Elections of the new studentbody -officers for the 1963-64school year have been held atImmaculata "Academy. Candi-dates were nominated by mem-bers of the junior and sophomore,classes at a special assembly.Each candidate was introducedto the student body by outgoingpresident, Kathleen Carmona,and each was given an oppor-tunity to speak at lunch Wednes-day, May 8.
During homeroom period thefollowing day juniors andsophomores e l e c t e d JuliaSheeran, president; NellitaMoore, vice president; SandraPage, secretary; and PerlaSurez as treasurer. New Jus-tices for Student Court alsoelected are Chief Justice, Car-ole LaPietia, and AssociateJustices, Margaret Lyons,Karen Due, Vickie Matthewsand Anna Hirfield.
Another first came to Immac-ulata-LaSalle this week. AnnMarie Cianci, editor, and herstaff presented to the studentbody volume I of the "Signum"— the first year book for thecombined schools. Inside the .black and white cover the"Drama of '63" is portrayedthrough pictures and copy.Many features, never presentedin the "Immaculata," can belocated in the book — sports*color pictures, a senior direc-tory and boys!
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Aquinas Stages Fashion ShowBy GREG CAAEPBEUL
An air of gay, shipboard com-araderie permeated the atmos-phere as the St. Thomas Aqui-nas Mother's Auxiliary and thehome economics departmentpresented our annual fashionshow, "A Carribean Cruise onthe Good Ship Aquino."
One hundered and ten girlsunder the expert tutelage ofMrs. Evelyn Wolfanger and Sis-ter Jean Agnes, O.P., presentedover 150 creations to an en-tranced capacity audience lastSaturday in the cafetorium.
Veronica Barret, DorothyHidding, Patricia Spears, andElaine Sanders were the stu-dent chairmen of the showwhich was divided into five in-tegrated scenes: boarding theship, in which casual wearwas displayed; a fashion showon the ship, which was a hu-morous skit created by SusanCatalina; shopping in theislands; dining; and dancing.
The program moved alongswiftly with excellent commen-tary from students Pat Burns,Lorretto Vecchio, Jeanette Oak-man, Kay Kennedy, ShelleyDouglas, Julie Kelly, Mary AliceHoeber, and Beverley Lusardo.The panel of judges, headed byMrs. Frank Heintz, chose Patri-cia Wilder as first place winnerwith Jean Vaccaro and BarbaraSedl'acek following in that order.These girls, along with 27 addi-tional prize-winners will be pre-sented with awards donated byarea merchants and friends ofthe school.
Many congratulations aredue to all who had a handin presenting this superb pro-gram, and especially to theSt. Thomas Aquinas Mothers'Auxiliary, not only for pre-senting the show, but also' forthe fine luncheon beforehand.
Saturday afternoon was alsothe date for Aquinas' annual artshow.-Students of the art de-partment presented a truly pro-fessional display of creative de-sign, sculpture, paintings anddrawings, lettering, and posters.The contestants were left tochoose their own media of ex-pression, and the results wereamazing works in ceramics, ce-ment, stone, and even collage.Others presented lettering workin the commercial advertisingvein, showing that art can bepractical as well as cultural.
For the second consecutiveyear, St. Thomas AquinasHigh has copped two firstplaces in the annual SerraClub Essay Contest. This yearsophomore Richard Feldhaustook the top spot jn division"C" while freshman PamelaDesmond captured first placehonors in the "D" division. In
, addition, senior Dan Pierce'sessay was adjudged the topclass "A" entrant in BrowardCounty. These winners werehonored Monday afternoonwith a luncheon at the RoundTable.
Three Aquinas students re-cently attended the 1963 Junior
Exchange Club Convention inDaytona Beach. Bob Hood, Rob-ert Grelak, and Steve Gehlconstituted Aquinas' delegationto the convention which was
held last week. Ideas were pre-sented for bettering the JuniorExchange and elections wereheld to choose state officers ofthe organization.
Gibbons Frosh Win DebateBy DENISE O'MARA
Cardinal Gibbons' freshmendebaters, Mike Dissette, RayPowers, Eileen McDargh, andChris Lee, won the first placetrophy in the Freshmen DebateTournament on Saturday,May 11, at Archbishop CurleyHigh School.
The four students, all mem-bers of the speech class head-ed by Sister John Margret,O.S.F., have been participat-ing in debates against class-mates and Pine Crest de-baters in preparation for thetournament.Evidently the practice paid
off and each has a trophy toprove his success over the rep-resentatives from the other sixparticipating schools. A secondplace trophy went to St. Thom-as Aquinas and third to NotreDame Academy of Miami.
Cardinal Gibbons' first annualAthletic Banquet was held Tues-day, May 14, at the TropicalAcres Steakhouse in PompanoBeach. >
Coach Fran Curci of theUniversity of Miami deliveredthe keynote address and let-ters were presented to cheer-leaders and the top playersin each sport. Trophies werepresented to outstanding play-ers by Father Thomas A. Den-nehey, supervising principal.Clearing of a tentative foot-
ball field on the school campusis now under way with footballCoach Tony Licata supervisingthe job.
The Journalism Class recent-ly toured the new Miami Heraldbuilding. Approximately 15 stu-dents made the trip and foundthe modern and elaborate meth- \ods an inspiration for the future ;publications of the school news- ;paper, "Insight". ;
Dr. Fernando Penebaz re-turned to address the NationalHonor Society on May 16. Thedoctor, who spoke before in-terested parents and studentsin a February assembly spon-sored by he N.H.S., spoke tothe honor students as a sem-inar group on the importanceof the study of governmentin high school curriculum.Tomorrow, May 18, the jun-
ior boys and girls will join
Assumption AcademyTo Present Operetta
The Academy of the Assump-tion Glee Club will present theGilbert and Sullivan Operetta"H.M.S. Pinafore" at 8 p.m. onAscension Thursday, May 23 inAssumpta Hall Auditorium, 140SE 15th Road, Miami.
William R. Ledoux directs theGlee Club and Miss MargaretE. Phelan is piano accompanist.
AH of the" male roles will vbesung and acted by the girlsof the High School Glee Club ofthe Academy.
This performance will benefitthe Academy Building Fund.
students of other schools in theMiami area at Barry Collegeto take the College Board En-trance Examinations. Thesetests consists of a scholasticaptitude test and achievementtests.
Sophomore Dick Ott re-cently learned that he willrepresent Cardinal Gibbons atthe Student Congress in Pitts-
' burgh May 30. Dick placedfifth in the Oratorical Decla-mation Tournament held bythe Catholic Forensic League.Three students were among
the Broward County winnersof the Serra Club's essay Con-test. The three essayists, RayWilson, junior; Pat Dissette,sophomore; and Paul Ott, fresh-man, were among the guests ofhonor at a luncheon May 13at the Round Table Restaurantin Fort Lauderdale sponsoredby the Serra Club of Broward.
"<" < 'Ai
: Sodality Installs j,iAt St. Patrick1 sf
By BARBARA ZAWKIEWICZ
On May 16, after the 8:30Mass the candidate members ofOur Lady's Sodality of St. Pat-rick School who have success-fully passed through the proba-tionary period and the, finalexamination, will be recei' >yFather William O'Shea, spu.,daldirector, into the Sodality prop-er in an induction ceremony.Afterwards, new and old mem-bers will be joined by Msgr.William Barry, P.A. and FatherO'Shea at a breakfast commem-orating the occasion.
Senior . Geraldine Michalskihas been-awarded a scholarshipto be credited toward her tui-tion at Loyola University in Chi-cago from the Elks' Club CircleNo. 1601 of Miami Beach.
Music for spring becomes areality in a program of thesame name which goes onstage May 22 at 8 p.m. Fea-tured on the program will bethe Patrician Choraliers aswell as the boys' and girls'glee clubs in addition to priv-ate music students of theschool.
Columbus Council NamedHector Uribe, president of the
Student Council at ChristopherColumbus High School, an-nounced last week the namesof the students who will occupypositions on the Student Councilcabinet next year.
Student Council Parliamen-tarian will be James Croteau,Skip White will succeed Ken-neth Bryan as the Council'shistorian and David Hiss' po-sition as the Chaplain will befilled by Paul Stulgaitis.
Members of the Columbus jun-ior class have been named tofill a variety of Council chair-manships. Marc Pelaez will bein charge of the plans for nextyear's Homecoming Week. TheSenior Affairs committee chair-man will be Nate Paini. AndrewNavarro will be in charge of theStudent Council School SpiritCommittee, and Bill Prattwill h e a d the A w a r d s
Committee. Steve Heagan as thehead of the Publicity Committeewill be in charge of the public-ity needed by Skip Simmon'sSocial Committee.
The 1963 edition of the Co-lumbus yearbook "Adelante"lists 18 seniors in the SeniorClass Superlatives. Headingthe list are VVally Cobbs, PatBehnken and Lee Bondy whowere named as the best na-tured."Easy on the good stuff,"
Mike Granada is telling GerryPhelan and Roger Rehfield inthe photo of the most congenialseniors.
The choice of the senior classas the most likely to succeedwere Paul Peoples, Frank Lago-tic and Richard Dunn. Most ath-letic titles went to Jim Kling,David Hiss and Paul Peoples,while Jeff Giles, John Fomonand Rick Tonnelli were namedthe most scholarly.
TOP WINNER of a $100 bond in a Civitan Club Citizenship' Es-say Contest conducted among students at Christopher ColumbusHigh School was Robert MackJe Jr., (standing) second fromright. Dr. Hugh Murphy (standing) far right was Civitan chair-man of the contest. Other winners besides Mackle were, fromleft, (standing) Richard Dunn, third place, $25 bond; and Jef-frey Giles, second place, $75 bond. Seated in the front row, from ileft, are Brother Steven, faculty advisor; John Beyer, honorablemention; Marshall Liptak, honorable mention and Brother Bene-dict, principal.
Page. 20 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
May Crowning At Newman PREDICT LAWK MOWER OPERATED BV THOUGHT WAVES I ^ H X HELPMV MIHO WAHDER5
By RALPH BUCHANAN
Charles Ciravalo, prefect ofthe Sodality, crowned MaryQueen of the May in an impres-sive ceremony at Cardinal New-man on Tuesday, May 7. Theceremony began with a proces-sion from the school to the Mayaltar which had been erected
on the campus. Those in theprocession s a n g traditionalhymns of devotion to Our Lady.The Sodalists formed the LivingRosary about Our Lady's Altar.
The Prefect then made thecoronation which was follow-ed by the presentation of flow-ers at Our Lady's feet. Re-
BARRY COLLEGE Players present a dramatization of CatholicWelfare Bureau for United Fund's weekly show on Channel 10,WLBW-TV. From left are, Robert Benson, Mary Turner andFrancis Jean Stewart. The baby is Tria Marie McCIeary.
Barry Drama StudentsStage Play On Miami TV
Students of the Barry CollegeDrama Department went be-f o r e "live cameras" a tWLBW-TV recently.
The United Fund of D a d eCounty produces a 15 - minuteshow each Thursday depictingthe work of Jts member agen-cies. In order to vary the pres-entation, United Fund askedvarious drama groups if theywould like to take part.
Sister Marie Carol, O.P.,head of Barry's drama de-partment agreed to have herstudents present a drama-tization of Catholic WelfareBureau, a United Fund mem-ber agency.
Father John J. Nevins, as-
sistant director of the CatholicWelfare Bureau, delivered theintroduction. The script wasprepared by Miss Rachel Ir-win.
Barry College Players whotook part in the presentationwere Lucille Ann Moss, Fran-cis Jean Stewart and MaryTurner.
Robert Benson portrayed thehusband and Mrs. M. J. MoCleary allowed her baby daugh-ter, Tria Marie, to be theyoungest "star" in the cast.
ciation of the rosary led bythe Sodality and answered bythe entire student body follow-ed the coronation. Ceremonieswere completed by Benedic-tion at another outdoor altar.Beautiful weather aided inmaking this one of the mem-orable events of the schoolyear.Paul Dee, junior class presi-
dent, and John Burman, a mem-ber of the junior class, havebeen selected to attend Boys'State in Tallahassee this sum-mer. The purpose of Boys' Stateis to introduce Florida's youngmen to the operations of govern-ment and to give them a chanceto participate in mock govern-mental proceedings. Activitieswill start July 7 and continueuntil July 13. The Newman stu-dents are sponsored by the WestPalm Beach Chapter of theKnights of Columbus and Amer-ican Legion Posts 12 and 170.
Both Paul and John haveexpressed their appreciationfor this fine honor and won-derful opportunity. CardinalNewman High School is ex-tremely happy and proud toparticipate in this worthwhileprogram which may give aboost to some of Florida's fu-ture leaders.
Miss Marilyn Hulme, daugh-ter of Mr_ arid Mrs. LomeHulme of Lake Worth, has beenawarded first place in the Jun-ior Girls' division of the Dioceseof Miami Vocation Essay Con-test. Marilyn received a DailyMissal for herself and a plaquefor the school from B i s h o pColeman F. Carroll at the din-ner given by the Serra Club ofMiami for the winners of thefirst palce awards.
fOOMUCH BED REST CALLED HARMFULI D PATIENTSXAr\ AFRAID .MR.GALU)WAV, YOU
Q U E UNDERSTAND Y r1XAr\ AFRAID .MR.GALU)WAV, YOUWDMr QUITE UNDERSTAND MY r1
OftD&fe ~ =— J
I REALLV MEED ISA. SLEEP1. ITOSSED AM'TVRMED ALL
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TRAVELOH HIGHWAY |O(ABOUT 3j£ INCHES,TURK LEFT ON 7LF0R.ABOUT,
INCH65?THEN..
Election Of OfficersSt. Hugh parish CYO has
elected new officers for theyear.
The officers are: Bill Lock-hart, president; George Boul-din, vice president; Holly Hig-gins, secretary; Karen Dunn,treasurer and George Leidel,sergeant-at-arms.
School AssociationTo Sponsor Dance
The annual Spring dance spon-sored by the Home and SchoolAssociation of St. Michael parishwill be held at 9 p.m., Saturday,May 18 in the K. of C. Hall,270 Catalonia Ave., Coral Ga-bles.
Mrs. Agnes De Cario is gen-eral chairman of arrangementsfor the benefit whose proceedswill be donated to the fund forimproving the school playgroundand athletic field.
St. Elizabeth CYO Installs New OfficersPOMPANO BEACH — St.
Elizabeth CYO has installedPam Nagel as its new presi-dent.
Installation took place after a
family Communion at the 9 a.m.Mass last Sunday. Other officersinstalled were: Patty Quinn,vice president; Pat Clark,, sec-retary; and Tom Davis, treas-urer.
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CC BdsebaUersShoot For TitleChristopher Columbus High
will be shooting for the big onethis week — the state Class Abaseball title at Avon Park.
The Explorers were to playDunedin High Thursday nightand if victorious take on thewinner of Pensacola Tate andPalataka at 8 tonight.
Columbus gained the four-team state tournament by win-ning the Region 4 tournamentwith a 4-0 triumph over SebringHigh last week. It was the firstloss in 18 games for Sebring.
However, they had no answerto the strong pitching of DaveMcCammon who held the BlueStreaks to just two hits.
Gibbons Hi Announces
'63 Football ScheduleA nine-game football schedule
for 1963 for Cardinal GibbonsHigh of Fort Lauderdale hasbeen announced by Tony Lica-ta," the school's athletic direc-tor.
The Redskins will play fivegames in the South AtlanticConference and the list also in-cludes four games against dio-cese squads.
All home games are current-ly planned for the PompanoBeach High stadium.
The schedule:Sept. 20-Florida AirSept. 27—Pine Crest (SAO)Oct. 4-at Newman (SAO)Oct. 11-LaSalle (SAC)Oct: 19-Ft. Fierce Cafli.Oct. 25—at Miami Mil. (SAC)Nov. 2-NortheastNov. »-at Jnpieter (SAO)Nov. 15—ChatninadeSAC—South Atlantic Conferencegame
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ANNUAL PRESENTATION of sports awards tomembers of St. Michael parish took place at theFather-Son Athletic banquet held recently. Theawards were presented by Msgr. R. E. Philbin,pastor. From left are: Jose Rodriguez, basket-ball team captain; Coach James Kutz; FrankZott, most valuable baseball player award; DonMcCammon, all-city ballplayer from Christopher
Columbus, who was gucsl speaker; Don Masser -Msgr. Philbin Award and Homertin AwartMsgr. Philbin, guest speaker; James Clark, mostimproved basketball, player; Gary Bond, mostimproved baseball player award and homerunaward; I. Schemer, guest speaker and advisorto the baseball team; Julio Palau, most valuablebasketball player and Coach Campbell awards.
K. Of C. BowlingTournament Held
A total of 23 Councils sent 86five-man teams to the tenth an-nual state Knights of ColumbusTournament held recently at Im-perial Lanes, North Miami.
Jacksonville topped the out-of-town entries with seven teams.
Marian Council of North Mi-ami, tournament host, was vic-tor in all of the scratch eventswith Msgr. Robert W. Schiefen,George Foreman, Frank Per-pich, Tony DeLeonardis andStan Zilvitis winning in theteam event. Ed McNamee andGeorge Foreman took the dou-bles, George Foreman was firstin singles and Perpich was outahead in all the scratch eventsfor the Marian Council.
The handicap division waswon by Fort Lauderdale Coun-cil 3080 in the team event. TheLauderdale Council's ' doublesteam of Ben Adamo and FrankHeston won in that event andAl Macina of Largo Council No.4892 took the singles. Bill Mel-anson of Miami Council 1726 wasoverall winner in all events.
Highlighting the tournamentwas a Bowlers Dance at thenew Marian Council Hall.
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St. Dominic Takes LeadIn CYO Softball LeagueSt. Dominic had the top of
the ladder in the Dade CountyCYO League all to itself thisweek as it rolled to its thirdstraight victory by downing St.Timothy 15-1 while previouslyundefeated Blessed Trinity waslosing.
St. Dominic punched out 16hits in its walkaway win withGary Hinds and Lloyd Boggioboth hitting home runs.
Blessed Trinity lost by a widemargin to Holy Rosary who puttogether 31 hits for their lop-sided 24-6 win. In chalking upits second win against one de-feat Holy Rosary scored 14 runsin the fifth inning with the teambatting a r o u n d completelytwice.
SS. Peter and Paul fell byone run to St. Rose 8-7. SS.Peter and Paul with one pre-vious loss on its record hasindicated it will protest thegame because two officialumpires were not used.
Corpus Christi toppled St.Mary 14-6 in another leaguegame with Mike Berry hittinga homer for the winners.
In the only other games play-ed Holy Family defeated TheCathedral 8-3 and St. Lawrenceeked out a 17-16 win over St.John. G u s Cisneros, SteveTello, Werner Williams and JeffMiller all got four for four forthe winners.
The league schedule for Sun-day, May 19, is as follows:
Blessed Trinity at Holy Fam-ily
Holy Rosary at Our Lady ofPerpetual Help
St. John at St. Brendan
The Cathedral at St. James.
St. Lawrence at St. Timothy
St. Dominic at St. RoseSS. Peter and Paul at St.
Vincent de Paul
St. Monica at Corpus Christi
Illness Hurt ExplorersIn State Track TourneyOne seven - letter word —
ILLNESS — kept ChristopherColumbus High from probablyclaiming its first Class A trackchampionship last week at theUniversity of Florida track.
The Explorers received vic-tories in two mile events, themile run by Frank Lagotic(4:23.2) and the mile relay byJohn Pope, Jim Kling, MikePosten and Julio Travieso(3:28.5) to register 31 points fora third place finish behind Day-
tona Seabreeze, 38, and Brad-ford County, 37.
In addition to the winners,the Explorers picked up addi-tional points from Travieso'ssecond place in the broadjump (20-11%), and fifth inthe 440 sprint, Terry La-Plant's fifth in the discus,Ming's third-place tie in thehigh jump and fourth place
finishes by the 880 and sprintmedley relay.
Illness to Pat Mahoney, theExplorers' talented hurdler hadkept him from qualifying in thetwo hurdles events at the ?'trict meet. "That; cqst us r ,least six points," explainedBrother John, the Columbuscoach.
Brother John also was disap-pointed in the showing of histwo fourth place relay units."They didn't run as well as theyhad during the season," he said.
One reason, he pointed out,was the flu that kept Jim Fitz-gerald, one of his aces, frompractice for the week proceed-ing the big meek it
' Two other diocese schools,Archbishop Curley High of Mi-ami and Cardinal Newman ofWest Palm Beach also scoredwell in the meet. ,.
Page 22 May 17,, 1963 . , THE VOICE . Miami, Florida
Culminate M Wonderful Holy land Pilgrimagewith a Special Mass on f BBW| •JWl^?%f
the day of the Assumption in U l l U l l l l I l l IJoin Today The 2nd Annual Diocese of Miami Pilgrimage
Holylund and Europe22 Fabulous Days and Nights
Departs New York, Sunday, July 27, 1963
SPECIAL FEATURES:The Audience with His Holiness Pope John XXIII (subject to con-firmation) in Rome; the Special Mass on the day of the assumptionin Lourdes and a "ROMAN NIGHT DINNER" in Rome. Excursionto the CIRQUE OF GAVARNIE in the beautiful Pyrenees Moun-tains.
