Migrant Plight Described At ABCD Dinners - St. Thomas University

24
iiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiB i Residents of the Keys and Key West were guests Monday evening at the ABCD regional dinner at the Key West Country Club. Bishop John J. Fitzpatrick is shown as he outlined campaign goals for the large number of guests. See other pictures, Pages 4, 5. Migrant Plight Described At ABCD Dinners "Their children suffer from hunger and malnutrition — they are the most forgotten of America's poor." This was the description given of Florida's 70,000 migratory agricultural workers by Msgr. Bryan 0. Walsh, Episcopal Vicar for the Spanish-Speaking Peoples, during ABCD regional dinners held recently in Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, Key West and Naples. Unusually large attendance has been reported at the dinners, held annually to officially open the Annual Bishop's Charities Drive to aid the unfortunate in the eight counties of the Arch- diocsese. Bishop John J. Fitzpatrick is the principal speaker at the dinners, hosted by the Archdiocese to acquaint South Floridians with the past accomplishments of the ABCD and to outline the goals of the 1970 campaign, which has a minimum goal of $1,750,000. "During the past weekend it was pretty cold," Msgr. Walsh recalled, "and the parts of South Florida most affected by the freeze were the farming sections of Broward and Dade Counties. "There was a lot of concern in the newspapers about vege- tables' being lost and about efforts being made to protect the crops from the cold weather. Nowhere in the newspapers or on the television did I hear one mention of the thousands of farm workers who were brought into Florida to pick these crops — crops that in some cases do not exist now. "These farm workers simply will be without pay. These are the workers who pick the lettuce and the other vegetables we had tonight. For they only get paid when there is work for them. There may be work one day for 200 workers on a particular farm and then for the next five days there is no work, because crops are not ready, or because there is a sudden freeze or some other disaster of that kind. And right here these people, who contribute so much by their labor, these people suffer." (Continued on Page 4) JAN. 23, 1970 A FOOD CRISIS which has been recognized as a definite possibility following period of cold and wet weather here, may bring days of hunger for migrant workers such as these pictured in a South Florida field. Social and welfare agencies are making plans and stocking up to meet the needs of any agricultural workers suffering the aftermath of inclement weather. Cold, Wet Pile Troubles On Migrants' Shack Steps Service agencies — includ- ing Catholic groups — are gear- ing up this week to meet a crisis which possibly may confront migratory farm workers as a result of recent cold and wet Funeral Liturgy For Fr. Brush; Priest Served S. Fla. Parishes The Funeral Liturgy was celebrated at noon Thursday in St. Mary Cathedral for Father Robert F. Brush, Florida native, who had served most of his 27-year priesthood in South Florida parishes. The 56 year-old native of Ocala, who was pastor of Blessed Trinity Church, Miami Springs from 1964 to 1968, died suddenly early Monday in St. Sebastian rectory, Fort Lauderdale. He had arrived last Saturday from Old Saybrook, Conn., where he has been residing since 1968 when he was granted sick leave, to visit his long-time friend, Father Lamar J. Genovar, pastor, St. Sebastian Church. Archbishop Coleman F. Carroll presided and gave the final commendation during the Mass, of which Bishop John J. Fitzpatrick was the principal concelebrant. Also concelebrating were Father Rene Gracida, V.G., Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Miami; Father Genovar, Father George Bucko, and Father Charles Ward. The homily was preached by Father Ross Garnsey, a friend of many years and former assistant to Father Brush in several Miami parishes. (Continued on Paere 24} spells in South Florida, accord- ing to Father John McMahon, director of the Archdiocesan Rural Life Bureau. While declaring that there was no immediate emergency, Msgr. Bryan O. Walsh, Episcopal Vicar for the Spanish- speaking Peoples, explained this week that housing and food conditions of the migrant crop workers, are "brought to our attention on the occasion of a freeze. At times like this, only the tipof the iceberg begins to come up." He pointed out that his office has repeatedly discussed the "inhuman" conditions under which the migrants live and warned that "we must under- stand that these people have a different life style, if we are to help them." While farmers in South Florida still waited this week to see what damage the recent inclement weather will bring to current crops, "the Arch- diocesan Council of Catholic Women and the laymen of the St. Vincent de Paul society have pledged to help any migrant workers and their families who might find themselves in need," Father McMahon explained. (Continued on Page 7) THE VOICE. P.O.Box 1059, Miami, Fla. 3313"? FATHER ROBERT BRUSH

Transcript of Migrant Plight Described At ABCD Dinners - St. Thomas University

iiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiB

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Residents of the Keys and KeyWest were guests Mondayevening at the ABCD regionaldinner at the Key West CountryClub. Bishop John J. Fitzpatrickis shown as he outlined campaigngoals for the large numberof guests. See other pictures,Pages 4, 5.

Migrant Plight

Described At

ABCD Dinners"Their children suffer from hunger and malnutrition — they

are the most forgotten of America's poor."This was the description given of Florida's 70,000 migratory

agricultural workers by Msgr. Bryan 0. Walsh, Episcopal Vicarfor the Spanish-Speaking Peoples, during ABCD regional dinnersheld recently in Fort Lauderdale, Boca Raton, Key West andNaples.

Unusually large attendance has been reported at the dinners,held annually to officially open the Annual Bishop's CharitiesDrive to aid the unfortunate in the eight counties of the Arch-diocsese.

Bishop John J. Fitzpatrick is the principal speaker at thedinners, hosted by the Archdiocese to acquaint South Floridianswith the past accomplishments of the ABCD and to outline thegoals of the 1970 campaign, which has a minimum goal of$1,750,000.

"During the past weekend it was pretty cold," Msgr. Walshrecalled, "and the parts of South Florida most affected by thefreeze were the farming sections of Broward and Dade Counties.

"There was a lot of concern in the newspapers about vege-tables' being lost and about efforts being made to protect thecrops from the cold weather. Nowhere in the newspapers or on thetelevision did I hear one mention of the thousands of farm workerswho were brought into Florida to pick these crops — crops that insome cases do not exist now.

"These farm workers simply will be without pay. These arethe workers who pick the lettuce and the other vegetables we hadtonight. For they only get paid when there is work for them. Theremay be work one day for 200 workers on a particular farm andthen for the next five days there is no work, because crops are notready, or because there is a sudden freeze or some other disasterof that kind. And right here these people, who contribute so muchby their labor, these people suffer."

(Continued on Page 4)

JAN. 23, 1970

A FOOD CRISIS which has been recognized asa definite possibility following period of cold andwet weather here, may bring days of hunger formigrant workers such as these pictured in a

South Florida field. Social and welfare agenciesare making plans and stocking up to meet theneeds of any agricultural workers suffering theaftermath of inclement weather.

Cold, Wet Pile TroublesOn Migrants' Shack Steps

Service agencies — includ-ing Catholic groups — are gear-ing up this week to meet a crisiswhich possibly may confrontmigratory farm workers as aresult of recent cold and wet

Funeral Liturgy For Fr. Brush;Priest Served S. Fla. Parishes

The Funeral Liturgy wascelebrated at noon Thursdayin St. Mary Cathedral forFather Robert F. Brush,Florida native, who hadserved most of his 27-yearpriesthood in South Floridaparishes.

The 56 year-old native ofOcala, who was pastor ofBlessed Trinity Church,Miami Springs from 1964 to1968, died suddenly earlyMonday in St. Sebastianrectory, Fort Lauderdale. Hehad arrived last Saturdayfrom Old Saybrook, Conn.,where he has been residingsince 1968 when he wasgranted sick leave, to visit hislong-time friend, Father

Lamar J. Genovar, pastor,St. Sebastian Church.

Archbishop Coleman F.Carroll presided and gave thefinal commendation duringthe Mass, of which BishopJohn J. Fitzpatrick was theprincipal concelebrant. Alsoconcelebrating were FatherRene Grac ida , V.G.,Chancellor of the Archdioceseof Miami; Father Genovar,Father George Bucko, andFather Charles Ward.

The homily was preachedby Father Ross Garnsey, afriend of many years andformer assistant to FatherBrush in several Miamiparishes.

(Continued on Paere 24}

spells in South Florida, accord-ing to Father John McMahon,director of the ArchdiocesanRural Life Bureau.

While declaring that therewas no immediate emergency,Msgr. Bryan O. Walsh,Episcopal Vicar for the Spanish-speaking Peoples, explained thisweek that housing and foodconditions of the migrant cropworkers, are "brought to ourattention on the occasion of afreeze. At times like this, onlythe tip of the iceberg begins tocome up."

He pointed out that his officehas repeatedly discussed the

"inhuman" conditions underwhich the migrants live andwarned that "we must under-stand that these people have adifferent life style, if we are tohelp them."

While farmers in SouthFlorida still waited this week tosee what damage the recentinclement weather will bring tocurrent crops, "the Arch-diocesan Council of CatholicWomen and the laymen of theSt. Vincent de Paul society havepledged to help any migrantworkers and their families whomight find themselves in need,"Father McMahon explained.

(Continued on Page 7)

THE VOICE. P.O.Box 1059, Miami, Fla. 3313"?

FATHER ROBERT BRUSH

Cardinal' Mclntyre Resigns;Abp. Manning To Succeed

WASHINGTON - tXC»— James Francis "CardinalMclntyre has requested PopePaal VI to accept hisresignation from the office ofArchbishop of Los Angeles.Archbishop Luigi Raimondi.Apostolic Delegate in theUnited States, announcedhere.

The Pope ""has ae-qalesced in (Ms desire withgrateful appreciation for the22 years of seaious service toGod of His Eminence in theArchdiocese of Los Angeles,"the Apostolic Delegate added.

Witi t ie rftripsatioa «fCariisal Mclatyre, lireArc&dMcese off Las Angeles isertnuted to the Mast Re?.Timothy Mmaaimg, who haskeen ssndflg as eoadjatorarelblsiap with t ie rigit ofsaccessiw.

Cardinal Melntyre, 83,has been a priest for 48 years,a bishop for US years, aa arch-bishop for 23 years, and acardioai 1? years. He hasserved the Ctareh on bothseaboards of the UnitedStates,

QRBMMEBArchbishop Maiming was

CARDINAL MclNTYRE

faorninBallingeary. in CourtlyCork, Ireland, Nov. 15. 1909.He was ordained to the priest-feood in 1S34; served as aux-iliary bishop of Los Angelesfrom 1946 to December. 1*7.wires he was installed as thefirst bishop of Fresno. Calif.His appointment as coadjutorarchbishop <sl Los Angeleswas announced June 11.1959.

Borm in the borough ofManhattan, June 25, 1&86,Cardinal Mclatyre was 23

years old when be began Msstudies for the priesthood. Behad finished grammar schoolat tbe age of 13, but then wealto work to help support an ail-ing father. He aUeaded. btgfeschool in the evenings andalso look evening cwrses attbe city College of New Yorkami Columbia University. Heenrolled in Cathedral College,New York, m 191$, after hisfather's death. He was or-dained in St. Patrick's Cathe-dral, May 2i. m i .

He was named assistantchancellor of the Archdioceseoi New York in 1923 andbecame chancellor in IKMserving in that office underboth Patrick Cardinal Hayesand Francis CardinalSpeilman, He was namedtitular bishop of Cyrene amiauxiliary to Cardinal Spell-man and was consecrated inSt. Patrick's Cathedral. Jan.S. 1341.

INSTALLEDHe was named vicar gen-

eral of tbe Archdiocese ofNew York in 1945. and on JuJv20.19*6. Pope Pius XII namedhim titular archbishop of

» Pagr 24}

BEACH was ttie scene oJe recent meeting oi dej»go^«j from Ae lnlardtoc&sanTelevision Auocicffon comprised of seven dioceses. Msgr. Joseph O'Shea, Archdiocsearrdirector at if»« Radio and Tmlevlsion Commission, center, is shown with Antfiony R«do,AixhdJocss* of Dslroib Msgr, Ralph Schmidt, Archdioeass of Milwaukee; VMiliam Fait,vk» pr«sid«ni, MPATJ, TV program distributors; Howard Cromwell, president, MPATI,andWHwm Fejpan,MPA'n,AJsoaif«Rdingfa«tnot$hown were Fa»her Mkhoel Dempssy,Diocs$« of BrooMyn; and Msgr. John Healy, Archdiocese of New York.

High School Exams Set March 7Entrance examinations

for high schools of the Arch-diocese of Miami will begiven this year OB Saturday.March 7. Registrations formsare available now in parishesand parochial elementaryschools.

According to FatherPatrick McDonnell, Arch-diocesan Superintendent ofHigh Schools, the section ofthe form marked'' high schoolcopy" must be sent to thearea high school by thestudent no later than Jan. 28.He emphasized that formsare not to be sent to theDepartment of Schools.

Forms of those desiringto enter archdiocesan highschools next September mustbe signed by parents orguardians. The admissionstnb must be kept by thestudent and presented on the

day of the examination."Public school students

who wish to enter Catholichigh schools should fill outapplication forms at therectory no later than Monday.Jan. 26,

Assumption Academy,

Miami; Rosarian. Academy.West Palm Beach: andSacred Heart. Carollton.

Coconut Grove, are notparticipants in the co-operative entrance exam, headded.

Archdiocese of MiomiWeekly Publication

Second-class postage paid atMiami, Florida. Subscription*aies*. $5,00 a year, Foreign,S7*50 a year. Single copy IScents. PubHsfaed every Fri-day a£ 6201 Biseayne Blvd.,Miami, Fist. 33138.

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THESE IS "an owafasalwg ef ffe* tatissiemm of #w ewrn«umty kt its drag probfawt. etffang toO," Ofr. 8«n Sh»ppar4, ExercsrtTvo Director of &« Catfeofk $a-rvk« Burwav, fold aiurechaoft meeting of tfe* Mtaot! Chapter of She National A**odbtwjrt of Soda} Worier*rtwt wt^i erf VsrierrtJ's festevnani. "Wi#KM*t Hi* tinfiriftg RttefstJ ami finottckri aid oJAixhbisiiop Gaiaman F. CsrroH fbls cc«W iwt hov« be«n done," he

ICursi//o Mass Set Sunday5 A GsDcelebrated Mass for bothi English and Spacisb-speaking mejKbers| of the Cursdlo Movement in Smib Flcnda| will be offered at 3 p m . Sunday Jan 251 inSi Mary Cathedra!3

| Archhsfcep Coleman F Carroll trC| pressde thirvssg :he Mass which mil be§ conce!ebra:ed by members cf the Arcb-

Msgr. James J Walsh.chairiBan, and Mssr Bryan; O Walsh IEpiscopal Vicar for ± e Spamsh-Sp«akir^ §Peoples, will preach ite bQrr.ilies ir. =English and in Spanish 1

More Jhar. L.3S Ctirsi^:stas sre e.t- |pec:ed so partic:pa:e sn ifce Mass and 5attend a recepuais which vu'. iollav: in ihe =Arcfcdioeessn. Hall sdjoi.-jr.s "±e Oath- iedxa! " |

Funeral Rite For Father Of PriestNORTH MIAMI -

F u n e r a l Li turgy wasconceiebracea Tuesdayeveaing m Si James Csurcnfor .Vtoystas A. Kisick:. whoseson 3 a pnest of *beArchdiocese of MLami

Father James Kssicfc. ss-Sssiar.t passor Ho:y FamiJy [Church, was ± e principal Iconce:ebract of the Mass lor. *his faiaer. who died Sunday a? 11the sge oi C after a Ion;

C-.r.ce'.ebra;;nE sere Fa-ther >e.i D?her'.y FatherJoseph Dennis ;r. Father

member ts S; James Ushers vnth whom ne reskted ai s*»iClub and the Holy Name -N%" 132 Ss . he is also survivedSociety ' by a daughter, Miss Mary

In aa&iKKi to his wife K*sv:ki v.

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Mr K-sicki can^e here 14years aga from Chscago andwas an c-piician He was a

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Page 2 THE VOICE Mio'rai, Florida • January 23, 'T770

News In Review IWisconsin Senate Move fSurprking*

Martyrs Recalled; Vote Advances School Aid BillCelibacy Target;Chicanes Protest

i NC .NEWS SERVICE t

Biafrans and starvation, chicanes aad poverty.Catholics and :.Protestant martyrs, priests andcelibacy, parochial school pupils and public aid,Russians and religion, and the human race aosi itsenvironment helped make op the sews daring the pastweek.

Chhanos Seek Upgrading-Sentiment among Mexican-American Catholics

regarding criticism of the Los Angeles archdiocese bya group of Cbkano protesters appears to be polarized.

The group, called Catholics For The Race, seeksbelter living conditions and looks to the Church forfinancial help in the areas of education and legalservices.^ "

ArciKliocesan policy defenders, however, cite aid.already being given to the CMeanos, including opera-tion of 2§ parish SCJKXJIS in Mexican-American areasand the start of construction of'a new ft-millionhospital .in a predominantly Chieana area.

March Of ReparationCatholics are plannli^ a public act of reparation

in London to the memory of the Protestants martyredfor their beliefs daring ibe bitter rdlgiaas strife of theReformation.

Httototis of Catholics will walk in silentpilgrimage Jan., 25 to the site srisere 46 Protestantswere burned at the slake daring the brief csaister-reformatiaa in the reigu of the Catholic Qeeen Mary.

Prlmis l a p CmMbacyA graup of priests from Sortlieast: BraiU agais

appealed u» u » isishaps for chasges is Use Charefc'slaws on priestly celibacy,

At a meeting ia BeeSe, representatives <rf afeent2.0GB priests asked far as enl to eesjpofaery celibacy,ibe reinstatement of priests mim have laarriedL, aadthe ordination sf jnarriaJ uses i«t© the prtesttoodL

lift To School SillBy a surprising 35-6 votfc. tfee Wiseossie Slate

Senate passed a controversial hill that providesfinancial aid to parents of paroeiual and privateschoolchildren.

The measure now goes to fte AssetnbK, whereapproval also is expected. Oppossits, however, hateraised ite^uesliosaC rossUistkm&HtY.

The bill presides tuoioB pants of SS6 for s seiemeatarj- pupil and SlOtt for a feigb seised sotdent fareach sefe»l year.

Enrollment ClosedArcbbishop Tissraas A Dwttsellaa of Atlanta

closed ecrcltoetils st all Catholic schools m fas arcb-diocese for t ie current setosf rear is sat effort to«pp&ri the public sefesels of Atlanta aad Georgia sswfactsg "a pemxi of ebatsge and some tesstee * overintegraties

He srged chinas "to have confidence is tbeirpublic school ateitnistraiars aod u> ewjperaie withitem in every way.*

Is IssueThe Spasiss bsls&ps are pressing far greater

iiale&mfcGee in Church-State reiaew&». a key tssse inihat cverwferfmtBg Catholic naiisa

Aad UKJT are d&ing s& at the tiff iaf of SR Btereas-rsgh ftSBtget fgaeransB of prelates wiifeut theSpanish Bsiiops* Ceelereeee. mam of iby l ie Vatican ctrcestseftuiig liteprivilege a! prssarttisg eamfidtaes ts tend dioceses

BY GENE HORNMADISON. Wis. - (NC»

— By a surprising 26 to 6 vote,the state Senate passed acontroversial bill thatprovides financial aid toparents of parochial andprivate school children.

The measure now goes tothe Assembly, whereapproval also is expected.

However, opponents haveraised the question of con-stitutionality.

The bill provides tuitiongrants of S50 for anelementary pupil and SiOO ahigh school student for eachschool year.

With financing expectedfrom a three-cent increase inthe tax on a pack of cigarets.

the cost of the program for1970-71 has been estimated at$9 million.

Two provisions whichwere deleted from the billwould have increased the costto taxpayers to about $13million a year.

The deletions providedthat the grants would bedoubled for parents whose

DEMONSTRATOSS gath«f in Rome's Piana Del PopoJo to support increased aid forBkrfram, whose breakaway state surrendered fo federal Nigeria after 30 months ofcivil war. Join} Church Aid, an international, interrelkjious effort which had been themajor cam«r of food Jo Biafra, was not expected to be readmitted by the Nigeria

The Earth DeteriorateInto Cesspool Of Universe?

WASHINGTON - *NC.— Tte new director of theDepartment of lotenjaiioisalAffairs. United StatesCatholic Conference, is"coovioced tfce Earth migbtbectMue tbe cessfc©! of theuniverse*" if ihe euviroB-mental ertsis is not

a^aanes his new post«&ile COISDBBII as direciorof she fHvjstoe & WorldJaslice as! Peace, totd NCNews Service theDeparunem of foternaueoaiAffairs will he greatly

with eccJt^kalduring the

"I £m"t mist t» gH* tfcei'&at s e wil.t be

aM else," fee saM,we wlf be toe^

la stwijiag tke

TMs crisis, ii* said"ksovs no faoaosiai-ies."tins is trely ac

, a f feet i^ his clgpart-As as example, Se

"By wfcst nght casCtereiand pai:u:e Lake Erie

when its other side touchesupon Canada?"

Msgr. Bordelon also saidbis department will have todeal with the populationqaestisn, ^hich will involveextensive study before anycoJKlasions are reached.

He txpMsei that thereare new miracle seeds beingdeveloped t&at will be aWe topredteee food to feed theworld's growiag popalation.Bat one of the pr(AlemsInvolved is that the fertilizerseeded to prodace thisabaadacce might causefarther peitatica aad terml ie very people wbe are beingled.

M^r. Bordeloo said theUitUea* Stales "is creating adrain on oational resources asa result of being a consumernation."

Selfisfjuess is beiagexpresses, he declared, whenno due regard is shown forpreserving resources. Msgr.Bonfcion said there seems tobe a lack of caneera for futuregenerations on d a pan ofmany present-day consum-ers

Another related problem

Msgr. Bordeion's departmentwill study is development inLatin America, Is develop-ment there, he asked, "justcreating another consumereconomy?"

A big task facing Msgr.Bordelon is his new positienin the review of the structureand objectives of the depart-ment. The USCC Committeeon International Affairs iscurrently studying theseitems.

Purpose of the review.Msgr. Bordelon said, is todetermine if there are toomany, or too few. divisionswithin the department, andwhether or not the functionsof some divisions should betransferred to other units, orperhaps dropped altogether,or even expanded.

Objectives of the depart-ment are to express coocernfor the social and economicdevelopment of peoplesoverseas; to expand theoutreach of the Churchoverseas in missionary aadrelief endeavors; aad to min-ister to the needs of foreignvisitors, travelers, aadmigrants.

effective income is S3,0(W orless a year and tripled forthose with a similar incomeof S2,0Worless.

Senate passage wasattributed generally topressure from severalsources. A non-denomina-tional group of parents,clergy and Religious, Citizensfor Educational Freedom,was the main backer of thebill.

There also was strongsupport from the Catholicbishops of the state, who saida tuition grant program wouldhelp reduce the number ofparochial schools that areclosing because of increasedoperating expenses.

They argued that a stateaid program would be betterthan putting private schoolchildren into the public schoolsystem and raising propertytaxes.

The Wisconsin CatholicConference- also urgedpassage.

A chief opponent. SenateMajority Leader ErnestKeppSer of Sheboygan.described the strong lobbyingfor the bill as "*the bestorganized campaign I haveever seen for any legisla-tion."

Another foe. Sen. HolgerRasmusen of Spooner. said:"CEF conducted one of thebest campaigns ever tooperate in these halls. Theopposition has not beenorganized and they are Justwaking up. . .this legislationwill force all taxpayers tosupport sectarian schools."

Rasmusen predicted thebill "will open the door fordemands for more fuwJs fromfuture iegislatares." Hecalled the measure *"de factopreferential treatment forcertain churches." *

Sen Cari Thompson ofStoughton argued that theSupreme Court would hold thebill sneonslitutional.

Order Of NunsPfeics Superior

ANGELES - sNCs—Sister Eileen MacDonaidwas elected to a four-yearterm as superior genera! ofthe Sisters of the ImmaculateHeart of Mary daring thereligious community's gen-eral ehapte here.

Sister EEeen in Jane 1968was appointed by the HolySee to direct those Sisterswho had chosen I© remainunited to the original Instituteof the Sisters of the Im-maculate Heart. Other mem-bers have continued as aseparate body following adispute with officials of theLos Angeles archdiocese overexperimental programsundertaken by 'them for therenewal of religioas life.

Death Still Faces Millions In SurrenderedBfPATBfC£8iLEY

ROME — - XC — Aj»tter two milhaB ises, «ssig» aadchildren — *s maay aad mere as died <tei^| the 3#-ie©£t&Biaf ran rebellion — could be stst w Cbeir ieatiis «ssi& ibef juien r&imibt of Biafra without anyone's Uftsag a la^per.

That is, tsiitert auwsjte's lifting a fa|§«r to refeetM theisffr-iastasr.isg a i r h o l e mto the m&rm lerriurr. or wrep'-sce n **!**- elfectree aid from efafewfaert

A;i .Jepewfet os l i e go-ahead af tibe victoriosts

A seek fit' Mrtmemtie tesfttef, m•o»Id aave m cataeiv smk- m, effect m tim

peinietl iirce to be reckoned *uh m a umted Xjgena Aaithai is precueSy wfcat l&e I&os accused iheir tnfaal rivals inJise Kifertar, gcsrerEnrera of pitting te achieve.

