The Advocate - Jan. 4, 1962

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Transcript of The Advocate - Jan. 4, 1962

The AdvocateOfficial Publication of the Archdiocese of Newark, N. J., and Diocese of Paterson, N. J.

Vol. 11, No. 2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1962 PRICE: TEN CENTS

Predict Autumn OpeninFor the Vatican CouncilVATICAN CITY (NC)—The

Second Vatican Council willprobably begin in the autumnof 1962 although the Papal Bullconvoking the council set nodate for its opening, accord-ing to Vatican observers.

They pointed out that it willbe impossible for the councilto be held next spring becausethe preparatory work for ithas not yet been completed,but there is a strong likelihoodthat it will open in October.

It was because of the pre-paratory work yet to be donethat Pope John XXIII speci-fied only the year in which thecouncil will be held, the ob-servers stated.

THEIR REASONING on theprobable opening time for thecouncil goes like this:

Rome is extremely warm inth® summer and this seasonis traditionally vacation timeat the Vatican, so it is highlyunlikely that a council involv-ing the presence of more than3,000 persons will be held then.

This would put off the open-ing of the council until latefall or winter. Autumn would

be the more likely time be-cause the work would com-mence before the rainy andcold winter season sets in.

NO ANNOUNCEMENT hasbeen made on what non-Cath-olic representatives will be in-vited as observers at the coun-

cil. But Pope John alluded tothis aspect in his Papal Bullof Christmas Day convokingthe council.

In appealing for prayers forthe council's success, Jiestated: "To this chorus ofprayers we invite also allChristians of churches separ-ated from Rome, that thecouncil may be also to theiradvantage."

AFTER EXPRESSING thebelief that “many of thesesons are anxious for a returnof unity and of peace," thePope added: "And we knowalso that the announcement ofthe council has been acceptedby them not only with joy, butalso that not a few have al-ready promised to offer theirprayers for its success, andthrti they hope to send repre-sentatives of their communi-

ties to follow its work at closequarters.”

“All this is for us a reasonof great comfort and ofhope,” the Pope stated, "andprecisely for the purpose offacilitating these contacts weinstituted some time ago thesecretariat for this specificpurpose.”

The questions of who willbe invited as observers at thecouncil and when the formalinvitations will be made arematters to be discussed at a

meeting of the Central Pre-paratory Commission on Jan.15.

Miracles Studied

Bishop Neumann

Cause AdvancesPHILADELPHIA (NC)

Tlw medical commission of theCongregation of Rites in Romehas approved two miracles in

the beatification cause of theVenerable John NepomuceneNeumann, fourth Bishop ofPhiladelphia.

Archbishop John J. Krol ofPhiladelphit said he receivedinformation to this effect in a

cablegram from Rev. NicholasB. Ferrante, C.SS.R., postula-tor in Rome of Bishop Neu-mann's beatification cause.The Archbishop said this in-

formation was subsequentlyconfirmed by letters in regardto the same matter.

THE TWO MIRACLES al-leged in the beatification cause

of Redemptorist Bishop Neumann, who was Bishop of

Philadelphia from 1852 to iB6O,were approved by a board ofnine medical experts, accord-ing to the Mftrmation receivedhere. w

The officials in Rome saidthe decision approving the mir-acles is a striking advance inBishop Neumann's cause, andindicated it is possible hisbeatification could take placebefore the end of 1962.

ONE ALLEGED miracle in-volves a girl from Modena, innorthern Italy, who in 1923, atthe age of 12, was cured ofperitonitis. She is now aliveand the mother of three child-ren.

The other alleged miracle isthe case of a man from subur-ban Philadelphia who at theage of 19, in 1949, suffered afractured skull and multiple in-ternal injuries.

When he was regarded as

doomed by doctors, membersof his family and friends madea novena to Bishop Neumannfor bis intention. A relic of theBishop’s was applied to himand within a matter of hours

his condition improved. He was

discharged from the hospitalless than a month after he hadentered it and has since en-

joyed normal good health. Heis now married and the fatherof one child.