TOUR GENERAL CONDITIONS:HOTELS: Selected superior 1st and DELUXE class hotels, accommodations in
twin-bedded rooms with private bath, and includes all governmentand local taxes and service charges.
MEALS: Full pension (continental breakfast, lunch and dinner) in the MiddleEast; Half-pension (continental breakfast and dinner) in Europe; meolswhile traveling in the Middle East (from city to city) will be providedat meal times, as well as the lunches during full-day excursions. Meolswill be served on flights in accordance with airline schedules.
TRANSFERS: By private conveyances, to and from airports and hotels, including- free porterage of two pieces of hand baggage per person, from
points of arrival to hotel rooms and vice versa.
TRANSPORTATION: AIR: Transatlantic air transportation by regular JETFLIGHTS in Economy Class; Intra-Europeon and MiddleEast1 flights in Tourist Class.
SIGHTSEEING& EXCURSIONS: As described in the itinerary by luxury motorcoach, including
English-speaking guide, all entrance fees,government taxes and tips.
'63 DIOCESE OF MIAMI PILGRIMAGESpiritual Director:
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1963 s '" THE V&tCE Florida ^ Page 23•
USE THEIR EXAMPLE TO ATTRACT THOUSANDS TO CHURCH, BISHOP TELLS WOMEN
Take Faith Of Early Christians As A. Model, DCCW UrgedF O R T LAUDERDALE —
Members of the Miami Dioce-san Council of Catholic Womenwere urged by Bishop ColemanF. Carroll to model their spirit-ual lives after the image of theearly Christians and thereby at-tract thousands to the" Church,during closing sessions of theirfirst one-day convention.
Bishop Carroll spoke duringan evening banquet held at theGait Ocean Mile Hotel, con-vention headquarters for theMay 9 conclave. . . •
Early in the evening, Mrs.Julian J. Eberle, immediatepast president of the Council,installed Mrs. J. Winstoii An-derson, president; Mrs. Nor-man Gerhold, Sacred Heart par-ish, Homestead, treasurer; andvice presidents, Mrs. RaymondNihill, South Dade Deanerypresident; Mrs. Joseph S. Nad-er, Broward County Deanerypresident; Mrs. Gervin NU'Pit-'zen, Southwest Coast Deanerypresident; Mrs. Ralph Quick,East Coast Deanery president;and Mrs. John R. A. Collins,North Dade Deanery, president.
PRAYERS FOR COUNCILEmphasizing the need for con-
tinuing prayers for the successof the Ecumenical Council, Bish-op Carroll reminded membersand guests that the success ofthe Second Vatican Council isthe first and foremost thing'that will affect us during thecoming year.
"In order to insure the suc-cess of the council it isn e c e s s a r y that Catholicsthroughout the world have agreater devotion to the Mass
" and the Sacraments," BishopCarroll said. "Intensify yourlove of the Mass; participatein the Mass and receive OurLord in the Blessed Sacra-ment everyday and week ofthe year."
He reminded members that"the Council is being held at avery, very critical time in thehistory of the world. All wehave to do is look back overthe past 15 or 20 years to seethe advancement made by theenemy of God. Some of thesesuccesses are right at our door-step. .
WORSHIP AND LITURGYExplaining the reasons why
Pope John XXIII convoked theSecond Vatican Council, BishopCarroll told dinner guests that
because of world conditions theChurch found it necessary atthis time to call a council thepurpose of which is to reviewthe position of the world inwhich we live and examine theproblems as far as individualmembers are concerned and togive more vitality and strengthto their spiritual lives.
Since it is necessary that in-dividual Catholics deepen andstrengthen their love for Al-mighty God, Bishop Carrollsaid, it was important that thefirst subject taken up at theearly sessions of the Councilwas worship and liturgy.
"While some newspapers havegiven the impression that theCouncil was called to bringabout the unity of peoples, thatwas not the primary purpose,"Bishop Carroll continued. "Butthe effects will be that theimage of the Church will bepresented in such a way thatit will attract many, manyChristians and arrive at unityso desired by all. Surely withthe progress that the enemy ofGod has been making it willtake combined efforts of allGod-fearing people throughoutthe world.
MIRACULOUS CHANGE"By reason of the Holy Fa-
ther's pastoral approach where-by he sees everyone as a childof God and through the prayersof everyone in the world, thereseems to' be a miraculouschange taking place."
Bishop Carroll revealed thatlast week he was "genuinelywelcomed" to the closing ban-quet of the recent Episcopali-an convention at Miami Beachwhere he was a guest of Suf-fragan Bishop James L. Dun-can of the South FloridaEpiscopal Diocese.
"By living truly Christian andtruly Catholic lives there ismuch more chance that you willdo as the early Christians did,"Bishop Carroll pointed out,"which caused people to say'See how these Christians loveone another.'. Your enthusiasmand zeal will flow over and en-courage other Catholics to dolikewise."
VOLUNTEERS FOR CCDOutlining some particular
problems which should receive
the attention of the MiamiDCCW the Bishop called for ad-ditional volunteers for the Con-fraternity of Christian Doctrine.
"Participate in the CCD,pray for its success and takethe teacher-training necessary,"Bishop Carroll told the women,revealing that 50 per cent ofthe children in the Diocese ofMiami are not in Catholicschools and that 40 per cent ofthose receive no. religious in-struction* whatsoever.
"As fast as we are build-ing schools we still cannot meetthe demand," the Bishop added."The salvation of the Churchin the United States dependson the CCD and the CCD de-pends on you. The priests andSisters are not here in suffi-cient numbers, so it must fallon you, the laity, to do this."
Bishop Carroll also reiteratedthe need for charity toward Cu-ban refugees "who have con-tributed much to this area.These people are Catholics' andare in need of our love, our af-fection and our true charity. Ifyou really love God and yourfellow man you will-be interest-ed in doing what you can to seethat social justice is done."
SCHOOLS AND TAXES
The Bishop also remindedDCCW members that "the pub-lic schools are your schools.You pay taxes, you have a rightto be interested and you shouldbe interested. I urge you to takean interest in the public schoolsand to do all you can to im-prove the public schools."
He also encouraged mem-bers to participate more ac-tively in civic projects suchas the United Fund. "Thereare too few of our people tak-ing an active interest in thingsof a civic nature," Bishop Car-roll advised.
In closing, Bishop Carroll saidthat there is evidence thatthere is a movement on now tomake planned parenthood "le-gal and popular:" On this sub-ject he said it is important thatthe women "be well informedand know the principles andmorals' involved to give an in-telligent answer. Much harm isdone to the Church by Catholicswho attempt to give an answeror say they don't know and add'You'll have to see a priest.' "
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PRINCIPAL SPEAKER during the closing ban-quet of the Miami DCCW convention was BishopColeman F. Carroll shown above with Father
David J. Heffernan, spiritual moderator of A*Miami Council and Mrs. J. Winstoii Anderson,who was reelected council president.
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The Miami Diocesan Councilof Catholic Women and affilia-tions were cited by the USO ofSouth Florida during the one-day convention of the councilrecently held in. Fort Lauder-dale.
Tom Butler, USO director ofthe service clubs in Miami,Homestead and Fort Lauder-dale presented a plaque to theDCCW in "recognition of distin-guished service to the men andwomen of the United StatesArmed Forces," during the Cu-ban crisis and military build-uphere last October.
In addition, certificates werepresented to three deaneriesand 22 affiliations who providedvolunteers and, on many occa-sions refreshments, for socialevents.
Receiving citations wereMrs. Raymond Nihill, SouthD a d e Deanery president;Mrs. Thomas F. Palmer, re-tiring president, North DadeDeanery and Mrs. Joseph S.Nader, Broward County Dean-ery president.
Affiliations honored includedHoly Family Woman's Club,Immaculate Conception Wom-en's Club, Visitation Altar andRosary Society; St. LawrenceAltar and Rosary Society; OurLady of Perpetual Help Altar
USO DIRECTOR, Tom Butler presents certificates of recognitionto Mrs. Joseph Nader, Broward County Deanery president andconvention chairman, left; Mrs. Raymond Nihill, South DadeDeanery president, center; and Mrs. Thomas F. Palmer, formerpresident of the North Dade Deanery of the Miami DCCW.
and Rosary Society; St. John theApostle Altar and Rosary Soci-ety; Cathedral Altar Guild;Daughters of Isabella; all inDade County; St. Anthony Homeand School Association; St.Thomas Aquinas Mothersr Club,St. Elizabeth Guild, St. AnthonyCatholic Woman's Club; St.Coleman Woman's Club; St.Clement Altar and Rosary So-ciety; St.' Pius X. Women'sClub; St. Sebastian Women's
Council, Resurrection Guild, St.Stephen Women's Guild, St.Theresa Guild, Our Lady Queenof Martyrs Guild and St. Greg-ory Women's Club, all in Brow-ard County.
The Dade County Chapter ofthe Miami Diocesan Council ofCatholic Nurses also was citedfor; its efforts. ''.
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*age 24 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida"
PONTIFICAL LOW'Mass offered by Bishop Coleman F. Carrollin St. Pius X Church, Fort Lauderdale, marked opening of first~ « , - ^ n . - rf ft, u DCCW „ « « * , . M,, ,. Almost 400 Catholic Women Participated In One-Day Sessions ot Convention Held At Gait Ocean Mil. Hotel
Buzz Sessions Of "Glamour Clinic" Featured Variety Of Subjects
I
Women Listen Attentively To Prominent Speakers On Program
WOMEN'S CLUBS represesntatives from the 16 counties in theDiocese of Miami were present for sessions. A f«w of thedelegates are shown receiving badges from Mrs. Edward Keefe.
NEW TREASURER, Mrs. Norman Gerhold of the Sacred Heart FORMER CHAIRMAN of the DCCW committee cooperating withparish, Homestead receives congratulations from Father David Catholic Charities, Mrs. Gerhold holds an umbrella attractivelyJ. Heffernan following her election to the Miami DCCW hoard. , decorated to show the various works of the Charities.
May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 25
APPLY BUSINESS METHODS IN SPREADING FAITH, DCCW TOLD
Research Expert Addresses DelegatesFORT LAUDERDALE — A
prominent Miami research ex-pert advised members of theMiami Diocesan Council ofCatholic Women to apply busi-ness management methods inorder to make the Catholicviewpoint known in South Flori-da, during opening sessions oftheir first one-day conventionhere.
Philip W. Moore, presidentof First Research Corp.,spoke to almost 400 delegates
who crowded the ballroom ofthe Gait Ocean Mile Hotellast Thursday on the topic,"The Lay Person's "Role inthe Rapidly Expanding Dio-cese of Miami."
Emphasizing that the Dioceseof Miami "is the fastest grow-ing diocese in t h e UnitedStates," Mr.'Moore told mem-bers that they are "living in an.area which is constantly chang-ing its own answers" and paidtribute to Bishop Coleman F.
Carroll for the "fantastic job"which Miami's first Bishop hasdone and is continuing to do inSouth Florida.
"The need for being readyto meet the potential prob-lems of the parishes and theDiocese is one that requirestotal understanding, "Mr.
- Moore continued, declaringthat "little is known by the .average Catholic layman,about the total situation. Inthe Diocese of Miami there
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are about 2 million people, ofwhich about 390,000 are Cath-olic," Mr. Moore said, add-ing that about £2 per cent-ofthese are women. He predict-ed that by 1970 the populationin the 16 counties of the Di-ocese will be about three mil-lion persons with a Catholicpopulation about 600300.
Reiterating that "we are allin a media of statistics anddata," Mr. JMoore said that"about 26 per cent of Catholicwomen are employed, which ex-poses them to others and offersthem opportunities to behave asCatholics' and set g o o d ex-ample." He urged them toadopt business managementmethods through salesmanshipbased on "attention, interest,desire and' action/'
MODERATOR SPEAKS"Create a desire among non-
Catholics to know more aboutthe Faith," he said as he ad-vised delegates to give constantattention to public relations andto try to obtain the "topbrains" in publicity and promo-tion from the membership."Stand up for what you believein a changing world and theCatholic Church will move," hesaid. .. - /
"Surely Thou Art One OfThem," theme of the conven-tion, was the topic of FatherDavid J. Heffernan, diocesanmoderator, who spoke brieflyduring opening sessions.
"We cannot stay in the bail-iwick of our parish," FatherHeffernan said. "There are stilla lot of people who never- havetalked to a Catholic. There arethousands of people who just donot know who we are or whatwe are.
"The image that people wantto see in us is the image of aChrist-likeness. Even though theChurch is big we've got to goout and sell the Catholic re-ligion through an image that isthe reflection of the image ofChrist," Father Heffernan said.
WOMAN'S ROLEDuring the one-day sessions
Mrs. .Arthur Podway, diocesanchairman of organization anddevelopment conducted the "Af-filiation Glamour Clinic" whenthe membership was dividedinto groups of 25 to discuss avariety of questions for a half-hour period.
In her evaluation of theclinic which followed Mrs.H. J. G. Essex, first presidentof the Miami DCCW, now na-tional vice chairman of or-ganization, pointed out thatalthough "woman's place isprimarily in the home, todaymore than ever woman'splace must also be in every-thing that affects her home.And so she joins organiza-tions, both Church - sponsoredand civic. She accepts respon-sibility in her community. Shelooks for opportunity to makeher Catholic thinking knownand felt.
"It is incumbent upon us whowould be leaders to KNOW whatwe believe," she said, "andwhy. We must know the way.Then we must become articu-late in bringing this faiowledgeto the attention of others. Wemust SHOW the way. Withknowledge and a voice, the po-
ORGANIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT chairman, Mrs. ArthurPodway, at microphone conducted affiliation clinics, assisted byMrs. H. J. G. Essex, who evaluated meetings during sessions.
tential-leader is then ready tostep forth and dare to GO theway.
LOGICAL ORDER ."Individual training means
working for self-improvement,"Mrs. Essex continued. "T a k ecourses, read books, mix withother officers and chairmen.Learn to communicate clearly.Practice jotting down pointsand shuffling them for logicalorder. Use key-word reminderswhen you speak. Read out loudto improve your expression andprojection. Always be on thelbokont for the better way. Openyour mind for new ideas.
"Just as Pope John asked,that the Vatican Council allowa refreshing breeze to comeinto the life of the Church,we, too, should approach ourwork in .the Council of Cath-olic Women with fresh vitalityand cheerfulness. No matterhow slowly progress is made,we should never be discour-aged. Looking further into thespirit of the Vatican Council,"Mrs. Essex said, "We findemphasis on the words/ 're-new' and 'restore'. These, too,we ask you to consider asthey apply to your local or-ganizations.
"Let this spirit be our ob-jective.' We certainly want ourCatholic organizations to be* intip-top shape for whatever addi-tional responsibilities are givento the laity as a result of. theVatican Council. Together wewill pray, plan, and work towardChristian renewal," Mrs. Essexdeclared.
PHILIP W. MOORE
Women's Club
Sets BreakfastNORTH MIAMI — The an-
nual Mother and Daughter Com-"munion breakfast sponsored byHoly Family Women's Club willbe served Sunday, May 19, atthe Singapore Hotel, 9601 Col-lins Ave., Miami Beach.
Members of the club and their,daughters will observe a Cor-porate Communion during the8 a.m. Mass ia Holy FamilyChurch.
Tickets may be obtainedcalling Mrs. Elmer Job.WI 7T9007 or Mrs. Earl !*,„.-
byat
New Officers Are NamedBy St. Vincent Auxiliary
Mrs. James W. McCaughanhas -been elected president ofSt. Vincent Hall Auxiliary.
Other officers named during acoffee meeting in the home ofMrs. Michael O'Neil are Mrs.John Canfield and Mrs. JosephM. Fitzgerald, vice presidents;Mfs. James Doyle, secretaryand Mrs. Edward H. McHale,treasurer.
Other members of the board
of directors are Mrs. FrankMackle, retiring president; Mrs.O'Neil, Mrs. Ransom Parker,Mrs. Robert C. Ward, Mrs. Ed-ward J: Lauth, Mrs. Charles R.Graham, Mrs. M. L. MaytagMcCahill, Mrs. Daniel Langley,Mrs. Louis Hector and Mrs.Julia Lewis.
The auxiliary aids St. VincentHall for Unwed Mothers locatedon the grounds of Miami'sMercy Hospital.
Page 26 May! 7; 1963 VOICE Miami, Florida
UNUSUAL FASHIONS are modeled by Mrs. Raymond Nihill,former international and Inter-American relations chairman;Mrs. Edward Keefe, Library and Literature chairman; and Mrs.Gerard Ganter, prepared for spiritual and material First Aid.
DCCW CHAIRMEN participated in iinimi.j fashion slimv. 1left to right are Mrs. Francisco Montana, international andInter-American relations; Mrs. Carroll J. O'Connor, CCD chair-man and Mrs. V. P. Mannion, Family and Parent Education.
CONVENTION HIGHLIGHT also included these fashionsmodeled by Mrs. L. F. Gwaltney, Naples, Social Action chairman,left, and Mrs. Stuart Godwin, Jr., chairman of Home and SchoolAssociations. Diocestan leaders of all committees participated.
BEFORE ADJOURNMENT FOR SUMMER
Clubs, Societies Elect, Install OfficersNew officers who will guide
the work of DCCW affiliationsduring the 1963-64 year are be-ing installed by women's clubsprior to adjournment for thesummer. •
NAPLES — Mrs. HenryLowe will be installed aspresident of St. Ann Guild dur-ing luncheon, Saturday, May18 at Baroni's Restaurant.
Other officers are Mrs, GeraldBoyle, vice president; Mrs. Al-lan DeLand, recording secre-tary; Mrs. Donald Belyea,treasurer and Mrs. Ted Brack,corresponding secretary.
* * *CORAL GABLES — Mrs. C.
E. Feinauer, Jr. will be in-stalled as president of St.Theresa Home and SchoolAssociation during flie month-ly meeting of the organizationat 8 p.m., Monday, May 20 inthe school cafeteria.
Msgr. Peter Reilly, pastor,will also install, Mrs. Robert J.Munley, Mrs. Jack E. Roberts,and Mrs. P. C. McMahon, vicepresidents; Mrs. Lewis A. Ca-puta, recording secretary; Mrs.Paul Lambright, treasurer;Mrs. C. A. Zarzecki, correspond-ing secretary; Mrs. Edward H.Doyle, parliamentarian; Mrs. S.J. Campbell, historian; andMrs. George B.. Gage, auditor.
• * •. A JTH MIAMI — Membersof Villa Maria Auxiliary haveelected Mrs. Jean Baglioneas their new president.
Mrs. Clara Beddow will be theinstalling officer during candle-light ceremonies during a noonluncheon, May 20, at the Bal-moral Hotel, Miami Beach.
Other officers are Mrs. MaryConnolly, Mrs. Kathryn Finkand Mrs. Irene Buzone, vicepresidents; Mrs. Edwina Stew-art, recording secretary; Mrs.Alice Liehi, treasurer and Mrs.Ann Corcoran, correspondingsecretary.
Reservations for the luncheonwhich will be followed by cardsmay be made by calling Mrs.Charlotte Born at PL 1-2074.
FORT LAUDERDALE —New officers of. Blessed Sac-rament Woman's Club will beinstalled during a Communionbreakfast Sunday, May 19 atthe Holiday Inn.
Mrs. John Hall is president;Mrs. Joseph Pelski and Mrs.Robert Fierro, vice presidents;Mrs. Gilbert Little, recordingsecretary; Mrs. Lowell Leffel,treasurer and Mrs. Peter Colai-anni, corresponding secretary.
Guest speaker will be FatherHenry E. Mirowski, Sch. P. ofCardinal Gibbons High Schoolwhose topic will be "Woman'sPosition In Dealing with theCommunist Regime."
• • •MARGATE — Mrs. Gilbert
Wyand was installed as pres-ident of Our Lady's Guild ofSt. Vincent parish duringluncheon held at the LakeShore Hotel.
Prior to the luncheon mem-bers of the club observed aCorporate Communion duringMass in St. Vincent Church.
Mrs. Joseph Nader, presidentof the Broward County Dean-ery of the Miami DCCW alsoinstalled Mrs. Merle Unks, vicepresident; Mrs. Vincent Chec-chia, recording secretary; Mrs.William Wenzel, treasurer andcorresponding secretary.
Mrs. Barbara Fisher, newpresident of St. Timothy'sWoman's Guild, will be in-stalled during ceremoniesTuesday, May 21 in St. Tim-othy Church.
Father Claude Brubaker willalso install Mrs. Patricia Mur-phy, vice president; Mrs. MaryColeman, recording secretary;Mrs. Sylvia Morse, treasurer;and Mrs. Rosemary Mura, cor-responding secretary.
• * •W E S T HOLLYWOOD —
Members of Chaminade Mo-thers Club will welcome newofficers at 8 p.m., Wednesday,.May 22 in Nativity Church.
Mrs. Edward Shapley is pres-
ident; Mrs. Gerald Tardiff.^vicepresident; Mrs. James Bryce,recording secretary; Mrs. BasilKaven, treasurer; Mrs. Leo La-Belle, corresponding secretaryand Mrs. Louis Lavrich, finan-cial secretary.
Arrangements are under thechairmanship of Mrs. MerleNaylon. A social will follow inthe school cafeteria.