Q » BM» « l » t«ttredi the teagtii and breadtk of » i a i wasleft ai Bk&s, a^i flew «rt o«!y live days bef«e it

»s«tei ; '"Evett Ae«» uetkiag eoaW &ave theiBM*ft i»a4*i%e airillti»g of ISNWI aad medicines &>

tie p^« pvmen."tie was ^seakisg « A note when well over a hundred s»ni

«ef viial «fippis«s weirg amviag atpMh* via the airbridgete* Jf-^gt CSireh AN! {fee jirtereteireh relief

selJ-temMsf <£

Persons wfe r««tf»al & W l ie tsesss§efi t£g$m emof its surrender iastst&f t ta t a ssfcstaEUai p e t el

— e s u m a a t » MS artltei —to- startauoa that motif a w&ek m mo wttitoaljwab maey to Ihtkr watU he

Tfcaf ms&n. tmamUse «asi em

expert v « « d iisrHaj that ibe iateraattooalobservers wlo reported ss Lagos dial ihejr saw BO sign ofm a s » « e s is ihe overran territory bad not beftfi- allowed wv&fttttteaaf&r? north of Owerri-

Se s ^ : "Tltae Is ii» crwcM. sectn» an«iai Lli and Uga,«as a fas! center ol Blafraa resistaaee. I fear lbs

ssMkrs tfeer* w a e 3^M®«I by $Ue te^reds ortfeey pei ten tbeir iaffms

Ai Ae Ro»e fceadqaarters ef lie akferMge isio wtet ted&e*a BisJra, a jjall ef (tread a s4 o'es despair ha4 fallen over

tie persoaael as the first week of the cease-fire drew ts aclose wit&oBt a concrete siga of action.

"We fear another two us HIion dead." stated one official ofCaritas Infernatioualis. the ijjterBational CaiboMc charitiesorganization that joined forces wife other religious relieforganizations to create the Joint Church Aid i JCA > airbridge.

"No food has been getting ia. No medicines. We learn thisfrom Sao Tome," She was referring to the offshore islandwhen Joint Church Aid had based its airbridge.

-There was one JCA flight t ie night of Jan. 13-14. Itlanded at Uga, a small airport wMefe is tedty damaged na».-Bat there was nobody there is uaload ibe food. "Use plane badto return with a MI cargo, but was able to brag back about 45refugees."

Joitkt Chareh AM tod made mere than 5.20ft m&tsrv Rightsinto Biafra.. Each flight ir&Bglii ia from It to 15 tons of foodand medicines.

Oae glimmer of Ispe came from a report that l i e federalNigerian government had asked all Joist Ctercfa AM

to remaia OB t ie spot ia former Bialra to

tmmrmtimmSht kmkfimKem froro Sao Toiae.

23, rrnvmes Wtemj, Flmtdo

EHNfiRS FROM Marathon wer« | fromfefti Mrs. frene Kotawidb, £,A, VamJy, FatherSan Jaouszewsld, Mrs. E.A. Vondyand Murray Vooth,

•:- • * • - - . - .

,"• = - ^ ^ ; U - ; - ' • .• J : ' • ^ / ^ • - • • - -

DISCUSSING GOALS for the Mve ore {fromleft) Father John Minvidle, S J , , PhSf Lewis,ABCD General Chairman, net!Father Lorkin Connolly.

1st Annual DinnerHeld In Key WestFor Charity Fund

Mrs. Jos*** H»l**«.

CHATTING WITH region eiSkt cftaitmon LeoCleft) is Father John Kevins, Archbishop'sCoofjJinator for the ABCD.

EHTERIHG THE room for the Key West ASCDdinner ore l j re« le-ff- EdTacfeer, director of tftcArcWiotcsss! Cttsnsnvmty Services offics; Msgr. R. T .Rostatter, Arch<fjoc«s<ai Diseciof of C h lCharit ies, aswi i - L, Lester. Jr .

ABCD Audiences Told Plight Of Migrants-"These farm workers

simply will be without pay.These are the workers whopick the lettuce and the ottervegetables we had tonight, forthey only get paid when thereis work for them. There may-be work one day for 200workers on a particular farmand then for the nest five davsthere is no work becausecrops are not ready or be-cause tbere is a sudden freezeor some other disaster of thatkind. And right here thesepeople, who contribute sosmach by their labor, thesepeople suffer."

Msgr. Waish emphasizedthat during the cold spellthere were families sleepingon the edges of canal banks,in erode teats, in old stationwagons and in old buses.because there is no bousingfor them.

'"Here in the affluentsociety in which we live." hedeclared, "society has foundways of covering up poverty,whether in rural or inner city.People have in a large

measure forgotten jast how-dire it can be. Fifty years agoeveryone was kind of poor andin a sense it was respectableto be poor. But we haveforgotten that."

He explained that throughproviding donations to theABCD, Sooth FJoridiani canassist the Archdiocese in pro-viding Child DevelopmentCenters and Day CareCenters which will helpchildren of agrkaltaral farmworkers "break oat of thiscycle of poverty experiencedby their paresis andgrandparents."

Bishop P i tzpa t r icktermed the plight of migrant

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workers as "one of theg r e a t e s t sou rce s ofembarrassment Jo as asAmericans and Christians.They provide oar daily foodoa a year-round basis asd yelare under-fed, under-nour-ished, under-paid and under*educated thetnseSves.

"'Tbey are victims of oareconomic system, of our na-tion's neglect, of oor lack ofChrist iae concern,' * t ieprelate said, "Most of as havenot taken time to go asd lookat the hovels in which theylive and watch them at theirback-break ing work,garnering greatly sub-stand-ard wages, paying exorbitant

rates fir 65, Fort LasderdaJe, that possible for us so keep a" ' beeae se S i . Joseph p-erson who ae«ds marslug

care tbere for mo-re than ISboors, we- have to ask them to

S3.r.v;;:es Residettce for the Aged here"It s arr.ane :.":es-e peopse sfoes ms iaelade nsrsisg tare

'.53'. 'he r.ew archci-x-esar. assd became xbt taws "of the leave."sik.-n i> wire rr.ad* through Stale o< Florida make it im- ~ •:the Rural L::e Bureau and ;

ppries:s. 5:=;er?. and lay per-sons who work sarong these*.er..« •.'; '.jTvUiarris of pe«?ple

White discassing tbe {needs of ihc mj^rant, tbe IexcepdooaE child, dragaddicts, unwed mothers.college s t adea t s , ifeeanedacaied, the abandoo«dchild aad the aged. BisfeopFitrpatrick emphasizd togaesis af ifre diaoer is Pier

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MIAMI BIACHSAVINGS u sLOAM ASSOCIATION

We mate no csiarge !s Ifaasfer ysaiisavings is Miarsi Ssacn F«ae,-a* from

a.-.ywaera in ?hs United States.

FED1EA1•sol Uincoin Hoac! Mali. Miami Beach

Phon* S3S-S51I755 Washington Avenue Miami Seach

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30! - 71s" St;eei. MiamiPhone S3S-5S11 Ms—.

Page 4 . THE VOICE Mianti, Fbrida Januory 23, 1970

Boca Raton Group f i ! ii

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• •

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•3f#""i ^. ; ' 1

• * * ' ' " • •

7 *. . ' •:• • ; • * • '

AODRESSiHGTHE

Ctub dinner isABCO GeneraiChairman Phil

Lewis.

STOPPING TO chat with Msgr. Michael Fogorfy,l ch«irwaar are Tftotuas Corcoran

and his wife.

PRE-DINNER confab includes Mrs. H. Muir, PotJ. Kennedy, Father James Consevgrsfofl, Joseph

M. ¥orgo and Mrs. Elmer Winters.

DISCUSSING ABCD goais with Msgr. Bryan 0 .Valsh ore ({ton left) Mrs. William Unks,

Mrs. Kenneth Griffiths, and Mrs. Ruth Heffeman.

Shy Of Food And Lodging"Where f bey go only Godrs. li JS Archbishop Car-

roll's plan, and your plan ihope i*» husid a ^-bedaddition in St. Ji>septi Homeand tr* d>> st» as soar, as fundsare made avau&b'e by r<ury»ewp~fe •Jir--.aph ;he A33CD."

He also re%ea>ed that aeunjDieietv newservice WISJ s*.-n be a»to Bruward Coustians

Sen it e Bareas. anrl "feat Kper real *»i adoption? JB theArchdiocese bad already beet!!&ndie<! thr«sgB she BrowariBarft^a Aitteou^b its*Arrhdmrese eoes ik;t vetmaisiain a bosne fef usftedmothers JH Brctward Ci<:rjiyBishop Fiapairicfc siaies. 51p*r ce«; of yestsg VHST.GRatJrr,nt«i 10 St. %'sfscerl Has..Miami. a»d to Maiirawood.

i»m Besch were frimt

He noted thai ia tae pastyear tbe Ardsdiocese had seal^§J00 to Key West am! thatthe Cathoisc Service Bureauhas s p « $13,330 of dificesanfunds. "Hoprfuliy. s«ce dayyoo"}! be able to bear all thebanfens domts here >«ttrse!iand als« ic be aware of theoiber pr>oblefii5- sa otter pansaf toe Archdiocese." fee

Turmns. ut the edtieailoa-aJ s«€& of tl»e ArHMiweese,Bislwip FItipairicfc ssM thereare 3?.tl§ fc^-s u d girls wCatholic sctossJs is SeaihFl«r4&, s«aie *.<•• «f tliese ia

taagte,*' iie saad, " i j ar*

parents ami of other Cathoiirsia &ur ccnunuany

"The Cfcarch :n F'.undawiE. »5iis year, ma&e SCF:£H.Srffwrls 13 brisg the plight «•!Catholic and oilier stHt-pufaheschools lo t ie aiter.nort of curState !egs5*a!irs hoping thatthey will began JO recognize atlois last distinct advantagesof a dual system if mzcaiien:n i«r Stale, else !a--i isat -j<irCalfcslic schools are turiunsa.1, wwir.wr.sle Arner.cajtc»U2en? arf rsuerjnf ojrtaxpayers o! what caafd wel!be an J!r«pc«iser3b;e tartlen

"We have sc, ;r.;«itisrs r-f

8i$hc-p F;t2pa*r:rk. was

directs the ArchdiocesanDepartment of Educationstated. " although last year inthe other three dioceses inilits state six Catholic schoolsclosed.

"But the fact is," he em-phasized, "thsi there is everypossibility riiat the rapidlyrising costs «#f education.coupled with the almost jm-possible burden on the i^hauiders »•*! Catholics who 1vnihr.gij ?appnTi iwo systems •of edticaii&n may we!! force |e<ir schoctfe to close and thou- 's&m> of our children made to jen;er public schools at great |additional expense to every ftaxpayer. ' '

greatly redated *alarie«reflect their «•» sprit

dedkaiias asd reai fer

iiaser at tfceW«t Coeatnei.eaisg. BisteepcositneBiedi on t ie large

of psrisfces i» XeyWest astf BB i te Kejs.

Xc-«»in S-ratij Ftfrnda.evec *te;es y«c are !5tf moess«i'<.' he -sa*d can beunaware ff ihe great

a i r yticnger people

I t is i s secre: tbasdues, ma and eaai»i

sneet all the expeases «i earSse cr*siiEtKl Tfce

$ are pasafcih aad. Igiadiy shcoidered b>-

pamtees amr pasfers aaiffao eofHrjfejie to the

ABCD AnS ail ef as arec4r.Ticceti thai we sfeaJi r«{-tvnae v> dft *e as 1«^ as »-eare able bai it appears ihaithis barren may wdl fecessetuo mecfe «©s for U»

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EXPLAINING SOME of the needs filled ty theABCD to Mrs. Chester Tekiertieroski andMrs. Edward La Porta are Bishop John J.

Fifzpatrick and Father Gilbert© Fernandez(right) of the Mission at Delray.

CONVERSATION TURNED to cfioritles whenMr. ond Mrs. Edward Clancy and Mr, and Mrs.

Walter Clerke joined Father Brian Redd'ngtoi*.

Dependable,FriendlyServiceSINCBW34

BADEFEDERALSAVING

23, THE Miswii,

EDITOR'S COMMENT

Many In NeedAre DependingUpon Your Help

The Annual Bishop's Cbaritles Drive is well underway. The aeeompiishineiits of the past year and thegoals for this year have been described lo hundreds ofparish representatives at seven regional dinners in allparts of the diocese, with one remaining In the PalmBeach area.

A smpplemeat is the Miami Herald brought themessage ef t ie works oi mercy sponsored by theArcMiocese into several hundred thousand homes. It issigoifieaat to note that tbe projects of the ABCD, forthe most part, while directed by the Church, have sucha broad commaaity interest that people of all religionseaa identify with the need aad the solution offered.Such matters as the Education Center for Prevention ofDrag Abuse, Beystown and Bethany House, touch ontfee problems of yostfa which are of deep concero to tbe

Thing They II Think Of Computer Wcrrs

Most people are beginning to realize that a crashprogram of education concerning the evils of drags isnecessary in our cities and towns. People must be wellinformed* about the problems, first of all youth, so thaithey can avoid the dangers to begin with, then adults sothat they can exercise preventive means whereverpossible: or. failing that, can direct unfortunate usersto seek necessary help.

The dissemiaation of information about ABCDgoals, therefore, on SBCQ a broad basis in the publicpress hopefoUy will elicit tbe approval and support ofconscientious citizens who are anxious that solutions befooad to these critical problems.

The accomplishments of the ABCD in the past 11years represent some of the brightest, most hearteningpages in the history of South Florida. This year's goals,if as successful ss in the past, will sorely add luster tothe astonishing story of compassion and cooperationwhich mir people have been recording.

fMarch Of SorrowJI For Martyrs Sat 1

LONDON - (NCi Cath-olics are planning a public actof reparation here to tliememory of the Protestantsmartyred for their beliefsduring ifae bitter religiousstrife of the Reformation.

Hundreds of Catholics —priests, nuns, and lay people.including students — willwalk in silent pilgrimageSunday. Jan. 25. from St.Etheidreda 's . historicCatholic church in centralLondon, to the nearby site —now a public square - where46 Protestants were burned atthe stake during the briefcoaster-reformation in thereign of the Catholic QueenMar}'.

Altogether 273 Pro-tejtants were burned asheretics under Mary, includ-ing Archbishop Cranmer °fCanterbury who so enrichedthe English language with histranslation of the Bible and

the Book of Common Prayer,and Bishops Latimer andRidley. They included 5!women.

The pilgrimage is beingJed by Father Clement Tigar,S.J., oae of the vice postu-lators for the caaoaisationeaase of the Forty CatholicMartyrs of England aodWales, which has recentlyaroused much controversy inthis coontry. The pilgrimagehas the full support of JohnCardinal Heenan of West-minster.

The ancient anti-heresylaw under which theProtestants died during thefive-year reign of Mary,daughter of Henry VIII andelder sister of Elizabeth, whoin turn revived the anti-Catholic persecution in all itsfury, was "intolerant, unjustand cruel," said FatherTigar.

The Archdiocese of Miami WeeklyPublication embracing Florida'seight southern counties: Browarti,Coilier, Dade, Hendry, Glades,Martin, Monroe and Palm Beach.

The Most Rev, Coiemon F. CorroiiArchbishop of Miami

PresidentThe Voice Publishing Co.. Inc.Rt. Rev.Msgr, James J. Waish

Editcria! Consultant

MEMBER: The Catholic PressAssociation

5UBSCRIBES TO: SC News Ser-vice, Religious News Service,Catholic Features Cooperative,St. Louis Review Service andCatholic Press Features.

PHONESEditorial — 758-0543

ADDRESS:The Voice6201 BiscayneBlvd.Micmf, FloridaMAILING ADDRESS: ,P.O. Box 1059Miami. Flo, 33138

George H. MonahanEditor

Fred C. Bfink, Advertising Dir.John J. Ward, Contributing Editor

Founding Editor, 1959-66

STAFFEDITORIAL; Uarjorie L. Fillyaw,local news editor; Allen J . Brent,copy editor; T, Constance Coyne,features .editor.PHOTOGRAPHY: Tony GamesSPANISH: Gustavo Pena Monte,editor; Manolo Reyes, contributingeditor.

ADVERTiSING: Clyde Carter,Jack Eayner, Herb Blais, LindaLawrence, Maria Alvarez.

CIRCULATION: Fred Priebis,supervisor; Bea Anderson

PHONESFditoriat - 7S8-0S4 3

Advertising — 7S4-26S1Circulation — 754-26SI

Fort Lauderdale — 525-5157

Tryffi Of The Matter

Changes In Society Will LikelyInfluence Future Of Ecumenism

BY MSGK. JAMES 3, WALSSl?p until very recent tunes :be disunity in

Christianity has seemed to expasd in ever-wideningcircles away from Catholicism.

No oae described this better "haa JohaaaDoilinger. a German scholar, when be wrote ahundred years ago: "At first tbe Bvzaniutessaid: 'Werecognize only patriarchs, and each of thesegoverning only a portion of tbe Church, bat no pope,no bead of trie patriarchs." Tten came tbe EnglishChorea and It said: "Neither popes osr painarefes, fellmerely bishops. * The Protestants of lite Continentdeclared: 'Ho bishops either, bet raereJy pastors, and

MSGft

WALSH

above them the sovereign of the coontrj',* And sab-- sequent!? came the new Protestant sects of Englandwith a declaration. 'We have no need of -pastors, hotonly preachers." Finally appeared the Friends tiiseQuakers * and many more communities who bad madethe discovery that 'preachers also are only an evil,and every man should be his own prophet preacher.and priest*.*'

Has this powerful force of ils«.alty speal Itselfnow? Is a reaction to tbe wild MweoflfarajBt attitsdesof the past several centuries settiag la despite llus.chaotic history of disagreement?

Hans Kueng several years ago asked Hie questionbluntly, "How can Catholics aod Protestants come to-gether?" In his reply he emphasized that the quest ofunity will not be advanced by compromise or wateringdown differences or playing down tbe truth. Heinsisted that progress can be made only tbroogb self-searching, self-criticism, self-reform.

"If Catholics carry out Catholic reforms, "hewrote," and Protestants carry out Protestantreforms, both according to the Gospel image, thenbecause the Gospel of Christ is but one, reunion neednot remain a Utopian dream."

The sixties saw some dedicated men. Orthodox,Protestant and Catholic, engage in much, sotil-searching, self-criticism and self-reform. But iiteirsturned out to be not merely a passive program forunity in which they concentrated on their own motivesand attitudes. Rather their concern for the one fold ofChrist spilled over into concern for a solution to theburning social questions of the day. And in this area,the common efforts of Christians of many groapsbrought about a certain unity which had not existedbefore.

1B fact t i * tiwee for this w«k oi He Clareisi'wty Octave, *'W« are Friicra Workers for GoC"pats t te emphasis sa sailed, effort to aid ose's ieitewman. Ami »*§e speasars ef the Octave stnssvi liereality ef tMs laaft«i "saliei Cfcristuusity" wfe i"stares its fereai wMi t ie tesgry, epeas its «to«r totie straager sag i&e refegee, lakes the part of theptm sad Ite sfpresset **

At me. with mas in his aoeertaiiities aod bistapes, it suites to break down all the walls of separa-tkm foetunses raees aad nations:, aixi ii engages Is theslreggie for -social jostice, for peaee and for ibe

nEient of ee^itlsas «f life fur Wividoals anila ifiis waf il wili be fated faitftful irs toe

ice «f a!! isaAiasi tioited in Jesus Christ. * *Last week ia 'ttmne a ratter y«ui^ priest, Fatfc&

Thomas Sfraasfc}*, CS-P. espressed Ms views on theprseat sitaatioo of Ecumenism sa6 what we j»ayexpect in tlie seventies. Since &e has been with U»Secretariate of -Claistian t'eiw from the begining.first asCardtsal Bea's secretary, tfeea as member, bisttougMs are wortli tmiing,

For one thing Father Strassky. wfco has tmverbeen k»«B fer coaservative %*iews, touched a ra«serve of the ultralibera! when ise said ffeaL .despite theuopo^ilaniv of stmetBrss tada?. "I see so Islile being.dfiie in tbe Ecumenical Msweswots is areas and oalevels «h«re there are no ^raciures or where those

• structures are not be i^ used properly or so thefsHest." Be insisted that slruetares must bestreagtbfiBed if l ie Ecameniea! Movement Is tosucceed.-

He rns&ytM t ie <pest <rif aa% ia Jbe Coited Statesiy say i^ tfcat M Ecsnteaisni means She "eliiniaatjea«F p-e^fiees awl the iacreasaq; ns^ect awl mataalaMte^tarf^ amrag men, I waeid say we Save mad#p-eal strides. H ymt me$m ksa/&% castioaiBg tbea-ieglcdl <fial* ttcs amoag tfce iiiEBer«Bt coaunanioas, Iweald again say thai we have ntaie great strides. Bettf t ie Eesaiesieal Mavemeai means, and I think itdoes, t ie helping of each oUs- to ref«rm the Ctorcltf#r a ajwsi«« in the world where it is really neededaad ia t ie form fit rejpires - tfcea I mast say Xtfaistk weare just &eg iaaaag."

H«wer«» as Pope John said of Vatican H afterthe first s*ss»a, "It is a good begifiKfag." It would herash to predict -where Ecumenism will be at the end ofthe seventies. The prophets who finished theremarkable gains ia the sixties are presently handi-capped by ignorance of tbe social changes to takeplace ia the seveatles.

As Father Stransky pit it: "The fatiire ofEcumenism therefore will depend to a great extent onthe outcome of the Ctarch crisis — tMs caltore crisis— aad how mnch it brings all the People of God to-gether to help lead it in positive directions."

Moreover, he stressed that success in the searchof aaity will also depend <m and will be conditioned by"changes io society" aad all yon can do is ask yoar-selves what changes there will be.

Aim To Turn Talk into Welfare ActionMINNEAPOLIS - (NCi

— Can the typical metropoli-tan resident make a contribu-tion toward alleviation of wel-fare, education, employmentand housing problems? Canconcerned citizens becomemore than just concerned?

Organizers of the "Com-rouni-Action in the "70's" pro-gram think it is possible.They feel that through a pro-gram of education and atti-

tude change, small groupscan turn talk into action andhave an impact upon theproblems of the cities.

Using materials devel-oped by George Ndsoa Asso-ciates, Minneapolis, the pro-gram camhises small jp-oajidynamics, education, sensiti-vity training, and action pro-jects with as «nphasis oa get-ting participants directly in-

volved through iadrndaaltask asslgnnaeiits-

"It is not so crucial thatthe first actions are sizable orworthy of publicity as .thatthey give an experience ofbeing able to effect socialchange," said Jim Evans ofCteorge Nelson Associates.

Earlier tMs year SO per-sons meeting 19 parish groupstook part in tbe initial pilot

project of the Communi-Ac-tion program ander the spon-sorship of the St. Paul andMinneapolis archdiocesanUrban Affairs Commission.

The mixed media pro-gram included lectures, dis-cussions, tape recordings,documentary films, quizzes,games and individual assign-ments relating to poverty inthe Twin Cities area.

Page 6 THE VOICE MiantJ. Florida J«Hi«ary23, 1970

Anglican-Catholic TeamSets A Massive Task

ByFATHERLEO E. McFADDENLONDON -iXCi — To

an outsider, the reunion ofRome and Canterbury mightseem sufficient work for a»lifetime. But for 19 membersof the joint Anglican-RomanCatholic International com-mission working for thatpurpose, it is only abeginning. In fact, sememembers fed that the finalgoal, "full organic unison,"*cannot wait for a conjoined"giving mission to theworld" by helping the man ofa technological age find hisrightful path by the Gospel.

NC News Service went toWindsor Castle, 28 miles

rest of LoBtkm cm theThames, to fiad the com-mission probing the themes of

authority, ministry andEucharist as part of theirmandate to seek eventualunity of the two communions,an assignment given them faythe Pope of Rome and theArchbishop of Canterbury in196fi.

A common declaration bythe two Christian leaders atthat time, while recognizingthe difficulty of the task, andthat its ftilfilent was "far

thewas behiM ana reach

for those things which arebefore." The commission, iaaddition to aiming at the iraityof the two creeds, isconsidering a church whichwill equip the man of to-morrow to solve his mostpressing needs.

Cold Spell IsHunger, PainFor Migrants

"Miss ies parishesthroaghowt the Archdioceseare worisiag ap emergesejrelief teams if sxtch arenecessary,** F a t i e rMcMabon said. "At best itmight be a l imitedemergeaej'* is miieiifamilies are siraaded or nitit-oat food for ?,e\eral dajsbefore tfcej ean liad «crkagain, he added.