THE MEETING in Rome ofthe medical experts was thethird in a series of meetingsin regard to the miracles pre-pared in Bishop Neumann’sbeatification cause. In thefirst, two medical experts con-sidered the merits of the case,and in the second meeting fivemedical men went over thetestimony. Finally, the ninegave their decision.

Before a final decision on

the Bishop’s cause is reachedthere will be three major meet-ings by the Congregation ofRites: an ante-preparatory, at-tended by consultors of thecongregation; a preparatoryone, attended by the congre-gation’s consultors and Car-dinals; and the final or plenaryone, at which Pope John XXIIIwill be present, in addition to

the Cardinals and consultors.From the final meeting

comes the decision that a per-son is declared blessed, anda date is set for the beatifica-tion ceremony.

BISHOP NEUMANN, who‘'Was born in Bohemia in 1811,

died in Philadelphia on Jan.5, 1860. He had worked among

Germans in Niagara Falls,N.Y., before joining the Rc-demptorists. He is buried inthe crypt of St. Peter's Church,Philadelphia;

Aid VietnameseAACHEN, Germany (NC)

Headquarters of the German

Bishops’ Organization to EightEamine and Disease here hasannounced it has sent $25,000to aid victims of floods InVietnam.

Msgr. Shea Receives

Mariological AwardNEW ORLEANS - Msgr.

George W. Shea, rector ofImmaculate Conception Semi-nary, Darlington, was double-

ly honored by the Mariological

Society of America at its an-

nual meeting here last week.On Jan. 2, Msgr. Shea was

elected president of the so-

ciety, and, the next day, re-

ceived its annual award givento a distinguished theologianwho lias written on Mario-logical subjects. The awardconsists of a check and a

scroll citing his achievementsin this field.

MSGR. SHEA, a formerpresident of the Catholic Theo-logical Society of America,has served on the board of di-rectors of both societies. A

graduate of Canisianum Sem-inary in Sion, Switzerland, liehas written extensively on

theological subjects in period-icals and is a contributor to

Encyclopedia Brittanica, thenew Catholic Encyclopedia andThe Handbook of CatholicTheology.

Except for a period spent as

a Naval chaplain in WorldWar 11, Msgr. Shea lias beenat Darlington since 11)39. Hehas been a member of theeditorial board yf The Advo-cate since its inception and foreight years contributed a

weekly column, "The Faith inFocus."

On Sept. 21, 1061, Msgr. Sheawas appointed rector of Im-maculate Conception Seminaryby Archbishop Boland.Msgr. Shea

Unity...One Faith, One Lord,One Baptism

UNITY OCTAVE: This poster, whose theme “Unity...One Faith, One Lord, One Baptism” stresses the re-union of all Christians in a single flock under Christ,signifies the Chair of Unity Octave, Jan. 18-25. Duringthis period of eight days, special prayers will be of-

fered for the unity of all men in one Church.

Historians Told Valid Program

Of Federal School Aid PossibleWASHINGTON (NC) - A

priest who is a member of alaw school faculty assertedhere that a valid program offederal aid to non-public gradeand high schools can be op-erated in the fields of history,languages, science and mathe-matics.

Rev. Charles M. Whelan,S.J., of Georgetown Univer-sity law center, cited deci-sions of the U. S. SupremeCourt to support his conten-tion.

SPEAKING BEFORE a jointsession of the American Cath-olic Historial Association andthe Canadian Catholic His-torical Association meetingshere, Father Whelan said afederal program designed topromote education in certainfields “could not be unconsti-tutional simply because somefacilitation of religious instruc- v

tion in church-related schoolswould result.’’

Father Whelan said thatprior to 1947 “the Church-State issue in education was

... couched in terms of stateconstitutional provisions, notthe First or FourteenthAmendments.”

The issue widened in 1947when the U. S. Supreme Courtdecided the Everson case. Fa-ther Whelan said. At issuewas the constitutionality of aNew Jersey statute which au-thorized local school authori-ties to reimburse parents forcosts in transporting theirchildren to public and privateschools in a program for allschool children of the stateThe Supreme Court upheldthe statute.