. * * *BIG PINE KEY — Mrs.
Mary Herr is the first presi-dent of the newly organizedAltar Society of St. PeterMission.
Other officers are Mrs. Hel-len Adams, vice president; Mrs.Evelyn Schwer, treasurer; andMrs. Alicia Charest, secretary.
• * •CORAL GABLES — Mrs.
George McMullen has been in-stalled as president of the Lit-tle Flower Society.
Other officers installed byMsgr. Peter Reilly, pastor, Lit-tle Flower parish, are Mrs.Harry Caplan, Mrs. R. S. Millerand Mrs. George Elias, vicepresidents; Mrs. Charlotte Lap-tos, recording secretary; Mrs.Norman Cossaboom, correspond-ing secretary; Mrs. SelamO'Neill, treasurer; Mrs. ClaraHoffman, historian and Mrs.Wendell Gordon, parliamenta-rian.
A special "This Is Your Life"program honored Mrs. GeorgeWilliams, who is moving to theNorth.
* * *W E S T HOLLYWOOD —
Mrs. Richard Heck, new presi-dent of St. Bemadette Wo-man's Guild, was installedduring a dinner at the ReefRestaurant.
Mrs. Joseph S. Nader, presi-dent of the Broward CountyDeanery of the Miami DCCWalso installed Mrs. Richard Mar-chetti, vice president; Mrs. JohnLane, recording secretary; Mrs.Joseph Basso, treasurer; andMrs. John Kopian, correspond-ing secretary.
COCONUT GROVE — Mrs.Stanley Patno, Jr. is the newpresident of St. Hugh Guild.
Other officers are Mrs. T.M. Carter and Mrs. Jose E.Munoz, vice presidents; Mrs.Joseph A. Hackney, treasurer;Mrs. Neil Cooper, recording sec-retary; Mrs. Charles Rossman,corresponding secretary andMrs. Katherine Gouch, historian.
• • • .FORT LAUDERDALE —
Mrs. Hugh Davis will be in-stalled as president of St. An-thony Home and School Asso-
ciation at 8 p.m., Monday,May 20 in the school clubrooms.Other officers are Mrs. James
Evert, vice president; Mrs. Rita
Nunemacher, recording secre-tary; Mrs. Leonard Hesch,treasurer; and Mrs. AnthonyAnziano, corresponding secre-tary.
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It is one of the easiest ofall parties to plan. Recruit afriend to "pour'' and you'llhave more time to play host-ess and replenish cooky trays.
For your spring party, servetropical punch. This bright, sun-
ny orange punch can be mixedjust before serving time bycombining a tall can of orange-pineapple juice with a tall canof apricot nectar.
Then 12 bottles of chilled lem-on-lime carbonated beverageare slowly poured into the cool-ed juices. Scoopfuls of orangesherbet can be floated on topand garnished with sprigs ofmint.
To complete your Punch Par-ty offer guests prettily decorat-ed Pelits Fours, crisp cookies,or tiny cupcakes.
Here are recipes I think youwill treasure for many occa-sions.
TROPICAL PUNCH1 (46-ounce) can orange-
pineapple juice1 (46-ounce) can apricot
nectar
12 (7-ounce) bottles lemon-1 Kme carbonated beverage1 pint orange sherbet
Orange rind or mintleaves .
Chill fruit juice, nectar, and carbonated beverage. At servingtime, combine fruit juice and nectar in a punch bowl. Slowly
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HERE'S A REFRESHING Party Punch
pour in chilled carbonated beverage. Float spoonfuls, of orangesherbet on top. Garnish with strips of orange rind or mint leaves.Makes 48 punch cup servings. •
LEMON TWIST PUNCH1 cup sugar .1 cup water2 pints lemon sherbet
%'cup lemon juiceZ cans (12 ounces each)
peach nectar . . . .
1 can (46 ounces) pineapplejuice
8 bottles (7 ounces each)lemon-lime carbonatedbeverage
Simmer sugar and water together for 5 minutes; cool. Packlemon sherbet into a V/z quart ring mold and freeze. At servingtime, combine chilled fruit juices in a punch bowl. Slowly pourin the chilled carbonated beverage. Dip ring mold briefly into warmwater to loosen sherbet, invert onto a baking sheet, then floatthe sherbet ring on top of punch. Garnish with^ twists of lemonrind. Makes 35 punch cup servings.
EASY PET ITS FOURSUsing any package mix cake or a boughten unfrosted angel
food, cut cake in small squares or any.desired shape and frostgenerously with buttercream frosting. Decorate if you wish andplace each pastry in a tiny paper cup. '•'
BUTTERCREAM FROSTING ..
(Enough for four dozen pastries)4 egg whites 1 pound sweet butter,2 cups sugar . softened .6 tablespoons cold water 2 teaspoons vanilla
% teaspoon cream of tartar , . .
Combine egg whites, sugar, water, and cream of tartar inthe upper part of. double boiler. Have^ water boiling vigorouslyin lower part; set upper part over it and remove double boilerfrom heat immediately. Beat mixture until thick and light ~%verwith damp cloth and allow to cool. Beat softened butte, Milcreamy. Add cooled egg white mixture to butter, a small amountat a, time, blending well. Add vanilla. If you wish, divide frostinginto several portions and tint in various, pastel colors with foodcoloring: make some chocolate by adding 2 squares melted,cooled chocolate.
CASHEW COOKIESA wonderful versatile cookie — good for tea time or anytime.cup butter
1 cup brown sugar
Yz teaspoon vanilla2 cups sifted all
flourpurpose
% teaspoon baking s»Sa% teaspoon baking powder
. »4-teaspoon salt; V& cap dairy sour cream ,
.1% cups salted whole cashewnuts . ._. •
Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add egg andvanilla and beat thoroughly. Add sifted dry ingredients alternatelywith sour cream, mixing well after each addition. Stir iti cashews.Drop from a teaspoon on ungreased cooky sheets. Bake at 400degrees about 10 minutes or until delicately browned. Makes about4 dozen.
Page 28 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
FAMILY CLINIC
Should W e KeepWe've been debating our problem for the past nine
years and need advice. One of our sons, aged 14,ismentally retarded. A series of tests run when he wasabout five showed that part of his brain had suffered
• injury and would never develop normally. The doctoradvised us to send him to an institution, but we de-
: cided against it. Lately he seems to sense that some-thing is badly missing and grows so tense that wemust give him tranquilizers. He is never aggressive,yet we must keep him inside the house and watch him
.:•• constantly. The doctor has again advised us to placehim in an institution. We just can't decide what would
s- be the right thing to do. What would you suggest?By FATHER JOHN L. THOMAS, S. J.
i You and your husband face a very difficult situation becauseJHf^" \cision you make will necessarily involve heavy emotionalfcL y Experience shows that parents and other members of
the family tend to develop a special kind of affection andconcern for a handicapped child, with the result that it is noteasy for them to make an objective appraisal of the situationif a change seems indicated.
. I think that parents find it so difficult to reach adecision about placing their child in a special institutionbecause they secretly fear that they may be motivated bythe desire to escape a burden rather than by sincere parentallove. As I shall point out later, parental love may also bemistaken in Us aims and consequently lose sight of the realinsterests of the child.
Because mental retardation is a rather inclusive term andwidely misunderstood, it may be useful to describe it in somedetail. Briefly, it refers to the lack of intellectual ability re-sulting from arrested mental development, and it manifests itselfin poor learning, inadequate social adjustment, and delayedachievement.
Causes Many And ObscureGenerally this condition is either present at birth or begins
during childhood, and the causes are many and obscure. Mentalretardation should not be confused with mental illness or witha specific disease. Rather, it is a sign or symptom of eithermongolism (congenital idiocy), birth injury or infection, or eveninadequate stimulwion in early childhood. The retardation can beso severe that the afflicted person never leaves protectivecare, or so mild that it is detected only under stress orthrough special tests.
Perhaps because it has received little publicity until re-cently, few people recognize the full scope of the problem.According to fairly reliable estimates, some 5 million personsin this country are retarded. In other words, it disables10 times as many as diabetes, 20 times as many as tuber-culosis, 25 times as many as muscular dystrophy, and 600times as many as infantile paralysis. And it strikes thosewho are least able to defend themselves — the children.
Every year roughly 126,000 babies are born who will be men-tally retarded. It is no "respecter of persons," for it may afflictthe child of the rich or the poor, the urban dweller or the farmer,the captain of industry or the manual laborer.
Need For More ResearchI have mentioned these facts not merely to show you that
many other couples face similar situations but to remind all' Americans that they should encourage and support community,
;•; state, and federal programs designed to deal with the problem.There is serious need for more research on the nature and
"• causes of retardation, for more adequate diagnostic and clinical' services, for additional residential institutions, special schools and
professional staffs, and for enlarged vocational agencies to deal: with rehabilitation.
Now, let us return to your question. You and your husband.• are to be commended for seeking expert medical advice as soonv as it could be given reliably and also for accepting the diagnosis
of impairment at that time. Some parents are reluctant to seek." advice or to accept it even though they have clear evidence that
their, child is not developing normally. Such reluctance may resultfrf false sense of shame and neurotic guilt or from ignorancet$ai Agnostic services are available, yet it is very unfortunatebecause the child may either be blamed for not advancing more
• rapidly or denied the special care needed to develop fully whatcapacities it may possess.
I gather that your son has not reached an age at whichhe is becoming increasingly difficult to manage. Althoughthere may be various reasons for his growing tenseness andawareness that "something is badly missing," it seems likelythat his restriction to the house and lack of suitable compan-ions are contributing factors. Hence I feel that you shouldgive your doctor's advice very serious consideration.
In reaching a decision, you must try to judge what will bebest for your son and the other children. His present conditionsuggests that he may well require the routine order, trained care,and regulated freedom available only in an institutional environ-ment. To place him in an institution would not be "letting himdown," as you put it. Indeed, it will probably require greaterlove and humility than trying desperately to keep him at home.
(Father Thomas will b? unable to answer personalletters).
Ourr
Retarded Son?'
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May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 29
II DIA DE MS CONORCGACIONES MARIANAS IN MIAMI
Trabajan por la Reconstruction de CubaMiami se uni6 a la con-
memoraeion del Dia Mundialde las Congregaciones Maria-nas, con una misa vespertinaen la iglesia de G-esu que fueoficiada por Mons. John J.Fitzpatrick, Canciller paraasuntas Laitinoamericanos dela Diocesis y a la que aate-tieron los mieniibros de laseuatro congregaciones marla-nas qu« procedentes de Cubahoy radican aqui.
Esas congregaciones son ladel Belen Jesuit PreparatorySchool, la mas antigua de to-
das, y las Hijas de Maria delColegio del Sagrado Corazdn,la Agrupacion Catolica Uni-versitaria para estudiantes yprofesionales y la Congrega-tion Rosa Mistica.
El »ia Mundial cobro es-pecial signification este ano,ya que se esta conemorandoel cuarto centenario de hifundacion de la primera Oon-gregacion Mariana, en Roma,por Juan Leunis en 1563 enel antiguo Colegio Romanode' la Compania de Jesus, hoy
r . ,Pecados hay que Confesar?Para dar respuesta a un buen numero de eatv
tas envtadas a esta vedacetfn por lectores intecesa-dos en conocer determtaados puntos dootrinalea,a partt* de nor wlveremos a ofrecer ta seccion«Quislera Sabee," en ta qtw iremos evacuando taspregumtas qua nos ban venido llegando y las « Men un future puedan llegar. Reiniciamos hoy estageceion respondiendo a una leetora que nos pregon-ta que pecados hay obligacion de decir en ta eon-fesion.
Confesarse es decirle nuestros ipecados a un saoerdote,representante de Dios en ta tierra, con el fin de obtener elperd6n. Debe ser heoha ta confesi6n honestamente y «om-pleta. Los unicos pecados que teaemos la obligacion de con-fesar son los mortales que no hayan sido previamente eon-fesados y perdonados; pero si usted quiere, tambien puededecir los veniales.
En el caso de qua usted no haya cometido ningnin pe-eado mortal, debe confesar por lo menos alguno de los ve-niales y sentirse arrepentido de el, de otro modo no habrianada que perdonas.
Hay una diferencta importante y bastante efera entee laspecados mortales y veniales, pero de todos modos, las pev-sonas escrupulosas frecuentemente se confunden y preoctvpan ya que hay pecados qua pueden ser mas o menos gea-ves segun el caso parttcwtasi
Tres factores eoneursen a determinar ta gravedad deon pecado:
1. — La seriedad del acto.2. — Nuestro entendfcntettto d« su naturaleza y gram-
dad.3. — La libertad ooa qne actuemos.
El primero de estos factores es objetivo. El prmdpioftfisico a considerar es evtet nfogfun pecado es mortal salvoque sea grave, serio, penoso e importante.
Bl segundo factor es intelectual. Ningun pecado es mor-tal salvo que sepamos lo qua estamos haciendo y ademasestemos conscientes de lo maJo qua es. Por un error de en-tendimteato — error de conciencia — podemos eonside«ara un pecado grave como sin importancia o al reves. Muesteaeulpabilidad personal frente a Dios depende de nuestm•onclencia: Haremos mal segto ta maldad que cotisideremosexiste en nuestro acto.
El tercer factor es voluntario. Cometemos un pecado enfat medida en que actuemos Ubremente, por nuestra propiavohintad. Cualquier «OM que nos prive de nuestra libertadaminora nuestra eulpa.
Un peoado mortal es un acto grave, (pensamiento, pata-bra u omision) cuando sabemos que es grave. lo que haca-inos libremente. Aunque tambien podemos eometer un pe-eado mortal a traves de una falsa conciencia, si lo que ha-cemos no es tan grave, pero creemos que lo es y de todosmodos lo hacemos libremente.
Cuando usted se ooafiesa tiene que decir todos los pe-cados mortales que hara cometido desde su ultima confe-sion valida y cuantas voces ha cometido cada pecado. Notiene que dar deaoripciones ni detaU.es salvo qua estos sir-van para cambiar o variar ta naturaleza de su pecado.
La preparacion eseneial para ta confesion es un examende conciencia cuidadoso y honesto. Ponga un espejo frente asu conciencia y mire fijamonta, sfai pretender darse excusas.
Debe coaclukse ta confeslon de los pecados dicieu-doieal sacerdote que uno osta arcepentido de ellos.
Universldad Gregorlana.
Pronuncio el sermon el pa-dre Vincente Rodriguez, S.J.Director -de la CongregacionMariana del Colegio de Be-len d« Miami, quien se refirioa la preocupacion comnin delos congregantes cubanos enel exilio, que es la de la ue-construocion cristiana de Ci*- .ba, que "supone aoci6n y es-fuerzo y oracion y sacrificio.Por eso aceptamos el exilioy sufrlmiento y tambiSn nosunimos y planeamos la ao-cion."
Record6 el nacimiento d»las coagregaciones mariana»en un colegio de internos en.Roma, con reuniones senci-llas y los grandes planes deOristo para esa obra.
* Bn cuatrocientos afiosaq-uel pequeno cuerpo satransforma en un ej^rcito —enfatizo el Padre Rodriguec— Hoy hay 80 mil congro-gaciones mariaoas y dos mi-llones de congregantes. LasCongregaciones Mariaaas hanido dando esplendidas batalla*por tat Iglesia a traves daeuatro siglos. Siempee «pwera necesario dar una bata-lla, atli estaban los oongre-gantow Contra al protests*-tlsmo, Jansenismo, Eaoion*-lismo, Comunismo . . . Pruebason los 49 martires elevadosal honor de los altares ylot 4& confesores.
Tuvo palabras de recuerdopara los congregantes cuba-nos que han caido en el pa-redon eomiunista proclamandoa Cristo Key y para los queguardaa prision, asi eonw dealiento para los que se en-euenteaa aqua "estudiaodocon toda el alma con la solaOusion de ser mas utUes aCristo despues."
T-erinino con una invoca-eidn a la Vicgen, pidiendola"que .nos ayude a veneer odiosy oobardias, confusione* ytentaciones de vida facil, quenos ensene a ponernos ineoo-di-clonalmente a las drdeuesd« CSristo para que El pu-edausar nuestras inteUgeaeias,noesteas eualidades, xmesteajwnantud, nuestras fueczas ysi es necesario nuestra saa-gre, para que un dia nuestrapatria sea efectivamente unaisla donde reine Cristo."
MISA$ LOS DOMMGOS CONS8U40N EN ESPMIOL
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MISION DE SAN JUAN BOSCO,(ProvisionaJmente en el localdel Cine Tivoli, 744 W. FlaglerSt.) 9, 10:30 y 12 del dia.
S. MMOTHY, 5400 SW 108 Ave.U am.
CAMDAD ALZUGARAY, perteneciemte en taactualtdad a la parroquia d* St. Michael y quef u n en Cuba presidenta de las Mujeres Cato-lieas da tarn pais, participo en ta Convenciondel Oousejo Diocesano de Mujeres Catolfcas
de Miami, eelebrado en Fort Lauderdato, e »poniendo sus ideas sobre los planes da teto-graoion de tas mujeres da habta ntspana etiese mavbnjenta.
.TTJoh n A .IT"al ffpoSo! o*«<
R.P.Antonio Mavarrej
A boats de esta sect* se ecMofreciendo n u r»nlem si Oaste-HADO del llbM "l« ra *• Mflto-nes", esorito por el R.r. John A.O'Brien, profesor de Teologla itala Unlvereidad de Notre Dame,presentando ea lenguaje seacfli*las doetrinac de la Iglesia Oat*.llea. Ebiste ahon ae ham pabll.cado mas de SOO.000 vol6a>eaeade esta obra, qne ha sido tntda>clda a dtvenos ldiomaa.
"Cristo no fue Indiferenfe a la Verdad"CAJPITU'LO V
EL CRISTIANO FRENTE A LA VEROAOHubo un tiempo en que los cristianos es-
taban dispuestos a seguir el ejemplo d« suDivino Maestro y sus Apostoles, soportandola tortua y aun la muerte misma antesque negar o alterar siquiera las verdades desu t* peligiosa,
Por negarse a renunciar a Cristo y ofre-cer incienso ante el altar de los idolos dala Roma pagana, miles da cristianos. en lostres primeros siglos, fueron anrojados al an-fiteatro romano para ser despedasados portas floras salvajes, mientras mocfaos otroseran ambadnrnados con pez y alquitran paraservtr como vivas antorchas luminosas enta pista de las carreras de carros.
Y es que en la memoria de estos pri-meros cristianos, se hallaba fresca la escenasublime del Calvario, donde Cristo habialesdado el ejemplo de su inquebrantable lealtada las verdades de la revelacion sobrenatural,a costa de- la misma vida. Fue ante Caifas,el Sumo Sacerdote, en el tribunal del San-hedrin, en que se apinaba ta muchedumbredel pueblo, donde tuvo lugar el dramaticoepisodio la vispera de su muerte. Caifas, po-niendose de pie, le dirigio a Cristo estasdesafiantes paiafopas: Yo te eonjvnt da pat>te da Dios vivo que nos digas si ta eres elCristo, el EOjo de Dios."
Kabie. a ta sazon una ley entre los judfosque condenaba a pena capital a todo el quese atribuyese honores divinos. Cristo sabiaperfectamente que si contestaba afirmativa-mente seUaba su propia sentencia de muer-te. Sabia tambien que si negase su divinidad,los judios no tendrian ningun cargo que ha-cerle y por lo tanto escaparia de ta inminen-te tragedia. Sabiendo todo esto, pues, elMaestro contests sin ambajea ni evasivas ycon la precision de una cortante espadac"Ta lo has dicho". Y en seguida le Uevarona crucificar.
Asi es que Cristo arrostro ta muerte so-bre ignominoso madero antes que salvar su
vida mediants ta negacidn de una sola v«*>dad de su doctrina. Este es el ejemplo quatuvieron ante si todos los cristianos por lav-gas eenturiaa, alentandolos a manteoerse fl«>mes en la doctrina y moviendolos a tener enta mas alta estima la ortodoxia de ta fe ya vechazar ta idea de que no import* gran .cosa el aeeptar, negar o alterar las ensenan-zas por las cuales murio Cristo.
El prooeder de Cristo rehusamdo coa-temporizar con Caifas, a fin de ponerse a to-no con los prejiiicios del Sanhedrin, es tipicode su manera de ensenar durante todo suinlnisterio publioo. Cristo no fue indiferenteante -la verdad eomo tampoeo lo fueron y loson sus verdader-os seguidores.
XX IN»IPBRE?IVTISMO A LA LUZDiB LA REVELACION
Veamos ahora si Cristo impuso ta mismaobligacion a sue discipulos y a todos aque-llos que habrian de venir en conocknientode ta fa por su predicacion. En otras pala-bras itnando Cristo a sus Apostoles ense-nar exactamente s« doctrina e impuso ' -•us.oyentes ta obligacion de aeeptar todv Mdoctrinas onsenadas por los Apostolesf^.T. SICristo dlo este doble mandamiento, el indi-ferentismo religioso queda condenado anteel tribunal de ta Revelacion divina.