>e*c-rai secular rnijrar:;service j^erscse- ha*«e

gl:..z they

migrants. Most graops arearriving without prior worteommientienis Crews asdfansilks that arrive withsome fends are forced IO asesp most ci wfcst they have ior

wars p;cier$- a**"* "iodutzw»k quilt- <Um ai»iserf tsld _c we: <pel. wjli rreaie a

# BROWAEO COCX-TV: AR emanated i- »** in:-grams at; jverssippH aflabcr ani crews- are

:- t:se «*• ereaaph: Jr. th* «i»aa-

erf :cut *Aedsthe er.ifrc-

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ANDCOLLIER COUNTIES:

23 350at peak is

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1 i&ttt

In a position papeiprepared for the commissionby an Anglican and a RomanCatholic, the "task of makingthe Christian commitmentintellectually and imagina-tively acceptable" in today'sworld was defined. This task,it was asserted, "cannot wait•upon the solution of oarhistoric differences."'cannotdepend on traditional apo-logetics or seek convert-ap-peal, bat involves a look atthe "eras" of life which isstill centered in the humanpersonality, "whose soundestinstinct is to react against allthat is the enemy of theauthentic." The commissionwas in full agreement that thetask was not just for thecommission, but as one mem-ber put it. "for the man in thepew and his family, rightdown to the Issl of his un-believing friends."'

As for t ie social action,the position paper queried:"Perhaps there is no culturalsituation intolerant of theGospel but may the Gospel beintolerant of cultural situa-tion in which eves Ml humanliving is impossible?'"

The paper then cited asexamples of interest for theCtarcta HOI only racism andpoverty and war. but also con-tempt for oatore. air andwater paiittaes, noise,vandalism stsd "ai! of theexpecssvelv hsse asd uglytatrxs which are effered ",l-

Regartltof the eomple\i-tj of aaiij. Dr. Ciatfcer Gass-maa {©id the NC News Ser-vice i&at it is iBHcfc more thana rsalif smeat of tbeoto^j. Aaofficial dwer^er to the c<xn-missisfi for the WorM CooBcilef Charcfces. the jeosg mMs-Ux toidi Jfce %rtmp thej nansf*ie« a»£> froes ail *M-es lestthere be aa eveaisal emhar-

ANGUCAN AND Roman Catholic dergy hold the first session of a week-long meeting ofthe permanent Joint Commission which was established fay the churches last October.Meeting in St. George's House, Windsor Castle, the Commission discussed majorsubjects—the Church and authority, the ministry and the Eucharist.

inntnniiiiiirinininiitHiiinlinnniiniHiitHttniiim

Paisley Balks Once More 1§ LONDON — (NC) —| The Rev. Ian Paisley,self-I styled moderator of the§ Ulster Free PresbyterianSChsrch and a ProtestantI leader in the recent riots in| Northern Ireland, tookS direct action to protest the§ Baity talks at nearbyiWiadsor Castle betweenS Anglican and Roman|Catholic leaders.g Paisley delivered a

What *ȣl! iapper.

cscnes a real::;* arsd :n :;veyea^s Sfcere is r.-z Anzl:car. _

s&»' I fa; n' a~-«er r.'-r did"I cip«ct i-ne. i s : :: .« 2

af R«me had been discussedyet by the comtaissioa, heanswered in the Begative, hotinsisted that ao member ofthe commission woeld accepttwo authorities ia a anited'church. "That," be quietly!bat emphatically stressed, 1"would be ecclesiastical **carpentry and oo one i*ill {stand still for it." l

Father Herbert RyanS J of WoodiUftck Ccliege inXew York was moreemphatic SR speaking <rf aCatsohc-Anghcan unity of a-existence. "There is no valaeis pluing together twoantiques to put in a museum."he softly stated '-If theChurch is the sacrament ofun:ty. how can a fracturedChurch serve mankind"' No. ,theolcgicai convergence ts jcoming and unny will beuptsfr u? before people.

a anitv that w;!I

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petition at Windsor callingfor the resignation of thearchbishop of Canterbury.In another protest of thetalks, Paisley watched astwo Protestant ministershandcuffed themselves tothe railings at BuckinghamPalace. Paisley droveaway with the keys.

The petition deliveredat Windsor said the Churchof England had betrayed

its trust by entering intonegotiations with the Vati-can, had placed the safe-guards of Protestant sne-cession in jeopardy andreduced to a farce thecoronation oath of theQneen.

The protesters atBuckingham Palace werehustled away by policeafter their hamdeaffs wereremoved by wire cotters.

enable the Church to fulfill itsmission to mankind."

sensus of the commission thatthe discussion of unity should

The American Passionist, be taken to the "grass roof"Father Barnabas Ahern, in- level for preparation of thesisted that it was the con- faithful for its eventualitv.

'A Modern Parable" — — -Then once was a certain young executive from

suburbia who dressed in fine clothes and dined aielegant clubs. And there was a certain poor manfmm India who longed, to eat what others thretvaway.

Daily the young executive read of starvation, il-literacy, frustration and despair. He watched TVspecials on hunger. "H?A_v doesn't someone changeall 'his? he pondered. "If they were my neighbors..."

Bui the poor man's only dream teas to haveenough food for himself and his family.

And it came to pass that the poor man died andu ent to heaven. The young executive uiso died buthe tins condemned to everlasting punishment In historment, he cried out- "Why, O Lord, am J here?For what great sin am I punished? "

And the Lord answered- "Sor^ remember that inyour lifetime, you received good things. You wereblessed many times over. Your sin was not in re-ceiving these gifts, hut in your refusal to share them.

"You read of suffering around the world, but yourefused to help."

"You heard cries of despair, but you refusal tobring consolation."

"You saw thai many needed the comfort of Mywords, but you refused to prach My gospel"

"My son, you did not understand that your rtagh-bar is anyone in need!"

Have we yei come to this realization — that ourneighbor is anyone in need? And in 1970 the needsare overwhelming — especially in countries Jess de-vcloped than our own. Food, clothing, shelter, medi-cine are the basic and desperate needs. But evendeeper are the »eeds of comfort, consolation, innerpeace and a conviction feat someone cares.

Missionaries are concerned wifSb a i these Beadsfor all out neighbors. The Society for lfae Propaga-tion of the Faifh fs concerned, too. The Society sap-ports missionaries who bring boflj physical and spir-Ilual comfort

The Society looks to you for your generosity,f»r your sacrifices, to continue its work of salvationand strvits. lit-mtmber: We cannot heip unless you do.

V««r ixaitxhhnr is anyone In need. Do no. rafuse

SALVATION AHO SERVfCi are th* worfe of TheSociety for the Propagation of ft* Faith. Please cutoat this celuraa and senslyoer offering its Right Rev-erend Edwcrd T, O'Meora, Motiona! Director, Dept.C , 366 Fifth Avenue, Hew Yerk, H-¥. 100SI, m

dtjecfly to your locel Archdiocesen Director, iheRev. Lamoi- j . Genowor. Chancery, 6301 -Blvd., Miomi, Florida 33138.

*.:»«<,-.

23, 195C Miami,

School Aid Discussed

Around The ArchdioceseBADECOUNTY

S$. Hose of Lima parishwill be host io senior citizensdaring a social, beginning at10 a.m.. Thursday. Jan. W infee parish hall. IS5S0 NEFifth Ave. Luncheon will beserved ami entertainmentprovided.

« * «A Valentine's dinner and

dance sponsored by HolyFamily Women's Club beginsat 1 p.m.. Saturday. Feb. 7 inthe parish ball. 14300 NE 11Ave,. North Miami. Forreservations call S>i-

"A Gold Coast Extrava-ganza"" is the title of thefashion show and luucheonwhich members of St. JosephCatholic Woman's Clab willsponsor at noon. Thursday,Jan. 29 st the HotelAmericana. Reservationsmav be made bv calling 865-m®.

mm*

Seventh annual cardparty to benefit localcharities will be sponsored byrvurt St. Coleman. Catholicllii-shiers of America, at~:30 p.m.. Tuesday, Jan. 27 atthe Blessed Trinity fieldnotije. Miami Springs.

* ** »Their aivnaa! dance will

be hosted by members of St,Rose of Lima Mothers Clab at9 p.m., Saturday. Jan. 24 inthe K. of C." Hall. 13300Memorial Hvry.. NorthMiami.

* * *Bowlers Dance of the K.

of C. Coral Gables Councilbegins at 5 p.m., Saturday,Jan. 24 in the council hall. 270Catalonia Ave., Coral Gables.

# * as

Marian Center forExceptional Children willbenefit from a thrift sale.Saturday, Jan. 3i at theWashington Federal Hall. 899XE 161th St.. N. MiamiBeach. The sale will be heldbetween 8 a.m. and 6 p.m.

* * *A Canon Law workshop

will be held Saturday and Sun-day, Jan. 24 and 25 at theDominican Retreat House,7275 SW 124 St., Kendall.Sister Eillene Patricia, O.P.will be the lecturer.

Luncheon and card partyunder the auspices of St. Roseof Lima Guild begins al noon.Saturday. Feb. 7 at the MiamiStores Country Clab. Ticketsavailable by calling 754-8850.

* « «Annual Mardi Gras will

be held in St. Vincent de Paulparish, 2800. SW MB Subeginning Wednesday. Jan, 38and continuing throughSunday. Feb. 1.

* * *A carnival to beneiit St.

Lawrence parish. NorthMiami Beach, opens Friday.Jan. 30 and continues throughSunday. Feb. 1 on the groundsat NE 19 Ave. and 191 St.Rides, variety booths andrefreshments will beincluded. Amusement rideswill be open from 3 to II p.m.daily.

r.c;n£ "A.«- L ..it-IK- rr.^d

officers of theMemorare Society forCatholic widows andwidowers wili be installedduring 7 p.m. dinner, Satur-day. Jan. 30 at the Elks Club.22 ' Giraida Ave-, CoralGabies.

ir « t

Members of St. Francisde Saies Altar and Rosary So-ciety. Miami Beach, willmeet at 8 p.m., Friday. Jan.30. Gaest speaker will be Mrs.Mary Louise McDiviti of theArcbdiocesan Council ofCatholic Women.

* * *Card party and games

night will be sponsored by St.Dominic Ladies Guild at 8p.m., Thursday, Feb. If in theparish hall 5M9 NW SeventhSt.

BROWARD COUNTYA Square Dance

sponsored by St. TheresaGuild and the Mothers Club ofLittle Flower Church. Holly-wood, begins at 8 p.m., Satur-day. Jan. 24 in the parishauditorium. Jim Vail will bethe caller.

* * *Their second annual

dinner-dance will be hostedby St. George Women's Clubon Saturday, Feb. 7 in St.Thomas Aquinas High Schoolcafeteria, Fort Lauderdale.Dinner will be served at 7:30

pbe provided b> M

bv ca

Woir.enS Cub *:1 : rr.et-'. a; ".p.rr. Tuesday. Jan z~ ;n ;.•:?dub ronms Refre.<rj::eni-vc.V. be served

• * *St Ehzabeih i>-i.c D*tr-

fie!-d Beach, «;'•': >ps-nr>r -j.fash:j»n show and '.urMhevn a;It '*» p rn Saturday. Fed 7at Crystal Lake O>an'.r> Cubin Pompanj Beach F -rreservationscaii £41-3754

* • *Lur.cheor. ar.d iashi-.-n

show under the auspices c: StMatthew Catholic VVvmt-n -Ciub. Hallasdaie. bef!.r.« «:noon. Tuesday. Fcb :c a: theSheraton Conveni:os Ha.;1S4CV Ctilhn> Ave Misrr.:Beach For reservatwn^ t i . "

C juntry fair •;:, >r.-« rt-d r-;,i>hr--e:* .-: -": f -u . - . c

m& • f*r,ur'_-;. wf.'. ?e ht".;Jar . :<•"' .;; ar.d i-"«r 1 -r :;.•par:,-:, jrr .^r:fI^ %V. >.v-/Avt and i\-< >:.-.-.•Hal.:ir.J.5:-, % -.cr:vV. :b c i t h - ; w i l : b-t- - K ! j.v •»••:

Women's Couiicl!

To Hold Beetle!New saucer*, oi tbt Mi-

ami Arcbdtoce*3n Cooncifof Catboltc Women will beelected da rice the winterboard mteilnz at IS a.m..Weda«da>. Jas. t& vs. theArcMkK«an Hall. NWFirst Cossrt utd Talk St.

P 5a&5 w ill fee discussedfor Spring Deaoei} meei-

Ball Wrif Be BenefitFor St Vincent Hall

-: %srjc«:; Ha!! i -r , m e - i rr.."r.zv? 'xi'.l

| | Zl al -he Bath Ciub M- srr.: Bc-a r,; Dsr ;«r %l be ser\e-i a' ? -*".pjn

$* ,\!u*:c for dzsxirs wiYl se pr->v:Jec by Free <-j-}§ 5m;:h

Much! UumeiirsfbrhoodDinner

' M - Ms'r.-. Ms'.r.t. exs- u*.

ber.

F a s h : ' n -r.">'Iur.fheun under sheof Bies--=ed Si i-r i i rer"Women's CSub w:il be heldSaturday. Feb. 7 at nj*tn ir.the Venetian Room aj P:er *•?.Fort Lauderdale Miss Sar.dvEdwards will entertain wishDennis Smith providingaccompaniment. Tickets maybe obtained bv calling 565-2976

* « *Luncheon and fashion

show of Holy Cross HospnaiAuxiliary's Circle Two begin>at noon. Saturday. Jan. 24 a;Pier 86.

PALM BEACH CO. iPre-lenten mission will

be conducted in St. LukeChurch, Lake Worth, begin-ning Sunday, Jan 25 and con-tinuing through Jan. 30. JesuitFather John Shroder will bethe preacher.

--^:::>- 8r;:h-, - , . . «T.UWl

fs;;ns w:Ii be .f.ide duringthe format dznser. scheduledla be held Tuesday Feb 17.at ihe Hotel Foaiauiebleau,Msams Beachs

A meniber of l ie t'mtedFund ar.d the Greater MiamiC&ahtiwt. Mach? ss also amember of the board ofgovernors c* the GreaterMiami Chamber of Com-merce, a director of theGreater Miami PhilharmonicSocieiy and a member of theOrange Bow: Committee.

Educators WillAir The New1

-••i M!dd"

Zw:efae;son Centralt:cut S:a:e Co^ege ar.d L>John ? Schardak. FairiseldL'civprsiiy

Registraa-m must faemade by cailws r53-3392. Es:249

READ

THE VOICE

CLASSIFIED

AHNOIINCEMENTS362 H.E. 1«7Hi Street

THE /ineJEWELBY STORE

ABE

[EPRESEMTATIVEOF A

5 iNCEHE DESIRETO

jjDUCATEA

FOR THE

DECORATIVE FURNITURE PULLS

PRIESTHOODFOR FURTHER INFORMATION CCN'AC

s of i*Bsfcff(fl <liffjr8iif a nd jo cftic pulb.tfut * «for fsnctiimat ase but-will jhow your good uste «»i

y ts i homemaktr, Cttae i» mi tho«st the potlj besl min ifo/ your tear. 722S H.W. 7th Avenue Tclephtme PL 4-5451CoOYtaient T» Tie Korlh-Sosth Expressway, Oss Tfce 69ife J;.

Burse Office6301 Biscayne Bivd.Miami, Fla". 33138

RELfGION TEACHERS WORKSHOPSAs

SOUTH OADE: Jonbory31, 1970, ptnea 1ob= anno:::.5-5:C3P,M.,"Tbs Sssidem and tte Chrisisaa Myststj""

s: I5eligictis experience® and ap-piamzhes to slse pricaary gra^e child •

IrsEenseifiaEe Grades; Cxmss.ivs drasjatlcs In re-ligions education today

Jusior High: Theme sad comrnusity approachesta religious edncatscsa

Sfegsior Higfe; .The use d Hliis saedia in x«Hgio*ss

Mms

NORTH 0ADE; January 17, 19?O, Notre Darae Academy

of the Siadent throsigh Scripture,the Realities of l ife, Christian

Msffuriiy aad Jhe AdolescentPri=iirj- Graiex: Faith sad !he ChiidInten=e<ii«e Grades: Faith, CoossnuniEy, and Re-

J-aciior High: Perscmhood and she Prc-Adoiescur.tSenior High: A Proeras-. for YotKh3

Specific -MeaiE of In£eres»: Parental Inyoliecseiit,Penance: Conversion and Recalculation.E'Jc&arix!

Mass

8ROWARO; Januaiy 17, St. ColemanJortuory 24, St, Thomas Aqurnas High SchoolJanuary 21^ Ncrtivity

rsith**rs-sth i» Fas'.h,

Fjiss, Rscsrtftrigs, Ars-Work in 8irJsgii;-js Edura-;i«i

MansEAST COASTt Jonuwy 24, St. Joseph, Stuort

iianiKity 31, Th« Cenocte Retreat Hou5«,Lartfonno

Februsry 21, S*. Joseph, Sf^arfFebruary 28, The Cenocie Reirecr HouseMarch 14, 5t, Joseph, StuartMarcH lij Tfie Cenaclc Retreot House

January 23^1970

Direct ElectionOf President In1972 Is Unlikely

By BURKE WALSHWASHINGTON - (NCi — As the 91st Congress

begins its second session, it seems less likely than itdid six months ago that the President of the UnitedStates will be elected bv a direct vote of the people in1972.

When the House of Representatives last Septem-ber approved by a vote of 339 to 170 a constitutionalamendment providing for the election of thePresident by popular vote, there was considerableenthusiasm among proponents. And, when PresidentNixon gave his quick endorsement to the Souseaction, prospects seemed even better to them.

But now, to meation some of the hurdles to becleared, the amendmeat may lave trouble gettlag ©etof tiie Senate Jadjeiary Committee; it coold havetrooble passing tfee Senate if It gets eat of thecommittee, and it doesn't sow seem likeiy that itcoald be ratified by encwgti states te become effectivein 1952.

The constitational amendment was higb on thecalendar of the Senate Judiciary Committee in thelast iession. after It came from the House. Bat anumber of things, including the fight en the nomi-nation of Jadge Clement Hayneswortii for theSupreme Court, left it in committee. Mow. It. isreported, some .important opposition to theamendment has developed in tiie committee. TfeeCommittee has promised to discus the amenaineBt-but it has given no isdicaiion (bat it is prepared tovote on it.

Dissatisfaction with the electoral college systemof election, which bas prevailed until* now. is w«ie-spreati But some senators woe!i prefer that presi-dential electors be chosen on a basts corresponding tocongressional districts, ixtt with eacb state having theright to n&me f « electors "at large."

If t ie smesisaetft clears* tJte eeMsalttee,observers feel it wf I face stiff <Iri»aie «B t ie Senatefloor, with &e pessiitlitf «f m iBBm&m- mm » beignored, .

And. if the Senate passes the amencbneot fay »iwr&-thirfs vole, it roast. of' c&arsc, stiff be ratified iwrtferee-fottfibs of the -states-., Oriitsarily, steles havesome years in which to ratify a proposed ansewtoest,bat HI the present case not ranch time is available.

Is fats, the Rwtse s»ipiste<i fiat stale ntrtfiea-I » B mmst fee coBijtetei ly Ja*. 21* IfTt, far *keproposes xmemixm-tmt t& lave effect to tiie MRSfwesidestial elaetim. Wftfc m&y a§#n§ ®m»katt «f t iestate legblcaires meeting t i » year, rattifiextiaa i*rnexi Jaamsry seesas »ti»ftsi*Ii&|*«5fiie, .

As amendment has been offered in il»e Senate pre-vidtog that the eotstitailogal atnearibnesi wattSdl feeeffective in lf?2.» if ratified only six months ra advance .of the election With a May, ISS. deadline. * ii isthought that rattfkaiton woaM have a leii*r efaaee

The population vote proposal, lawtK pase i theHouse., is "sat in front" as a system to replace thepresent -electoral college However, there are sewera!other proposals, each with its adherents,. and if thedirect vote amsstaet t falls in this, the last session ofthe SI si Cmprms, it will be a » « feallgame wises ifeSSad Congress meets after 11K etertioBS HitsNovember.

BROTHERHOOD in stained glassmingles Block, Indian, Orientaland White children in this tab-leau in Seered Heart CotftoilcChurch, Lewisfown, Pa, FEATURE SECTION

Despite Statistics Of Gloom'Silent Majority' Fills Pews

'Religious Vocations1

isTournament Theme

By FATHERANDREW M. GBJEELEYThe reeesi Gallup poll re|»ft

thai weekly efcareS attei¥3aijceam«jf Catfeelks bad <kc!ii^d Itper eeni cfeim^ the pasl decadeand a hall is beaixf to stir up agood deal of bappiness in vsnousfr«sps cidan the CThar ch

FATHERANDREW H.GREELEV

cyclic change inreligions behavior which is as yet

' ReJtgissuS \ oczucrs•mil hg the gemrai topic ofa spe*efe tsuraamer.swsich will be sposscr^ &y*,he Miami fera Cicb forsasdents in |0E»r andser,ior topfc sdsaols

Tbe speerfttournament r^jl^es an

essay contestcoolHrted M- tfce

as ac acii«!} tckeeping w»ib lijeir f &al el

yacjii ts audf vacaliass ;n

fee beW Feis. 21 si St Jc4usV'tanoey Seforaan Tsmeiwiit si ifee speeds shouldbe not less tisa» live

fcas feeeatiui scta»l

fee

I t

aspects «f !Mgeneral topic sn «faei»

d may speakl

yas a seiiCMi assemblyXaises of fiaattsts msst oe

6. teFaUj^- Fr«knc* JEasterly. CM si St. JOmVuamef Stnusary

to Father

T6* party hoe Jjbs-aJs wfee re-jesee as #acfe saw sifs tfeai tiieissutattesa! Clasrclj 1% dyirq? •will&e irfeasel at seejj^ sue more nanis the ejffffl of :fee Char«-h Jftatster hale. Tie eeoservauves «£•be ftMd^4 tfeai ifee> &si,e - oetesne IBI <rf «»jiesK' that y »Vauean C<«seii aad ;* ai terisasli

tfee fsilh d theThe moderate

E; matter 'IJOB so"' aiai tastsi thai no oee

"gels assj-#33g-* sat s" Mass

ytltt- f rasd f tnad wlSis two F&gBsfs ofy

« K Vocattast!» H*eCl»rch "DediedWMt IsTlse Lrfe Of .4 5isfter,""' i f r p o r t a s e e Of A

Vt>utH3s Ta Tte BrnOm-

m a, hnsl rcsissfrom w*ie*I«ttft

Ifcirt

Earfaselect is

to essiest

Alas ior ail of tfeeiu. stsetr re-aet»ss are fesed es I aslty odtioasaf sample rasearrfs as^ ia-

nowledge of Uie t»t-©a SM ^ess t^y oC re-

tlgKXl

Jfass ifcal msisi b-« tskeis iasis ac-

tat «s rfc!:igiees fe*fcavi«. Tfeel int fa tte M ^ i « | ^ ^ *«1aites'*wHeit mMf mm M Wgfc .as fear «r

per eta* foaaii s«re«f tc«iife «» eteage i t tl*e

fee&a-vier sf fee p©pa?aiiosfeeing ssrwifei f i e «c«rf te aa

Wttils church attendance intire United States is dearly lowerthan it was to the early and middle1950s. It is just as clearly higherthan it was in the iSSOs. No one canexplain these variations but thereis no reason to think that we arewitnessing a permanent decline inetareh attendance — particularlysince even the 1930 average wasapparently substantially higherthan I8th "and ISth century churchattendance estimates.

Bui there is another problemfor those who wish to make muchof the CaHap report: the decline ofweekly church attendance amongAmerican Catholics from 74 percent to 63 per cent between 1955and 1963 is feased on a IS55 figurewldch is sol substantiated by othersurveys from the middle fifties.Quite the contrary, most of theexisting survey information wouldsuggest thai weekly churchztlmMme at»iig CaiWks hashavered arooadf 65 per cent formost of the last two decades; andall 6f these oata are based onsamples «fiich are considerably.larger ttea ibe ordinary Gallup«eekiy sample..

The Be« Gaff» sta% of 19S4a ffi per eest weekly

attea&wce far CatWies;t ie XQB€ pamUsi school staiy«f £Kt recawled a €5 per cetrtw eekjy ebarch attendaaee and a 67per eeMl a t i ^ t o f e was observedis the Gailup-Caihoiic Digest

credited, msst of the decline tochurch attendance among Amer-ican Catholics occsirred before1963. The report would not be sewsand alleged collapse of Catholicdevotions in the late 1960s wouldbe an illusion.

However, there is sot raacb inhe way of theoretical ©r sub-stantive reason to think that tfaerewas a decline to etairclj attend-ance during the late 50s; if it wereto occur at all. such a declinewoald have been probable afterthe end of the council in IMS,Therefore, oae can reasonablyassume that the Ben Gaff in data of1*2 have greater claim to validityas a description of the early 1950sthan the Gallup data from 1955. Inother words, weekly churchattendance among Catkslies is1S52 was 62 per cent and in 1962.13percent.

Oae mast eoaelwie tkereftwethat there eertaisly ias heea Holechange in Sunday devotion amongCatholics siaee IMS &M pretaNylittte cfca^e siaee 1SBSL.