“THE MAJORITY of thecourt, however, so worded itsopinion that a considerabledispute has arisen as to whythe court sustained the stat-ute.'' Father Whelan said.“Did they reject the argumentthat whatever aids religion is

unconstitutional, or did theydeny the statute aided reli-gion? In the current disputeover the inclusion of church-related schools in federal aidto education, this is one of themost (important questions.”

Father Whelan said the ma-

jority opinion in the case

"frankly recognized that theNew Jersey statute was an 'aidto religion,’ at leakt to the ex-tent that its absence would

have been a handicap.”He said the crucial problem

raised. by the Everson casemajority was not resolved bythe court. He said this prob-lem is how can the govern-ment in a society permeatedwith religion and irreligion,design and execute its pro-gram so as neither to estab-lish nor to prohibit serviceswhich result in benefits to re-

ligious citizens or institutions.“They sustained the trans-

portation statute because it as-

sisted all the children of thestate to acquire the seculareducation required by thestate, whether in a public or a

private non-profit school, andbecause the transportationwas not directly and imme-diately connected with actualreligious instruction of the

child,” Father Whelan said.

HE RECALLED two otherimportant decisions renderedby the nation’s highestthe McCollum case in 1948and the Zorach case in 1952.lie said:

"It cannot be understoodtoo carefully that what Mc-Collum decided is that the

government may not teach re

ligion in public schools, andthat what Zorach decided is

that the government may re

lease public school pupils dur

ing public school hours for re

ligious instruction outside the

public schools."Neither case deals with the

question whether the govern-ment may help support in-struction in, say, physics or

geometry, in private non-prof-it schools. ” Father Whelanemphasized.

The Jesuit said the SupremeCourt eas' some further light

on the problem by its recentdecision upholding the Sundaybusiness closing laws of \ari

ous states.

He said the key argumentin the cases was that the lawsoperated against conscientiousobservers of the Sabbath He

said the multiple opinions ofthe majority in the cases

make it impossible to disen-gage one ground on which the

justices agreed, but it is clearthe court sustained laws "de-signed to provide secular ben-efits to society chiefly a

common day of rest despitethe economic burdens result-ing from these statutes to re-

ligious groups."

"If government is allowedto achieve important civilpurposes despite the resultanthurt to religion, the FirstAmendment must permit gov-ernment to achieve importantcivil purposes despite the re-

sulting benefit to religion,”!■ athcr Whelan stressed.

THE AMERICAN historicalgroup gave its annual JohnGilmary Shea prize to Rev.John Courtney Murray, S.J.,for his book “We Hold TheseTruths.” Archbishop PatrickA. 0 Boyle of Washington pre-sided at the luncheon at whichthe award was presented tothe Jesuit theologian fromWoodstock (Md.) College.

The $2OO prize is given forthe book which during theyear makes "the most orig-inal and distinguished contri-bution to historical knowl-edge.”

Manoel Cardozo, head ofthe history department at theCatholic University of Amer-ica, was installed as presidentof the association succeedingRobert F. Byrnes of IndianaUniversity. Gerhardt B Lad-ner of Kordham was namedfirst vice president and presi-dent elect

Movie Law

For ChicagoCHICAGO (NC)-The Clin a

go City Council has passed(29 2) an amended ordinanceproviding for city screening ofmovies (or children andadults

Ihe new measure includes a

provision establishing a fivemember appealsVioard to re

'i' w cases in vvlWli per nutshave been refused to exhibi-tors by the reguLfir six meinher police im>cic screeninghoard

The screening board ran liarexhibitors from admitting chil-dren under 17 to films it con

siders objectionable for young

people.It can also ban entire-

ly films it regards as objec-tionable for all age groups.

An earlier law, struck downby a U. S. District Court in

March, 1959, permitted thecity to ban certain films, topersons under 21.

PRESENTATION BALL: These 18 young ladies were presented to Archbishop Boland Dec. 30 M the Robert Treat Hotel, at the fourth annual Presentation Ball for theThor ofNew Jersey. Seated, left to right, are Judith Elizabeth Gannon, Diane Cassidy, Marilyn Ann Klein, the Archbishop, Anne Marie Sellitto Angela Sibilia andTheresa Maric Mattia; standing,RosemaryRimmele, Veronica Widmer, Suellen Scanlon, Eileen Carlin, Cathyleen Divilly, Mary Elizabeth Burke Carol O'Flynn, PatriciaDivlly. Helen Theresa fanning. Anne Mario Collin. Barbara Ann Howard and Karen Fitz Maurice. Missing when the picture was taken was Diane McDonough.