Estas son tas palabras de CSrsfo a susApostolesc "A Mi se me ha dado toda potes-tad en el delo y en ta tierra. Id, pues, ainstruid a todas las naciones bautizandolasen el nombre del Padre y del Hijo y del Es-piritn Santo; enseSandotas a observar todastas cosas qua yo os he mandado. Y estadciertos qua yo estara siempre con vosotros,hasta ta «onsumacion de los siglos. (Mat.28:18-20)
Por ultimo les dijo: Id por todo el mun-do; predicad el evangelio a todas tas criatu-ras: el que creyere y se bautizare se salvararpero al que no creyere sera condenado.(Mauc. 16:16-16)
Page 30 May 10, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
IPS JOVENES REFU&ADOS DEL CATHOLIC WELFARE
Honran a la Madre que Esta en Cuba
Orand« ante el Rtncou a las Madres
Los jovencitos cubanos re-fugiados, que para escapar aladoctrinamiento comunista,han venido a Miami separadosde sus padre* que quedaronen Cuba, experimental-oil eneste Dia de las Madras la nos-talgia por la madre ausenteen una ocasion tan marcada.
Fueron insiados a perseve-rar en la oracion y en la reo-tltud de vida, como el mejorhomenaje a las nrajeres quepara salvarkw del material!*mo y del odio optaron pordesprenderse de eHos, sinsaber cuan larga seria la se-paracion que para ellas re-presentaria la soledad en es-te Dia de las Madres.
En log distintos ca-mpamen-tos se congregaron en la mi-sa dominical para recibir lasagrad* eomunion par las in-tenciones de la madre lejanay pava escuchar la predScade mm capellawes ai sespec-to.
Para muchos de ellos estefue ya el segundo o el tereera no en que el Dia de las Ma-dres les llega lejos de la pa-tria y de la familia.
Se les re«ord6 que un diase encontraran de mtevo consu madre y que debea ahoraesforzarse para quo ese diaella no tenga que avergoa-zarse de ninguno de ellos, si-no que de por Men emplea-do SB enorme sacrificio,porque sus hijos llegaron aser todo lo que ella suenaboy que sean.
Con sus propias manos losjovencitos que se encueotranea el Campamento de Opa-loeka confeccionaron un ap-tistico rincon a las madres,encabezado por la imagen dela Santisima Virgen, Madrede Dios y de todos lot hom-bres, ante la que se postraronpara impetrar las bendfeloneadel Cielo para las madres d«Cuba.
ACTO DE LA UCE EN BAYFRONT PARK EL DOMINGO
Observaran los Cubanos en Miami Fechas PafrtolicasLa Union de Cubanos en el Extfio (UCE) celebrara el
domingo a las 4 de la tarde un acto civico patriotico en elBayfront Park (IParque de las Palomas), aiusivo a las fechaspatriot cubanas del 1® y 20 de mayo, conemoracion de lamuerte de Jose Marti la primera y de k instauracion de laRepublic*, la segunda.
El acto, en el que se darS a conocer la UCE a todos loscubanos sera apolitko y tal como informan sus organizado-res, serf una reafirmacion patrlotica, espiritual, que decidaa los cwbaaos a la verdadera union ideologica que traericomo resultado la liberacion de Cuba del comunismo. UCSEqnierc hacer patria en el destierro con un contenido es-pirHual y social basicamente crtsttamo.
K obispo cubano desterrado, Mons. Eduardo Boxa Ma«-vidai, inspirador desde Caracas de la UCE en todas lac lo-calidades dorwJe se encuentra establecida, escribe que el 20de mayo, dia ea que tras tango* y heroicos esfuerzos sasge ala vida de los pueblos libres la patrte cubeoa, "es 16gicay espontaneamente el Dia de la UCB, cuyo unico fin « r w ra esa patria afianzada sobre bases cada vez mas solidas yplasmar ea realidad los ideales por los que lucharon nues-
tros mayores, por los que se derrocharon tantoc herokanosy ae vertio tanta sangM generosa.
"Pero el 20 de mayo de 1002,^— advierte ei preladodesterrado en el mismo meneaje — que es una meta yla etflmioacion de una etapa, es tambien un punto de partidsy el comienzo de otr« etapa nueva porque la patria nuncaesta hecha del todo sino que tenemos que irla haciendotodos los dias con la suma de los esfuerzos y los sacrificioade todos. Y tenemos que hacerla especialmente hoy en quelo que esta en juego es la misma supervivencia de la patriacomo nacion libre y de todo el legado historico, cultural yespiritual que lleva consigo.
Tara cumplir hoy nuestra mision y seguir haciendo pa-tria, — espreso Moos. Bora — tenemos que trabajar todoscon ideal t&aro, deftnid* y dlnamko, que como el alma atcoe*po de vida y contenido a 1* action. T esto es sencilla-mente la UOE."
Bse ideal a que se refiere Mons. Boza, agregan por suparte los dwigentes de UiCE en Miami, sera dado a cono-cer el domingo a todos los cwbaaos de Miami en ei actodel Bayfront Park.
JOVENES REFUGTAOOS en Distintos eampa- mtsa ofreclda en la Capffla de Opalocka dmentos del Catholic Welfare se uuen ea la Dia de las Madres.
Ofrendara el MFCFlores a la VirgenComo el primero de sus ac-
tos publicos en Miami, el Mo-vimiento Familiar Cristiaoode halbla hiapana esta orga-nizando para el sabado 29 demayo un ofrecimiento de Co-res a la Virgen por parte delos pequenos hijos de los ma-trimondos integrantes del Mo-vimiento. La ceremonia seefeetuara a las 4 de la tar-de, ante la gruta de la Vir-gea que se levanta en losterrenos de la Kscuela Parro-quial del Corpus Christi, y ala misma se invita a todos losmatrimonios cristianos, conBUS hijos, perteoezcan o noea la actualidad al MFC
Radio y TV—• WCKT-TV, Canal T, presentariel dominco a las 9 de la mananaen el programa Telamigo una masde la serie de charlas reaUgioeas« cargo del padre Sugenio delBusto, secretario del Apoaboladoen EspaiioJ d« la Dioceoia de'Miami.— Radio TleloJ, TVMET, ofrecatodos lbs domingoe a laa 9:46 p.m.,a traves die sus 1120 Ke., lea char-las reiigioeae del Padre AvelinoGonzalez O. P., capettan del Cen-tro Hispano Catdlico de Miami.
Comunion por las latendonea de la Madre Ausente
S K C I O N ^
La Iglesia en America£1 pasadc 13 de mayo se conmemoro un aniversarlo mas,
el 439, de la llegada a America de los doce primeros misio-neros franciscanos, hecho que se considers como la funda-ci6n o el inicio de la labor apostolica de la Iglesia Catolicaen el Continente.
Coincidiendo con esa conmemoraeion, las noticlasrecientes revelan un incremento esperanzador de la obraapostolica de la Iglesia y tma pujanca renovada, fruto de lacoatinuidad de la obra iniciada por esos 12 misioneros em uncaserio indigena de Mexico.
sa en una d« las nackwiies la Igtesia comenzo a su-frir recientement« penseouciones y ealumnias y hoy en-cuentra muy limitada su accion pastoral, en otros sa traba-ja con entusiasmo para vivificar el espiritu cristiano de lospueblos, orientandolos al mismo tiempo hacia formes devida mas justas, mas llevadera* en el campo de lo social.
El esfuerzo de la Iglesia ea estos aspectos es gigantes-co. Y mientras aqui en los Estados Unidos este ultimo a nose reporto un aumento de casi un millon de fieles, en lospaises de habla hispana, portuguesa y francesa, se preocupapor acendrar el espiritu tradicionalmente catolico de los in-dividuos y con ellos de las sociedades.
Al tiempo que en la Republica Dominicana coopera consus obras sociales a la reconstruccion general del pais, ha-ciendo frente al mismo tiempo a las corrierites que quierenimprimir a la nueva constitution un acento tardio de lrbera-lismo anticuado que pretende excluir a la Iglesia de la vidapublic* y encerrarla en la sacritia, en Ecuador, Peru, Bra.sH y Chile, por no citar loi nombres de las veintiuoa na-ciones, la Iglesia se situa al lado de' las ansias de log pue-blos, ayudanddtos eon la idea y con la action a Uevaradelante las transfomnaciones que t«nto necesitan.
Precisamente en esta misma edickm aparece toda unapagina que es rcflejo de esas actividades y preocupacionesde la Iglesia en Latinoamerica: Las apelaciones de justicia
. social de los obispos en Pern y Ecuador, apoyando los mo-vimientos transformadores con orientaefok cristiana; la obrade los misioneros norteamericaaos q«e s« ofrecen. volunta-riamente para trabajar eon sus hermanos de las tierras delSnr; el reclamo de los Obispos de Mexico por el vespeto a laMbertad de la ensenanca religiosa.
Los catolicos de las Americas continuan asi la obra ini-ciada hace 43® anos por aqiiellos 12 misioneros iraaewoanos.
(Actuolidod Latinoomericona en la Pag. 32)
May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 31
El Problema Educative en MexicoTres Arzobispos y diecisiete obispos enfocaron en Mexi-
co el problema educativo —tema vital para el pals— advir-tiendo en sendas pastorales que la paz escolar requiere que searmonicen los derechos y deberes de las instituciones educa-eionales. • . , .
Las pastorales, suscritas por los arzobispos de Oaxaca, Ja-lapa y Durango y los Obispos de Zamora, Zacatecas, Tux-pan, Tlaxcala, Tapachula, Texcoco, Huajuapan de Leon, Cuer-navaca, Tulancingo, Huejutla, Ciudad Obregon, Tehuantepec,Sao Andres Tuxtla, Tampioo, Mazatlan, Ciudad Juarez y Tula-exponen los derechos y deberes de la Familia, el Estado y laIglesia en materia educativa y precisan que los padres defamilia "tienen derecho natural, primario e inalienable de•scoger la educacion qve ha de impartirse a sus hijos," yque deben ejercitar ese derecho y procurar a sus hijos edu-eacion religiosa.
Los obispos indican que una vez salvado el derecho fun-damental de libertad ensenanza, "se pueden encontrar for-mulas variadas de aplicacion practica para las relaciones•ntre la escuela piiblica y la privada." "La intervencidn sub-sidiaria y la propia del Estado, el puesto de la religion enla ensenanza, los programas de estudios, los libros de texto,todo en fin, afiaden, debe ser estudiado con la doble preo-eupacion de salvaguardar la unidad moral de la nacion ygarantizar los derechos de los padres de familia." *
Vn repasc de las pastorales revela varios puntos basicospara la solucion del problema educativo:
—Armonizar los dereehos y deberes de la Familia, ©1Estado y la Igiesia. Buscar una solution practica, en la quela Iglesia y la Familia no sean ignoradas como fuerzas edu-eadoras. Creai una atmosfera de leal comprension, de buenavoluntad y de paz.
—Salvar el derecho fundamental de libertad de ensenan-za. Interes y cooperation sincera y patriotica por parte d«todos los mexicanos. Evitar Mmitaciones e incomprensiones,y que "todos a una" busquemos la paz escolar "fumdamentadaen nuestro pasado, con apreciacion del presente y una claravision del futuro."
Los padres catolicos de familia mantienen en MexicoUnas 2,270 escuelas, donde se educan mas de medio millonde ninos. Fun<>ionan tambien bajo »u patrocinio 52 escuelasnormales que educan a cerea de cinco mil futuros maestro*.Pero frenados por una legislacion decididamente laicista yabsorbente, no pueden hacer mas.
Las leyes de "nacionalizacion" que bajo Benito Juarezeonfisearon las propiedades de la Igesia en 1859, siguensiendo la espada de Damocles para los padres de familia, quetratan de aumentar sus escuelas y de ayudar a resolver elproblema educativo. Mexico tiene todavia un 40 por cientode analfabetos, niientras que solo se invierte en la educacionel 1,2 por ciento de la renta national.
Bajo la ley ningun grupo religioso puede poseer bienesraices. De hecho los templos son propiedad del Estado. Desuerte que si en una escuela se ensena religion, o se muestran•imbolos religiosos, el edificio puede quedar sujeto a confis-eacidn, sin "amparo" o recurso legal.
El temor fundado de una mayor incursion marxista enlas mentes infantiles — segun caliculos hay unos 3,800 comu-nistas infiltrados en el magisterio national —, motivo laprotesta de buen numero de padres de familia contra eltexto unico oficial, impuesto desde 1060 por la Secretarfa deEducacion, .
PASTORAL DE LOS OBISPOS PERUANOS
"No Solucionar el Actual EstadoConduciria al Colapso Social"
LIMA (NC) — Los obis-pos del Peru exhortan a susfieles a participar en lasprdxlmas elecciones comocristianos dispuestos a ace-lerar el cambio economico ysocial que el pais necesitaurgentemente.
Ni temor en los ricos, nirevanoha en los pobres, ad-vierten.
"Todos sentimos la impor-tancia capital de las proxi-mas elecciones (del 9 de ju-nio) para el porvenir de lanacion. . . . Ellas constituyenuna prueba de nuestra fide-lidad a los preceptos de Cris-to," dicen los 41 prelados enwna pastoral eolectiva que re-
. pite la exhortaci6n de 1961.
Al hacer su liamada paraque "todos unamos los es-fuerzos y superemos los ma-les y los peligros que acechanel futuro del Peru," los obis-pos proponen a grandes ras-gos el programa de recons-truocion nacional que los fie-les deben apoyar:
1. Estudios tecnicos y sis-tematicos sobre tributacidn,educacion, reforma agraria,legislacion electoral, pues "ladecision de reformar, ouam-to es mas profunda, tantomas exige percepcion clarade la pealidad."
2. Una intensa campafia,basada en la dignidad delhombre, que eambie la men-talidad social del pais, aca-be eon. los despilfarros delos que tienen, y fomente laparticipacion nacii>nal de losque no tienen.
Programas de accion queeorrijan los efectos de lamiseria en la mayoria de lapoblacidn: desnutrici6n, ma-la vivienda, promiscuidad,analfabetismo, amargura.
4. Educacion y entrena-miento vocacional para queese pueblo pueda trabajar yproducir.
"La accion politica de losgobernantes secundada porlos cittdadanos — dice la pas-toral —, d«b« empenarse enasegurar la justa repartitionde la renta nacional entre laindustria y la agricultura, ymis generahnente, entre elmundo urbano y el rural. De-be velar por el cabal reparto
de las uiilidades entre el ca-pital y el trabajo, estirrfulan-do con los medios adecuados,el ahorro y las inversionesestables, particularmeiite lasde provecho para la familia,favoreciendo asi la multipli-caci6n de propietarios y ladistribucion ordenada de losbienes/'
"Nos place dejar constan-cia que la Iglesia, esta pre-sente en esta tarea de ilus-traci6n y da su aporte a laformacion de una autenticamentalidad social," dice laJerarquia peruana y al efecto
eita su propio programa deaocion:
a) La earta pastoral deenero de 1958, la predicacionfrecuente de obispos y sacer-dotes sobre la cuestion so-cial, las semanas sociales na-eionales de Lima y Arequi-pa, otras jornadas de estudioy varios seminarios para di-rigentes sobre nuestra reali-dad.
b) La multiplicaci6n de laasistencia social en las pa-rroquias — como la Misionde Lima — y, el desarrollo
Puntos Destacados de la PastoralHe aqui algunos de los parrafos salientes de la pastoral
eonjunta del episcopado peruano:"Primero y fundamentalmente debe desaparecer la eom-
placiente paslvidad de quienes creen que el orden actual esjusto o euando menos tolerable, e que los males no puedenser remediados".
Las diferencias economicas entre nosotros se han acen-tuado, y'lacra deplorable es el despilfarvo o el lujo exagerado,mientras la poblreza eorroe euerpos y almas".
"US intercambio social que intensifica las mutuas relacio-nes, impone mayores responsabilidades, y exige una mayorformacion en cada individuo dpara) un mayor derecho a par-ticipar en los bienes".
"Si el estado de eosas actual no es solucionado, el virus(de la injusticia) «c-nducira al colapso social. Grave es el ac-tual estado: la desnutricion, desde el hambre hasta la habitualsubalimentacion; la vivienda, ruinosa o primitiva, cobija laipromiscuidad, cerco lacerante de las grandes ciudades; el anal-faibetismp en alto porcentaje, eon la agravante de que milla-res de ninos no encuentran escuela; y ni asoma la remota po-sibilidad de contar eon servicios fundamentales como templo,escuela, asistencia social, espareimiento sano".
''Cada dia son mas numerosas las voces de la industria,el eomercio, las profesiones, que leconocen la gravedad delproblema y se aprestan a colaborar. Permaneeen, sin embargo,les que persisten en su mentalidad conformista. Los que su-tren, euando se convencen que el influjo de los que tienenpoder mantiene el actual estado de miseria, no ven otra sali-da que la fuerza".
"A estos hijos mueshros, tan probados por el sufrimdento,les decimos qu« tienen derecho a participar de los bienes queDios ha creado para todos; pero les pedimos tambien que seguarden de los que profesionalmente usan los desajustes so-
para seunibrair el rencor y ei odio".
"Tanto como el egoismo de los que tienen riqtrezas, el re-senttmiento sembrado entre los que padecen necesidad inipi-de la verdadera reforma social, paralizando la buena disposi-cUin de los bien intencionados. Ni los unos deben procederpor temor, ni los otros por revancha, sino todos gulados porel respeto a la dignidad humana y cristiana de todo homfrre,eomo hijos del mismo Padre".
nacional de cooperativas decredito, institutos de educa-cion rural, formacidn de sin-dicalistas. Hay mas de 300cooperativas de crddito y cre-cen las de vivienda .
e) La expansidn de las es-cuelas catolicas al servicio de
clas clases pobres.
d) El programa de- distri-bucion de tierras que e€e«-tuan entre sus campee;noslas diocesis de Aban« yHuanuco, y la arquidio>wsi3del Cuzco, eon lo eual vanen camino de ayudar a masde 2,000 familias indigenas.
1M ritmo que tteva la trans-fonnacion social de nuestrapais es sumamente lento yanemJeo," advierten despues."Aipreinla aeelerarlo. ta todoto posBMe, y a eUo eontrttmi-ra imqr eficawnente Insjrirar-s© en los rectos principioscristianos."
Los obispos tocan otros dosteoias que eonsideran vitalespava »1 Peru; la reformaagearia, y la formaci6n vo-eacional de las nuevas g>ene-raciones.
"Si faltan las hombres ca-pacitados, es im'posible lograrel debido progreso — escri-ben — U.rge que el Estadoy las corporaciones e insti-tuciones intermedidas se es-meren en remediar el atrasoeducacional de nuestro pais..(con) una adecuada forma-cion de base que eonduzca auna eficiente capacitacion yasegure la colocacion com-Detente de los jovenes," envarios niveles de profesiona-les, tecnicos, obreros, em-pleados y agricultores.
"Se habla mucho del fac-tor tierra, pero no se insisteen el 'hombre' de la tierra.Hay quee ducarlo en la tee-nica de los adelamntos de laagricultura, y w la psicolo-gia ruural, para que ame sutierra y no la abandone; porlo que la obra educativa su-pon« todo un eonjunto demejoras que haga la vida delos campos, digna de seres ra-cionales,"
Prelados de Ecuador Apoyan Reforma Agraria
SARCERDOTES I>E EE- UU. que nan Jdoeomo misioneros voluntarios a Latinoamerica,llevan la mlsa » los habitaates del Tembla-derani, poUado proximo a La Paz, en Bolivia,
valMndose de una capffla portatil. Este sdste-ma asta facilitando la asistencia dominical amisa a fieles de regiones donde se earecia decacerdotes y de iglesias.
Quito (NC) — Los obisposdel Ecuador han reiterado lanecesidad de una reformaagraria que corrija las injus-tieias del latifundio y la ane-mia del minif undio. Peso ade-mas piden en una earta pas-toral colectiva, que se de alos campesinos junto eon ladistribucion de tierras, otraayuda eficaz en entrenamien-to, credito, y la edueacionhumana que necesitan parasurgir realmente.
EI document* evoca la tra-dicion de la Iglesia en suseefuerzos en favor del indioecuatoriano. Entre las gestio-nes de los Altimos aoos ligu-ra una eamipafia iniciada porla Iglesia en 1959 "por la dig-nidad del fndto", secundadapor ei c»niaaario Meridiano
y otros organos, el estable-cimjento de Institutos Cam-pe»inos en diocesis como Iba-rra y Riobamba para ensenara los bidios a mejorar su ho-gar, sus euJtivos y su attmen-tacidn; dos pastorales, una enjulio de 1961 sobre la urgen-cia de una reforma social yotra en febrero de 1962, sobrealfabetizacion y formaciou deKderes; el movimiento gindi-ccd cristiamo y el apostoladode la Juvemtud Obrera Cat6-Hca; y haee poeas semanas,el reparto de tierras a los in-dios hecho por la curia deQuito.
Ahora los obispos pidenque la reforma agraria se fun-de en el es-tableeimiento degramjas familiares, y eom-prenda un programa bien pla-
neado de colonizacidn y unaredistribucion de tierr-' tueponga a producir los * _ an-dios y detenga la coiitinua- "da multiplicacion de los mi-nifundios.