I will cirfess that thisconclusion su rp r i s e s raesomewhat, I would have thoughtthat ifee tiraffltatic — not to saytraumatic — changes of the lasthalf-4eea4e would have bad astronger effect on Sundaydevo4i«J. It is terribly tiiffiealteven for a sociciogist toremecaber that m«ch of tfaeimpact, s€ the recent changes basbeen felt eoij by a smaH elitegroup witfein the Catholic

l

The mm of ibe last twosamples tin aggregate. weH over3.060 re^^tesls»«iables os to feeqaite cwtflteit ttat the actualeteeit stteafome in OK CaiWicpapef*t«is ia tite -early ami m«Mte§6s was s®n«tfeere between S4p r cast sad S7 per cent, Heoce.

tf t ie 74 per cent in. 195§ is

White tilts elite Is the roostlikely to pra4aee newspaper aaJmagazine articles, it does sot yetrepresent any safaBtamttai modifi-cation of Ise 'belsw«" of the Cmtk-©lie masses. The •"silentmajority"* still goes to ehareit

b isiB. coaUme to <te soHie W$ mast be rated aa

©pet! question.

23s,

Queen Alexandra—Was SheOnly A Beautiful Emptiness?

QUEEN ALEXANDRA,by Georgxaa Baifiseoarfje,MmgMmt Mifflia* 33% ill

When writing his famoasbiography of King George V.Sir Harold Ntcolson com-plained how difficult it wasSo maintain interest in themonarch's preparatoryperiod as Dake of York:"For 17 years, he did nothingal all bat kill animals andstick in stamps,""

Sow we have the story ofhis beautiful mother. QueenAlexandra. Her biographerhas a similar difficulty.From their marriage in 1863unit! Queen Victoria's deathin 1901. the future EdwardVII and His Danish bride.Alexandra, had oo realemployment.

The untimely death ofAlbert. Victoria's Consort,was connected by the ever-grieving Victoria with Ed-ward's early indiscretions:she concluded that her eldestson and heir was a "Han-over."

Bertie, as Edward wasknown i he was also called"Turn-Turn" in cruelerc i r c l e s * r e semb ledVictoria's degenerate unclesin being emotional, careless.polygamous, profligate. For46 years he played the off-stage buffoon, occasionallyembarrassing the mother'sstately reign fay social orsexual scandals.

Alexaadra was aa as-tonisMiqj beasty. Altbooghnet Victoria's chief choice,her kiad demeanor, goodlooks, aal apparent goodhealth commended ber whenthe most sellable Germanprincess was disqualifiedbecause her father bad"lapsed oBaeeoiintahly totethe errors of EomanCatholicism."

Alexandra could prob-ably "never have satisfiedher husband's innate inconti-

nence." The circumstancesof his enforced idleness shecould do nothing about; butsfee did get on well with Vic-toria.

She was. generally, agraceful and charming anduninteilectual ornament. Shekept clear of internationalpolitics, save for anti-German tirades * mostlyprivate* and ceaselessefforts for her relativesimostly public*, especiallyfor her brother, the King oiGreece.

Her efforte were inef-fectual. She did establish auseful series of charities.notably a nursing service.She suffered an attendingseries of affronts from herhusband; but she retainedher dignity throughout tSiesemisfortunes and longchronicle of family calami-ties..

After Edward VII died,his hereditary defense over-balanced Alexandra'sconversational capacity.With beauty waning, sfeesaok slowly and somewhateccentrically iato a "poorold blind and deaf old tovtugMother" as she describedherself in a letter. Alexandralived long enough to seeGermany defeated in WorldWar I; but died in 1925,before Hitler's rise and jbefore the Britisb Empire jset.

Georgina Batttscumbelabors mightily in this well- jappointed volume to convey •life wi thout c l e a r jsignificance, save for anexalted rank. One is temptedto conclude Queen Alexandrawas a beautiful emptinessand rather boring at that. Nodoubt she was.But we oughtnot to underestimate theinfluence of beauty on publicaffairs.

Until Disraeli etarateiVictoria into showii^ bersdfpublicly, much of thai SWJS-areb's prestige came fromAlexandra's natural grace,

cheery coontenatKre. ~ evernoble reputation. The Britishloved her. Her popularity didnot suffer from herhusband's roguish behaviorEdward cherished heralthough sot as a compamas

Whatever one may c<»-dude about Alexandra's in-telligence, the Qaeen'seffect upon severa lgenerations may be readilygathered frora this gentleand excellent biography Theportrait on page 241 cannotfail to melt the harshestcritic. When Edward laydying. Queen Alexandraasked his last mistress, Mrs,KeppeL to be with him in Msfarewell. There is somethingextra-ordinary here. ever, ifwe do not appreciate it muchnowadays. '74-91084

Harvey L. SfchermaaUniversity of Pennsylvania

HOUR" *eries being p a r t e d ttw *mm*m fey CIS f***m*s fkaniy Skm."Swnmor h Forwr," wi*h Gary MwnriB sod Shewn Campfeei in fb«So§ roles, w i fa#t«tec<sr ot tliM fM., Saftuniay, -km. 24 mcatm an WVMH. 4.

Bestiary Re-Created In New FormTHE 8OOK OP

IMAGINARY BOKGS. ByJcsrge Lais Serges WitisMargarita Gaerrers. Battue.

Tfee bestiary has bseoremoved from its tradtfiooaisettisg to be re-created byB<jrges rcio a we* archetypalform

Drawing !r«a the wmksof Kalis. Pee. Lewis Swai-enborg :mt rnvtboigpes atbain East and Wot. tfee m-thors fuiered tins- iSJ storiesu* forro a 'Tiooiike" -wsrW»! imagj&arj" l^ i^$ This •book. Jia", cm be exteirisd 1infinitely, ieosfe swelf So ?hsreader w;!fe the ma^K of j""the sfeifiirsg patterns of akaleidoscope" Is's the

aa

sasplest asaaifest3ti« ofifae boten bates ra Herges.

Ttese imags- are (beresttlt of man's tm^matmrn.

Uiat itseilm ibe iMiste Tfets

ss maa's oBlyweapoc is iw&am aes&efjc ttasmi aiai i©p^rfe eftsas wish a cisatsaad as a i e r ti Its owa. Wecancel s^tefsta^ Ifae roean-ing of everytluqg perceived

- site semes saA tte iasitel

Ifaasati reason

T&s fe^ slioiiW fee ap-p-saefeed as Pandsca's boxIts ingredients should besastplsst one by see — tiseaestfeeUE pleasure of ait agedbrandy noJ remauiiiig alarffrom this excptsite presents-itoc. Oar favorites -'Faunaof Marors." "Tfee Gete."

EUC.

Semes "

Salamaiater."Metaphysical

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Biggest Money MakersWeren't The Sexiest

NEW YORK -(CPFr -Despite all the publicity givento sex-rated films during thepast year. 19S9"s biggestmoney-making picture was aWail Disney comedy. "TheLove Bug,"" according to abox-office survey.

In a report headlined.""Year's Surprise: Family"Films Did Best." the show-business paper. "Variety,"revealed the 10 leadingmoney-makers last ve3r. inorder:

"The Love Bug""Fanny Girl""Buflitt""Batch Cassidy Asd The

Sundance Kid.""Rotnea Asd Jaliet"

~ "True Grit""Midnight Cowboy""Oliver!'*"Goodbye, Columbus"'" Chitty" Chitty Bang

Bang"rour of the top 10 money

makers were rated "A-I" bythe National Catholic Officefor Motion Pictures • Morallyunobjectionable for ail;:

'Love Bug." "True Grit.""Oliver!" and "Chitty."

Runner-up "Funny Girl"was rated "A-2," unobjection-able for adults and adoles-cents.

"Bullitt" and "ButchCassidy" were rated "•A-3."unobjectionable for adults,while "Midnight Cowboy.""Goodbye. Columbus"* and"Romeo and Juliet" wererated "A-4." morally unob-jectionable for adults, withreservations. However, therating far "Romeo" was "A-4L" initially, for a brief nudityscene, ami NCOMP laterwent on to recommend thefilm for "mature adoles-cents."

Al though XCOMPrecently noted thai therewere more films rated"Condemned" by that officethis past year than in any pre-vious year, only five of the 48condemned films made "Va-riety's" rundown of 96 filmsthat earned a million dollarsor more on 1969.

RELIGfOUS PROGRAMS'tit v.'SsO

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"I Am Curious (Yellow)"was in 12th place, with g£-SOO.000 — "The Love Bug'" ledwith $17,000,000 — and theother four. "HieronvmousMerkin." "Inga."1 "Helga"and "Fanny HiH." were fardown the list.

Although a number offamily-oriented films madethe "Variety" list in additionto those in the top 10 i amongthem. ' "Swiss Family Robin-son," '"Darby G"G<H and theLittle People." "Peter Pan."""Rascal." "My Side of theMountain" and "Smith"!.notably missing was "'RunWild. Run Free,'" a film manycritics felt was one of the bestchildren's films made inyears.

Although "Rua Wild" fellshort by S100.0W of making"Variety's** "big films"listing ta minimum of a mil-lion dollars" Income is re-quired i. the f i lm's _distributor. Columbia 1Pictures, said it would re- §release "Run WiM" in the =Spring. |

'Defensive BehsvioriRadio These \

WEST SPRINGFIELD. |Mass : A series of talks on I"Defensive Behavior" will be§broadcast on the rad io!program "Crossroads" "2during the month oi Februaryby Rev Isaias Powers. C P .

•";- it was announced by Rev. . Cyril Schweinberg. C P , Dir-

ector of ;he Pass;oni5t Radio., — TelevffKB Cer.ter

The talk? geared pn-raarjJy for college and elderhigh school stader:^ and theirpares:;. 5ho-* hs» defensivei>eha\:or car. frujiraie "jnder-

: sn-d ever. >••«>-

"RUN WILD, RUN FREE," a family film featuring Mark Lester, will be re-released in theSpring by Columbia Pictures.

3iJHnii(iinfinHiniHiiiiiiiHiHirni!innt»

fStiut-lns Mass§I On New Time!I The Mass for Shut-Ins 1= telecast every Sunday at =I II;3f a.m. on WLBW-Cfa. II 1ft will be seen at a new f

tune beginning Suaday. =Jan. 25. S

Those eoaf Ined to tbeir =lionies because of handi- §caps or iHsesses may view |t ie Mass at lt:3t a.m. Iieglaaiag oa the last Sun- |day la January. |

• QUICKIE REVIEW:

Gaily, Gaily

ncv.cs ir.• £ * . - : • .-. :•

Urge Letters

Against CrimeJERSEY CITY. N J. -

•NC'— Parishioners at themore tha.n 30 Catholic church-« in this city are being askedso write to Gov William TCahiH ta express theirconcern about organized

In 1910 Ben Hecht, swad-dled in an adolescentInnocence which small townAmerica still nurtured,made his way to Chicago.What he found there isdepicted in this film— acity in the grip of dynamic,disorganized growth and itsattendant excesses frommorai and pol i t ica lcorruption to anarchistprotest.

On arriving in Chicago.according to Ambram S.Ginnes' script, young Ben• Beau Bridges 1 lost, in rapidsuccession »1 ;• his wallet to ajovial pickpocket; *2j hisi n n o c e n c e . when asympathetic madam (Me-hna Mercouri > gave the pen-niless youth shelter in herhouse; and s3» his remainingillusions, under the tutelageof a prototype of the hard-drinking. anything-For-a-

storv demon reporter i BrianKeith).

With the possible ex-ception of the wallet, none ofthe losses seemed to distresshim very much. However,again like today's youth, hedid harbor the overly simpleconviction that the worldwas reformable through hisefforts — specifically thatgaining possession of a littleblack book, in which politicalpayoffs were meticulouslyrecorded, would bring the •political rascals crashingdown.

(Rated Morally Unobjec-tionable for Adults by theNational Catholic Office forMotion Pictures. Beviewcourtesy of CathoUc FilmMetvsleiter.)

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II

Viewpoints

On Theology

B> REV. MR. PETER SCHINELLERimage »« God h«*n?ver imperfect

makes « great difference sn oar a'ttiutieGod and m oar o*r, Christian hv?= Kor sheway we taik of Gvd refiecst t,«r humancondition ssrd experience Tr.a« a riu?d tr. aslum dwelling wh-t«e father j> an atrobvkcand cruel toward his •nil*,* ms<! nsddtfficaiv to ca:i Ci;,-d father.

Ye". wtth ;he asd vfrehgs'jus in?truc*wn we dt< io£G;;d Scriptures speak uftJed as FatherChris: ,-tK the 5<*r. and :h<? Third Person r- :Spint In the Oid Testament Uyd i,< <p»jjtas Roe* Kine Judec- Shepherd. %arr:>rand Creator A brief reileciion w.iukJ >t- wthat to rail him rock or warr;.-.r ;* qu;:?different shan to call him shepherd

Philosophers speak of God as supremebeing, first cause, aUunate coacertt, barizaaor groatvd of experience, awl omega, or fisafcause. It is to be noted that each of thesetitles carries with it a system of views ofwhom man is and what the world is.

Thus if <»od is King, then

* M pwe isyaljj a s ! stsefeeaee to HUB II Heexeat**1. s&es we te ear icpraksee awer v«ry essieac* 10 Has. If He is sfieptient

— ac mnm* beewsasg fe* i^mltar to t» atwo? i««fe«s^i€*( ag*. — sites we are thesteeep «ft* ss«st Islfaw.

Tfee CSrtsfjas f8or*«r IKS a <fa$femtm « «f God tfcas the settfe- For tfee seniw.I* ad » I J » i&v p¥£f. j&e esaysr Yost the t* « K »n irerfc. felt Kg 15 a maa It* be feartdHi? laws call for strict ofesdsewe-

Tte God a€ :3» pwaeer » a5wr.*c:te presesl *sib USE «a

ius safe*}- Tsss f r iJOTS ami casspas

Tfee £m»«i V*tk*o> Camel,pastoral Mess, did ass eftes speakabout <J#i. tet if dM speak el gas as tiersr%esksr «f G-eC Acoarifog t» Yatieaa B, itis »f te tie CteisiiaM, fe* Ms He «f law aeifaith, to make iBaoiie*; itereaMsj rfG««t

IH t&e decree m. tfee Qerctt'Todsv- tteC^ecil says "Jsai Cfyetsan l^ieva^ havemmh la do with the bats «sf atbesra "Ts tfeeextent Jija: tisey select ifceir own t r«ss^ 10

lite f*itk or

irfe, «l«3f Ptmt { rather ifeas

d r i f t . t*e S « «l C«rf, is auntwte are

* ^ Jssttc* fif Csi i f

the waii

its

tltes *f

ff me feavc jsivwd lfcr«igts««rvt««d it* w^alled P*atk -4 *>,»d *

y If* ittov«CEfra Jtas s«r ed teclsaf*j some over-sample *Jt»as « K*» and

wfeal Ckxl K f<?- tedav- *e «k- fin

mas ^ ^ iheir r«ah«»fejp — ared even fey Jicse whM w--miid T.~A csii

As Use f*f««sta6« f fM<jJ?maiM declared. Gsd 15 de.-i Is wrslienoa one s«lc of Ute iombstsi^ But whea yoeaim it over, it "eads " «-eryifeiR£* isnelipos"

Ma/or Social MovementsBy GRANT MAXWELL

The Gospel and the Council teachings aredirection pointers to the taman valuessituated at the heart of the major socialmovements of our time. These greatmovements, mainstreams of human history,catch up and carry with tfeem sodaLeconomic and political questions of manykinds. Three of these world movements havebeen pointed out by Dr. John Bueii:

" . . . three things begun with the earlyChristians and. then submerged for centurieshave exploded on the world at large: thethree things are; freedom, peace andpoverty sin the seisse of full sharing andgenerositj-«. These have exploded into worldmovements. . .These world movements donot include the Church yet . ."

That was Dr. Buell's judgment in 1965.Now it is 1S70. Is there any progress to report— within the Catholic Church, among theother Christian communions?

Certainly t ie CooacS's ringing state-meats represent progress. Vatican II closelyassociated the Catholic Ciarch with theworld movements ia search of humanmatarlty, a s i slfinced that these move-ments need the leaves of the Gospel to reachtheir goals.

Pope Paul has been equally positive, af-firming Christianity's coocem "'with manand with earth" — a concern that "rises tothe Kingdom of God." And there has beensimilar progress wilisin the World Council ofChurches and other major religious bodies inpointing out the social dimensions ofChristianity.

But what of the rest of us. the great ma-jority of Christians? How dedicated are we— people, priests and ministers, bishops andmoderators? Are we promoting peace,freedom, the poverty of spirit that bringsjustice? Are we serving at the centers ofthese movements, or are we still preoc-cupied with private ceremonials and paro-chial housekeeping? Let's look a little closerat these world movements, beginning withthe peace movement.

Today the contest between good and evilin every person is summed up and reaches its

apex for aii men in the faielul choice •>:'peace on earth or global, nuclear war.

In one hand, mas, few tbe first time, hasthe resources and the know-how to build aworld community where all people eas livein peace, with dignity. In his other hand,modern man for the first time carries thesurplus firepower — the capacit) ol•'overkill" — to destroy civilization sadhimself in a final, tocal war against life.against creation, against the Creator.

Gyd leaves man free VJ make ih;> sale:*J;choice. Are we wise enough humble tr.-.-uehresponsible enough. 10 choose peace"'

Are we wise enough U» heed John F Ken-nedy".-: warning ' Mankind mu?t pus an er?iin war or war wiH put an end U> man-kind"" .

Are we hurr.bh? enough to heed P'jpePaul s plea before the United Nation? "Leithe arms fall {rum yi-ur hands . No more••va r! Wa r n ever again *"

Are we respsmsftle enangli %m reewpise,v i t i t ie OmmaL tfett "BMae Pn»ii«jiHfieatasii, of ss iksi we free « t s e i ¥ « if*s«tfce ag*-«W slavery af «*r" — j«at i s pastgeaeraeieas {carved to free tfeeaa-seives: fromike slavwy «f w^efcraft stsd t r iW sarcerr?

Are we responsible ssougb to team txmathe CWIIKII Fatfters. «is» «asdemaed totalwar in all its fttdtam* forms as a crassaga;nst Gssd and launaniiy, « t o decr^J thenuclear arm^ rate as a treacfeerflas irap Utatdetwes ?c«jd ;c- ti« star^ j « . ^fco pleach far

b&iti the pe^:e. wte} called far a«lucauws -if ztiii&tes and for Hew»ns|Jir3i»«s in pubitc *jpin:ijH* . awi wfeirnpiored paresjs. teachers, psslcrs &m£ aiiwba edscaie » 'coasKler it t&eir incstweighty task te jieimcl all ai toe fresfesscSimes's of i^ace in ifee sptnt of UseGmpel

Despite Uus lead^sbip. d«ptie l!ieG>J5-

Breaking Real BreadBy FATHER JOSEPH M. CHAMPLLN"Children, you must be careful not to let

the Host touch your teeth and never shouldyou chew the very Body of Jesus.'*

Such stern warnings from sincerereligion teachers preparing young childrenfor First Communion were not unheard of afew years ago. Their explanations of thewafer's whiteness followed a similar theme.Since the sinless, all holy God is trulypresent in the Eucharist, we may use onlyspotless, immaculately white, pure hosts atthe altar.

We probably cringe at those remarksnow or even Iangh at them. Bat they areunderstandable enough and proceed logicallyfrom the theological emphasis in vogne at

that time. We spoke of Mass and Holy Com-munion in terms of awe, loftiness, adoration.Christ came into oar midst oa the altar so wemight adore and worship Him. If we reallybelieved, spiritual writers told ns, we wouldcreep np the aisle on our knees.

Papal teaching and conciliar documentsover the past two decades have neitherdenied nor minimized this truth of the RealPresence. But they did bring into sharperfocus the fact that our Lord instituted theMass as a sacrificial meal at his LastSupper. They also clarified the concept thatJesus gave up His Body to eat and Blood todrink under the sign of food. The materialsfor the Eucharist, therefore, should both beand look like bread and wine.

The second chapter of the GeneralInstruction to the Roman Missal treats of"Requisites for Celebrating Mass." Number283 gives on this subject some interestingprinciples which contain quite practicalimplications.

"The nature of the sign demands that thematerial for the eaeharistle celebrationappear as actual food. The eucharistic bread,

even though naieavened, sfacwld therefore bemade in sach a way that the priest caa breakit and distribute the parts to at ieast some ofthe faithfal. Whea the wtmhtr of eomm»Bi-eaais is larger or other pastoral aeedsreqnire it, small hosts may be ased. Tfcegesture of t ie "breaking of the bread,' as theEucharist was called in apostolic times, wSlmore clearly show the Eucharist as a sign ofnnity aa i charity, sinee the one bread isbeing districted among the members of «aefamily."

One wonders if the paper-thiii, tasteless,necessarily white hosts commonif employedtoday fulfill those requirements. What seemsneeded are larger, more substantial altarbreads capable of division into perhaps twodozen particles for distribution to all thecommunity at a weekday M ^ s or acelebration of sim iiar circarastaiwes.

Gbvioasiy, smaller ones prepared ia ad-vance wooM stili be.a .necessity for Sundayservices ani occasHffls w&es large nambersgather to wors&ip. Large m small, however,these hosts sfeoald possess more substance tothem and demand a real eating on l ie part of

pel Imperative ilia: calls Christians to bepeacemakers, many CaJlwiics still are sotcommittal fully ia ibe search for worldpeace, aeti&er. I suggest, are many otherOtrtstisiB. Some of Jssr. issll 's questionsstill apfdj" For instance

# Wfcy <fe many Ca'ftcisrs stul makey

• Why wr«sr. tr s-.-ir.eoa* talk-, ..»:pese« d%s we fenmedtate^' coaciude trstfee mum be esthsr a toward - r a c^ntwt rarely heed ib/t possifeilny that he mi

Tfese comments raise fiintef ques-twes;-.

Wtort'w* we Ssisg wsm ta help create asecW efiaatg far pete*: i» lie fawily, i» tie

! gWMps? Iffcat es«y we be «tew| Is(wr «nrs cs«a«s»ities to fees! l ie caacers of

ejaitee, is reae» *lttlai«setlnic grasps »»*E # t e

Wbat about TV, movies. »x«s. ntaga-zines- and elaborate war Joys., thai glamorize

i p^petoatf old hatreds? Are we

Ars we ready to pay mere 'axes to helpsapper? a sermaneot peace f--rce ar<fer theV^

Wlai are pareols and teachers daing tolead cfaibfren bey<Htd a narrow, naiionafisisctwlioc* towards a wiser loyalty to the wholehomsB family and to the US" as a "sciiooi farmankind?"

W&at are Cluristtaits of various com-nianiOJS dtsi^ to raise-tlffiir voices togfit ser,to arettse the paWie coBscience against thefolly-of total war? .

And what about peace marches auddesMftstralioBs? Are they always Inspired byextremists? Siwuld Christians be ma'rehingin the streets, too. demanding, "No morewar"? What do you think*5

What are we dosag. eacls of us. to educateoar own conscience for peace in the spirit ofthe Gospei? Anything?

n.Father James D. Shaughaessy of the

Pe&ria diocese thinks so. A monthlycoiutaoist for the clerical journal,"Homiletic and Pastoral Review." thisgreying, intense, serious man has studiedand toyed the liturgy throughout bis. jparter-of-a-century-pius years in the priesthood.Besides lecturing on the national level andserving as elected temporary chairman ofthe newly formed Federation of Diocesanliturgical Commissions, fee shepherds thesotetjanites who make ap Sacred Heartparish i s Creve Coeur, Illinois.

Women of the parish supply the altartreads at Sacred Heart. They are four or fiveinches in diameter, W* thick, browa and softand easily'brakes.. •

Page 12 THE; VOICE Miami, Florida Jaueory 23, 1970

There is a rumor afoot these days thatsin is being abolished. It comes hard on theheels of the ramors that God is dead, that theCommunists have captured or infiltrated thepapacy, that the Church has gone soft, thatthe end of the world is coming soon, and thatreligion has come upon hard days, especiallyCatholicism.

The overall impression created by suchrumors is that the average person just has nochance of figuring out what is going on inreligion. Theology has alwa^-s beenconsidered complicated, above the level ofordinary people, requiring immensebackground and intelligence. The Church hasalways been more or less of a mystery. Whatpriests are up to has never been certain. TheBible has looked foreboding. What they areteaching our kids in school has seemedstartling, confusing, and too sophisticated.

A good example of what I am talkingaboot comes up each Lenten season. Whatabout fasting and abstinence? What aboutpenance for our sins? Is sin still for real? Arethe same things sins that used to be? What is

P*1 right aad wrong any more?

The articles which are appearing in this.series are designed to clear tip some of thiscoiifusioa. This week, for example. GrantMaxwell examines the peace movement-inMs Christian witness series. Fr. Cbamplis

- gets into the liturgy, while Reverend Mr,ScbineHer writes of God. Fr. MeBrien eachweek answers votir questions concerning theChurch since the Second Vatican Council.