Pope Is ConfidentAt Start of YearVATICAN CITY (RNS.) -

Pope John XXIII, qdJrcssingdiplomats accredited to theHoly Sec who called on himto extend host wishes for 1962,declared he was facing theNew Year “with a serene andconfident spirit toward thatwhich Divine Providence hasin store for us, whatever thesufferings or the joys."

“Looking into the future atthe beginning of a New Year."he said, "is something that al-ways brings joy and hope. Thehuman eye most certainly can-

not penetrate the future whichstill remains full of mysteryand the unknown. But, never-

theless, we like to paint it withthe most promising colors."

NOTING THAT in his annualChristmas message, he hadcalled on all "rulers of the na-

tions” to work for the peaceand security of all men. PopeJohn implored God "to will

that such a great benefit willspread over the earth during1962."

"We know that this is thedearest wish of the nationswhich you represent,” the Pon-tiff told the representatives of49 countries with which theVatican has diplomatic rela-tions. "But it is also the first(wish) of all those desiring theliappiness of the great humanfamily."

REFERRING TO the recentPapal Bull formally announc-ing that the Second VaticanCouncil would be convoked in1962, Pope John said: "We are

confident that the council willcontribute toward the spread-ing of an atmosphere of un-derstanding and good will.”

"It is for this reason,” hoemphasized, "that we choseChristmas Day —a feast ofreconciliation and of peace

among men and with Godfor the promulgation of theBull.”

The ecumenical council, hecontinued, "will be a religiousevent for the good of theChurch and Christianity. Butthe whole of mankind —andwe expressed this hope in theBull will in some way feelthe benefit of such a greatmobilization of spiritualforces of'which we will havebeen the humble instrument.”

He described the forthcom-ing council as a "glitteringspectacle of unity, of univer-sality and of brotherhood,”and said he hoped it would be"an example and an appeal tothe innumerable men of goodwill who everywhere in the

world remain loyal to moraland spiritual values and whosincerely desire to see themmore widely honored for the

good of humanity"

I’OI’E JOHN also cited the

most important Catholicevents of 1961 He said theseincluded the creation of new

Cardinals, the consecration of

new Bishops on five continents,anil the canonization of SisterHertilia Boscardin. an Italiannun who died in 1922

Others were, he said, the

commemoration of the 70th an

niversary of Pope Leo Xlll ssocial encyclical. Iterum Nova’rum. in which connection thePontiff issued his now famousMater et Magistra encyclical;the death of Cardinal Tardini,Vatican Secretary of State;Hie Papal appeal for worldpeace last September as theinternational situation sudden-ly became more tense; andthe participation of the Catho-lic world in ceremonies mark-ing* the Pope’s 80th birthdayand the third anniversary ofhis -

AT THE START of the audi-ence, the Irish ambassador to

the Holy Sec, Leo Thomas Mc-Cauley, acting as dean of thediplomatic corps, addressedthe Pope on behalf of thosepresent.

He said: "Wc arc unanimousin stating our admiration forthe tireless efforts made byYour Holiness for the happi-ness and prosperity of man-kind and for peace. We praythat Your Holiness will be ableto continue with this greatyvork. May 1962 bring joy to

all men of goodwill and thecompletion of those tasks that

arc so dear to the heart andhopes of Your Holiness.”

BEFORE THE START of the

New Year, Pope John sent

messages do the Bishops ofGermany and CardinalWyszynski of Poland.

In his message to the Ger-man Bishops, the Pope said heis ever aware of the difficul-ties of the divided nation,voiced his sympathy for EastGerman Christians andpraised the Catholics of West

Germany for striving for bet-ter social legislation. .

Pope John told CardinalWyszynski that he shares theCardinal’s worries in regard tothe Church in Poland. ThePontiff’s message was read inall Polish churches on Christ-mas Day.