Junto con estas medidas -que eorrijan la infraestructa-ra de la agricultura con nue- Jvas tecnicas, credito y promo- reion humana, los prelados pi-den un plan d« industrializa-ei6n que vaya dando trabajo -,al exceso de brazos de la agri-eultura. . -I
Estiraase que un 65 poreiento de la fuerza activa dela nacion esta en el campo. .Firman la pastoral el carde- -nal Carlos Maria de la Torre, •arzobispo de Quito, tres arzo- -'bispos, doce obispos, y sei*prelados.
Page 32 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
LEGION OF DECENCYFILM RATINGS
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Was WonHoneymoon MachineH«y Boy> Hey Girl
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The World's FairEawrence Of ArabiaLazariUoLineupLisaLion, TheLonely Are The BraveLong AbsenceLoves of SalammboMadison AvenueMagnificent SevenMan lii Cocked HatManster, TheMarie OctobreMatter Of WhoMein KampfMighty UrsusMiracle- WorkerMost Wanted ManMutiny On The BountyMy GeishaNaked EdgeOnce Upon A HorseOperation BottleneckOutsider* TheParty CrashersPirates Of Blood RiverPlay It CoolPlayboy of the
Western WorldPremature Burial
A III — MORALLY UNOBJECTIONABLE FOR ADULTSAdaAdventures of a
Young ManAll In Night's WorkAnother Time, Another
PlaceBig Deal On
Madonna St.Big Risk, TheBlack OrpheusBreakfast At Tiffany'sBye, Bye BirdieCairoCaliforniaCaptain's TableCaretakers, TheChildren's HourClaude He IngUshCome Blow Your HornCorridors Of BloodCrime Does Not PayCritic's ChoiceCrooks AnonymousDay of the OutlawDay In Court
- Dime With A Halo.End of InnocenceExplosive Generation
4 Facts Of LifeFatal DesireFive Golden HoursFive Miles To
MidnightFour Fast Guns
Grass Is GreenerHitlerHome From The HillHorror Chamber of
Dr. FaustusHorror HotelHustler, TheI Could Go On SingingIf A Man AnswersInherit The WindInterns, TheLa Notte BravaLast Year at
Marie nb adLight In the piazzaLove and LarcenyLove Is A BallLovers Of TeruelMagicianMagnificent SinnerMake Mine MinkManchurian CandidateMarriage Of FigaroMarried Too YoungMind BendersMonkey tn The WinterNine Hours To llamaNinth CircleOne, Two, ThreeOne Foot In HellPeriod of AdjustmentPlease Turn OverPlunderers, TheQuare Fellow, The
Rice Girls, TheRififi In TokyoRider on a Dead HorseRocco ano>His BrotherRing Of FireRoots Of HeavenSomething WildSound and the FurySparrows Can't SingSpencer's MountainSummer and SmokeSundays and CybeleSweet Bard of YouthTaste of HoneyThis Earth Is MineThunder of DrumsTower of LondonTown Without PityToys In The AtticTrials TheTrial and Error"Two for the SeesawTwo WomenWarriors FiveWest Side StoryWhatever Happened
To Baby Jane?Where the Truth Lies
SiSi£2i'A<toWonder/ul CountryWonders of AlladinWrong Arm
Of The Law» - MORALLY OBJECTIONABLE IN PARTFORAL l
Arturo's Island-Back StreetBig ShowBlack WhipBlood and RosesBorn RecklessBramble BushCan-CanCandidChapman ReportCircus of HorrorsCrack In the MirrorCry For HappyCurse of the WerewolfDesire In DustDevil's EyeDiamond HeadDoctor In LoveDoctor NoEdge of FuryEighth Day of
The WeekFirebrand, TheFave Gates to HeUFollow The BoysFoy""** of ImpulseF' White And. .ty-One
FT. fined CityFrom the TerraceGirl Named TamikoGirl's Town >Goodbye AgainGuns of Black WitchGypsyHappy AnniversaryHead, The .House of WomenHouse On the
WaterfrontBalcony, TheBoccaccio 70BreathlessCome Dance With MeDuring One NightFive Day LoverGirl With the
Golden Eyes•Green Mare. TheI Love, You LoveJoan of the AngelsLady Chatterly's
Lover
Indestructible ManIt Happened In AthensIt Takes A ThiefJoker, The
- Journey To TheSeventh Planet
Juvenile JungleLandruLa ViacclaLaw, TheLook In Any WindowLight FantasticLove In Goldfish BowlLover Come BackLovers On A TightropeMadameMagdalenaMain AttractionMan In the ShadowManiaMan of the WestMan On the ProwlMarilynMarriage Go RoundMary Had A LittleMatter ©f Morals, AMaximeMinotaurMisfitsMpngols, TheMorgan The PirateMost Dangerous
Man AliveNever So FewNight of the QarterNo ExitOperation BikiniPretty Boy Friend, *1 Purple NoonRat Race
CONDEMNEDLaw, TheLes LiaisonsLove Is My ProfessionLoversMating UrgeNaked NightNever On SundayOdd ObsessionOscar WildePhaedraPlay Girl After DarkPlease, Not Now
Advise and ConsentCleo Froni 5 to 7Circle pf DeceptionDivorce Italian StyleEclipse /
Pert of DesireSEPARATE CLASSIFICATION**
Intruder Sky Above andKing of Kings Mud BelowLong Day s Journey „, T
Into Night Strangers In A CityMondp Cane , Too Young. To Love
Requiem For aHeavyweight
SamarSamson and the Seven
Miracles of the WorldSardonicusSavage GunsSay One For MeScent of MysterySecret of Deep HarborShadow Of FearShame of the
Sab'ine "WomenSinnerSix Black HorsesSo Lovely — So DeadlySpiral RoadStagecoach To
Dancer's RockStranger At My DoorStranger In My ArmsSurrender HeUSword of the
ConquerorTaras BulbaTeenage Bad GirlTender Is The NightTen Seconds To HellTo Kill A Mockingbird13 West StreetThunder In The SunTormentedTrunk, TheTwice Told TalesTwo Rode TogetherVirginis of RomeWake Me When
It's OverWalk Like A DragonWerewolf In A Girls'
DormitoryWoman Obsessed
Rebel BreedRevolt1 of SlavesRookieShakedownShoot the
Piano PlayerSodom and GomorrahSolomon and ShebaSome Came RunningSons and LoversSplendcr In GrassStripper, TheSubway In the SkySummerskinTake A Giant StepTelltale HeartTerror In the NightThat Touch of MinkThis Angry AgeThree On A SpreeTime Out For LoveTomorrow Is My TurnToo Late BluesToo Young for LoveTwo Faces of
Dr. JekyllTwo LovesTwo Weeks In
Another TownVampire and the
BallerinaVery Private AffairWaltz of the ToreadorsWarrior EmpressWayward GirlWhat Price MurderWhite Slave ShipWife For A NightWild HarvestWild In the Country
Prime TimeQuestion of AdulteryNight Heaven FellSaturday Naght and
Sunday MorningSeven Capital SinsSins of Mona KentTemptationToo Young
Too ImmoralTruth, TheYoung and Damned
(**A separate classification is given to certain films which, whilenot morally offensive, require some analysis and explanation as aprotection to the uninformed against wrong interpretation and falseconclusions.)
(Please clip and save this list. It will be published periodically.)
Film Press Relations \A Tower Of Babel'By WILLIAM H. MOORING
HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Lastweek some big shots from dif-ferent branches of the moviebusiness were ' talking aboutYOU.
The annual Motion PictureHerald Merchandising Confer-ence came to Hollywood for athree-day pow-wow, keyed to thehigh-sounding theme, "The NewHollywood Horizon."
This visualizes YOU as partof a silver (or is it gold?) linedcloud, blowing back towards themovies.
At an opening banquet, starsand producers, guild leadersand representatives of 10,000theaters, listened to RobertW. Selig of National GeneralTheaters and to Martin Quig-ley Jr.
Qujgley's father, film tradepublisher, Martin J. Quigley,with the late Father DanielLord, S.J., developed the orig-inal Movie Code of ethics andmorals.
The Quigleys, father and son,have done far more than anye t h e r American publishinghouse, to accelerate moral andcommercial responsibility amongthe film-makers. There still isfar, far to go.
ENTITLED TO TRUTHMerchandising, to movie peo-
ple, means catering to YOU,keeping YOU informed. YOUlook for better films; bettermorally and artistically. Thereare some. "But which," you ask.
YOU should be given reliablenews about movies and moviepeople, instead of fabricated —and frequently foul — nonsensepurporting to take you "inside"Hollywood, Rome, London orParis, as a sort of key-holepeeker.
YOU are entitled to truth infilm advertising and honesty
T—; " -.-- .„ ;
in film classification. The filmmoguls admit tbis. They slim-ply do not arrange it.
Since the film business splitinto a hundred small, independ-ent companies, instead of adozen big ones, Hollywood'spress relations haye raised aTower of Babel from whichgreat noise makes1 little news.
Hollywood "economies"," havelet out more responsible, expe-rienced and informed pressagents, letting in more incom-petent, even dishonest ones.Some honest p.a.'s are forced bysuperiors, to fake "flews" Oth-ers know, nothing about the press-or about motion pictures. Theymeasure public reactions tofilms by inches of newspaperspace, not by the validity or vi-tality of the criticism these con-vey. One "local" column isworth a hundred out of town!
TYPICAL INSTANCEA nationally syndicated movie
reviewer with 2% million read-ers, has been bombarded week-ly, from Madrid, with airmailedblurbs about one of the big filmsof the year. When the finishedfilm was press shown in Holly-wood, he was not invited to re-view it! Critics with a tenth ofhis circulation were there.
Mr. "X," the president of thedistribution company, one of theMerchandising conferees, doesnot know this, but he should,His "press" manager is suppos-ed to know how to reach YOUthrough the newspapers.
Like many others who arewell paid to sell Hollywood mov-ies to YOU, he does not knowwhich press men write what, forwhom.
High level conferences mayend, as they begin, in words,not actions.
But before Hollywood can re-capture public interest and pa-tronage, its leaders have "gotta
Catholic Programs In DioceseOn Radio And Television Sunday
TELEVISION(Sunday)
9 A.M.TELAMIGO - ,WCKT, Ch. 7 -
Spanish- religious talk by Father Bu-genk> del Busto, secretary. Dioce-s.tn Spanish-speaking Apostolate, andassistant pastor, Blessed Trinity pa-rish.*
* A.M.THE CHRISTOPHERS — Ch- 5 —
WPTV — (West Palm Beach) — To-lly 's program js entitled, ''Develop aTaste For Good Readin'g."
» A.M.THE CHRISTOPHERS - Ch. 4,
WTVJ — Dennis Day's introductorystory leads into an interview withJohn Shanley, the radio and TV edi-tor oi • the New York Times* Theneed and opportunity for emphasizingthe positive in th£ entertainmentmedium is stressed in - "Accentuatethe Positive."
1»:J0 A.M.CATHOLIC HOUR - NBC-TV, Ch.
7, WCKT Part II of " I am withYou," a four-part history . of theCatholic1 Church and its EcumenicalCouncils'. Today's program coversthe development and crises of- theChurch ..in the West from the timeof Charlemagne (800) to the fall ofConstantinople (1453). This will in-clude the four Lateran Councils, thetwo Lyons Councils, the Councils ofVienna, Constance, • and Basel-Ferra-ra-Florence.
• 1 1 A . M . .. ." •••THAT I MAY SEE — WCKT, Ch.
7 — Religious talk by Father DavidJ. Heffernan,. pastor, St. Lawrenceparish, North Miami Beach**
11:30 A.M.MASS FOR SHUT-INS — WLBW-
TV, Ch. 10 — Celebrant: FatherRobert J. Williamson, assistant pas-tor, Immaculate Conception parish,Hialeah."
• •W A - M .THE CHRISTOPHERS - WESH-
TV (Daytona Beach-Orlando) —
6:30 A.M.CATHOMC HOUR — WIOD, 610 Kc.
»:30 A.M.THE SACRED HEART PROGRAM
— WFLM-FM, 105.S Mg. (fort JLau-derdale) — Today's program is en-titled, "Simon OI Cyrene, Saint ofCross Bearing."
- »:30 A.M. * ^~CATHOLIC NEWS AND YOB .—
WHEW, 1«00 Kc. (Riviera Beach) -News of parishes in Palm Beacharea reported by Father CyrilSchweinberg, C.P., retreat director.Our Lady of Florida Monastery andRetreat House, North Palm Beach.*
»:45 A.M.SPANISH CATHOLIC HOUR —
WMET," 1220 Kc. — Spanish religiousprogram for Diocesan Centro Hispa-no Catblico. Father Avelino Gonzales,O.P., moderator; and Father JoseMaria Polios, O.P.*
<:«5 P.M.CATHOLIC VOICE OF THE AIR
— WGBS. 710 Kc.; 96.3 FM — In-ternational Catholic News fromNCWC News Service and Diocesannews from The Voice. Commentator:Father John W, Glorie, assistant pas-tor, Corpus Christi parish.*
8:4S PJM.THE HOUR OF ST. FRANCIS -
WKAT, 1220 Kc. — This "Hour otSt. Francis" domestic drama is cen-tered around a wife who declares,'"I'm glad I separated from my hus-band — he's an alcoholic." Ruthfeel uneasiness over only one point— bow to tell her small son whyhis father is no longer at home andwhy he will never return. As shereviews her long struggle to handlethe situation. Ruth makes a startlingdiscovery about herself as well asher husband.
(Daily)
RADIO(Sunday)
6:30 A.M.THE SACRED HEART PROGRAM
- WGBS 710 Kc.
5:35 A.M.SERMON OF THE DAY - WIOD,
610 Kc.; 97.3 FM — May 17-22 Fa-ther John- P. Murphy, C.SS:R., assist-ant pastor, Our Lady of PerpetualHelp parish, Opa-locka.*
(* — Denotes presentations byRadio and Television Commission,Diocese of Miami. Father David 3,Heffernan, Chairman.)
lotta learnin' to do." The first flash-in-the-pan "news" writerslesson is that neither the Holly^ who play along with them, canwood publicity fakers, nor the fool the movie public any longer.
Li t SISTERS ByBrHO'MXy
SISTER WHEN WILL W TANTRUMS BECOME TEMPERAMENT?^
COLORTELEVISION
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HOW THEWEST m s WON
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TECHNICOLOR'
RESERVED SEATSAT BOX OFFICE OR BYMAJL
SHERIDAN410 Arthur Godfrey R«f. Miami B«ach
ph. JE 2-4451 ot 8:45 p.m. *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
MATINEES,ot 2 p.m.Wed. Sat.,
**•***
Sun., Holidays 7.
EVENINGS * '
May 17, 1963 TH£ VOICE Miami, Florida Page 33
The Holy Father's Mission Aidfor the Oriental Church
LEBANON: A TREE DIESThe other day one of the famed CEDARS OF LEBANON
died. Obituary notices appeared in four Middle East news-papers . . . Why? Because thesetrees are historical and legendary,deeply rooted in the life and hills ofBible lands . . . The Prophet Ezechialspoke of them, as did the Psalms.Solomon used them for building theTemple . . . Cleopatra and St. Helenordered them, one for her royal barge,the other for the Church of the HolySepulchre. In modern times, theirwood was used in Sacre Coeur Basil-ica, Paris . . . Now there are just400 left, with only a dozen or so ofancient origin. Not far from the
famed trees, some Lebanese laboring people are trying valiantlyto build a church for their parish, BEIT-EID, in the Maronitediocese of SABRA . . . No longer, they hope, must they assistat Mass in their all-too-small building where in winter manyhad to stand outside. Through their Bishop and parish priestthey ask us to aid them to the amount of $3,000, enough to payfor materials like cement and iron which must be purchased.. . . Will you help ? -
THUNDER OVER JORDANJordan Is much in the news today. Political unrest, plans to
divert the waters of the Jordan River into the Negev, the find-Ing of the oldest theater of the Middle East in the "rose redcity of Petra"—and in the midst of these happenings, the con-tinuing, sad, never-solved problem of the PALESTINE REFU-GEES . . . They fled their homes in the 1948 Israel-Arab warand were taken into hospitals and convents, orphanages andschools. Temporary quarters were built . . . Their needs weremany and are still enormous. Will you help with a $10 FOODPACKAGE which will keep a family for a month? . . . Andfor the Bedouins, blankets are needed which cost $2 . . . Re-member them now!
TAKING A CHANCE ON LOVEBilly P., a nine-year-old from Las Vegas, Nevada, writes us:
"I have a great desire to help orphans . . . I receive a dollara month for my chores and I would like to give it to theorphans." -
You know, Billy, the priests and sisters in the Middle East.will be encouraged by your generosity. They too are helpingorphans . . . We have our ORPHANS' BREAD CLUB to helpthese children. Your monthly sacrifice of $1 and a prayerkeeps it going !
KINDLX SEND US SOUR MASS OFFERINGS. They areoften the sole support of the 15,000 priests under our care inthe 18 Middle East and Near East countries.
ADOPTING A SEMINARIAN OR NOVICE ? This means-paying the cost of their training. A seminarian needs $100 a
year for six years, a sister-to-be needs $150 a year for twoyears. We have many names such as PIETRO TEAME andBERNARDO TESFAL, studying with the Cistercians in Italyfor missionary work. Also SISTERS BERNARDINA ANDMERCITTA of the Sisters,of the Destitute in Alwaye, India.
PLEASE REMEMBER US IN VOUR WILL. Our title:THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION.Dear Monsignor:
Enclosed find' for
Name
Street
City Zone Stats
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, PresidentMtgr. Joiepb T. Ryan. Nat'l See'y
Send all communications to:CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. New York 17, N. Y.
LAWSONINSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Complefe Insurance Facilities
PHONE FR 1-3691212) BISCAYNE BLVD.
MIAMI, FLA.
FALCOPRINTING, INC.. . . accent on Service
PL 8-3751'6045 N.E. 2nd Ave. Miami, F
Philip D. Lewis, RealtorREAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS
PALM BEACH COUNTY31 West 20th Street
Riviera Beach • VI 4-0201
"While sitting in church, I experienced a deep longing \to become a Catholic . . . "SHARING OUR TREASURE
Reared In Jewish Faith,Mass Drew His Interest
By FATHER JOHN A. O'BRIEN
No two converts travel exact-ly the s a m e path to theChurch's open door. Some enteronly after prolonged study oft h e Church'scredentials anddoctrines. Oth-ers seem to bedrawn by ana b u n d a n c eof grace whichrenders their en-trance almosteffortless. Suchseems to have Father O'Brienbeen the casewith Joseph P. Riddell of NewYork City, now Frater Nicholasof the Child Jesus, a priest ofthe Order of Discalced Car-melites, at St. Florian's Church,Milwaukee.
"I was reared in the Jewishfaith," related Father Riddell,"but attended the synagoguevery irregularly. I preparedonly six months for the Bar-Mitzvah and this was my onlyreal contact with Judaism.But' I had ~a constant preoc-cupation with the after life,which prepared me for a gen-uine appreciation of the Cath-olic teaching on heaven.
"I became restless in highschool and quit to take a jobas an operator of IBM ma-chines. A year later I joinedthe Navy, and began my boottraining at Great Lakes, 111. Asa youngster I had often attend-ed services in the CatholicChurch and came to feel verymuch at home. At, Great Lakesa Catholic friend invited me togo to Sunday Mass with himand I went. I did this for abouta month.
'DEEP LONGING'"While sitting in the church,
I experienced a deep longingto become a Catholic, thoughI knew little about the religion.Indeed I had this same desirewhen I was a little boy at-tending my first wedding In aCatholic Church. I called on thechaplain and informed him ofmy desire. He told me to keepattending Mass and that hewould contact me later.
"Somehow, I got lost in theshuffle, and wasn't contacteduntil a week before finishingat the boot ca'mp. The Bap-tism was rushed and I re-
ceived very little instruction.I memorized the "Our Fa-ther" and "Hail Mary," andwas baptized. Wanting v to
learn more about the Faith, Iasked cradle Catholics, butwas dismayed at how littlethey knew."I then started reading, going
through some 300 pamphletsand many books, including Bish-op Sheen's. The novel, "TheCardinal," kindled a desire forthe priesthood, and another,"Fire in the Rain," deepenedit. I got into some Marian' booksand they quickened my desirefor an Order dedicated to OurLady. The autobiography of St.Therese finally led me to Car-mel. After being dischargedfrom the navy, I joined theThird Order Secular of the Car-melites and attended the Schoolof St. Philip Neri in Boston fordelayed vocations.
"That remarkable school en-abled us to complete a four-year course in Latin and Eng-lish in nine intensive months.Then I entered the novitiate ofthe Discalced Carmelites inBrookline, Mass.
I was ordained at the Shrineof the Immaculate Conceptionin Washington, D.C., and cel-ebrated my first solemn Massat St. Elizabeth's Church inNew York. My father has alsoembraced the Faith. God'sgrace seems to have donepractically all the work in myconversion, as it involved nolong intellectual search nortorment of soul.. "Indeed even the lack of the
ordinary course of instructionmay well have been part of thedivine plan. At that time I wasbut little interested in intel-lectual matters and, if lengthystudy had been required, Imight well have abandoned thewhole project. Without agony,pain or toil I was drawn bythe bountiful grace of God intothe Catholic Faith. This is thetrue heritage of every Israelite,for Catholicism is the gloriousand complete fulfillment of Ju-daism."