During Leal these articles will continuein this same style bat with- tie- common

Stomp Out Rumors

Is. Sin Being

Abolished?

By LAWRENCE LGSONCYDirector, Adul£ Education,

Department of Education, USCC

theme of the new morality; what does newmorality have to do with Confession and sin.what should parents teach their childrenabout morality, and what is the new theologyabout forgiveness.

These articles are being put togetherwitt you to mind- Both the h"C Sews Serviceand ifee USCC Divisioa of Adult Educationare working to snake the themes of theseweekly articles simple, relevant., andpteiigent fa terms of the religions adult, theharried parent, the person in search of

broader and deeper Christian background.These articles wiii apear weekly, makingthem ideal for discussion or study groups,and they will be related to filmstrips andother follow-ups available for parishes.

The big message, though, is to hangloose, relax, have confidence, don't panic,keep yoar cool. You've been through worsethan this. For example, you probably wenttiroegh the Depression when tbe wholeworld of finance, banks, paychecks

(including yours}, mortgages, employment,and the economy changed overnight.

You've seen the Federal governmentgrow into a complicated world during yourown lifetime. You've seen every big city inAmerica change so much in the last 10 yearsthat it is unbelievable. You've seenmoonwalks and wars and black revolutions,crime, the invention of TV, and only Godknows how many more big changes,complicated systems, complex concepts, andintricate schemes hatched in your lifetime,making you a pretty sophisticated person.

Religion is really no different from life.Life forces us to grow, to change, to adapt.We would all readily admit that if ourreligious understanding remained static,even concerning things like sin and morality,it would also be irrelevant. We will always becommitted, as Christians, to doing good andavoiding evil. Salvation will always come forthose who are of good will and whose actionsmatch their good will.

The basics will never change: God is stillGod, evil is still evil, virtue is still virtue.But the nitty-gritty of everyday life willchange. Chastity will always be chastity, forexample, bat what that means for thecelibate priest, the dating teenager, the mar-ried father of five children, the singlewoman, and a divorced person will be very-much different.

Let's get rid of rumors and ignore oarinstincts toward panic. As long as we can useour head and are of good will, open andloving towards God and our fellow men, weare in good shape. Keep reading and keep thefaith.

Is The Church ChangingFor Sake Of Change?

B> RICHARD P. McBRIESQ. White 1 do not necessar'H agree

tho^e Roman cardinals, who demsaneed thenew Mass as heretical, t defiaitelj 6>in-pathiie «kb she raan> Catholic* who aretired of changes in the itrargj. Oar parishpriest, hotteter. va>«t £hat %e mirst chaage in)*rder to keep up with the lime?*. This cbesn'iseem iike a -vaiid re&vfiB is itself. It stw&dk as,if ihe Church I- supposed to rhaage ju^t fors hi- ••ake of i-hansr iiieli

.'-. *: L- are ::::.: :

rr.cjr.:.-.sf-

:r.e w^rds Ana :he a'".:;-^5 ;he worshxGod was tak:r.2 p:ace ar.d Je<-< f hr:-". -b re^!!> and ^Kir.:::..!1. pre^en

ruxrr.-jr.tor. The >-;r.;vc:

.V- .pic* r.j"'":i;S'd lrc—

::J.T,£C >,.'r.p._.:;n>— • r.an?? f r 's.c- ?:*•:•- » change- r . j -r.s.-**.r :>=-t-r. e?iirr<'--i A- •* *~iiiz.tr.: re*< -r.: -r : - : rrr. sr.i rt*".%--*-•., Tr*r»* n:a«l be v> •:r.\ ..-.:: r.> ;r.;r.c'.::;.:£> ..r.s>-'.hi-£-.*•}*•.::r.- : -.r. h Zvr.z-.r,*--- :tni *->.-:• ";-s;r.:;v reqj:re->•;.'•::: :re«~- ~-.v.t:.:s -r. r 'r.r- l,i:ur_s> *U'.e^r u. .-.~d -.- rt- rr-_-: .".-- :s*u-r. iha: a->

-sv> : r::> si-?:ca «r. ..: :r, - -i^cvray prom:•:.-.-.. .*::•, ,'r -••:-. f.-rrr..- ..r.^iy *\.?:ir.»j

i*~ :f.t c-tcer hare :r,e t'r.arr^. ws-jldhi'-t- leer. dereCiri :r. .:> d.v; :: i'. bad r.->:

t:- '.:» --:n rarr.ervs rr.

care tr.^: ;*p rt--pit ::>,,:, r. ».-rji? tf:e sign? rr.t-ar. The sat ra r.sr.*..- ^i'nvstif j l . . »-jjit-;ri'.-e Or.'r.e ' "".

T*.r-r

ui the :h:,:c Church h s j rt~ * ihe-r. *.

:r.c-f .'he.:: :r -n.-- M =

Se.

"r.e>: In *:r.t- rr.r.ds- A .-.-Kt C-'.n •*.:<•? tbe «r*B:r^h. a,*::-.ely i,--? ' -

j —

Q. T&at esplatns nh% tht Omrch msj C berests!? ta cbaage sfet wa> it •AiW hijH iromlirae is time, tai j£ doeia't «s.plgis «.bj Jhe-rcis so math ** ananas ia tlte w.a> the Mas* andik$ saterameats ar« actual!?

t «<; be ablt to a.gree ap©*sjsi ibtn %tirk m tbem, -*.& thatocce agais K, doin^ ibe same

courtesy ©f OlO; Paut Conklin, Pbetogrop}*er.}

Almost e¥€*ywh-ere you go, people are caugte up in the motion-commsfton of a world of rapid change. They are on pigrimage, exploring,searching, wandering oral sometimes worrying abo«t where their own !wes

to isad nexi in this ever-changing world, Tbe Cf»r«h tew is ontoge, «xfslering. secH-ctting, wondering am! sometimes

afcwswt where thtt CfeisJion task ought to ieod next.

A Are- ;.^-J perhaj:; 4- -.rJ-^fd .r.;. _-

-aso

t-> ses lit

At

U*

are ssat sa esd :c ttexst-'^es

means to an end. A slight change in therubrics requires only a slight reason.

Ttas. before the recent changes in theMass re&ries, masy priesis did not use tbepat! tm the chalice. The pail is the flat, white,cardboard object that iradiuonaliy protectedtie wine ia the cbatice from being

vrith dast. flies,, tff any otherthat migljf accidentally drop into the

eap- Same priests were aps«t by the action oftheir fellow priests m not using the pall. Theyseemed to equate this practice with ageneral disregard Cor, and even outrightrejection of, lawful authority. Thai wasswifitfiiBg of.' a classic eC confosingaccidaaiais with essentials and of losing

$ . Let w» fnw»JE«nlHs sake of argawest,ttet certaia varia Uoia is l ie rubrics are not

alkrs*able feat, &o some occa.sioas, me®

necessary sad deslraNe. Can we Jastify,however, mare fsadaineataJ varlatk«s is theliturgy itself?

A. Yes,, asd the Ctarcii alrea% allowsthis. After all, the Western, or Lalio, rite isnot the only legitimate .rite in the RomanCatholic Church. There are Cahelics of theEastern tradition who completely foreign tomany American Catholics, And thesedifferences are not simply a matter ofrubrics; they are a matter of basic structureand format, "Even io the liturgy," l ie sameConstitution «n the Liturgy staite Cn. 37 n"the Ctarch bas iw wish to jm^se a rigiduniformity in matters whieb i s sot involvetbe iaifh or the good <rf the wholecommunity. Rather she respects awl fostersthe spiritual ajfonsneais and gifts of ifeevarioas races and peoples."

23, T W

DOES THE END JUSTIFYTHE MEANS—A BUG?

VOICEBELOW OLYMPUS By Interlandi

By FAT&EB J«HM B. SHEEBINI think it was Greta Garbo who used to say. *"I wan! to

be aloae." Most ef us want to be aloae but we realize thatlife in arbaa society makes this impossible: for the good ofl ie community it is necessary that the government as twr.essftatrid intrude into our privacy. But this should be held to aminimum becaase we have the broad, general njeh: lu bealone.

The great Justice Loois Braodeis said that the F= tindnigFalters had conferred, as agai&st government, the right b>be let alone as "the most comprehensive of rights- and she-right most valued by civilized men."

We wast Is 6e let alsse not oaiy ts tfce matter ot beingstopped aai frisked by policemen o» mere suspicion, batals# is t ie area of jsalietoos gossip aad characterassassisaiiw. Oar libel laws try to protect this right to agood same as agaisst eavesdroppers aad detractors.

TMs whole question brohe into the headlines recentlywbea a Federal Jadge in New Jersey permitted tfee reiea.-eof I,2G6 pages of electronically recorded conversationsrelated to organized crime. It seems that the FBI had"bogged"* the headquarters of a reputed Mafia chief GypBeCarto, to get iafonuaiion about gangsters and crimeUnfortunate!? the conversations rambled all over she lot.ana some of the chats were an orgy of name-dropping. Somepersons named have vigorously denied they knew thegai^sters or ever &ad any contacts with them. Yet the tapedconversations were released.

Governor Richard Hughes of New Jersey indignantlycondemned the age of this material. "We must think mostcarefully about oar personal liberties." he said, "andcherish them most dearly against the threat of innuendo,slander and character assassination." He felt it was atragedy that indiscriminate and idle gossip should bepermitted to destroy hard-earned reputations.

SECTIQM

Tbe fw&lie fk*s aot *ees» XBfhe natter as d&es life GcnenNr. Tfees-e deefcrasiewere illegal w!»es ssed gad are iawimisstbtea* «vifa*£«t«tthe pstblic seems lo feel that £Ms ««* &s* isssaarr is ssbtefe"ike emi jtslifted tfce roeaas." Y«* bs*e m iigta tire wilbfire—asd it the osly way ts gei MDcmatioa <m mrgasixeticrime is to ase these eavesdropping devices, » t w it:

The American C:\sl Liberties VCI.T. hid aviewpoint They ctsijended tfeai iftt- eavesdfncitizens ol a civil rigfci. and ".hey rc< trsir.^r-dec :o FrederickLarey. why »«i directing U» 2nve*~23-.:t:r: c5 crL~e w: "NewJersey, irust he ihwild fcrina sbcr. '.he ;rjd;c:rr,er.:5 a? :heFBI agent- whs conducted the tiz.z:,-£ ' a* -*eil as *bepubirc offiriaS wh"» gave the FBI the rrwen :;gr.t to do :»:»"bugging "

No responsible axiztn WJ^JS .rec-;<£-:Ee '.he rxrtt t-i agossiper U-'assasfinate ant-iher rri3- £ cha:*r;er 1* *.bere 4double siandard" Is i; perfec:-> ac^epucLe r.-r esvenar.enito do what is immoral ic-r its c::;zer.s~ S-rrr,et:me5 ;;:? sard£hat a man « home i« HJS cas'Je Trie, rw rr.sn can sicre upan arsenal of deadly weapon? in Jus hcir.e iwr far; he abasebis children at home bat :r. a jiencra: ser.se every masenjoys a nght of pnvacy in 5m hoire To a grt^'.er Czzt&i. sman's reputation should be imrnune K un;asi ir.;~ist^-

Jnstice Braodeis observed that ttoe Fesmdiag Fathersandertook to secare cosditions fatorabte to ib« jmrsait ofhappiness asd that the most eoroprefeeBshe ngfci thej-acknowledged was rhe right to be let aloae. For tbe makersof oar CoasutatioE. said Braadeis. recogniied nsas*sspiritaai natare as well as the satisfaction be coald fiwl inmaterial thiags.

Governor Hughes was rig&i in protesiiisg agasast therelease of information that iniiscTtniraately vjetaniiedinnocent persons. Rigid law eaforceaeat is oat i&aog bsttcharacter assassiaalton is soseiMsg ei$e agam. He may

:K

v»* i

"I don't cote. Sf is for it, I'm ogoSns! i t!"

s t bea needed- rasksler «6eg he said: "We

mast begin td tbudc fearsl atett what is tappemag i® ourAaiertcaa way rf He aai to <sr systes «f Justice. "*

Our Generation Has More Goods But Less TimeBy MSGR. 6 i » S G E G.

HIGGINSIf you are one of those

people who feel faopelessiytrapped in a never-ending ratrace and, try as you wili,simply can't manage to slowdown long enough io enjoysome of the finer things of

' life, you may be comforted toiears from an expert on thesubject thai, la this respeci atleast, you are a t&oroaghiytypical member of that greatsilent majority of which weare liearing so much these•days is a completely differentcontext.

MsgnHfGSIMS

The expert in question isStaff an B. Linder. a Swedisheconomist with a good classi-cal background, a fine liter-ary style, and a very engagingstrain of gentle satire in hismischievous academic soul.

In his receal book, "TheHarried Leisure Class," tpsb-lisbed by ibe Priseetos Uni-versity Press} Under arguespersuasively that time is t ierarest conimodity ©a earthaai is fcanier to come by iatoday's afflaeat society thanever before.

"While we had always ex-pected one of the beneficentresults of economic affluenceto be a tranquil and har-monious manner of life, a lifein Arcadia . . .," he says,"what has happened is theexact opposite. The pace isquickening and our lives arebecoming steadily morehectic."

Ecomomic growth, inother words, has resulted in agrowing "scarcity of time."with the result that "aur af-fluence is only partial and nottotal as we seem to believe."

As I was reading "TheHarried Leisure Class." Ikept trying to pick holes inProf. Linder's argument, butto no avail. I thought at firstthat statistics on the sale ofbooks, to cite but one ex-ample, would clearly demon-strate that people are reading

much more tbaa ever before..which in turn woeld seem toindicate that tley have mereleisure than their forebears.

Bat by Ike time Hnier few!fiaisfced asalyasag Ihese sta-tistics, fce hai pretty welt ess-vinced me thas I was j>robabiyon tbe wrong trade, lie ad-mits, of course. Hot the num-ber of books sold in the UnitedStales has increased consid-erably in recest Seeaies i^tlmillion la 1954 as against U »million is 1963, for examples.tat be hastens ?o add that "itis particularly important togaari agaiast a deceptive aseof figares for expeaiitwe t®saggest ftat we are experi-enciaga caltaral team."

For his own part, be ispersuaded that "the relation-ship between books read andbocks purchased has in allprobability changed, it maywell have changed so much asto mean that people read lessthan they used to... . tbe plea-sure of buying books lies notso much in reading them as inhaving them available.People are buying books asthey buv pictures—to glanceat"

Many pspie. qooiiag* orf • M a r s h a l l

McLabaa as tfeir aatboritfor. if you wil, as lieir jprtton tits subject, ssay be in-clined to baa tius "deuelsp-sieoi. not as a sips of cuiftsai-retrogresskn. bat raifeer as ap^eaJ stqs fwward ia &emarch M civSizaUou. I am re-ferdBg to Vtose peof^e. ia mrmidst who bm-e eonvlaeedthesaselyes that the. primedword lias bad Ii» ss to ^ ^ .and1 wili .have lo make way foraew sieUmis <rf learning..

Frafes»3r Urnim *«s»*fg» *Img wMfc t t » liae oftMeiinf. If 1 aadersSand himcorrect}?, i e iai«s a ifi»view of the prflp^MeB ttoEpeople, for all * ikefr »HI»-eaee, are re«fiag .iess mm1MB tfcey asei to. But, what-ever «f ttat, even tbe •**•book people in gar midstwoald probably agree withUlster's «ver^I caachsi^tiat <»r «e-sfciei eatpfasfaoa ike fffo^etisa and e t »sampsioB of material goodsa&fl g»%ets feas replied » apr»fort»Bate loss of freetime asd a consequent cheap-ening of tfee jpailty ol life ia

Ltoiet* bkoseif avoids l ieof 8»tere^lHi3l»^

tte Isoefeeat r«a te of "thaieeanoak gr«rth wikfa haslifted tfee . tie* affluent©sBtries from a wtesteacelevel." In other words., bestoesa'l £ali into ite a ^ : ofsaslsbisilj ^patii^: a c s -sary eeoaojnie p^i^ess srilfe

Oa i i s otter teai. beeoiertais t ie bops t tet

tite loag o*-«ntee revoititioa ofrisii^ material e»pKtaii«sis t&e a ^ ^ ^ ^ ' e l i ^ J work!

wai. In t ie future, be paral-leled, first of ail in the -de-

world, by a seeeirfof rising caltswai

espectation. "Certa.iiily," hesays, "a eaostairt teal to se-cure the basic-necessities oflife is presortl? regarded as adegrading existence Per ia | sbeing constantly chased-bv. ascarcity of time will somedaj be reeogBizsi as aaeqaaily nadignified wa? rflife."'

This is a l ratfes1 corf«s-ing, bat pe r t ep it can serveto indicate tbai Ptetesstx Al-bert A. Binra's argent

lo ii» American later move-ment {referred to is lastweek"*$ csiosiB •• to begin csa-

oa 'tsmm <& qaall-^ t ie iraeliigent

me ef iei^re time, is a verytsig order indeed. Whether or»oi the trade aaion movementss sttcia—asy more than tfaefSPsnaaeal as seen—can iai-tiale a revolution of risii^•dilturai *as opp«s€a lo purelyjaaterial expectations* re-mBimtabesem,

But assuming, far Ibe• sake of tbe argument, that or-ganized isfer does have a rolete play in ibis area, we areleft with the question as tobow it sMigb! to ge about fal-fiUIng tills role. Perhaps, as astarter, tfee labor movementcould initiate a serious dis-eessioa in its own raises of thebooks referred to above orsome ol the other treatises onthe same subject which havebees published in recentyears. This presupposes, ofcourse, tbat labor leaders andrask-aad-fde trade unionmembers still have the timeaad tbe inclination to readserious boefes.

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Page 14 Miami,- Florida .-January 23, l?70

Pope Calls Council The Guiding LightVATICAN' CITY - JNCt

— There is a "sense of un-certainty" that disturbs hu-manity today, but the SecondVatican Council can removethat uncertainty. Pope PaulVI told a general aodience.

He told the audience thatno one escapes tbe "dizzinessof uncertainty" in this periodof history.

'"One eo longer knows

what may be the right thing tothink or do. We must begrateful to those who study,think, see. teach and guidewith tnie human feeling." hesaid.

In t t e eoeneil, the Popesaid, "we have the lampwhich lights tbe way."

He told priests "assailedwith s* many dmMs abmtyoar exisJeace Ia the Church

and in the world" not to beafraid. "Read again the pageof the council that concernsyou, and go forward with faithand courage," he told them.

The Pope advised youths"militant for contestation"also not to be afraid. But hewent OB to ware them that intheir zeal for a better sociallife they should not be"agaiastChrist."

The Pope urged youths:"Do not fear that the Churchdoes not know how to acceptand understand you, and thatthe firmness of its principlesmay paralyze your vitality."

Then P o p e Pau lencouraged all Catholic not tobe afraid, and asked them totake strength from Christ,who said: "Have faith. I havewon the world."

Have Respect For YourselfBy FATHER JOHN T. CAT0IB

What a man believes abmt himself and about the world inwhich he lives ultimately determines Ms destiny If a mansecretly despises himself for being drab, or homely, or

^.unexciting, if he doesn't know how to accept himself, a'rage• of discontent begins to force him to carry bis inner dis-turbance to tbe outside worid.

Many would-be radical reformers who demand thehighest moral behavior of others, are men who are self-indulgent and careless with the truth themselves. When aperson has a distorted self-concept he projects his own lackof respect for himself on others around hiirs. He needs todemonstrate his romantic emotions and his intellectualvalidity ia order to prove his own worthiness, which is threat-ened by self-doubt. This drive is so powerful in some people

FATHER

JOHN T.

CATOtR

WANTS

A SISTERTHE HOtY FATHER'S MiSSJQK AID TO THE OSiEKTAl. CHOSJCH

YOU •_- ••?'z •*•.•£-* - a •-*•£-;•: i"*-^*i »'*"? •-CANT ' i - " ' i • { , : • • * " « a ~ * ; • - • « i ? - '

G O "" " - ' " w - ; . ' » « • . : * • • • ' * • <,-•'- : - * :—: c * -YOURSELF :-•-- -. = , v * ; , - r - - ; > - i . - - ••;-?". '

SO TRAIN . - : •--! • - -..--.- -•••: -*•• r * - : ~ ~ -- •

SiSTEP ' • •> • i - - " K i t: i?i" Si". £

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that it often clouds their objectivity, and the actual issue ofreform may became a vehicle for riding out aaxieties.

A desperate "aow-or-never" insistence develops,and the reformer, especiallythe very young, looks for afinal battle in which to rise orfall, victor or martyr. Eitheroutcome is acceptable be-eaase either will serve todemonstrate his worth as aman He may even distortfacts and manipulate othersto achieve his moralistic cru-sade.

Objectively, without al! this excitement, everyone aroundMm may see quite elearh that he is a good person, that thereis really no need to prove all this, but be does not accept this.Ii is what he beSieves about himself that really matters, and aman wJ» has oat learned to respect himself, is a man who hasact learned to accept the respect of others.

By no mean* do i want 10 imply that ail reformers arebasically >;ck people, nor shat there s,s no need sor reform incivic and religious organizations I m?rely want ti> point outthe lolly of self-deception

Whenever we fa;". :o open ourseives :o objective reality,we las! \o see ans understand what we are doing t>? ourselvesand other? This ".= wfc> n :- ?a important in child-rearing tosr.c"j«ca;e a sp:r:t -•<! self-arc ep:anr.-e and atif-respt*-!

Tbe onlj waj to do this properiv is "to give the childgenuine acceptance aed love in spite of his or ber faults andfailings. B« patient *»ith the children: be firm in correctingtlaem; bat reassure ih«m of vour lo\e frequently. It ii nevertoo tale lo iearn. bat it lakes as enormous amount of humilityto face up to ibe tact*.

Onre * pers yr. i>: f-^-^r.yjrr. and i> >;iii «ruepims unlit ih<-p-'6C!err, of se;i-2ccpe:ar.re the >pou>e snm.i rarr> iht burden•--i p!vssc C'sTS'-i',' r>sa>j"jrar:*-e The :uct< r»f human i*r-iw:hand de-.e!:'?ir.er.*. re-.ej". tfcut change* c o w ihr«u£h patr.-ssaKj-g snd ;abor:-vj< rr. >ra". e;'f~-rr

P.V,-:er.c«- ard f jr*.:vjie are rse«fed. aiauf* with a w«i:ing-nes>> ;--• war, a L'-rtg :srr.e !-:-r resjiis S:ranaely these- veryyual:::e> are :ht '-re* nt-ede-i :r. the reform •?! an inpt:;uiiur.Patience &r.£ L-rwrnde are =.npop'j!ar virsues. bat ihey an-£5ssr,::j; :-'.. ar.v jir.rerc rr/'-rmer and any ?ini"ere ntr--.-r:

Prayer Of The Faithful; Third Sunday After EpihanyI Ian. 25, 1970\ CELEBRANT: The Lord be with you.j PEOPLE: And with your spirit. " • '\ CELEBRANT: Let us pray. Christians manifest Christ[ to the world by serving others. Let us offer our petitions that[ the world may see Christ and Ms love reflected in us.| LECTOR: The response for today's prayer of the faith-I ful will be: Hear us, 0 Lord.: LECTOR: (1) That all Christians may feel deeply the= pain of their division and for Churches suffering fromI persecution or complacency, we pray to the Lord.i PEOPLE: Hear us. O Lord. *E LECTOR: (2) That the unchristian barriers of racial= prejudice and discrimination will be broken down, we pray: to the Lord.= PEOPLE: Hear us, O Lord.= LECTOR: (3) For peace, trust and charity in the familyE of nations throughout the world, we pray to the Lord.= FEOPLE: Hear us, 0 Lord.| LECTOR: (4) That all men will have freedom fromI misery and a greater assurance of finding subsistence.I health, fixed employment and better education, we pray toi the Lord. "I PEOPLE: Hear us. 0 Lord.! LECTOR: (5) For the success of the Annual Bishop's= Charities Drive, that the assistance which our Archdiocese| renders to the poor, the sick, and the dependent persons inI our community may be continued, we pray to the Lord.i PEOPLE:'Hear us. 0 Lord. " -| LECTOR: (6) That the peace of Christ may come to the= sick, suffering and deceased members of our parish.| remembering especially N. and N., who died this past week,z we pray to the Lord.| PEOPLE: Hear us. 0 Lord.i LECTOR: Hi For all of us here present that we may= joyfully accept Christ's invitation to share fully in thisEEucharistic meal by receiving His body in Holy Com-= munion. we pray to the Lord.= PEOPLE: Hear UP. 0 Lord.| CELEBRANT: Father, you will that all men be one in| Jesus Christ, your son and our brother. Answer oar prayers.I so that united together. aSi men may be more closely united= to you. We ask this through Christ, our Lord.= PEOPLE: Amen

Clsricni AppsrelScllglwu An

Above all. the reformer must be one who acts out of love.He cannot do this unless he first learns to love himself. Theworld i.-. filled with radical who are driven by bate, and theirmajor program is to destroy. God save as from them. Christ•*'«' a radical reformer %vhi by stated intention came not todestroy, but to fulfill iht :«•*

.*-. - ff * Wntn-Aebet-ome impatient with ourseHcs. or ihe people * § a , V l r i S It W i t h L s i f l f larownd as. «e ie»d so o%er-reaci. Changes are definiteivsparked b> moments of intense confrontation and deiermi- RH<MiKLYN N Vnation, but the follow -through mu-jt hi e\ena»dcon-,tarii.