• * *Father O'Brien will be
glad to have converts sendtheir names and addressesto him at Notre DameUniversity, Notre Dame,Indiana, so he may writetheir conversion stories.
The Question Box
How Does Church View
New 'Ovulation' Drug?Q. In the Kansas City Reporter last week I read a story
about Duphaston, a new drug designed to regulate the men-strual cycle and make rhythm reliable. Bishop Helmsing andFather Gerald Kelly, S.J., were quoted as saying that theuse of this drug would not be contrary to Catholic moralprinciples. May this be the answer to violent conflicts iaour country on the subject of birth control?
A. First of all, I want to saythat Michael J. Greene, theManaging Editor of the Report-er did a great job of researchfor his article on this subject.At times his story overtaxes myknowledge of chemistry and bi-ology, but it would seem thatthis new medicine does not in-terfere with normal ovulation,but rather aids and regulatesit. It is not a birth control pillin the same sense as thosesteroids which inhibit ovulation.
For the past couple of years,or more, I have known of therestricted clinical use of drugsof this or similar type, andwhen questioned about their usehave given my private opinionthat they were morally unob-jectionable when their use wasreasonably indicated. I am veryhappy to have such admirableauthority give me backing.
I note that Bishop Helmsingqualifies his statement: "If theclaims of this drug are trulyverified . . . " And Father Kel-ly places a condition: "Unlessthere are, spme harmful sideeffects . . . " Only time willgive us the answer to thesequestions they imply. And onlydoctors can determine the con-dition in which the use of thisnew medicine may be indicated.
With his usual clarity ofthought, Father Kelly points outthat if this drug is used andregularizes ovulation as hoped,the reasons, etc., which justifythe present use of rhythm willnot be changed. Its use willmerely become easier and morereliable.
At first glance this new druglooks like a step towards therealization of that hope express-ed by Pope Pius XII, in speak-ing of rhythm: That "sciencewill succeed in providing thislicit method with a sufficientlysecure basis."
• * •Q. I'll bet you are the most
read part of our paper.Thanks for your guide for ex-amination of conscience. Fewof us go about stealing, kill-ing, etc. Our prayerbooks areso inadequate for a thoroughexamination.
• I don't think I understand"Thou shalt not covet (heyneighbor's goods." Does thismean we must be contentwith what we have and neverwish for more? If I go by astore window and say long-ingly, "I wish I could buythat!" is that wrong?
A. My dictionary says that"to covet" usually means "towish for eagerly . . . to desireinordinately, or without due re-gard to the rights of others; de-sire wrongfully." It says thatthe covetous person is "grasp-ing; avaricious; often, eager topossess that to which one hasno right."
These definitions accord rath-er well with the meaning ofthe word in moral theology. Ii?the strictest, sinful sens? Hheword, you covet when '_ ,. al-ready steal in your heart, whenyou really want to cheat anddefraud, when you want yourneighbor's property so bad thatyour love of God and yoursense of justice would not pre-vent your robbing him. Onlylack of means or opportunity,or fear of the police, keep youfrom actual crime.
You covet also, in a mannerless directly sinful, but verydangerous, when you go arounddrooling over the fine things ofyour neighbor, letting yourmouth water at the sight of hissteak, your fingers itch for hisbankroll, or your skin tingle forthe feel of that mink. Of courseyou would never steal to getthese things. After all you arehonest! But oh, how you dreamabout them and long for them.Keep it up long enough andyour scruples about stealingmay be lessened.
Coveting, even the droolingtype, may well lead to envy,which is next door to have. Itmakes you dissatisfied withyour lot, inclines you to grum-ble, and may lead you to ques-tion the justice of God.
However, we must not con-fuse covetousness with a goodhealthy desire for a nice home,a fine car, fashionable clothes,neat furniture and good books,or for enough money to sendyour children to college. Healthydesires, kept in proper balance,may urge you to get up offyour fat cushion and go towork.
MISSALj GUIDE gMay 12 — Fourth Sunday after
Easter. Mass of the Sunday,Gloria, Creed, Preface ofEaster.
May 13 — St. Robert Bellar-mine. Bishop and Doctor of.the Church. Mass of theFeast. Gloria, Preface ofEaster. ' »
May 14 — Ferial Day..4t<aSs~oflast Sunday. Gloria, 2nd Pray-er of St. Boniface. Preface ofEaster.
May 15 — St. John de laSalle, Confessor. Mass of the)Feast, Gloria, Preface ofEaster.
May 16 — St. Ubald, Bishop.Mass of the Feast. Gloria,'Preface of Easter.
May 17 — St. Paschal Baylon,. Confessor. Mass of the Feasts-
Gloria, Preface of Easter.May 18 — St. Venantius, Mar-
tyr. Mass of the Feast, Glo-ria, Preface of Easter.
May 19 — Fifth Sunday afterEaster. Mass of the Sunday.Gloria, Creed, Preface ofEaster.
Page 34 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami/ Florida
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OF POPULAR & WHOLESOME, GENERALINTEREST MAGAZINES. ALSO BIBLES
MISSALS i LIBRARY BOOKS.HAPPY HEARTS. DRAWER-A-MIAMI SPRINGS,
FLA. TU 7-3096
AUTOMOTIVE
Olds 88 '53 Hydramatic, Power Brakes &Steering. New Tires, Battery, Radio & Heater.A- l . $300. JE 8-3338.
REWARD. $10. Leading to the sale of a newor used car. Call Mr. Ditto, 945-5311.CRANSON RAMBLER l£50 N.E. 163rd Street
INSTRUCTION
ST. JAMES' PARISHYEAR 'ROUND TUTORING. PRIVATE
OR GROUP. ELEMENTARY SUBJECTS.AIR CONDITIONED STUDIO
CALL MU 5-2269 NOW.
ITALIAN, FRENCH teachers give expert pri-vate lessons in their home to adults or chil-dren. Tel. 696-2029.
BEAUTY SCHOOLS
Calling all girls!Introductory offer
Learn Beauty CultureSave $200Earn $5000or more a yearLow Tuition
Pay as you earnNo ace limit
A facinating careerfor a year round job,or a shop of your own
Flagler Beauty School109 West Flagler
•" J. Rollo DirectorFR 1-0812
BEAUTY SHOPS
FREE SHAMPOO-SET.With Haircut $1.00
PERMANENT WAVES $2.95 COMPLETETints $3.20
- Jr. Dept. only109 West Flagler Tel. 371-0812
j . Rollo Director
BUSINESS SERVICESAPPLIANCE REPAIR
Appliance Repairing
-:- A S C O F -:- .DEPENDABLE APPLIANCE REPAIRS
NE 3-6366 JA 2-1735
ELECTRICIANS
NMNIMET, ELECTRIC SERVICESSpecializing in Repair, RemodelingLO 6-7521 OR LU 3-2198 Ft. Laud.
L. A. (ART) WESSELS — ELECTRICALCONTRACTING. ALL AREAS IN DADE CO.
Wiring for Air Condition, Rewiring,Repairs, Electric Range, Dryers,
Water Heater Repair Service. TU 8-1556
EXTERMINATORS
99c A MONTHKeeps All Roaches
Out of Your Home — TU 8-6112
SIGNS
EDVITO SIGNSTRUCKS WALLS
90 N.W. 54th St.GOLD LEAF
PL 8-7025
OUR PARISH
&&'»'It...' .
"Good heavens, children! Is it three o'clock already?"SIGNS
LIGHT YOUR WAYto better business
ELECTRO NEON SIGN CO., Inc.Larry Monahan, OX 1-0805
2955 N.W. 75th St.Miami, Fla.
"House Shop" inThe Voice for
Real Estate Bargains
INSURANCE
GIL HAAS INSURANCE, INC.See or call' us for
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE1338 N.W. 36th St. NE 5-0921
MOVING & STORAGE
PADDED VAN FLAT PRICESSMALL JOBS — $5
CALL MU 1-9930 ANYTIME
JOE WELSH MOVING and STORAGE,Local moving, modern Vans. Local, long dis-tance moving. In Fla., Ft. Lauderdale, Palm.Beach, Orlando, Tampa, Key West. NE 5-2461days. Eves. MU 1-1102.
WATER SOFTENERS
SERVISOFT SYSTEM OF MIAMI INC.HI 3-5515. Service - Repairs - Sales. HI 3-5525
109 San Lorenzo Ave., Coral Gables, Fla.
" • ' CLIP N A 4-7552 SAVE ~ " 1
ROOFS CLEANED j$4 f up to 1000 square feet •U FR 3-8125 — YU 9-3737 J
Tile I Gravel Wbite Coated $55 I
Licensed, Insured, Guaranteed JL _ . CLIP W l 7-6465 SAVE , _ _ !
ROOF LEAKINGFHA
? INSPECTIONS LEAK SPECIALISTS
ALL STATE ROOFING Member ofSt. V incen t De Paul
LICENSEDINSURED
696-6311
FULL BUSHY
IXORAS 5OcIN GAL. CANS , ..
SPECIALS IN EVERY DEPARTMENTAT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD
• FERTILIZERS • SHRUBS
• PLANTS • WEDGES
MELANDOR NURSERY15721 N.W. 7th AVENUE Wl 7-6971
Open Doi ly 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Closed W e d .
EMPLOYMENTHELP WANTED — FEMALE
INTERESTING POSITION!If you are a proficient and accuratetypist. Have some knowledge of stenciland mimeograph, are alert and wtllingthis is your opportunity. CongenialGo-workers. Many fringe benefits. Salaryopen. In your reply include PhoneNumber. Box 12 The Voice 6301 Bis-cane Blvd.,-Miami. .
Mature Woman, child care. Light duties. 5days a week. Immaculate Conception area.Ph. after 6 or weekends. OX 1-1519 •
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISINGTELEPHONE SALES
FULL TIME POSITIONS-AVAILABLE• 5 DAY WEEK '
SAURYPART TIME 20 HR. WEEKLY
SALARYPrevious Selling Experience and typingfielpful but not absolutaly necessary.
Qualifications :An interest in Sales and Advertising,
Initiative, and Willingness., A pleasant Telephone Voice '
Write Box 15, The Voice6301 Biscayne Blvd., Miami, Fla.
Include full name, address and telephone,Previous Experience. .
HELP WANTED FEMALE
BOOKKEEPERDouble entry up through trial balance. N.E.location. Pays $300 per month. 5 Day week,paid vacation, holidays, insurance and hos-pital. Give age, phone and ful l experiencedetails. Write Box #9 .
The Voice, 6301 Biscayne BJvd.
WANTEDMature woman for homemakers service.Work as substitute mothers. Must qualify;health, references & moral background. 5day week. N« living in. Write Box '50,The Voice, 6301 Biscayne Blvd.
COUPLE WHO NEEDS HOMERENT FREE
Furnished 2 bedrooms - Waterfront HomeFree Utilities. In exchange wife willing to dohouse work & care for 7 children when -need-ed.Ho Cooking — 5 Days — Some Baby Sitting
Husband to keep up his'own yard onlyApply giving details & Reference to Box #24,The Voice, 6301 Biscayne Blvd., Miami.
Housekeeper for elderly couple, live in. Giveage and references. Box 10, The Voice, 6301Bjscayne Blvd., Miami.
Woman, single. Bookkeeper and general office.Age 35-45. N.E. location. Pays $80 for 40hour, 5 day week. Paid vacation, holidays, in-surance and hospital. Write age, phone andfull experience details. An Equal OpportunityEmployer. Write Box #7, The Voice, 6301,Biscayne Blvd.
HELP WANTED MALE
Retired couple. Handy man. Exchange for-apartment. PL 7-4464 — 377-3241.
HELP WANTED MALE — FEMALE
Free room in exchange for light duties, coupleor mature woman. NA 1-2870.
POSITIONS WANTED
Mature widow, housekeeper for Rectory. Ex-perienced. Well recommended. Write Box 3635Lantana Fla.
HOME IMPROVEMENTAPPLIANCE REPAIRING
Free estimates, gas, electric appliances.Expert Work. Reasonable. Matt's 691-8363.
BUILDERS
Homes - Florida Rooms - Additions,. Alterations. FREE ESTIMATE.Bob Burkart, Builder - 226-6136
AD0ITI6NS, REPAIRS — ALL TYPESA. J. CONTRACTING CO.
Licensed & Insured. NO JOB TOO SMALL.Let Us Prove Our Low Cost To You.
CALL TONY Wl 7-3989 ORJACK NA 1-3326
BUILDING REPAIRS
AL - The HandymanEnclose carports, painting,
Jalousies, carpentry, masonry &household repairs. No job too small.
Wl 7-6423 or Wl 5-7878
TONY THE HANDYMANElectric, plumbing, carpentry,'masonry, jalousies, painting.
Install air conditioners. Wl -74256
CARPENTRY — PAINTING ETC.GENERAL HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS
For Estimate — Call FREDNE 5-3463 — Member Corpus Christi
ALL TYPES REPAIRS S REMODELINGKitchens, Bathrooms, Etc., Residential or Com-mercial quality work. JE 1-0957, Beach Area
CARPENTERS
St. Brendan Parish — HOUSEHOLD,SMALUREPAIRS, ROOF LEAKS etc.Call John Crimmins for estimate.
CA 1-4359 or CA 1-5676
CARPENTRY — PAINTING, ETC.GENERAL HOUSEHOLD REPAIRS
Fred, NE 5-3463 — Member Corpus Christi
CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION
PATIOS, DRIVES, walks. KEYSTONE, color,any size job. Quality work. Free estimate.
MU 8-2151
HOME REPAIR
All types of home repair, also screening re-pair. No job too small. ROY, Member EpiphanyParish, CE 5-6434.
LAWN MOWER SERVICE
MIAMI LAWN MOWER CO.Authorized Service and Parts
Fertilizers — Sharpening — Welding„ . , „ TWO STORES TO SE*VE YOU \27 S.W 27th Ave. Call HI 4-230520256 Od Cutler Rd. Call CE 5-4323
Uncle Tom's Garden SupplyLawnmower Rental and Repairs
Large Selection PLANTS and SHRUBBERY2105 E. 4th~ Ave., Hialeah — 888-8832
LAWN MAINTENANCE
HARPERS LANDSCAPING SERVICE-MOW AND EDGE - $5 AND UP
CALL JIMMIE CA I f "
LAWN SPRINKLERS
. ALLIED LAWNSPRINKLER SYSTEMS
Lawn Sprinklers, Pumps and WellsInstalled, Serviced & Maintained
SERVING S. FLORIDA SINCE 1949-FREE ESTIMATES IN DADE
CALL MU 8-4661
VELVET LAWN SERVICE-WHITEBISCAYNE PARK, MIAMI SHORES OR
NORTH MIAMI AREAS. CALLPL 8-8675 of PL 9-3244
SCREENS REPAIRED
Fiber glass — screens replaced, repaired,porches, patios, pools. Call after 5 P.M.CE 5-4039.
PAINTING
AULT AND SONPainting and Paper Hanging
For more than 40 yearsThe Name of Quality
Better Work by Better WorkmenMember of St. Brendan • CA 6-4831
FORQUICKER, EASIER WASHING
BRIGHTER, SPARKLING DISHES
Jin BEAUTYSCHOOL
"Where Career* Are Born"DAY and EVENING CLASSES
ADprovct for C.I. Unrein TninincEVERY BEAUTY
SERVICENewest Styling Methods Tn(MAdnnced Hair Styling Clun i
By Appointment Only
AIR CONDIT1ONIN0
free PlacementService • A
W N.«. 4fll ST. ( I ' / j BLOCKS WEST Of BISC. BLVD.)
FR 9-3415
ftPlumbing Repair Service
PLaza 7-0606
# • , ELECTRIC SEWER CABLE£ PLaza 9-0355 Nights and Sundays PL 8-9622
J McCormick-Boyeli Plumbing Co.» 7424 N.E. 2nd AVE. MIAMI. FLA.
SERVISOFTREG. U.S. PAT.
SOFT WATER SERVICE
on a low-cost
S&vtce• PHONE FOR DETAILS
HI 3-5515109 San Lorenzo
Coral Gables
"WE SOFTEN THE WATER FOR YOU"
May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 35
VOICE CLASSIFIED 6301 BISCAYNE BLVD MIAMBAINT1NG
PAINTING BY CONTRACT — ANY AREAINTERIOR — REASONABLE — EXTERIOR
LICENSED & INSUREDVERNON L. CASSELL CALL 821-2906
PAINTING - INTERIOR - EXTERIORLicensed, Insured, Clean, Reliable. LOW
RATE. Call FRANK 696-3824
Painting, inside - outside, any size Job.Carpentry work. Free estimates. MemberSt. Mary. Dee. PL 7-3875.
PLUMBING
McCORMICK-BOYETTPlumbing Co. 24 HR. SERVICEWe specialize in plumbing repairs
7424 N.E. 2nd Ave., Miami, Fla.Day PL 7-0606
Night PL 9-0355 - PL 8-9622
PHIL PALM PLUMBINGREPAIRS & ALTERATIONS
CALL PLAZA 8-9896
Priced For Quick Sale1 HOT POINT APARTMENT SIZE RANGE
1 STAUFFER EXERCISING CHAIR1 CARPENTER LEVEL 6 FT.X8"
1 SINGER ELECTRIC VACUUM SWEEPER254 N.E. 1 RD. HOMESTEAD
PHONE Cl 7-2525
SEWING MACHINES
FR*EE ESTIMATES — ALL MAKESRepairs — Electrify — parts. Guaranteedwork.. New & used machines $15 and up.90 N.E. 79th St ;, Mia. 757-9071.
VENETIAN BLIND SERVICE
VENETIAN BLINDS-CORNICESREFINISHED REPAIRS YOUR HOME
CALL STEADCRAFT PL 9-68449510 N.W.- 7th AVE.
(MEMBER Of ST. JAMES PARISH)
WATER HEATERS
LOWS E. MILtER PLUMBING CO.Water Heater Repairs & Sales
4102 Laguna Est. 1930 HI 8-9912
WELL DRILLING
WELLS DRILLED UP TO 4 "Licensed, Insured, in Dade Co. All wellsguaranteed 1 yr. Neil Conway. MO 5-1209
ROOFS - PRESSURE CLEANED
ROOFS - PRESSURE CLEANED$14.95 - ANY SIZE ROOF'
Licensed and Insured. HI 4-1627
RUG CLEANING
Rugs Cleaned — in your Home, of our PlantMIKE'S RUG CLEANING
Dade PL 8-7894 Broward YU 9-7811
Give your Rugs & Carpets a'NEW LOOK' — For ESTIMATE
CALL Hank — PL 4-0898
ROOFING
LEAKS — TILES REPAIRED $4 UPALL TYPES ROOFING & REPAIRS
LICENSED & INSUREDALL METROPOLITAN ROOFING CO.
FREE ESTIMATES CA 1-667118 YEARS ROOFING EXPERIENCE
(MEMBER OF ST. BRENDAN PARISH)
Williams Roofing all typesGutters, Solars, Roof pressure coating,
painting. Free est. HI 8-6102 - CA 1-091
JOHN'S ROOFINGLeaky Roofs Repaired.
$5 Up. Expert Work CA 6-2790 — HI 8-6102
UPHOLSTERING
SPECIAL — SOFA BEDS — $39.95HUB CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY
7640-N.W. 7th AVE. PL 8-9408We also BUY & SELL used furniture
FREE DECORATOR ASSISTANCERe-upholstery - Slip Covers - Drapes. FreeEstimates by experienced Decorators. FineWorkmanship at lowest prices. Quality Fabrics.
. Credit Terms. Unique Decorators. Wl 5-7402
HAVE A SERVICETO OFFER?
TELL YOUR FRIENDSIN THE VOICE!
FURNITURE REFINISHED
ALUMINUMCHAIRS -k LOUNGES
REWEBBEDREPAIRED — REPLACED
Free Pickup & DeliveryTRIPLE R, INC.
13140 W. Dixie Hwy. . PL 7-5381
HAVE A SERVICETO OFFER?
TELL YOUR FRIENDSIN THE VOICE!
FOR SALE
FENCE FOR SAW
FREE ESTIMATESCHAIN—LINK—WOOD—CONCRETE
FENCING AT ITS BEST!F.H.A. FINANCING LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS.FENCE AND GARDEN CENTER. • PH. 888-5193
HOUSEHOLD SALE
EARLY AMERICANANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE
TREMENDOUS SAVINGSDining Rooms - Bedrooms
Many Other ItemsFURNITURE INDUSTRIES
135 St. & N.E. 16 Ave. Call PL 4-6450
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Coke MachineHolds 3 Dozen Cokes
Newly Painted$40.00 247-6215
Air CompressorIV2 Horsepower — 3 Phase
$250.Phone 247-6215 '
Ray lalamas Firestone Co.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
TREMENDOUS REDUCTIONSOn 62 Model Kinsman Organs
THIS WEEK SPECIALBLOND WURLITZER CONSOLE PIANO.Pianos and Organs of Brand Names...FREE PRACTICE ROOM AND TEACHER..
NEW AND USED PIANOS OF, POPULAR MAKESBuy-Trade-Service-Tune or Rent
Max Lewis Ace T.V. 11500 NW 7 Ave. 688-2596
ALLEN ORGANSFOR CHURCH OR HOME
OVERBROOK MUSIC STOREEXCLUSIVE REP FOR BROWARD COUNTY
FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA JA 4-2628
RADIO, TV & STEREO FOR SALE
DRASTIC REDUCTIONSNEW MODELS
WESTINGHOUSE TELEVISIONSCLOSE OUT AT COST
23" Swivel base $199.9523" Early American (Maple) $258.23" Lowboy — Remote (Walnut) $299.23" Combination T.V. - Stereo - Radio $275.Fully Reconditioned — Repossessed Models.
23" Table model $65.23" Console -.:.$115.19" Portable and Table . . . . .$115.
COOKS GAS CO., INC.348 Washington Ave., Homestead
Cl 7-8440
PETS fOR SALE
Poodle puppies. Champion sired miniaturebeauties. $50. Wl 5-7010.
REAL ESTATE
MARY MULLEN, RealtorL t H A r e l g ! R e n t a l Sa,soTHAlvrRl!ArES7349 S.W. 8th STREET - CA 6-1311
WILLIAM C. MURPHY, RealtorMember - Corpus Christi Parish
3191 N.W. 7th Ave. Ph. NE 5-2955
REBUILT USED APPLIANCESSALES-SERVICE-REPAIRS
WasherStoveTape Recorder
FreezerAir ConditionerDisposal
Refrigerators, Refinishing
NE 3-6366
DryerTelevisionStereoDishwasher
JA 2-1735We Install Afr Conditioning — Antennas
APPLIANCE SERVICE CORPORATION OF FLORIDA3665 N.W. 49th ST., MIAMI
REAL ESTATE
U.S. GOVERNMENT HOME$73 per month — $100 down
THREE BEDROOMS — TWO BATHSJ. A. STONE, Realtor . NA 1-3623
RENTALS — MANAGEMENTLISTINGS WANTED
DICK BROOKS — REALTOR — 688-6638
INCOME PROPERTY N.W.
7 Units — home & income on 3 lots.Suitable for day school, nursery,
or home for the aged. Fenced.Owner, FR 9-7410 — PL 7-4464.
J. A. O'BRIEN REALTYYU 9-2096 — EVES. YU 3-4428
6081 Washington St., W. Hollywood
B A R G A I N S !1) — 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED HOME,
CLOSE TO SHOPPINGCENTER — $7,500
2) — LARGE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH,FLORIDA ROOM — $15,000
3) — BEAUTIFUL 2 BEDROOM HOME,PEMBROKE PINES — $10,500
4) — LO'TS AND ACREAGE ATSPECULATORS PRICES ! !
C A L L U S ! ! !
INCOME PROPERTY COCONUT GR.
Walking Distance to St. Hugh's. Large 3 bed-room, 3 bath. Extra 2 apt's, needs repair,$19,500. Consider Rental. Owner, JE 1-0957.
SALE LOTS
LAND IS WEALTHINVEST IN FLORIDA
Beautiful Suwannee CountyReasonably Priced
High Dry — Legally PlattedTitle Insured — Size 50 x 100
$150 EACHOwner Sacrificing Call 531-0957
HOMES FOR SALE NO. MIAMI
Leaving. Must sell 3 bedroom, 2 bath, den,carport, oak floors, air cond. $76 per month.2 blocks_to St. James, Stores. 265 N.W. 131stSt. Owner.
HOMES FOR SALE N.E.
ST. ROSE OF LIMANear School, Shopping, 3 Bedroom
. 2 Bath. Florida Room, Air Cond.$18,500. Owner 500 N.E. I l l St. PL 4-9391
BUILDER'S BREAM HOMEReduced from $32,000 to $26,000No Qualifying Good Terms
Boat Slip, Sea Wall, Big 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath,Fla. Room, Garage, Loaded witd Extras.Phone Owner - ^ 681-5512.
Morningside ParkA desirable 4 bedroom corner rancher. Ownertransferred. OriginaHy priced at $39,500, ask-ing $30,000.
Carmine Bravo, Broker — 754-4731
BLOCK TO HOLY FAMILYChurch and School. Like new 3 bed-room. Carport. Furnished or unfurn.
Large landscaped lot.1265 NE 146 St. Wl 7-7898
Owner Needs Larger Home. Sell 3 bedroom2 bath, screened porch. Annunciation Parish.
Unfurnished. $11,500. 1230 N.E. 206 St..645-3129
Block to Holy FamilyChurch & School3 Bedroom. 2 Bath
Central Heating, Sprinkler, GarageOwner 11265 N.E. 148 St. Wl 7-7898
BUILDER'S DREAM HOMEReduced from $32,000 to $26,000
No Qualifying Good TermsBoat Slip, Sea Wall, Big 3 Bedroom,2 Bath, Fla. Room, Garage, Loadedwith Extras.
Phone Owner — 681-5512
HOMES FOR SALE NO. MIAMI BCH.
Lovely landscaped corner 3 bedroom CBS,Living room, dinette area, Florida room,equipped kitchen, sprinklers, awnings. 7Minute walk to shopping center. $17,500.Wl 5-7372.
HOMES FOR SALE N.W.
RETIREES2 Bedroom Modern C.B.S. Home. Newly deco-rated, on duplex lot. 1065 N.W. U2th St.
Price $12,500.McNicholas Realty PL 1-7592
7927 N.W. 7th Ave.
NEAR ST. JAMES - X-WAY$400 DOWN — $71.52 MONTH
Lovely 2 Bedrooms, Nice Fla. Room, Oakfloors, t i le roof. $12,500 total.
MOORE REALTORS926 N.W. 119 St. MU 1-7418
$ 9 5 0 DOWN3 Bedroom, 2 bath hbme with 12x24 Floridaroom. Corner lot near Visitation Church &School.
Owner, NA 1-2920
$8,500Lovely 5 room furnished home, on landscaped75'xlOO' lot. Near everything. 5525 N.W. 1stCourt.
FREE RENT — INCOME.WALK TO THE CATHEDRAL
DUPLEX — CBS — 2 BEDROOMTILE ROOF — HARDWOOD FLOORS
1 SIDE AIR COND. — SEE TO APPRECIATECALL OWNER, 275 N.W. 75 ST. Wl 7-9107
HOMES FOR SALE HIALEAH
605 EAST 9TH COURT3 Bedroom, large kitchen, detached garage.Many extras. Excellent cond. Close toschool, church, shopping. Owner, 887-1626.
HOME FOR RENT N.E.
$125. Mo. Spotless, 3 bedroom, kitchenequip., large screen porch. Walk to St.Lawrence. 18321 N.E. 21 Ave. Wl 5-4969.
HOMES RENT HIALEAH
Furnished cottage near St. John Church; busand shopping. Reasonable.
Call 821-0201
SALE OR RENT MIAMI BEACH
3010 Alton Road. Large 3 Bedroom, 2 bath,Furn. Or Unfurn. Walking Distance to St.Patricks. Consider Rental to Nov. 1st. Owner,JE 1-0957.
HOMES FOR RENT GOLDEN BEACH
WATERFRONT, Private beach. Spaciousgrounds. Air conditioned 3 bedroom 2 bath.Maid's quarters. Season or $250 month yearly.945-9724.
HOMES FOR SALE S.W.
Walking distance to Westchester shopping.Close to St. Brendan Church and school. 2Bedroom, Carport & Florida Room. Vi Acrecorner. City water, $105 yearly unfurn.
HI 8-2325
$900 down, $152 monthly (Covers all). Buyslovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on profes-sionally landscaped, fenced Vz acre. Closeto parochial & public schools. Shoppingcenter and buses. Furn. or unfurn. G.I. loan.
CE 5-6936
NEAR ST. BRENDANS$78 PAYS ALL! 3 bedroom, on doublecorner lot. Small down payment. $12,900.Price far below real value. Good Terms.
Phone Robert Meagher MO 7-6028evenings or
THE KEYES CO.357 Miracle Mile Realtors HI 3-7423
HONEST SACRIFICE$2,000 Loss on quality duplex. First timeoffered. FHA. 5V«%. 30 Years. Low down.Live rent free. Good location.3016 S.W. 26th St. Call owner, NA 4-8074.
NEW VOICE
CLASSIFIED NUMBER
PLaza 4-2561
HOME FOR SALE — MIAMI AREA
WHY PAY RENT?VA-FHA RESALES
Down payment as low as $100. Monthly payments as lowas $48 which includes taxes and insurance. Larger homeswith this low down payment available.
BILL REILLY, RealtorVA MANAGEMENT BROKER OF SOUTH DADE AREA
CE 8-1481
HOMES FOR SALE S.W.
Hyde Park. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, screenedpatio, dra'pes, built-in range, near St. Brendan8, St. Timothy. $19,000. 4915 S.W. 88 Ct.MO 6-4111.
HOMES FOR SALE CORAL GABLES
WALK TO ST. THERESA'S —LARGE HOUSE AND LOT. REASONABLE.
CALL HI 6-2879 2618 COLUMBUS BLVD.
By owner — 3 Bedrooms, 2V2 Baths, 5-tonreverse cycle Air Cond. 2 car enclosedgarage. Corner lot. A good by at $37,000.MO 5-6126
HOMES FOR SALE SOUTH MIAMI
Vi BLOCK TO EPIPHANY!BUILDER'S OWN SPACIOUS HOME, EPIPHANYNEIGHBORHOOD, GEM. THIS spacious north-facing 3 bedroom, 3 bath, custom built home-with closets galore plus large den-familyroom plus formal dining room and friendlyliving room looking out on a 29'x60' enclosedpatio, including 17'x34' pool, plus extra largecheerful modern kitchen all add op to theright home in the right location for the rightprice. You must see the many extras andconsider this refined Epiphany neighborhood,its proximity to schools, churches and shop-ping. Call us today on this f i rst class, closein, low tax buy.
MICKLER & LYDEN, REALTOR1300 Ponce de Leon HI 4-6161
Lovely Acre Estate, Patio, pool, Bar-B-Que,2 car garage. Many extras. Terms. Owner,6030 S.W. 84th Ave. MO 5-7351.
$450 DOWN — NO QUALIFYING$68 PER MONTH — 3 BEDROOM C.B S.
9940 S.W. -53 ST.
HOMES FOR SALE SO. MIAMI
152' On Sunset. 3 Bedroom, nicely furnishedhome. Near St. Thomas The Apostle Church.$18,900, Value $24,800. For details, MO 7-2603Owner.
HOUSE SALE OR RENT SO. MIAMI
3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS AND DIVIDED- KIT-CHENETTE. BEDROOM QUARTERS SUITABLEFOR MAID, NURSE OR GUESTS. ON LARGELOT ACROSS FROM EPIPHANY CHURCH. RENT$150 MONTH OR SELL FOR $24,500_5720 S.W. 84th STREET MO 1-0365
APT. RENT WEST HOLLYWOOD
Duplex — 2 Bedroom, Built-in Oven, Screenedporch, uti l i ty room. Near Dade County Line.UN 3-2487 - UN 6-3236.
APTS. FOR RENT N.E.
Furnished Duplex. Available June 1st. NearHoly Family Church, $110 yearly includinguti l i t ies. 1430 N.E. 147 St. Wl 5-5128.
NEW VOICE
CLASSIFIED NUMBER
PLaza 4-2561
ROOM FOR RENT N.E.
Room & Board. Complete care for elderlyperson in nice pvt. home, $25 wk. 758-9829.
ROOMS FOR RENT KENDALL
Widow, daughter in Immaculata, has finehome to share, or rent room to 1 or 2.Board Optional 271-1319.
SHARE HOME S.W.
Catholic Lady with car. To share home withwidow. Beautiful House & Gardens. Near St.Hughs NEW Parish. $10 Week, HI 3-0605.
ROOMS
Large room twin beds, air cond., privatebath & entrance, has own screened porch.PL 8-5836.
VOICECLASSIFIED ,RATES and
INFORMATION3 Line Minimum Charge
Count 5 Words Per LineDeath Notices — per inr>- $3.00
1 Time Per ; '60c3 Times Per V 50c
13 ConsecutiveTimes' Per Line 40c
26 ConsecutiveTimes Per Line 35c
52 ConsecutiveTimes . Per Line 30c
1A DT SAME RATE as 2
• » n lines ordinary type
U DT SAME RATE AS 3r I lines ordinary type
i 8 D T SAME RA.TE as 4
I O I I , lines ordinary type
D T SAME RATE as 5 .I I • l ines ordinary type
~ NO EXTRA CHARGTTOR\:APSCALL PLaza 4^2561
Published Every FridayDeadline Tuesday, 2 p.m.
For Friday Edit ion."The Voice" will not be responsible formore than one incorrect insertion. Inthe event of any error in an advertise-ment on the part of the publisher, it willfurnish the advertiser a letter so wordedas to explain the said error and thepublisher shall be otherwise relievedfrom responsibility thereof.
—No Legal or Political Ads—
BREEZEWOODESTATES
Lots 75x130
ONLY ^ * J « 7
$ > f g% DOWNJL W MONTH
A beautiful Home| Community in theI malting—13 milesI south of Ocala inFlorida's great
j Horse county ••*—251 lots sold with-T
lout advertising-Jess than 300 left.
Free Brochure with fullcolor' picture of each
block. Write or see ustoday — You may never
have such an opportunity again.
ROOF COATINGS BY MURRAYUSING
GENERAL ELECTRIC SILICONESNo. Dade PL 9-6604 So. Dade CE 5-1351
The Best CAR VALUESAre Found In The Voice
Daniel J. HorvathGeneral Manager -
Little FlowerCoral Gables
For The
BEST TRADES,PRICES and
TERMSASK FOR
Michael J. BoyleNew Or Sales Mgr.
AMERICAS LARGESTPONTIAC DEALER
DETROIT* FLINT- MIAMI
South Miami
"ON THE TRAIL"
665 S.W.6-ST. MIAMI
FINE CARS — FINE SERVICE
Page, 3$ Jrjay 17,196j3 THE VOfCE Miami, Florida
SAVE HUNDREDSON ALL NEW
1963rOR LESS ONLY AT KESSLER
OUR LOT IS BUSTIN' WITH ALL MODELS and COLORS
X. L. KESSLERRICHARD (Dick) KESSLER
Members of St. Coleman Parish
Phone: 942-4464
RAMBLERJ S. Federal Hwy., Pompano Beach
MIAMI'S DEALERWITH COMPLETE FREESAFETY LANE CHECKUP STATION_ NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED
Largest Buick Dealer East of Rockies ^
Save Time and Money With
Buick QUICK ServicePut that Buick of yours where if belongs . . .
in the hands of trained BUICK SPECIALISTS
COURTESY CAR SERVICE • CENTRALLY LOCATED
"LET OUR GUARDIAN MAINTENANCtQOE YOUR GUARDIAN ANGEL"
HI 4-16612301 S.W. 8 ST. (HWY. 41 OR THE TRAIL)
GREATER MIAMIAUTOMOBILE DEALER'S ASSOCIATION
BELIEVES IN A DAY OF RESTJOIN US
AND THE THOUSANDS OF OTHER CIVIC-MINDED INDIVIDUALS IN SERVICE, BUSINESS,
LABOR AND CHURCH GROUPS WHO ARE SEEKING TO PRESERVE SUNDAYAS A DAY
OF REST BY THE ONLY PRACTICAL MEANS — A FAIR STATE-WIDE LAW.
CLIP AND MAIL THIS COUPON NOW (if you live in another county, send
this to your own state representatives. They will appreciate hearing from you).
^
Dade County Delegation c/o Dick Fincher, Chairman
Florida State Legislature, Tallahassee, Florida
I believe it is vital to the health and welfare of our people, and to the moralclimate and character of the community to have a Day of Rest. I urge you tosupport a fair uniform law for closing non-essential, non-recreational businesseson Sunday, the traditional Day of Rest in America.
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY ZONE STATE
DON'T MISS IT! ^THE ALL NEW,EXCITING '63 £
CHEVROLET 1
^WORLD'S FINEST CHEVROLET DEALER
See one of thesecourteousrepresentativesfor the BUY of alifetime on aBrand New 1963Chevrolet, Corvair,Chevy II, orCorvette
R. F. FogartyPresident
Church of theEpiphany
Robert HoffmanSt. Timothy
LOWER PRICES
HIGHER TRADES
TAILOR-MADE TERMS
showrooms: No. Miami Ave. at 21st St. FR 7-2601
Used cars: 3 0 1 1 N . W . 3 6 t h ST. NE 5-2582
FABULOUS BUYS FROM CRANE BROS.' 60 CHEVROLET **"•
milageJust .
owner, low
'1295'59 CHEVROLET 1Buy
'59 RAMBLER w
new a Voice special . . . .
'57 VOLKSWAGEN ^sharp car. Only t9&
' 59 FORD 4 door M t U q eRradio and many extras only O T O
'59 RAMBLER •*" £ & £Drive this one out today . . . O 5 F 3
' R A N E BROS. MOTORS, INC.7000 N.W. 2nd AVE. • PL 1-2475 • Open 'til 9 PM
NEW CARSPHONE MO 6-8511
NEW VALIANTS $1795NEW PLYMOUTHS $1959
FLAGLER PLYMOUTHDIRECT FACTORY PLYMOUTH DEALER
HOWARD COSTELLO 5600 w. FLAGLER ST., MIAMI
TODAY'S GREATEST TIRE ECONOMY
DUAL RADIUSFULL CAPS
600x13, 750x14
520x13, 590x13
560x13, 135x380
500x14, 560x14
4 Full P ly-1st LineAnd Premium OnlyWITH NEW TIRE
GUARANTEE
They are Wider,heavier, more punc-ture resistant andsafer than brand
new "2 plycheapies"
GUARANTEEDIN WRITING
15 MONTHS —15,000 MILES
Against tread wear, all toadhazards (commercial use,station wagons and mis-alignment excepted). All tireadjustments are prorated formonths or miles based onsales price .prevailing.
640x15650x13670x15800x14710x15600x16
850x14
760x15
900x14
950x14
800x15
820x15
CAP YOUR TIRES OR' EXCHANGE WHITEWALLS $1 ADDITIONAL |
Plus Fed. Tax 43c to 60c per tire and recappable exchange. If no exchange add$1.50 for 14" tire, $2 for 13" tires and $3 for 15" tires. No mounting.charge.
PAN-AMERICAN TIRE CO.MAIN STORE: 1450 N. MIAMI AVENUE
Check your phone book for the store
nearest you and stop in today.
May 17, V THE VOICE Miami> Florida
The Best CAR VALUESAre Found In The Voice .
SUPERMARKET
FORD DEALER
I CORAL WAV
BIRD ROAO
\%DBBUFORD
OF MIAMI'SFINEST GARS3ACRES
-SALE• " • AIR-CONDITIONED • • •
9-PASSENGER
'63 COUNTRY SQUIREwith all of the extras — Thisis immaculate and like new andyou can save hundreds of dollarson this pre-owned S^AQQlike hew car : . . -*tOO
I '61 PLYMOUTH 5 . *white over green - V-8 - standarddrive - 'TlftR1 owner trade XAOOi ^ " " ™ CONVERTIBLES " " "
'Lt't 'At't Excellent se-0 / » ' O i l lection of like
new cars - Automatic drive, Powerand many other accessories - ifyou are interested in a convertibledon't pass this opportunity to seeand buy these — ! | £ A Apriced from JUDOO
' 61 RAMBIER :e^SLSSiRadio, Heater - Push Button DriveReally extra nice 1 owner car -Full size and $i?QCeconomy too - iOOC
• * • • * • ELECTRA 225AIR CONDITIONED
' 6 1 R l l i r K 6 window R i ¥ i e r a lO l D U I I A hardtop that is I
immaculate and like brand newAll power accessories, excellent Itires and really a ^prestige car
'Li TAMET *•*<»' '<« Cadet Blue0 1 lUP IE I . here is a chance to
own a really nice car for next tonothing - You can buy t i ^ O Qthis for only JLfcOO
PI 5 STATION WAGONS'¥t ' A 2 ' « — Standard!f 1 thru O J > or automatice, 6 or 8 cylinder, 2-door oror wagons — Many colors,1 makes — Come %f ~see today from : . «
'Ll\ E f iDH Fairlane 500 Tudor Se-O U r U K U dan, immaculate, Arctic
! white, B cyl. with standard $ Q O Odrive - excellent buy . . . . W O
Catalina 4-door -has Hydramatic,
Power steering - Arctic white and extranice - Buy this today for $ 4 - | Q Qthe low price of . . . . . . . * * O O
'HI VAIIAUT *-ia" sellM -IO U T A L I A n l original blue with [Push Button drive - really S Q Q Qeconomy bargain «FOO• i " i » ™ " FALCONS • • ^ • • B
16 TO CHOOSE FROMWAGONS - TUDORS - FORDORSBest Selection in Dade County.All.kinds of equipment and colorsgalore. You can really have a pic-nic making your fAQQchoice today. From . . 7 O O
FAI TAN s t a t i 0
rALtUli- Automatica dandycar . . . . . . . . . .
andglacier blue finishradio and really
'11881'CQ T D i n n Coupe. Factory AirJ 7 I-DIKLF conditioned a n d
all power equipped. Original lightblue with matching leather interior.A real buy today $ 4 " T O Ofor only -.. * * O O
DflllTIAfPUNIIAl 'KO D IVAI ITU Savo» 4 d l l o r Se"07 K l l U U I n dan - an original
one-owner low mileage new car trade - |Economy 6 cyl. with Auto- $ C Q «matic. Really a buy today . O O (
3 BLKS WEST OF PALMETTO EXPRESSWAY8200 BIRD ROAD CA 6-6060
37
Sunday MassesARCADIA: St. Paul. 7. I I .AVON PARK: Our Lady Of Grace,8:30, 10.BELLE GLADE: St. Philip Benizi, 10,and 11:15 (Spanish).BOCA GRANDE: Our Lady of Mercy,10:15BOCA RATON: St. Joan of Arc, 7, 9,BONITA SPRINGS: St. Leo, 7:30, 9:30.BOYNTON BEACH: St. Mark, 7, 8:30,10, 11:30CLEWISTON: St. Margaret, S, 11:30.10:30, 12.COCONUT GROVE: St. Hugh, 7, 8:30,10:30, 12 and 5:30 p.m. (Sermons inSpanish and English].CORAL GABLES: Little Flower (Audi-torium), 9, 11:30 and 12:30 (Spanish);(Church), 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. 11:30, 12:30.St. Thomas Aquinas Student Center,8:30, 9:30, 10:30. 12.DANIA: Resurrection (Second St. andFifth Ave.) 7, 8 ,9, 10, 11 and 12.DEERFIELD BEACH: St. Ambrose(5109 N. Fed. H'way) 8, 9:30, 11,12:15, 6 P.M.DELRAY BEACH: St. Vincent, 6:45,8:30, 10 and 11:30 a.m.