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have a Mass in La!?n everyPrat^:dfn> \\:V..-'.:: :•.<• Sansav,

: .:i>-u-ah> S..cse:ati> Ma. r:~ Editor Don ZirkeS said heN t- - -Eb ' - ra r s r i:ap, :• hoped those who understandKpi-r'.pu:n MuBdve-r-'- uu Latin will be pleased by ifte<,'j?--iir.u'.:? Heen;:!: c rr.-i'.rMr. story - ami those who do not;r.:rc-* 'j'J-.'d patK::ur t-t-t-'.z-:a- may realize how little ouaii-:r. Ijj'i-'t'-e \Vt'siri*:in; '.{-r tied they are to pray together'•firrr*-- par'K-ftsani-"" M:? .-.::. is that ianfuage.

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5 f -as*i-*: LJTt'RCY AND U r EI PAf^INE EPISTLES

THS SEW TS5TAMEXT

THE ¥&iC£ Fioriio

Hypnosis A New Approach To Curing Drug UsersDr. Beo Sbeppard, physician, law-

yer sag former jwveaUe eeert jwlg«, ispresently director of tfce ArefcitecesanCatholic Welfare Boreas aa i % mem-ber rf l ie Bade County School Beard.Be wUl answer ^westfawts ei Veiee read-ers *• Jegat, medical ami fsmUy prob-lems. Readers wisilsg Ms a*rtee mayad i r e s irapi tries is him la care of TheVoice, P.O. Box 1«S, Miami, Fla.

By DR. BENSHEPPAR©H vpnotberapy, a new approach to the treatment of drag

adiieiioit is meeting with some success, according to latestreports.

Recently Dr. Franz Baurnan told the American Societyof Clinical Hypnosis that In his work as associate director ofthe Saa Francisco Children's Hospital be had learned £ rcsn aIS-year-old girl who was under hypnosis that the happiesttime of her life was aia "pet"* party.

Oa subsequent visits she was able under hypnosistherapy to intensify this feeling she had. Because she wasable during these visits to intensify these feelings sherealized that site bad the capacity within herself to producethe good feelings and hallucinations which she was seekingin marijuana. This girl was taught self-hypnosis in orderthat she eouM utilize it when she had the urge to smoke poi,

Advantages of this farm of sell-iypaosis are obvious.First, a self-iattaeeii state by hypnosis was not illegal. It wasfree and totally aaier the sahject's control becaose only feeor she eoolti tars It off and oa. In this -way it woold aid t ieadoleseeals* seed far independence witboat depriving Mmof the escape previously supplied by illegal, expensive dragswith oapredfctable effects.

In this ciiaic were 80 patiente who used marijuana; 42who were frequent users of LSD: Yt who were "'speed"freaks; 28 who were intermittent users of oralamphetamines: 10 who had a history of barbiturates andtwo who were heroin addicts.

Dr, Bauman had the same experience as ail who work inthe field — that is he was less successful with the marijuanausers. One-half of these dropped out. claiming that the useof the weed was only legally dangerous and not barmfui tomind and body — a false impression that will soon bedissipated.

Speed, Hearing Emits GChildren and adulls

believed to be in need ofspeech correction, auditorytraining and lip-reading{raining are being evaluatedby the Barry College Speecfaawl Hearing Center for theSpring semester.

According to Dr. Fred-erick J. Schaefer, speech andtearing therapist at, thecenter, "The average personlistens to enough words in oneday to fill a book. He speaksenough words ia one week tofill a book. He reads enoughwords in one month to fill abook, and he writes enoughwords in one year to fill abook.

"Heading and writing

receive much attention in theschools while listening andspeech, the individual'sgreatest communicationneeds, go virtually ignored."he said, emphasizing thatchildren are not born withlistening and speech skills —they must be learned.

Referrals to the speechcenter are given a phoneticevaluation and a pure toneaudiometr ic t hearing*evaluation. Each student isthen assigned a 3Q-rainutesession of individual workonce or twice weekly, depend-ing on his need for therapy.

Further information andappointments may beobtained by calling 758-3392.Ext. 280.

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The 30 teenagers vn LSD were ntsre ws;.\>sf i@ gr«e cpthe drug and discovered, thr&ugh U* as* -A w£Mty?!K>$».that they could accomplish :Birospectarr aasi bexitr sell-understanding without ever having so wan fv a drag wwear off Of these. 25 have given up LSD aed s'sor have dek-nitely cut-dovrn oa its usage Tfce 'speed" freaks have allabandoned ase of ampbetaznise«: and srccess was g.-jedmih she barbiturate users, many « vhom were dca^ Its ioshock their parents

Here jn Miami we have been using hypsoiiszapy bus sartwith the great success rep&rted by Dr. Baamaa We havehad some startling success b-: rat to tie extsst he ts&ort^d

While at a ce*ve«km recesUv is tfee sttios's capital Italked with a ps> rtiiatrisE «ko fcsd selected a greef of Hveheroin addicts. I asked him tboet stock tberapy fer ilsesepeople. He said be was re-tectact ts use it bst reTeaied r&atbe had ased it on one patient who. after recovery from ib«effects erf shock therapy, ^as hack OB ifee streets is sseweek-

Undoabiedly Shis is a held which urii! fcave £o beexplored mare fullv — bu>. ;h*re is te?pe "«;h hyr-w'feirrapv

ANSWERING THE READERS'"Some people may asr-me "h-a". :f:e children -o! tin pv*r

•- especially |>t>etto cfc;:dre" — are p^ r lnature and that ;t is fuu:e :-:= tr>- " :• rai<-e :heir aachievement to national r.-jrrr.*- There art- 'h.i->e "stz- believesuch children should be . iftred p3r:-::.*r:e "'.a^-rwrr:instruction. t;ed in wsih apprer.::cesr:;? ~,:a;~:r£ by a poten-tial employer

Roger Freeman a »en: >r :-"sff rr.«rr.5er s*. s;ar;:--rd.feels that all husr.ans- r.a-.e a hsc-i jv-:n1: c-ey.,-nd wjurh theycanno: go for in;eileciual dev^; S K K :

Many behavwra; -ci<rn::-:< ict- h-we-.cr - ins :•:*••• unately this :> coming n;-ce avc rr, .re :•? ibt :%-re — tha; :hesative end«wment of p.-v^n;. cfijicrfn ;»;hc- s.an".« as *hat vlchildren from any other >'.C;SJ clas? s»d -.hai '.f.e;r learningretardation aoes wish tad-Ifearr.xg expi;r;e*ces — tr.a: "be

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23,

Coach's Son The Hero For ChaminadeAitdy Toskovicit, the

vet&as Chamiaade Highoasketbail coaeit. will acceptany victory ... eves if hislearn Is guilty of 31 turnovers.

"I guess if wasn't reallytoo good a game, bat It was afine one to win." he statedwith reference to the Lisas'heart - thumping 8S-86 victoryover Msgr. Pace last Friday.

•"Taey made about 28turnovers and we tad 31." headded, "but when you get thatmany points ia a high schoolgame, you know that they'redoiag a lot of tMngs right"

For daaiiaafe, a slreageoBtefider far Class A honorswfcea tfee state districttecraamest starts aext

il meant as 11-2

record awl kept its slate cleaaagainst Osss A competition.

"We've got seme goodshooters.*' concedes Andy."and they're a very intelli-gent group of kids""

His "good shooters" areheaded by Ms own son. Dawn.a S-3 sharpie with a 27 points-a-game average, who aisQleads the team in rebootsand assists.

"He's still bothered by abad aside and does get kind oitired. But. he's our massconsistent player." the coachsaid.

The name Dawn, inci-dentally, comes from the facttaat he was born early in themorning and Coach Andy'swife wanted something diff er-

VOICE

ent m the way of s name ~-hence. Dawn.

Backing Da* a is thelearn scoring are TeroKificaM, who fell lorfass week agusstGibboas, asfl Jofea PaxiHa,KiflcaW is averaging If pewrtja game while Pariila is closeis 14.

Parilia, just rGuatag intobasketball shape after ifee

c->here? with Dawn is tbethr^er with Pace

With the Jess iraili»f SI-TS ;s the *i?»; lw~3 mteaW5 «fplav. Dawr Tesiavjefe gat apair of baskets to lie ap limc«st€-«! ssd Partita!hr*«gh vEiSh faar **raifree ifcro-ws s-3 pat JM gamean ef reach

I*. « a tmgk ese go fcse

far Pace. *teci feastims ihe lead w ttsechanter wites u raliet ap 1*siiajffci potsts la go frsws »»-lfi'*iici! to ft 32-26 leastTIi? Spanass bekl a SK to

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Teams' Tourney Chances AssayedIce Follies Slated

By Jack HmigfateiLiig

It's Just a montii awayfrom the state's basketballtournament playoffs, so, let'stake a look at the prospects oflie archdiocese high schoolsquads. GeaeraMy, they'reaottoebai.

With j o s t a fewexceptions, the archdioceseteams have a good s&ot attheir class district titles andhave some hopes of winningregional crowns to advance tothe slate finals at jfack-sonville.

Much, of course, wiiidepend* upon the district as-signments to come from theF lo r ida High SchoolActivities Association,particularly in the crowdedClass A competition.

So ... let's take a loefeclass by class.

CLASS AA — Only Chris-topher Colornbus is bigenmsgii for this category. It'sa bleak outlook for the Ex-plorers. Coach Dick Pollock'screw has won only once thisseason, although droppingseveral close games due tothe absence with a fracteredankle of Mike Fiyun. The Ex-plorers may be able to pull offa win or two in the districtmeet, as their probable dis-trict alignment will put themin with also-rans in the AAcompetition, like Palmetto.Kiliian. Southwest and SouthDade.

CLASS A—this is the busyfield with the region nowstretching from Palm Beachto Key West.

West Pa lm BeachCardinal Newman is in thetough district with defendingstate champion West PalmBeach Roosevelt and willhave its hands full getting tothe district finals. Continuedimprovement of 6-4 juniorJim Stewart will help,though.

Moving down into otherdistricts, the field getscrowded with Cardinal Gib-bons, Chaminade, Msgr.Pace, Archbishop Curley andLaSalle all solid contenders.

Chaminade has been themost consistent contender

with 6-3 Dawn Tonkovich asthe firing power. The Lionswere 11-2 with both losses toAA teams.

Gibbons has been asurprise with 6-3 GaryHanrahan coming on strongbut the Redskins are short ondepth and have their troubleswith the larger Class Aschools as Gibbons justbarely qualifies for Class A inenrollment

Pace Jumped off to a 7-0record, then lost five straight,with three of the lossescoming from Class A rivals.Cbaminade i.Z points-.Gibbons and LaSalie «ix»fh byone point). So, the Spartansmust right themselves andcut down on their ball-hand-ling mistakes. Billy Sheppardleads the Spartans bat thereIs good balance in scoring.

Curley has been sadstelwith a tough Class AAschedule plus the ineJigibiiityfor five games of reaimingstar ter Buss Meriedy.Farther difficulties maycorse from being in the samedistrict as Key West, wbictiwill make It tough to get intothe regiooais.

LaSalle has started tomove behind 6-3 Chris Savardand Joan Casanova, bat theRoyals have been in-consistent. They'll probabtyend up in the same dtstnetwith Key West, Cbaminadeand Curley . . . which will bejust too much ChaiBinade

best bel for a district titlefeere

CLASS B - Msgr Pace'mm fast year's district crewsbefore moving up to Class Athis season. leaving: only St.Thomas and Beiea ia t iecategory. St Tfeemas will bea tpestieji mark, as iUsrijeduie feas been made apmostly of Class AA awl ClassA teams, so- its tree strengthin the class is net inssmSteve Pope and DmgircMeKense are iise leaders

Be ies isas beenimpressive m its games JaftoCarnpa is tt-p man

g owr featured skatars. six. ipmfeefions and s m e n m sole aai specially acts williagfelifte l&e opesisg d Siapslads sM MBRSSRS - letFollies" fae« at Di»er Key Aaditoriam Feb. 13 for aMhfayrsa

Tiekets are abatable at l ie fees office or by-mienf, ?•©- Beet«». Miami. Fla. 31191.

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Time invested In CharityBrings Back A Diamond

Seventeen-year-old CarolWoeppel got a diamond thispast weekend — only shewon't wear it on her finger.

She'll wear it around herneck — and it will be a symbolof the hours she has dedicatedto children at VarietyChildren's Hospital.

She earned her diamond,bat all the money in he worldcouldn't have bought it.

She purchased it withtime — 20 hours a week whichshe normally might have usedto go to the movies, shopping,bowling, or any of a thousand

other things that teenage girlslove to do.

Carol, now a senior atLourdes Academy, chose toinvest her time. She "put itinto" children, as the WallStreet people would say, andshe thinks the interest it paidis pretty terrific.

Carol received the CandyStripers' highest awardSaturday — a gold locket witha diamond chip — for voluri-•teering 1,000 hours of servicein the past year.

"I always wanted to work

SiNlOR AT Monsignof Pace High School, Rkk Reece, andJustine Bizette, a senior at Palmetto High School, havebeen named king and queen for fhe 20th annual DadeCounty Youth Fair and will reign over that giant eventwhfch runs thrugh Sunday, Jan. 25. Sorb 17 axtdmembers of 4-H clubs, they wiJI have busy scheduleshandling personal appearances at the fair vdtkh will beheld at the Dade County Youth Fairground on NorthKendall Drive and on local radio and television shows.

Essay Deadline Is Extendedfreedom, opportunity, self-reliance, aisd responsibilityand the vital rote played byAmerica and Americans inthe world straggle for free-dom.

• Tbe goals, aspirations,problems and responsibilitiesof today's high school sta-feits as thev relate to thegoals, etc of the country as awhole

Entries should fee mailed«3 Certified Plumbers ofSmith Fiorkfai. S3B WesiF!ag!er 5irm> Miami Fla3313S

Deadlioe for estrles intfae "Speak Op For America"essay cosiest, sponsored byfee Certified Plumbers afSouth Florida, has beenextended from Pefe, 1 to Feb.23

Ail high scix>ol students inDade County are eligible toenter the contest

The essay — which shouldrun from 500 to 2.5W words —may address itself la any ofthree topics:

* What's ngfet wi:bAmerica

• Oar heritage of

Open HouseMadonna Academy in

West Hollywood will presentan open house for seventh andeighth graders and theirparents ©u Saaday. Jan. 25.from 2 to-4 p.m. at the school.

During tfae open house —whieb is designed to showpotential Madonna girls tfaeins and oats of the academy —there will be tours of theschool, an explanation of theacademic program and adiscussion of Use extra-cur-ricular activities.

The seta*! is located al3SQ0 SW 32wi Blvd.. WestHollywood.

Hal Of FameJoba F. Harkoess. son of

Judge aM Mrs. Jata F.Harkness <M North Miami,feas beea named to the Uni-versity of Florida Hall ofFame and Who's Wbo InAmerican Colleges andL'mversilttes.

Teerf Program

Blacks Interrupt Basketball

Game In Cheerleading Dispute

Coach's Son HeroIn Chaminade Surgethen a S6-50 tom&i frotKarcfcdjoeese rival MaryImmaculate Julie Campawas the scaring leader mtk 15points agaius* Sfarath&nwhile Mario Paradeto toppedthe scoring with IS agaiJisiMIHS for the well balanced

attack

€bri$«Npiier Columbus. 75-17,KiUt Paul Taylor coiiecunf 25points and Ted Hamtter ITThe KaiglJis thec dropped a53-4$ game to Class AAEdison mils &-S Dvrigfei BJT4leadiog {he scoring for thef i rs time tins season, getting

n Wjsfe TfeeFamily" will be the ibeme ofa Search pr^rair. at St. Johntfee Apostle parish f ram K » Epijui 3 p rn - Sunday. Jae 23

Speakers «JU :nc!udeNorman Levicskj. AudreyD'Amito zvA Roncie Harm— all trained c&anselors »ndrag retebiiitat-ar-

A Yooth Mass wrJJ fallowjJie profram at ? 3D p.?n.Theme fer the h«sny wdl be

SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. —Black students from SetonHall University took over thebasketball court here during atense game with AmericanUniversity to protest whatthey said was a violation of anagreement ending a disputeover cheerleaders.

The g a m e wasinterrupted with tlie score 64-63 in favor of Setoo Half and11 seconds left to play. Playwas resumed after about 15minutes.

About 30 students tookpart in the spontaneous de-monstration when white girlswbo had been on the cheer-leading squad began cheeringfrom their seats in tfaegymnasium.

Just prior to the game, asa culmination of a series ofmeetings involving FatherJohn J Horgan, athletic di-rector, an agreement hadbeen reached suspendingcheerieadmg activities forthe season

The meeings stemmed {from tf*e Nov. IS dismissal of 1the squad"s two black!cheerleaders, Dora Barnes, jbead of the campus Black!

Students League, and JuanitaTrimmel. A white girl wasdismissed at the same time.

AH were dropped by theother members of the squadbecause of missed practicesand other offenses. Afteragreement was reached on-suspending cheerleading forthe year, all squad memberswere given tickets to thegame by Father Horgan.

When the girJs began tocheer from their seats nearthe blacks took over thepublic address system andcalled for an occupation of thecourt.

Play was resumed whenthe blacks got up off thecourt, after Father Horganmet with them, and the cheer-leaders left the gymnasium.

with children, so I sent aletter to Variety and asked ifI could be a Candy Striper,"Carol explained. She addedthat she might have been avolunteer at a younger age insome other hospital, but shewaited until she was 15 andqualified for service atVariety because she always-wanted to work with children.

She has spent 1,300 hoursin the past two years feeding,cleaning, and cheering up ahospital full of children.

' 'Some of the children yousee over and over again.Some of them are sick andkeep coming back. I'm glad Iwaited to work here," Carolsaid.

She is still not surewhether or not she will pursuea career in nursing or somemedical-related field, but sheis thinking about it

Was the investment intime worth the interest?

"You bet it was. What Igot out of being a CandyStriper was worth more thanwhat I put into it. Workingwith the children was mar-velous."

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23, 1970 Miaaii, Florida 19

de Gotoress

klB(trrata el Dia 4;0

Los eursiffisias de S*;ajri:mumento afare a Sn dconstruction de "a \

«prt \ echancc tocode is.rrn;na,t.»ir Ia> *4»r«is de re-

inaugcrar ts nutrv*. -«? 4 e* !*br£rthouse" que coraenzara «s "as T ?.-- A» cLa ijueves dia •'». ,«e ~.Kkiux& vl curs-i G -pnrnero a efectuarse en Im nun 3 c*ea.

Ptero este doming©, dsa 25, I«s es«sii&ta» haise noalto en sus trabajos para particyiar *a oaa mlsa quepiesidira el Arzobispo C-otetnaa F. Carroll y qae co-menzaia. a las 3 p.ta~ ea ia CatedrBi de Miami, para

!a feellvidad Jilargica <fc la Conversion de Saa, Pafrouo tte los CmsJUos tie Cristiaoelsd.

Ik-sde saee var.as sejnanas. £ecw:a4 ae e - ^ l l ts SKC-S- GK »wrr,a»a

para p:r«ar. rano?ar y l;~,p;ar la harratadurante *a II CJuerra Mondial y siae rajjjcamente *«esta conv»nieiMk< t-n usa sarpjjcs«»a yde- curstlloF. con arnpaa* >a2d* de r«jHt*s.habitacionfc&. nsoosraa cap'sLa, y Miras- fadtdades pasaofreer i«s curstiice ae horaon*;»

La camara caph> a Its Cur?;i*;*;a5 ptinkiaio *1 r.ym-bro" tn las tarea* de ~.vr.?itXA y re»:auradoB de ",&barraea. q«fr rnuy pronto "sciat fwrfa cs auei is*toles- de C'riati'.'" segun palaora? d£- Ede e*e movimienKj, Padre Jose L. H

Fotos, sexto, Gustavo ftna

A

Con el primero de enerode 1970 y con arreglo dela cartaapostolica"MysteriiPasdaalis celd>rationem" delcaiorce de fdirero de 1969,hail entrado en vigor lasdisposidones que reformanel calendario liturgico gene-ral que eontiene las celebra-dones de importaneia uni-veisal, obligaiorias para to-da la Igiesia.

For consiguiente, vienenxnodificandose tambien loscalendarios partiailares queconfienai, ademas de estaseelebraeicmes comunesparatodo, las propias de cadadiocesis u orden religicsa,coordinadas con las demas,con el fin de satisfacer lasnet^Idades de la unidad delculto con las exigeneias delas razonables devocionesparticulares o locales.

Kedactado per el Consejoencaj^ado de la aplicadonde la refonna Hhirgica, el

En Vigor los Cambios al Calendario Liturgiconuevo calendario generalpara 1970 tiene en cueata lareforma misma y el mayorrelieve dado por ella a lacelebracion del misterio pas-cual, las exigeneias del pe-riodo provisional hasta laimpresion de los nuevos li-bros liturgicos y los despla-zamientos debidos a la pas-cua de esteano, queeaeen29de marzo.

He aqui las principalesnovedades del calendario:

• El primer dia del afio,dedicado hasta ahora a laCircuncisidn del Senor, hasido restaurada la fiesta deMaria Madre de Dios, conarreglo a un antiguo uso la-tino vigente todavia en lasIgleslas Orientales.

La fiesta del nombre de

Jesus, que desde el aiio de1721 se venia celebrandoel primer domingo despuesdel Ano Nuevo, queda su-primida, puesto que delNombre de Jesus se ha ha-blado ya en la precedeniefiesta de la Madre de Dios;por consiguiente, sera llama-do simplemente, como el Se-gundo Domingo despues dela Navidad. |4de enero).

• El 11 de enero, primerdomingo despues de la Epi-fania, se celebrara el Bau-Ssmo de Jesus, en vez de laFiesta de ia Sagrada Fami-lla, antidpada al Primer Do-mingo despues de la Na-vidad.

En enero no hay modifi-.cadones dignas de reEe\-e,por que, y esto vale tam-

tbiea para los demas, las fies-tas de los santos que, segunia nueva reforma, seran des-plazados de fecha, para1970 permaneeen invaiia-das.

• En febrero, Ia firatadel dia 2. que antes secele-braba bajo la advocacidade la PuriScacida de Maria,se Haxnara de ahora en adfrlante "De ia PreseitacidG deJesCts" en ei tempte por toqee pasa a ser una fiesta

cuerda el beebo religioso delas aparitiones de Maria,no el hecho bistdrico de .unaaparidon deterndnada.

• En mano resulla des-plazada tma sola.fiesta: lade la Aaunciaoan, que esteano; coincidlando con elMiercoles Santo, ha sidotrasladada al 6 del abriL

Aflanas, la misma fiesta,que en aaos sucesivos coin-ddira igjialmsKte con el 2Sde inarzo, como ahora, seilauiara "Anundacion del

El 11 es ei miercote dec«siza, primer dia decuares-Bia, absoree ia fiesta deNuestra Senora de Lourdes,la «aiaL a sit vez, cambiade noiafare, Haroandose enadelante "Fiesia de la Apa-rieion de Ia Virgen"" y re-

• La fiesta .de San Joseg a cdebraudose el 10

de raarzo, pero dado a queeste dia ate en cuafsma,las ConfercncEas ^jiscopa-les tiensj facultad para tras-iadar la cel<i»zacidn a oiro

dia que rsulte iibre de otrascontnemoraclones.

«, En abriL, mayo y ju-nio, ningun carnbio de re-lieve, salvo los relacionadoseon la diferentecolocacion deIa Pascua.

En Julio quedasuprimidala ceJebracion de la preeio-sisima Sangre, festK-idadinsttoidaen 1849. Enefeeio,de la Sangre Redentora deCriSo se habia en iodas lasceldsraeiones de sa pasiony maerte.

• Bn agosto no se hacamblado nada.

,* En sepfiembre. queda-. suprimida la fiesta dei Nom-bre de Maria, que se ceSe-feraba el dia docs en memo-rla de la victoria de Jos cris-tianos eoatra ios turcos an-te las muralias de Viena, en1684, y que es un d«pSicadode ia fiesta de ia Natividadde Ia Virgerj Maria, que secel&ra el dia 8.

Page 20 THE VOICE Miami, January 23, 1970

Ataca Radio Habana ProyectadoTemplo a Patrona de Cuba Aqui

Con erte numsro se este dirtr guyando «n swplementeen ingles sob re las abrai d«l 'A&CD.' Un iupJeme-rrfo titm-tar en esponol esia siendo dirtribufcio a Jraves tie lasporroquios.