FORT LAUDERDALE: Annunciation,9:30Blessed Sacrament (Case FuneralHome), 6, 8, 9:30, 11, 12:30.Queen of Martyrs, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:30,12:30, 6 p.m.St. Anthony, 7, 8, 9:15, 10:30, 12 and5:30 p.m.St. Bernadette, 8, 9, 10, 11.St. Clement, 8, 9, 10, 11:15, 12:30.St. Jerome, 7, 8:30, 10, 11:30.FORT LAUDERDALE BEACH: St. Pius X,7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.St. Sebastian (Harbor Beach), 8, 9:30,11 and 5:30 p.m. 'FORT MYERS: St. Frf.ncls Xavier,6, 7, 8:30, 10, 11:30.FORT MYERS BEACH: Ascension, 7:30,9:30.FORT PIERCE: St. Anastasia, 6:30,7:30.Auditorium: 9, 10:30, 12.HALLANDALE: St. Matthew, 6:15, 8,9, 10, 11, 12 and 7 p.m.HIALEAH: Immaculate Conception, 6,9, 10:30, 11:30 (Spanish).(City Auditorium), 8, 9:30, 11, 12:30,and 6:30 p.m.St. Bernard Mission: 9, 10 (Spanish).
HOLY FAMILY "OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT EVERY DAY
SANDY'S DRUGS1060 N.E. 163rd ST. — Wl 7-2467
PROMPT FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
St. John the Apostle, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,11, 12, 12:55 (Spanish), 5 p.m. and
HOBE SOUND: St. Christopher, 9 a.m.
HOLLYWOOD: Annunciation 8, 9, 10,11:30."Little Flower, 5:45, 7, 8:15, 9:30,10:45, 12, 5:30 p.m.Nativity, 6:15, 7:15, 8:15, 9:30, 10:30,11:30, 7:30 p.m.St. Bernadette, 8 9, 1 0, 11.St. Stephen, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12:15 and7p.m.HOMESTEAD: Sacred Heart, 6:30, 8,9:30, T l , 12.IMMOKALEE: Lady of Guadalupe, 8:30and 11:45IND1ANTOWN: Holy Cross, 7:45.JUPITER: St. Jude (U.S. 1), 8:30 a.m.,10:30 a.m.KEY BISCAYNE: St. Agnes, 7, 8:30,
LABELLE: Mission, 10.LAKE PLACID: St. James Mission,8 a.m.LAKE WORTH: Sacred Heart, 6 7, 8,9:15, 10:30, 11:30.St. Luke, 7, 8:30, 10 and 11:30.LEHIGH ACRES: St. Raphael (Admin-istration Building) 8, 10.MARGATE: St. Vincent. 8, 10, 11:30.M I A ^ I : The Cathedral, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,12, and 6 p.m.Corpus Christi, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 (Span-ish), 11, 12, 12:55 (Spanish) and 5:30p.m. (Spanish).Gesu, 5. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:30, 12:30.Holy Redeemer, 7, 8:30, 10.International Airport (InternationalHotel), 7:15 and 8 (Sundays and Holy-days).
St. Mary of the Missions and St.Francis Xavier, 7, 8:30.St. Brendan, 7, 8, 9:15, 10:30, 11:30,12:30, and 5:30 p.m., 6:30 p.m. (Span-ish).St. Dominic (Fairlawn School) 7 8,9, 10, 11. (Spanish).St. John Bosco Mission (Tivoli Theatre),9, 10:30, 12.St. Mary Chapel, 8:30. 9:30, 10:30,11:30, 12:30 (Spanish).St. Michael, 6. 7, 8, 9 (Polish), 10(Spanish), 11, 12:30, 6 p.m. (Span-ish), 7:30 p.m. Dade County Aud-itorium 9, 10:30 12.SS. PetefNand Paul, 6:15, 7, 8, 9:15,10:30, (10:30 — Spanish — SchoolAuditorium), 11:45, 12:55 (Spanish),5:30 (Spanish) and 7:30 (Spanish)St. Timothy, 8, 9:30, 11, (Spanish),12:30 and 6:30 p.m.St Vincent De Paul (Central HighSchool Cafeteria: 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12(Spanish)MIAMI BEACH: St. Francis de Sales.7, 9, 10, 11 and 6 p.m.St. Joseph, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and5:30 p.m.St. Mary Magdalen: 8, 9, 10, 11, 12,and 6 p.m.St. Patrick 6, 7, 8, 9. 10, 11. 12:30and 6 p.m.MIAMI SHORES: St. Rose of Lima, 7,8, 9, 10, 11, 12.MIAMI SPRINGS: Blessed Trinity, 6,7:30, 8:30, 9:30. 10:30. 12 and5:45 p.m.MIRAMAR: St. Bartholomew, (Firemen'sRecreation Hall, at Island Dr. andPembroke Rd.) 8, 9. 10, 11, 12:15.MOORE HAVEN: St. Joseph the Work-er, 10.NARANJA: St. Ann, 10:30 (Spanish)NAPLES: St. Ann, 6, 8, 10, 11.NORTH DADE COUNTY: St. Monica8, 10, 1 1 and 6 p.m.NORTH MIAMI: Holy Family, 6. 7, 89. 10, 11, 12, 6:30 p.m.
ST. THOMAS
FIERTEL DRUGS, INC.THE FRIENDLY DRUGGIST
FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
MO 7-1891 .DELIVERY? Of Course — No Charge
6557 BIRD ROADMIAMI
PARISHPHARMACIES
GUIDEYOUR GUIDE TO GOOD HEALTH
- ~ LITTLE FLOWER"
MAJORCA.REXALL DRUGS
FREE DELIVERY
HI 8-2441 HI 6-94191735 Ponce De Leon
Coral Gables
VISITATION
JaAa&dvPHONE
NA 1-9961
THE LIGGETT-REXALL STORE
FREEDELIVERY
TOP VALUESTAMPS
18315 N.W. 7th AVE., NORWOOD, MIAMI
ST. JOSEPH
dlahboA. (DhuqA., Qnc."AT YOUR SERVICE"
JAY G. ROSS, Reg. Pharmacist Phone UN 5-3746
1001 Kane Concourse, Bay Harbor Island
•CORPUS CHRISTI
Sterling Rexall PharmacyWE CALL FOR AND DELIVER
PRESCRIPTIONSSODA — LUNCH — DRUGS — SUNDRIES — COSMETICS
RALPH S. MATTHEWS — Owner — 3832 N.E. 2 Ave. — PL 8-3252
EPIPHANY
O.K. DRUG STOREIRVING F. FELSKE, R. Ph.
Your Complete Drug and Prescription Store
MO 1-2661Red Rd. & Dixie Hwy. Coral Gables
•ST. JAMES-
GOLDEN PHARMACYTHE PRESCRIPTION SHOP, MARSHAL T. STERN, R. PH. C
FREE Delivery within the Parish.
LINEsV P h o n e M U M**7
COSMETICS 13265 N.W. 7th Avenue North MiamiCONSUMER GREEN STAMPS
ST. LAWRENCEPhone WI 5-1131
FAMILY DRUGS, "FAMOUS FOR ?RESCRIPTIONS"
lay Jacobs Ph. G.
18100 N.E. 19th Ave. North Miami Beach
•THE CATHEDRAL-HARTLEY#S"-RixAii-pHARMACY
Prescriptions — Drugs — Cosmetics
• FREE DELIVERY •640 N.E. 79th ST., MIAMI — Phone PL 4-4135
Charles J. Hartley, Registered Pharmacist
ST. PATRICK
CLARK-SNYDER PHARMACYPROFESSIONAL PRESCRIPTION SERVICE
ALTON ROAD AT 41st STREETIE 4-2978
PROMPT DRUG DELIVERY
IMMACULATE CONCEPTIONPRESCRIPTION PHARMACY
Three Stores To Serve You — Complete Prescription Service
515 E. 25th St. 801 W. 49th St.691-0641 TU 8-3436
398 E. 41st St.TU 8-4683
NIGHT EMERGENCY Ph. 821-0473
• MARY MAGDALEN •
19400 COLLINS AVENUE, MIAMI BEACHComplete Prescription Department — Agency for Elizabeth Arden
FREE Delivery Throughout Motel Area
WI 7-6954 • WI 7-4411
•ST. VINCENT DE PAULOX 6-1221 FREE DELIVERY
ROBIN PHARMACY, IXC.(Formerly Baker's Drug Store)
9920 N.W. 27th Ave., Miami 47, Florida• MONEY ORDERS '
ST. AGNESVERNON'S DRUGS
658 So. Crandon Blvd. Key BiscctynoPHONE EM 1-5632 FREE DELIVERY
"PRESCRIPTIONS FIRST" — HARRY & DICK VERNON
— — — — ST. ROSE OF LIMA ———^—P R E S C R I P T I O N S
CENTER PHARMACY, INC.9727 N.E. SECOND AVE.
"Dedicated To The Health Of Our Fine Community"Phones PL 1-6847 — PL 1-2924
FREE DELIVERY oV ALL YOUR DRUG STORE NEEDS
.OCR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP- ST. PHILIP-
art ah 'ADEPENDABLE PRESCRIPTION SERVICE
OPA-LOCKA DRUGS(Greater Opa-Locka's Exclusire Helena Rubenstein Cosmetic Outlet)
SUNDRIES * PHOTO SUPPLIES * FILM DEVELOPING * MONEY ORDERS * BLUE STAMPS
Phone MU 1-3122 400 Opa-Locka Blvd.
St. James, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 s 12:15and 5:30 p.m.Visitation, 7, 8:30. 10. 11:30 and12:45 p.m.NORTH MIAMI BEACH: St. Lawrence.School cafeteria). 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.7. 9, I I , 12:15.NORTH PALM BEACH: St. Clare7, 8:15, 9:30, 10:45, 12 and 5:30 p.m.OKEECHOB£E: Sacred Heart 9. Boys'School, 10:30.OPA-LOCKA: Our Lady of PerpetualHelp, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:30.St. Philip (Bunche Park) 9.PAHOKEE: St. Mary. 11:30.PALM BEACH: St. Edward, 6, 7, 8, 9,10:30, 12 and 6 p.m.PERRINE: Holy Rosary. 7, 8, 9:30,10:30, 12.PLANTATION: St. Gregory 8, 9:15,10:30, 11:30 and 12:30 p.m.POMPANO BEACH: Assumption 7, 89:30, 11, 12:15.St. Elizabeth, 8, 9, 11, 12.POMPANO SHORES: St. Coleman. 78, 9:30 11, 12:15.PORT CHARLOTTE: St. Charles Bor-romeo, 7, 8, 9:30, 11 and 6 p.m.PORT ST. LUCIE: Marina, 9.PUNTA GORDA: Sacred Heart. 7:3010, 6:30 p.m.RICHMOND HEIGHTS: Christ TheKing, 7, 10, 12.RIVIERA BEACH: St. Francis, 7, 8, 9,10:30, 11:30.SANIBEL ISLAND: 11:30.SEBASTIAN: St. William Mission, 8 a.mSEBRING: St. Catherine, 7, 9:30, I KSOUTH MIAMI: Epiphany 6:30. 8, 910, 11, 12.St. Thomas (South Miami Jr. HighSchool. 6750 SW 60th St.), 8, 10, 11STUART: St. Joseph, 7, 9, 11.VERO BEACH: St. Helen, 7:30, 9, 11.WAUCHULA: St. Michael, 9.WEST PALM. BEACH: Blessed Martin9:30.Holy Name, 7, 9, 10:30, 12.St. Ann. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.St. Juliana, 6:30. 8. 9. 10, 11, 12.
ON THE KEYSBIG PINE KEY: St. Peter's Mission.10:30 a.m.KEY WEST: St. Mary, 6. 7, 8:30, 10.St. Bede, 8, 9:30 and 11.MARATHON SHORES: San Pablo, 6:308:30.PLANTATION KEY: San Pedro, 6:309, 11.
Social SecurityCan PayFuneral BillsFree Booklet GivesFull InformationSocial Security and VeteransBenefits are explained in thenew GUIDEBOOK recently pub-lished by Lithgow Funeral Cen-ters. Many families are un-aware of the extent to whichthey may benefit under SocialSecurity — as much as $255for funeral expenses!
Veterans are now entitled tospecial burial allowances "whichbring help to families in timeof need.
Get your FREE COPY of thiswonderful GUIDEBOOK: - TIjereis no obligation (no 4 willcall). Mailed in a plain -w ^iper.Write to Lithgow Funeral Cen-ters, 487 N.E. 54th St., Miami37, Fla., or telephone PLaza7-5544.
In Miami i t ' s
FIVE Funeral Centers485 N.E. 54th Street
PLaza 7-5544
Funeral DirectorsLeading Funeral
Director
HARRY B. WADLINGTONIn Hollywood—140 S. Dixie Hwy.
WA 3-6565
In West Hol lywood-
5801 Hollywood Boulevard
YU 3-6565
Allen E. Brake, F.D.
1480 N.W. 27th AVE.
Jack E. Sounders, F.D.
NE 4-8545
KRAEER FUNERAL HOMER. JAY KRAEER, Funeral Director
Ambulance Service
200 N. FEDERAL HIGHWAYPOMPANO BEACH, FLORIDA
Phone WH 1-4113
CARL F. SLADE, F.D.
CARL F. SLADE FUNERAL HOME800 PALM AVE. HIALEAH TU 8-3433
Homelike Surroundings
Dignified Friendly- Service
Prices To Meet Any
Family Budget
R. E. wi om, F.D, t u n e r a l H o m eServing faithfully for over 60 years
206 S.W. 8th Street FR 3-2111
Rage 38 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida
r iit
CATHOLIC CEMETERIESof The Diocese of Miami
Burial in a Catholic Cemetery is a Privilege and an honor forthose who persevere in the faith. "~
Your family's burial place should reflect your faith. More andmore families today are choosing burial places in cemetery shrineareas that recall their own family devotions.
Our Lady of Mercy Cemetery and Queen of Heaven Cemeteryoffer Masses regularly for souls of those buried there. Also,Field Mass on Memorial Day and All Souls Day.
Serving the Parishes of all Dade County,Florida. Our Lady of Mercy Cemetery is4^4 miles west of Miami International Air-port, at 11411 North West 25th Street,TU 7-8293. P.O. Box 127, Miami Springs66, Florida.
Serving the Parishes of Broward County,Florida. Queen of Heaven Cemetery is 4\Z2
miles north of Sunrise Blvd. at 1500 SouthState Road #7, Pompano Beach, Florida.WEbster 3-5544. P.O. Box 8575, Ft. Lau-derdale, Florida.
For Further Information
CATHOLIC CEMETERIESOF THE DIOCESE OF MIAMI, INC.
6301 BISCAYNE BLVD. MIAMI, FLORIDA PLaza 7-5714
The Catholic cemetery is truly God's acre.!>.*
DON'T DEPEND OHYOUR MEMORY
SEE INSIDE BACK COVE.R'tftyouvTELEPHONE' DIRECTORY
JOHNSON / FOSTERFUNERAL HOME. INC.
1650 HARRISON ST.HOLLYWOOD, FLA.PHONE: W A 2 - 7 5 1 1
G. D. PEDEN FUNERAL HOMESComplete Ambulance Service
GAITHER D. PEDEN, Jr.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND OWNER8231 BIRD ROAD 9798 HIBISCUS ST.
MIAMI 55, PERRINETelephone 226-1811 Telephone 238-2724
cXhern
PLUMMERTHIRTEEN FORTV-NINcFLAGLER STREET, WEST
"Member C.D.A.—K of C—Holy Name"
'EduiardllFHalcejoiis,mc.
FUNERAL HOME
3 Generations ofExperience
Largest FuneralHome in Dade County
Catholic Ownedand Managed
Prices to satisfyEvery Family
7200 N.W. 2nd Ave. PL 1-7523"Near the Cathedral
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Edward F. McHale
EMILIO C. MONFUNERAL HOME"SIRVIENDO LA COLONIA HISPANA"
1873 W . FLAGLER ST.PHONE FR 9-1697
Formerly with Tampa's Leading Funeral HomeAntes una de las May ores Funerarias de Tampa
FT. LAUDERDALE
FUNERAL
HOMES299 N. FEDERAL HWY. — 3501 W. BROWARD BLVD.
JA 2-2811 LU 1-6100
DAN H. FAIRCHILD PHIL H. FAIRCHILDFUNERAL DIRECTORS
VIII reasons why
Van OrsdeVs is Miami's
most recommended
funeral service
II
III
IV
VI
VII
VIII
Convenient Locations — four chapels strate-gically located for family and friends.
More experienced — Van Orsdel's conductsmore adult funerals than anyone in DadeCounty . . . and passes savings developedon to the families we serve.
Finest facilities — Van Orsdel's beautifulchapels provide everything possible for com-fort and reverent dignity. All chapels equippedwith pews and kneeling rails.
Finest service— no compromise with qual-ity. Our best service always — to anyone —regardless of the amount spent — and weguarantee our service.
Personal attention — our staff trained topersonally handle every problem, no matterhow difficult, every detail, no matter how,small.
Freedom of choice — every family mayselect a service price within their means —no one has to plead charity to purchaseany of our funerals — no questions are asked—— and we use no selling pressure!
Complete funerals, quality for quality, costless at Van Orsdel's — and have for over 20years.
We offer all families a choice of over 60different caskets, with the finest of funeralservice and facilities . . . complete in everydetail,-from $145 - $215 • $279.
CanCbMMORTUARIES
LARGE CATHOLIC STAFFC. D. Von Orsdel, Licensee
For Further Informqtion Call FR 3-5757
May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida , Page 39
RATH'S BLACK HAWK—FULLY COOKED —SHORT SHANK ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
SMOKED HAMS 2 9CLB
BUTTPORTION
WHOLE ORFULL CUTSHANKHALF 39 C
!b
FULLCUTBUTTHALF 49 Ib
CENTERHAMSLICES
3989 Ib
RATH'S BLACK HAWK J H jPfe
THIN SLICED BACON. . . . . . 4 9 'TOP U.S. CHOICE —PSG BRAND
R I B R O A S T S CENTER CUTS . . . . .
24-OZ, POLY BAG LIBBY
FROZENVEGETABLES
Stew VegetablesMixed VegetablesPEAS & CARROTSCUT CORNLIBBY PEAS
PINEAPPLE - GRAPEFRUIT
LIBBY DRINK46-OZ.CAN
^ LIMIT 2 CANS,| C PLEASE, WITH
5.00 ORDEROR MORE
TOMATOESK t U • V V CARTONRIPE g| ]2r
FRESH CUT GENUINE ^ f\.J
HADDOCK FILLET ... 59*KRAFT'S VELVEETA 0% *\4F^tf
CHEESE SPREAD 2 £*89*FARMER GRAY OR ARMOUR STAR ALL MEAT M f\j
Skinless FRANKS SS 4 9 *
QuantityRights
Reserved
1OO EXTRAFREE MERCHANTS GREEN STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND
ANY 5.00 ORDEROR MORE
VOID AFTER M A Y 18
0NE c a u p 0 N PE(I F A M I L V ' p l E A S E
p.u <?/JcJLibbu jute.
30-OZ. CANS SLICED OR HALVES
Elberta PeachesT5'/2-OZ. CANS CORNED
BEEF HASH46-OZ. CANS
Tomato Juice17-OZ. CANS
Bart left Pears17-OZ. CANS
Fruit Cocktail16-OZ. CANS
Cut Green Eeans4-OZ. CANS
Vienna Sausage
#
FOR
FOR
f
f
mPRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., MAY 18 AT ALL FOOD FAIR
STORES FROM FT. PIERCE TO KEY WEST
Page 40 May 17, 1963 THE VOICE Miami, Florida