Piden Ropas y ComidasPara Victimas de VorazIncendio en NicaraguaLas organizacosfiS: caso- parraquial dt St. Jmm the

iscas d« area ie Hialeafa se Apo^fe baa ooatribuido tam-han unidoparaprestaraywda faien con aj&memas etilatadGSa las vscSmat de an voraz ia- y '.» parroqula de Miamitench* ocurrido redeniesneni* Lakes. Our Lady of the Lakeser. si pyen& de Biuefidife, Ni- eaa cKbonandu a sus fefi-caragua, dooae dser mi; per- gresss a coop«rax ea csia fau-

Radio Habana Cuba de-dico una de sus irasmisio-nes de onda coria para tras-rEiitir a. todo el contineate unlargo aiaque a la inlelativade ios exiliados cubanosdeconstruir aqui un santuarioa la Virgen de la Caridaddel Cobra.

El comeniario estaplaga-do de frases Insultaniesparalos dirigentes del ComiteFroSantuario, asi como paratodos tos cabanos que bantornado ei caroiao del exi-lio a los que llama.'apatri-das,

I*a radiocomunistadeLaHabana trata de ridfcullzara los exffiados en varias oca-sloaes como euasdo se re-fiere a la. capllla donde — di-ce la irasmisidn de RH "COHiatemiBable pad«*da, dig-aa de mejor causa, oran al-gitnos apafaidas por el re-greso."

Ei comeoiario de la radioeoHHinista se refiereal<»dosejecutivos del comite, MB.-nolo Beyzs y Jose MiguelMorales Gomez. As priroerolo lama cabaslla ainirarre-vohtdonario que "ahora sedlsfraza de ferriente creyen-te", al segtradb lo lama"afortuaado-" al arotiiiee-10 an tor del proyecto preten-de IisuJtario Eamando!o"a-patrida empareajado con ddicsador derrocado FuJgen-do Batista."

IsEislssua lamejei la RadioHafaans qae d corni'e es-cargado de recsbai y ad-ministrar los *osdos parala eoRsswxaoii del •nonu-stento, aprovechara lostnis-mos para fonnnas parcea-lares.

La trasmlslon .«e baaa enun dsspacfco cablegraSco asei qtie la agenda inforsRati-

va AP describe el proyecto yrecoge dedaraciones de susimpulsores, Reyes, Morales-Gomez y Perez-Benitoa.

Como esta. dirigida al ex-iranjero, la trasmision insi-niia el respeto alascreenciasxeligiosas del pueblo cubanocsiando dice que "la viejaimagen de la 'leyenda' sigueen su lugar, en el Santuariode EI Cobre, bajo el delo deIa nueva Cuba, rodeadadelaveneration de Ios creyentessinceros y el respeto del pue-blo."

No mencaona la informa-tion que ea 1961 ia mili-eia comunista tiroteo en el(Kntro de la Habana unaproeesion en honor de laVirgen de Ia Caridad del

Cobre, lo que le did opor-tunidad para expulsar a unobispo y decenas de sacer-dotes y religiosas.

Responde Manolo EeyesComentando los ataques

que a su persona Mzo laRadio de La Habana, Ma-nolo Reyes dedaro que "unataque dementiras.expresio-nes sin education yargumen-tos sin base, como siempreproduce el castro-comunis-mo contra sus opositores esun galardon para los queaman a Dios y la libertad."

"Fidel Castro vivehoyendia huyendole al ojopublicopor temor asereliminado delcuadro de Cuba. Ytrasbam-balinas, protegido por unaextensa guardia pretoriana,

Designan Obispo Auxiliar

Para Santiago de CubaCIUDAD VATICANO —

Se anuntio aqui que el Pa-pa Paulo VI ha nombra-do obispo auxiliar para laArquidiocesis deSantiago deCaba a Monscnor HectorPefia Gomez. parrcscodeSanIsldro en Holguin, Cuba.

Monsefior Pena Gomez,segun e! araindo vaScano,faa sido nomfarado ObispoTitular de Xovalidana yausiliar del AdministradorApostolico 'sede plena" deSantiago de Cuba. El Obis-po Pedro Meuriee, es elactual admlnlstrador apos-tolico de Santiago de Caba.

El nuevo obispo cubanonacio tn Sas Andres, Pro-vlnda de Orients, el 18 de

octubre de 1929. Initio losestudios eclesiasticos en elSeminario de San BasilioMagno, de El Cobre, y lostermind en el de Santo To-rnas de Aquino, RepublicaOominicana.

Fue ordenado sacerdoleel 29 de junio de 1955. Hatrabajado como coadjutor,capellan de una comunidadreUgiosa y vicedirector dela Obra de Vocaciones enHolguin. Despues ha sidoparroco de Victoria de lasTunas, de San Andres y dePuerto Padre.

Actualmente era paarro-co de San Isidore, en Hol-guin y vicario de la zonanorte de la archidiocesis deSantiago de Cuba.

ordena que se hagan estosataques demagogicos e im-propios contra quienes solodesean y ansian la libertaddel pueblo cubano."

"En sus estertores deses-perados el regimen arremetecontra los que prolesan lafe religiosa a la Caridad,en el exilic"

"El mismo regimen queha desatadotmaperseeudonreligiosa sin preeedentes enla historia de Cuba y delContinent Sacerdotes, mon-jas, ministros de todas lasramas de la fe, han sido ve-jados, humillados, golpea-dos y puestos en prisionpor el nefasto regimen deCastro. Bajodcastro-comu-nismo en Cuba, se han pro-fanado sagrarios, dausuras,se han convertido iglesiasen almacenes de azucar."

"Se probibe practicamen-te que a juvennid acuda alos templos a redbir el panespirihial de la fe. Se acosaa Ios que practican la reli-gion. Y hasta se cancela-ron las Navidades COH elpretexto de ir al campo acortar cafia."

"Cuando la reaiidad sque el castro-coirmnismo es-ta tratando eon ello de erra-dicai lacomnemoraddncris-tiana de la Navidad."

"Este es el regimen queseatreve a sacar una trasmi-sion en la radio de Cubapara todo el continente, ata-cando a quienes en el exHio,solo aspiran a que la Cruzde Cristo se estabiezca enCuba desde la mesa de go-bierno hasta ei mas intrin-eado lomerio. A los que des-de el exilio solo viven. por ialibertad de Cuba," contlu-ye Maoolo Reyes.

le spo n d e Cof radii tie lo Cur id id Ataques de C i l iLa eoleda de ropas,

dnas y altaeBias ha sido or-ganizada por el CemHe deCiudades Hermaaas Hialeah-Mauagua. qtie preside la se-Sora Mary Barren

E. padre Orestes Hevia esel capc^art e*I Cortua Hm-ieah Managua ytiaoigasiza-au Ia co;ssa ea Ea parroquiade ia Iiusuculada Cesneep-eos, doade se saa reoogidacsmenares de laias de alisEten-iot. Los nifios de la Bseaela

E pucrto de Siu^dds, enia costa aiiantifa de Nicara-gua caeata asm 25 mil ba-faiianta de k» <ssal« ara»10 mil has perdido s«$ fa>garis. Ya que et cranepoRepar carrefera se feats cas; ins-

<a sifuaeton se fesce

At r;e t£& t&

s«n n-.as cn*»ea para ta* «c-fc inceadio.

cerse a trairts *te las parro-de HialeaJh o gferedta-a Mrs. Barws; fla»sja»-8l

es

la

\a\\e Farm^namorados...,

Eso sfera el 'Fesivaj de Juan y Marts' que:a urgafsiaaimo el Movimiento Fam&ar Cnstianuque jetsdra «ugar « sal»ado M de fffissro ass eJI_*n parr*xiaiai de la Inmaculada COJX^JCOB deau£^J^, -OGn3d52itrtd0 a iS£ Si3C? p.B!i~Cortsisura at una cormda baijabk- para cdet>rarfeatiridad de San Valea&n. imtMetaaaimmte oo-oda MSSHO el £te d£ I<K EnamorsAK.Ya estar. aiavesa tas aaraiis* a eu&mjckKajw•r persan«i« lo qse .r.ciaye «s p-rmo d*J cubkno.

isailaclfe easaras a cargo de l& popjjlar or.a "Los CaiHsnarafci" Qae dirige Fe%se

Carloe %, •iuaaca. Henumda. qut ding*r»

al qut & MFC quiere dm: c»Jor»

£ Jar ur. fcE?slJd& crs«iaai» a. ta vi&i. eoa-yugal >- fajjsiiar »uwi#n <crfrtif3r *5 tfaa «fe Jos ena-

Es tardeea la utxlte. Freaeanutengo sobre la mesa!as tfctiarasioiKS de Radio-Habana-Cuba del I2de Enerod* este aSo £ra»ajido efc difaoiar ia obra que los devotesde la Virgen de! destferro quieree ofrecer a mi Santa Fa-tron*> AladeredjaiengoIaBtbliaycomo siempre abicr-ta. Esia ableita en & Capaulo 13 dela Primers Epistolaque el AposioS Sac Pablo eseribiera a Ios Corintios. Sen-tsdo eo ia pecueftiaiiRS oSciaa de Ia ermita oigo el §©-nido agradaiale de ias olaaddmarqaebafian. es& iugsx.Son los mlsjnos mares quefaafian a Cuba. Detras de mi es-vk Ia baagao Exllada, que mm Itegara de Cuba el B<fc Sqjt»»bre ife 1961. Teago sieflo pero prefiero que-darnse aa rato nas y como testigQ de ata. obra dar tes-tfaEoaio y aaviarie al The Voice lo que me pueda mi co-raxon «iecir ao^ca ite esa obra.De las dedaraclaoes .^teel ot tocomolapesfe sale de lo

podrfd© y al caiablar fe vista y poa»ia en las divioasWrss vee rf coirfra^ "ftunque hablara las feagaas deias fcombret y tfc lo* Angeles, si no tengo carfdad» soycaiao tsroacs <|ee mass octofaaio que reli&s.,.aunque ce-

fodoa tew miateriiM y toda la d£jx3B-,.aaaqaetodos mis biases y eaiiregara mi caapa a las

liamas, a no tengo caridad, nada me aprovecha...Lacaridad, e* sfcdr, d amor es lo que distingue al criitte-sisiBO. La 'Hrgas liace n»s de torasAaitos cioraienla afiosim qaeido aparasr sotee las ag«as de ia Bahia deJBpe csa cste ao»bi« para que iwoea ohidarainos loqwe BOS ddje dte^^itlr: ei amor.

La r&zon que ban. fenido !<w devotos del destierropara querer ^ESS obra *« Oevada liaicamenie por elassor. Btei ae ve qae quien vive «e5 odio no la puede

T*Hlg» durassie tie* aSoa del paaocontinuomuy sassprauo hssta muy tarde en la noche de

io* d»*i)iBs deastm-a;k» que libresrtenifc se acerca. abru-sado pot HER corre&poasiencia que cast nt* pu*do leery »obre is»do axlstado <»R la Paiabra que Ella taedita-ba ea su esrazos <sir.o lo» %-eferanos el 24 de SepUem-toe de ISIS no pueda caliar porquesena vergoszosa ia-

aacerio.

in Rcsssrs, desjjucs <i# un^ reunion de ess Cofrsyfss,

Sera graode porque todo el exilo teadra la oportuai-dad de poner su piedra y el exiiio es muy grande. Ba-rece muy alto porque los devotes de la Virgen son tannumerososen su pasar constante que si eada trao tansolo trajera una piedra aimo signo de presencia yodiria que se nos perderia en las aubes. Esie peregriaarconstants en las Beregrinadones de la noche como enlas Romerias provinciates es mas hermoso porque no esobiigado, es iibre. Muy diferenie a las 40,000 muje-res orientates que trabajaran en la zafra y laboresagricolas que la misraa Radio Habaaa Cuba aos in-

& dia anterior a la dedaraeidn difamataria.

¥1 baae, SIR ecbargu, no « a**;* para Ic* mssei MFC *ii n

Equip*** de Matriso«o»^ d< fea dSstiaias. pano-

!la v Cark« Sateaa.

Esiov es «l :u^x dd destisrro por donde han pa«adodos vacxs y iStaK pasando por tercera vez k» devotesde Ios 126 nrjslcipio* de Cubs. Hay dsswrrados ile lo-de* las itig&rss \ muy abandarstemente- Han peregrlaa-do mov^doc ueicainestt iwar «l aroor porque selo us«iplritu <|Be ssa& es capas de de\«r su oorazoB arrite,Han pasado rogando y unlsidose a las de aUa paa-iitiido ea mm numo*, en « a presos, ea d suftiuiientodtf as ptteMto-

E3 Mtmua«fi» «ra la etpresisn de s ie pweblo queno ofcida* ^ae «>s&iKa en *u desttero poR|ue se halaiWsdo a tA, pe«|«ft w> se tsiigna a no «sr fibre y si•e fe <Seflt to oporsiuidad atododpueblo en Cuba tam-

lo latrtau Sera aim obra smbo&a, no

H Monumento teadrA UNMO8EO. En el gaardare-naos Huestrag rkpiezas que no soa ai ei oro ai ia plataSIBO pri3Kdpalmenie ias cartasde los presos *pte tin afatta-daniemeiie hemos reco^do. Esedaiaorearfto^rtnaes-tro tesoro porque d vate mas qae todo io demas. Lasbalsas y pajueSas «abarcaciOQes dicsj mucho mas delo que an couHinista podria ver. Sooellesfimonio de queun pueblo btisea — arriesgando si vlda — ei ser Mbre.

EI pabellon no es tan grande como lopinfexs, DO serasuficiente para IDS actosdelosdevotospoKiiteen d. exilioias famiiias permanaxn fssmo ea ia Cubadeanles uaiday son miles ias famiiias que se acercan. La ermSa qae-dtara en io alto porqwe queremos hacer oraci.dn, porquecreemos en la oracion. Creemos y queremos mantenernuestra fe bien viva hoy con mas razon que nunca por-que hemos eonocido el aieisnso en aaesSra propia carae.

En la escena de Betania, caando ia Magdalena de-rramara su frasco de per&ixie sobre los pies del SeSoraubo tan solo una queja y ftie la de Judas. "Qae des-perdtdo" y lo diatoulo diciendo que podia ser repartidoa los pobres. El no era eapaz de ansar y le dolia queotros amaian. Que penosa es esfe escena.

Queremos amar, queremos levantar tea sigao doadese raegue y se recuerde a todos. Lo queiemos fe'miiartodos no con dinero robado sLno con nuesteo sacrifidoporque El es el signo de amor.

Aqui no nos pele&mos ni buscasttos ningnu provecbopropio-Tan solo queremos qae el aeilio le cfiga Biea-aventurada como todas las geoeraciQiies y bacer jaatoa Hlaisncaiarocfeamorcapazdeguardar y hacw crecerporque much© odio han sembrado ea naestra Serra ytrafan con gprandes eftfiierzos {te coaservartos.

Que esia obra como tantas que puedau stirpr es e!exiikt sirva para que nos veamos «jmo una sola fa-HiiBa que le ha tocado vi\»ir una miaatsa bistoria la queviviera Maria en los prte»os mamentos cte ser Madre:to de) destlcrro y que como JSBa, porque. Io pu»o todoeo tas i»&»o* del todo poderoso podsaaos i^r^sar para,bacwr sa sombre una vlvenci& «a todo aaertro pwrfsio:la Caridad.

23, Ifftt Peg* 21

!os

| C EI.E81AXTE O Safer « t « * •~ Y COC SB f

, ti

* Cristo y *s aasor£ LEC1OS: i a resptsestm a .as oraconts d*

&vi«at>!$. asda* Ia» per- =|

5 2 % j * seas detribada* las _d«l prtJwHSw y I« eacnuu«at*jtn racial. 3

si Seftur. 1= 3. Par Ia pax. ia eonSaras y !a eajiias ensnt Ia 5

•Is y eacaaRtren uaa aay&r s*guntsai KI U 5

cEd Ifesp*?. ABCfJ. para ^ut p«s«la cinSRUSur 5

P A R A ^ o n £ l u s ' o n e s Continentales del MFC

LOS QUE HOY SE CASAN

f S.

= ft. Qat ia paz <fe CnsJo akance a ;gd?»; Tos qae

= 7. Par tmfcse ios aqvu pres*nies» par* tjttr ic«pa^~ , ijsiisck#s de Crisio de panici-

s« ctmpn cs ;a sagrada

MB quinfeiias personas,representarjies de dieciime-ve pajses, celebraron a finesdel pasado aflo el QulntoCong-res© Inleramericanodel Moviimento Familiar?Cristian© en Santiago deChile.

Faeroa naatrimoniosyjo-veses mnktes bajo uo temaconjure " S mundo de Iosquae hoy se casau."

Los resultados de esasreunioites que se realfeanca-da ires aflos, asi como laseoncltisioaes de la AGLA( entidad que UBC a los pre-sldeates nadonales) que se-siono para trabajar sobrelas coociusioaes delos asam-bleistas, fueroa expuestospor Itw esposos Domingo yMatHde Quarraeino, presi-d e n t del MFC eo Argenti-na, en una enirevista ea elsersmnario "Esquiu," deBuenos Aires.

He aqui un eciracso desus cleclaraciones:

Fonnadora de peisonasEl primero de los objeti-

vos paxticulares que el Mo-vimknto Familiar Cristianodetermine en Hueria Gran-de, Cordoba, siguiendo lalirtea de MedelMn, es quelas familias sean fonnado-ras de personas, "guaxdia-na y promotora de la digni-dad hamana y de sus valo-res, frenie a las nuevas for-mas de esclaviruddelasocie-dad coniemporanea."

Esto implica que cadaeonyuge debe tomar a sucargo la plena realizationdel otro; que la pareja de-be orientar a sus hijos enel aprendizaje de la liber-tad: que esa mision se ex-

. tiende a todo el nucleo fa-miMar (no solo a los hijos)y a los que se vineulen coneL

Edueadora en la fe"Corresponde a la fa-

milia redescubrir su caracterde 'Iglesia domestica' y su

mision evarsgelizadora."" Esftincion ineludible at* los oa-

dres la formationde sus hyas dtnie

cia r.asta q«c .isre y cons- =

| CELEBBAK7&: Padre ss as v»iantad q-j

§ nuestto nencaao. R^p«r«4e ns-«s;ra«« «-j;pUc3» SS par®, qae unidos lisas «s«tiha8eiesrts •«• UJX» a =5 Ios otros. aos asjasios m&$ Srrossaja a a. Te I

k» peeMn»£ por Cristo. KasEra SaS«r. 5

Un O/rso Para los *

Que Pieman Cosarse

x a : « j v «j asubtto fa-

Un nuevo curse de prepa-racion al Matrimoiuo seraofreddo en Idiorna espaftola las pare] as de novios queplanean reeibir ei sacramen-to del matrunonio en losproximos meses.

EI curso se ofrecera lunes5* miercoles ios dias 26 y 28de enero y 2 y 4 de febrero,coraenzando a las 8 p.m. enla iglesia de San Juan Boseo.

Estara dirigido por el Pa-dre Angel VUIarooga, diredordiocesano del MovimieatoFamiliar Cristiano y las char-las seran ofreddas por saeer-dotes, mediccM, psicologos y

matrimonjos que trabajan enel apostolado faumHiar.

Aqueilas personas quehay an redbido d sacra-mento del maliim-OGio, sinhabe<? redbido este carso depreparacion, paeden laiu-bien partidpar en el nusmw,I^as inscripe'iones se kaesidixiismo dia 26, un mpmeffloa n t s de eomenmr las cfaar-Jas, que induyai lopictK a>-sno ajBoryfeiiadadenelnja-trimonio, eS matrijnoaio es

• un sacramento, raalrimonioy sexo, medicos hablan so-bre el aialrimoiJio y parsjascasadas expiiears susjrlencias matrimoniales.

de k A6LA— "La familia eomo fenaadora de personas

y promotora del degarroHo."E3 objetivo del MFC queda expresadocomoslgae,

en base al trabajo realizado por te presldaitesde 19 paises, taniendo en cuenta las conclusloaesdelos asambleistas:1. Promover Ios valores huaianos y erisiianos de

la familisL2. Cada pais elegplra libremeide Ia estructura mas

adecuada, la que debera ser diuamiea y flecibte.3. Pueden pertenecer al MFC todas las famiilas

de buena voluntad.El MFC en America Latina es uno en objefi%?o

y responsabilidad, pero emplea diversos medicssegun lo requieran las familias concretas a lasque sirve.Es necesario hacer consdente a todos ios miem-

bros de esta unidad latinoamericana y su impor-tancia.Ser miembro del MFC implica, a la familia quelo acepte, un compromise consaente y penna-nente con el continente y con la Iglesia.La actitud del MFC debe ser de total disponibi-

lidad apostolica en el marco de lo familiar.

Promotora"£«

tks-arrottol*t femiita

Curnpla cor. a s :arsa fcnr.a-cora de pemsaas coa satsl-4o socfe y ds educadkjraen aaa fe viva y ica comeisz-ara a1ora «W desarrojlo. Tenanan-do asi comiama. de sa res-poasabildsd cotnuaitana,ceMBpietarA su cwmaildo siqerce la fmaeioB de eiaida<le «riBdes sociaks, si pro-m u « e la jsistiaa, ei resp^o>• el aasor hada todos. iosho-sssbres., «p«iaia»enfe ha-cia los mas sacesltados-

Aiendveado a esios pua-toa, ci H w A a t e procaraqu« sas ginp-os s«an WBP-da<teas cornunidades hu-man as %• crisfianas, no aje-nos a la accion pastoral de

Cyrso deCuitura CubanaEn la Universidad

B program* cfe Cuibira OeCeha

4.

a

"Se debe biKcar la per-feaaon de los. servieioB vo-nimiifarics esisleates y vol-carse a la promooon inte-grai de la familia,. sobre to-do de las masca proeesode action sociaL En cuaatoa la Instituddn. con«po»-de al MFC asumi.r la re-presajtacion de !a familiacomo euerpo interraedlo einierveair en forma dinsmi-ca en el proceso de cambioy Iransforajacton.

Por supaesto que el ea-mino no es faeiL Esta Qenode obstaculcs, Ios de todoslos dias. Son las tribulacio-nes de la que nos faabla SanPablo. "Las riquezas de-lafamilia son deseonoeldas.No hay conciencia de susposibiiidades.*'

v«rsidad de Miami .se dispo-se a faMar »a aog^'o cuisoo&o. 2S as%a^Bt»s que tses-dm a r»iH>aAr a! feleifede la ootnutudad de feablahjsj*aaa de MSaisi* sbazcactodesde la ""Coiuparacion *ieIos ^tedlos t ^ a l e s de tas£sta*tas LraMtw y Cuba" has-ta das** de guMarra y caii-cfcjB cabana pasando porPriudpios de IBM o ftibii-cisiad,

Las dascs aMuensaraii #proximo•" Jueves, 29 de ai»-TO. y loe interesados piiedeeobteser ajayor isfonnacioifsUaisaiMio al Dr. Luis Rodri-guez Molina o a ia sefioritaMavda Fsratodee al d f o

i

riot « Part* I. p

r- M M * . SLSJ » CO js ia.

iha. SSSSB Tti<fert- Mm-

f» Laa Catdo* yII- JaevDiri -an'es Ite

CcMaaaidad!Dr. few* Vmsqms. MCniaxr3 v Cisdo.- Cafciss - Lily

jr l a0 cSolSss y Ttoite - Dr. Rfcanfeii l

da* MsMKtaw - Ot. gimrf

CDCMXCMI y Fublkiisife -

Ftasdtado. haoe ya caatroafios, «l PregraiBa de Calta-ra Cubana, qoeeomenz<i contnes pnj&oras y tsefata es-todiaBtes, tnada ya COB loseanrow qoe se -ewaaeran .a<»afij«iKS6B y mn alrededorde 400 estudiantte.

Cada CMrso, oiteex dasssde bjoray media dedurarfoa,una noeiie a la seanaaa,da ramie dies o quince sana-nas y d costo de ia matrieu-Ia Quctoa entre 10 y 40doiares.

He aqui uaa reladon deesos cursoe.que se ofreceranen las aulas dd Koubek Cen-ter, 27 Ave y 3 Si, S.W.:

a SSSBOTS XtirteaniEricanc De E*3u-sffiSoa - Dr. Bolan^fe BipisMsa. la-'ses, 8 p.m.

- Dr. Ls* F. Caabl Sii«c©fcs,BSbajoy-Ctana-OKOro- MsdoSaa-t i Laaes.

ta tone*.Siolto <fe Ckaaay PioCHttEai^totOe fSs^^aw - .toss L<5£» Csnsfe

DKsej© y Ba^secftfa - Mario SanS.Mastes.?riBc%Aw Be J»aWJciiJad -Jew Mor-tis. Mattes <te 8 a 9:36 p.ns.Bciai%los A iBM - ifeaando Moa-tsiro. Maxtcs de 7:30 a S:30 p.B5.

I©s sabasloa pesr ia rnanana, de 10a 12:00 a.m, JKJF on peoodo de 15sesaaas. EI coslo da cada carsoseradeSIS.OO.Balks I^iamsles e p

- CdinsJa Donaldson,jado Ea Metal - Margarita Lo-

- Juais Lops: CondiColori«fc»- Mario Santi.Ptetara 08 Pais^e - FaShcFtalaoMstes IM DJS«MI -Soiiaco.Arie tansa&o - Paul Diaz.

If you own securitiesOrder this hook TOD A Y!

Security Owner's

STOCK 6UIDI

THE VOICE PresentsThe S&P

JUST ARRIVEDYEAR-END STOCK GUIDE WAIL COUPON TODAYSacfudes High, Low mi Closing Prises for Year"This is your opportunity to receive ac an appre-ciable saving the famous S&P Year-End StockGuide that Is regularly sold ar $2.50 a copy. De-signed to give you a meaningful ac-a-glancepicture of the stocks you own or think of buying,the Stock Guide with irs wealth of practicalfacts on over 4,750 stocks can be yours now for$1 when you return the Coupon.Resenre your copy today. Copies limited.

IF1

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Please mail we . . . . copses at the. 1969 S&P YEAREND STOCK GC'DE ac Si each, for which I ?sn en-closing check or money order, i unce-ssariJ that 1 willreceive delivery a*= soon as book censes off p u s s ,about siisi-jaauary 1S~O.

STATE ZIP

Page 22 rm VOICE Florida January 23, 1970

3 Cemetery Lots

Two lots, Bade Memorial Ceme-tery St. Patrick section. $300.68'-7860 aft. 5:80 PM.

5 Personals

STEP LIVELY - Dancing instruc-tion for year club or church or-ganization — ai YOUR place orours: Special group raies. Aisopvt. instrncuion, KORMANDANCING STUDIO. 565-0000,Ft. Laud.

77 Help Wanted-Female

Companion for elderly lady, mastbe Spanish speaking. Live in.References required. 565-4473

WANTED - 5 women to sell thewonderful Permyrich bra. High

i earnings, new car furnished whenj qualified. Call or write, Tina's| Pennyrich Salon, 86 Miracle Mile.

Coral Gabies. 445-0009SARA COVENTRY

JEWELRY685-2833

Mature assistant hoaseparent towork in Catholic Home forChildren. Understanding ofchiMreirs needs essential. Phone238-2381 between 9 a.m. - 2 p mand9 - 10p.m.

Forming group of entertainers todo free shows at convalescenthomes asd hospitals. Heed pianoplayer and guitar-player. Othermusicians welcome. GeneMyers, 621-1253. aft. 3 P.M.

10 Loans

We buy oW GsM aM Diamoosis.

LE MONDE JEWELERS8499 Coral Way.

til Schools & Instructions

PIANO and Organ' lessons.Popular or Classical, Lessons infctfr home or one of manyftudios. Robert WMtford MnsicSchool. 754-0441.

WE TUTOR ALL SUBJECTSFROM 1ST GRADE THRUCOLLEGE. SCHOOL OF TO-TORIXG. §45-4842.

Conversational Spanish classes atmy home for adults. CaH SJMIOT

KELLY GIRL 374-61UMIAMI'S FIRST

NAME FOR TEMPORARYOFFICE WOMEN

$23 a day, to clean twice a weekand iron in apt. No children.Write; 32 CaimJen Drive, BalHarbour.

18 «effsWonf«f-Mafe

JANITORSemi-retired 6-10 P.M. top pay.

52M500 or 374-5444Maintenance man wasted forlocal work. Moderatefcr dalted Inone or more trades. Usualienefiis. Reply to ¥oke, Box 61,Tte Voice 6201 Bisc. BlvdMii33138WANTED — Itenn CAMERA-MAN WITS TALENT. ANDBiSJICATHM TO THE APOS-TOLATE. SHORT HOOKS. NOPAY BUT BEtMSHLY- RE-WARDf.CALL fSf-62«, s e t 214.

ass K. s w , — asei w, MOWXSB m m

25JIH H, FAIBOIED

T9 Help Wanted—Male

21 PositionsWanted—Female

MATH TEACHERExperienced, elementary throughcollege. Also Spanish & Tutoring.633-57(5

WANT ADS42 Miscellaneous For Sate

Mature, experienced, certifiedteacher wants position inparochial or private school,primary preferred. Will goanywhere. Write Box 85. TheVoice, rasi Bisc. Blvd., Miami33138.

3?

1961 Olds 83 four door, powerbrake and steering. Radio.Mechanically good. f2X. Phone754-6129

38 Pets For Sole

New items. 1/2 price or less.Shalimar and Arpege perfumes.Mens shoes, sz. 8-D, shirts sz. 16-32, better class raincoats. Men'sluggage, 3/8" drill, sprayperfumes-copy of famous brands,$1. EACH. Radio, clock, otheritems. 421 E. 7 St., Hialeah. 9-11A.M. or 6:30-8 P.M.

Typewriters for rent. Electric,|10 - f 12 per month. IBM's $15.Free Delivery. Rent may applyon purchase. Baker TypewriterCo. 8205 Bisc. Blvd. 751-1841.

42A Sewing Machines

Cairo SScottiesAKC champions at stud. Florida'stop winners. 821-4564.

GREAT DANE POPSBeautiful fawns and hrindies.taring protectors, 6S54S17

•40 Goads

Draperies for sale Custom MadeiHalf Price. ©t-S88i J

Sewing machines for rent. $8month. Rent may apply onpurchase. Free deliver. BakerSewing Machine, 751-1841.

JB.A 7 W Rentals

Over 100, Low Rental ToolsSMTTTY'S Hardware & Paint Co

B3»NW7Ave. S81-44S1

42 i 49 Air Conditioning

HOMEMADE PATCH QUILTIKfereot pafiwjs,

S.W. IS S t 33*335.

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCEReverse and straight, '8$ modelChrysler M7-66H 9*7-4256.

8 l*

KRAEER FUNERAL HOME

ii Sexh

8 '»» ICmwr. f*mtrj£ Bitstur

—.H.r f; .sf?P*:.j-.

WADLINGTONFUVERAL HOME

Bollywood's Oid*»f140 S, Dixie H»y.

32S4SSS

mm

«STSftVlCE STATIONPki-mp •& BAety Sara-Ire

f*t S-2WS

SERVICE

Af

1185 H-W. 34A S*«et

STATION GUIMCOMSOLT THE

SERVICE STATIONHEAR TOO

FOR ALL YOURAUTO NEEDS

ST.

ftsprtetot

1 CRANDON SLVD.K£Y BISCAYfclE

EM 1-5521

ST. /AMES

JGHETS

fiULF SERVICEPHi 681-S1S3

John PostoreSJa, Prop.

59 Apartments ForSalc

DUPLEXTerrif ic value, modern,spacious, 2 bedrooms each side.Near St. Mary's Cathedral.$32,000. Owner will finance.Carmine Bravo, Realtor 754-4731

60 Apartments For Rent

M. B. Newly decoratedefficiency, 41st St. area. Walkingdistance, St. Patrick Church.Season. 531-3771

72 Lois For Sale

SACRIFICE11,500 cash-residential lot at PortSt. John, off U.S. 1, across fromCape Kennedy. Write Voice Box65,6201 Bisc. Blvd., Miami 33138.

1% acre lot, close-in Orlando,high and dry. $1,990, terms. 688-8759

73 Homes For Safe

Northeast

New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, air cond.Garage, patio. 225 N.E. 152 St.,255 N.E. 164 Terr., 15840 N.E. 2Ave., $3,GGG down. Builder.

Hollywood

LOOKINGfor a pool home for a small familyfor tinder $20,000.00? We have i tInMiramar.

983-2096Eves. 983-8427 Eves. 98S-5455

I h, O'BRIEN REALTYRealtor

6328 Pembroke RoadHollywood, Florida

Miami Beach

NORTH BAY ISLAND '•OFF 79th St. CAUSEWAY

Terrific value! Fabulous;secluded island rancher. Double;corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 3 separate:baths. 35 ft, heated pool Man>;extras. ,000 down. ]Carmine Bravo, Realtor T54-473I'

Horthwsst

THINK POSITIVEHOLLYWOOD

2-2, family room, carport, largeeat-in kitchen, air cond., carpets,drapes. Very close to PembrokePines. ?13,O0O p-ri^ting mortgageat 6%. Price, $21,500

3-2, Florida room, carport,drapes, aluminum awnings,17,900 down lets you assume ajlS.OOO existing mortgage at 6%.Priee.^1,500

3-2, Florida room, carport,carpet, drapes, aluminumawnings, $7,900 down lets youassume a $13,300 existingmortgage at 6%, Total payments,$106, including taxes andinsurance.

3-1, carport, corner lot. Largeeat-in kitchen, air cond., awnings.Screened porch. Low payments off87 per month, including taxesand insurance. |6,700 will assumeexisting mortgage of $11,000 at6%. Total price, $ 17,700

NEW BRAND NEWImmedia te occupancy.Waterfront property, access toocean. 3-2, family room, extrasgalore. 80% mortgageavailable. Priced low at $3S,5GG

HOLLY«OOi HiLLSExtra large, 4-2 pool home.Family room, 2 car garage,central air and heat, carpetingand drapes, well, pomp aadsprinklers. When you come to seetliis house, pack a lunch. Morerooms than you can possibly nse.eS.OOO first mortgage at 6 " .Second mortgage available toqualified buyer. Priced at $49,900

YES

ISI3.509 BUYS THIS CBS J

DUPLEX, NEAR BUS jCALL 757-4968 TG SEE

FiEBER REALTY. REALTORS!. 3 bedroom. I bath home, in;i vicinity of Miami High School on;

lol raxlaO. $6.08) down. Call 642-i5680. i

R e a l t y and Ce. '"notIncorporated). Registered RealEstate Broker. S7J0 HoifvwoodBlvd.. Hollywood, Fla. *OpenSundays. Days. 987-5916. Eves.987-8396

REAL ESTATE

AT YOUR SERVICE jRentals, acreage, homes aad'

[apartment houses, property *S management. List with us for.:| quick action. Contact James:j Daily or Ray Sullivan, members 1[ Little Flower Parish. :

Holiday Shores Realty Inc.Realtors 2338 Hollywood Blvd.33-0531. * j

« S .O**» Forty fi»» Y«s«

FlOEiDA LtffO5

SWISS®'OKMKAKIHSiNG

mMM. HOSWADKc* Houn 9-3 ?M

Philip D. Lewis, Inc.Res! Estate investments

PAiB BEACH CSUST*31 WEST 2Bth STREET

Riviera BeacH*«Vi 4-0201 |

SERVICE GLMDEACCQUtfTittG CARPEHTSKS

MOXIHLY SER\TCEREAS0XABLE RATES

i REFRIGERATOR REPAIR

AtR CONDITIONING

PARTING - lasrfe ostade, \Carpestrv wwk aim n a b * ;eteiswg ~%s& waO wasfciag Fnse Je s DeeMess.Si

FREE ESTIMATESFactory tramed jnectaaks

AtrCmsii PL4-28S3

SEWING MACHINE REPAIRS

CARPBT E ROOFCt£AMMC*COATJMG

Ar CosAttKi^ Corp.Sesateiti«i ate Oomtnerettl

P S

;" Xew #nt foaat. «fe«^ eieasI process" Aati-msWew ©dsr

adfe fife Rs^^^gliali CK-ia» Dries I kr

CH AKIJQS THE PAINTER J CLEAN. 99 - COAT, $33. TILES..„ «GRAVEL — BONDED. WAULS

' A M « < 2 1 POOLS. PATIOS'.

SEWING MACHINE REPAIRS

I 25 YEARS experience. We repairj all tvpes se-wing machines, rtsr

free "estimates withoat obligationScaSi891-5aot.

!A£VgKS. POOLS. PATIOS,i BRICKS. WALKS. 947-4HK IT3-

Safe a ^ , ... ._. ...._...moskls Suy coo! ait easv wa* \ l-^Wf MOttEfl SEM.VJCE

iisaiu Pamia^Itsertorsar Extstiors

« e l Class SSTMsSlI

RCX)F CLEANED —S!2ia»B ^ F PAINTED - $35 smLICENSED - INSUREDMfrCHEX - 688-33S8

SIGHS

Lumen de Laroine1 Jotfl the 3rd order of St. FrancisI for true peace,j Write Bos 1046, Ft. Laud. 33302.

AMHIMGS

Cttstca

E.&umaS4ss Oscar

• SO&MI LAWN WJWER CO. fetteiaiftiSartteeafsi Parts

" i TWO SHfitlSi TOvoc ssw sa AW

aa! Ji* Qulitv JUitrii UUlu j PRINTINGM A S T E R H C X 5 F E R ~ S I N C E j " n ^ L ., ,•S32 Est and SpecmciUems ©3-

SfGNS

EDVITO SIGNSraiiCKS WALLS GOLD LEAF

»X,W.S4ttaSt. PLS-782S

VENETIAN BUtfD SERVICE .

New Venetian BlindsCORNICES — REFBfiBHEDREPAIRED — YOUR HOMESrcadoaft-l lSIHWllTSl.

688-2757

PHOTOGRAPHY

«O¥1«C JW0 STORAGE

AddiBails S{

1 s Robert f^RALGASLES Pi IISBING«f

Water Hea!«- Repurt A. Sale*P K E

JOHN MAXV1LLEGUARANTEED ROOF

'•• Metnta«r of Chamber of

AMERICANSEft

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THE VOICE Mieai,

Union Pmm

Have Killers Of Yablonskis Slain?BY MSGS. CHARLES OWEN RICE

PITTSBURGH - .-XC< - Suddendeath is no stranger to the coal fieldsMiners awl their families simply lire withJhe prospect of men's being crashed.burned or choked to death. But death atthe turn Jf the year came to the coalmining district of southwesternPenttsvivasia in an unfamiliar and morefrightful fashion.

Joseph A. 'Jock- Yabiunski. his wifeMargaret and his daughter Charlotte•were shot to death, probably during thenight of D«c- 30.

Tie agiy deed profoundly shockedcoal misers and tfeeir families — andt&ese people were not the sort to be epseieasily by tfee harshaess and eraeHy of life,or of other temaa b«Bgs. Men have beenMlled by other mea in tie coal fields bot ifhas bees a !oBg, tang time since a sun'sfamily was killed along with him.

The Pennsylvania State Police andthe FBI have been understandably closemouthed about their investigations. IIthey bave leads on the sillers, they wouldbe ill advised to tell us. Substantialrewards have been posted by the UnitedMine Workers of America and the PolishNational Alliance. The union offer is thelarger. SaQJKlQ: the alliance. $10,000.

Personally I believe that if the killersare revealed they will 6e f mind to have al-ready departed tfais world and those whoeonnnissloseil tbem, while ander sas-pkrkta, will aot be iadictaMe.

The Question ss. Was this motivatedunion politics?

Only a month before the killings itwas made official that Joseph Yafalonski

had it>s$ in his b«i far the presidescy uf UseUnited Mine Workers agsits! theincumbent WA «T**nj-' Eknle Jscfc. »fthe dead man was knows, did aw acceptthe veniici of lhe un&a roamers fcilvnwed lc keep en fighting ami f evealtag

He was in a position to reveal, as ihad already revealed dunnft thecampaign

YabJo»sii*s sons, Kemetb sadJoseph, both tam-jm, « e is Wasi«gt«»-Pa.- aad the atfcer ia Washington. D.C.,bad no qualms aboat btasjisg ikt uaiosa ad demanding that the leadership of ikeaakro stay away from the fuaeral arf t i*wake. I was e&irf eseeelefjraat at ifcefHBer al Mass.

Important political figures from U»locality and the eossiy. twwever. weresolid m attendance and that tells machabout Yablonsfci, who led a fusJ andvigorous political existence far more Ihana quarter of a century its Utst pan $f thecountry He was King-maker sm apower, and his clout was statewide.mostly but noi exclusively, on theDemocratic side of politics.

He had just established temsetf as aman to watch and develop when I met himin the late i?30s. Other rising young mesof labor had their eyes OK the total CIOpictare but Yabiooskt focused en theUnited Mine Workers. He rose in the baili-wick of Phillip Marray bat he was withJohn L. Lewis ail the way and when thesplit came in a few years he west will:John L and delivered for John L.

Yabicmski was very important ir/Lewis because he beat Murray andMurray's men within tfceir own districtof the mine workers EventuaHv Jwfc

r-3se Jo mitre sf ttot dtt*nei.

execsttse boardhe &zd a p m i deal sf tedp

Xader stfe* doused Useaegled «>< ffeg mem sM tts waltectng MIiuxsry. was attraeteil ia*cfcaTinisg a$ fee was toigts

Josepft t Rask J rDC laywer aad psJitietsa. asd c Jserhbersl ref <jnn«rs stepped sp to help

But me I'M** fead s system a«d iradi-urns- Th* HBKRB is jsst a ^e!€?«» of itsformer ?«SI- < d J«fci Lews' ifjciaiooalsay K«r, fcaife. petsmt fessis c^sirscts

d is* s e r e as the ooces was bastend b? Qie

fcsuista^f. U» mansctand Jnec!aiia3tt«ii Boyle's I«3ffiet5i«p

csr* *>f ?fce same wits less drive aai

from srifs*? eJajrefe llwj were tenetf WegKeaiae fnesfi} agats bat **• #«rt ailfen$ir and! promised escfe eSter that

« ? woekS see n?ore «€ «acfc oUasrYSH&MSIU. like Has* asmter mm m

feis Este 5%, ««<e«f *a give iws We m«res^oslscaae*. frasSed l» sacrrfice andserve Hss aesili may 4s- irfeat his MeciwW &x A iw* ieal rasy e«rte to l iemmers and U»eir «ar st lile

So aswfe 4^esst« *JS Shejfiat raar sose aaa wbeiU*r are cas pvem il irsBi t^ts^i e«fi«r c«rnipied ur

IK 5l« n«nes as is Mmaad ffc«ff y«» nsvt ajtly so

talent. Tfce araws have towi.ft mana$enent sni Use

as !fc«e da>? *«en a jreod. nwacB tfee rafste* is a ramy- Bui good

m e a t e w risea ;rs the pass aai may r s eagaui How long entil Jisey hear £t»e siren

At ^Kesattfe Va^ntdd rwe is ihe ctertk »Ifc*d feeem UW le iai s«®ety^| l» «y ami3Ubepre-p*r momeal I br«Jgfei baa totte*f « - He «aM lias Ms fetter

Today ?fc# yevog. of the w<3rfc«rsless ifealistie Uaa 'fee yaam? ef ibe

mnst affect ttern s*M«r or iatsar awl <*ae

te last lew BKWH» % ^!«• the misers aM. «f»as* tfce •emxmehg4lea^ewWp as l ie gr«sl«sl atd fc^ «f Mslife. Tfcs aad itere I saw tfee faster ia *sew iigia.

Back ia Ute 30s I had off teated st themarriage el Margaret aad J«^fe Wetes beer, very close be! oar closeness wasa victus cf l ist p-a%gr matter ef Usecaarrei &€i"*€er. giauis asd- mbiiw wenev«r cpiarrelsd. we did soi s«« eacfcsrfher asiri I *as iraisferrfd 10 Was-fciBp-;ar. Coasly sr. ;55t as pastwr of i&e parish

A t « f rste l ie sp«f q^c witt be «• tteH I M a»i tfce a^^Uy a»4 ae laager -stilt

ln« amafe saiaes

Tfce sf^rt^fct may preteci thep a ^ the a&tgriiy of lite |»t*atasi

A ne«r day ma> be dawnuig tow thecoat miner, fell praisises aai oraterysave bees hw rr.35S diet for ?JJ Jong tfeal f»isay be pardea«i a cenais :osr tradecynicism as he ^aits t-v see what willtapper, sest

Cdl. Mclntyre Resigns;Abp. manning Succeeds

'Continued trass 2)Paltus and coadjutorarchbishop of New York.

On Feb. 7.1948. Pope PiusXII named ArchbishopMclntyre to head the See ofL«s Angeles, and he wasinstalled in St. Vibiana'scathedral on March 19, 1948by Cardinal Speliman. He wasnamed Cardinal in 1853.

EDUCATIONArchbishop Manning

made bis studies at MungretCollege in Limerick. Irelandand at St. Patrick's Semi-nary. Menlo Park, Calif. Hewas ordained to the priest-hood in Los Angeles, Jane 16.1934.

After ordination, he stud-ied at the Pontifical Gre-gorian University in Rome

from 1935 to 1938. taking adoctorate in cannon law. Hewas serving as secretary tothe iate Archbishop John J.Cantwell of Los Angeles inAugust. 1346. when he wasnamed auxiliary bishop of LosAngeles. He was consecratedOct. 15.1846.

When Pope Paul dividedthe Monterey-Fresno dioceseinto separate Sees on Oct. 25.1967. he named Bishop Man-ning to be- the first Ordinaryof Fresno, He was installed isthat See on Dec. 15. 1967. OnJune 11. 1989. it wasannounced thai BishopManning had been namedtitular archbishop of Capreaeand coadjutor with right ofsuccession to Cardinal Mc-Intvre.

Funeral Liturgy CelebratedFor Father Robert Brush

Msgr. David Bushey andMsgr. William F. McKeeverwere chaplains to ArchbishopCarroll. Father John F.McKeown and Father LouisRoberts were chaplains toBishop Fitzpatriek.

Born in Ocala in 1913,Father Brash spent his earlyyears in Gainesville and laterwas graduated from St. PaulHigh School, Daytona Beach.Three years later he enteredSt. Charles College, Catons-ville, Md. and completed hisstudies for the priesthood atSt . Mary S e m i n a r y ,Baltimore.

He was ordained for theDiocese of St. Augnstine onMay 8, 1943, in St. PaulCimreh, Daytona Beads, andsubsequently, served as anassistant in the Cathedralparish, St. Angnstine; LittleFlower parish, Coral Gables,the Cathedral parish, Miami;and Sacred Heart parish.Lake Worth.

Assigned to organizeNorth Dade's Visitationparish in 195S, Father Brushwas named founding pastor ofVisitation Church when theparish was formally estab-lished on May 25 of that year.

la 1951 Father Brash was

i from Page I)

appointed pastor of Our Ladyof Lourdes Church ,Melbourne, where he serveduntO 1955 when he was namedpastor of St. Mel Church, OpaLocka, now known as OurLady of Perpetual Helpparish.

After the Diocese olMiami was established heserved as first chairman ofthe Diocesan LiturgyCommiss ion and theCommission on ChurchMusic. Early in 1959 he wrotea series of articles for TheVoice explaining the role ofthe laity in church worship.

Father Brush also servedas first director of theDiocese of Miami LayRetreat League and had beenNorth Dade Deanerymoderator of the MiamiDiocesan Council of CatholicMen. He was a member of thepersonnel committee of theSenate of Priests.

He is survived by a sister-in-law, Mrs. Marcese Brush:a nephew, Charles H. Brush.Jr.; and a niece. Mrs.Suzanne E. Nowicki, all ofCenterline, Mich.

Burial was in the familyplot in Mt. Olivet Cemetery,Detroit.

December 11,1969

Re*. War McfCae, C.SS.R. ' ' • .Lifaoiian Booksiiguori. Me ' ' ' •

Dear.Fathe-MeKee:

Set long age I was al the. point of ebuefcing werftfaiaf,! toid myseU. thebe A with everybody else, from aow oa It's just mm sa l my. family. I

I was sick of the mass the worfci is in, the gcwenuaeiit, the war, the notsas-d even the iae$sed-up Chsrch. I Jsad enough. That's it, ffo sore.

I told Fatter IStatJpispit bsw I .felt, tfe §a*s am Ae ixjck to lead,"'Keepiag Yoar Bafasce m the Modem Church." I d&kt't feel-ike msm&^ii.bat i did. It was suastuae ssittealy.-tsjfiffitf oat oa a coil, damp d&y. I ceailjneeded that saB$Mi*e.

Ttts book gsas me somethiiifi I aewer bad before. It helped me realeethat once I siedwstood why sud» eifaaseps happen io l i s world aad is t ieChurch, tbea I was ao longer so aftaM or dSseouiaged.

There mast be a tot of people ike ase nho get diseCBiiafed because, welive ia an unhappy wot!dL That's why I am writing this tetter. "K<ee$mq YourBalance ia the Modem Chaich" is a book that can help restore faith ia

for both Catholics and other Christians.Let people know about this book. Maybe it will help than lite it helped

me.

Sincerely,

J .TJ1{Detroit, Mich.)

God works in mysterious ways.

His help can sometimes be found in reading asimple, tittle book.

Are you completely satisfied with what isgoing on in the Church? Do you have ques-tions, doubts or misgivings?

"Keeping Your Baiance in the ModernChurch" is not B cure-ail. But it certainly isgood medicine for concerned-and disturbedChristians today.

Try i t It helped others.

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Page 24 THE VOICE Miami, Florida January 23, 1970