Atomic WeaponsUse DefendedFRIBOURG, Switzerland

(NC) Use of atomic wea-

pons to repel aggression is le-gitimate, the spiritual leaderof most of Switzerland’sFrench - speaking Catholicssaid here.

"It may be lawful not to re-sist an unjust aggressor whenonly our individual safety isconcerned,” said Bishop Fran-cois Charricre of Lausanne,Geneva and Fribourg. “Butwe have the right and duty to

use force agaihst force whenit comes to resisting an ag-gressor attacking our neigh-bor, and all the more so thenational community to whichour neighbor belongs.”

He added: “If wc admit thisprinciple, then we must alsoadmit that our defense mustbe effective, using adequateweapons in order to resist theaggressor. Such weapons in-clude atomic weapons.”

BISHOP CHARRIERE was

giving the initial address in ascries of lectures on nationaldefense at the Catholic Uni-versity of Fribourg. He assert-ed that those who, without ex-

amination. oppose the use ofatomic weapons forget thatthe same problem has beenraised each time anew wea-

pon has been adopted to re-

place less effective arma-

ment.

The Bishop said that eventhough all are in favor ofsome kind of control of atomicweapons, “until this wishcomes true we must not de-cide that such weapons, iflist'd fnr our defense, are in

trinsically immoral.”

Concerning conscientious ob-jection, Bishop Charriere saidthat the problem cannot bediscussed in the light of the-ories that are basically oppo-site:

“They are wrong who holdthat a soldier must obeyblindly, unconcerned whetherthe order he receives is moralor not, thus refusing to let hisconscience judge the moralityof the act

... But they arealso in error who pretend thatno order should be carried outuntil its lawfulness has been

proven, denying their super-iors the confidence they de-serve.”

German Reds

Free PriestsBERLIN (NC) - Two of

three priests recently sen-tenced to jail by communistcourts in East Germany havabeen released, according to thenewspaper of the Berlin dio-cese.

Pctrusblatt reported thatRev. Ludwig Niehoerstcr ofKcmbcrg and Rev. HerbertBangel of Halle were releasedjust before Christmas. Thepriests had been given prisonterms of 18 and 8 months re-spectively by the ProvincialCourt at Halle.

A third priest convicted, on

economic charges, Rev. HansHermcsmann of Berlin, is stillin prison He was sentencedto n L’o month form.

Bishop Names Fr. RodimerTo Position With Advocate

PATERSON Rev. Francis.1 Rodimer, Assistant Chan-cellor of the Paterson Diocese,has been named by BishopMcNulty as Paterson repre-sentative for The Advocate,effective Jan. 1

Father Rodimer replacesRev. Carl Wolsin, pastor of St.Simon the Apostle Church,Orecn Pond, who has served

in The Advocate position sinceit became the official paperfor the Diocese of Paterson in

1953.

A NATIVE of Rockaway,Father Rodimer received histheological training at Immac-ulate Conception Seminaryand was ordained on May 19,1951. lie then studied at Cath-olic University, receiving hisdegree of Doctor of CanonLaw in 1954.

Father Rodimer was ap-pointed Assistant Chancellorof the Paterson Diocese on

%lunc 12, 1954, and is also an

assistant pastor at St. Bren-dan's Church, Clifton.

Father Rodimer

Bishops Schedule Annual AppealTo Support CatholicRelief Work'NEW YORK (NC)—The 16th

annual appeal of the CatholicBishops’ Relief Fund, whichsupports the world-wide ef-forts of Catholic Relief Serv-ices NCWC, will begin Mar.

25 and end Apr. 1.The closing day of the ap-

peal is Laetare Sunday, in themiddle of Lent, when a spe-cial collection for the fundwill be taken up in churches.A minimum goal of $5 millionhas been set for the 1962 ap-peal

ANNOUNCEMENT of theappeal Was made in a letterto the U. S. Bishops by Arch-

bishop Patrick A. O’Boyle ofWashington, chairman, NCWCAdministrative Board.

In conjunction with theBishops’ Relief Fund appeal,a special 40-day Lenten cam-paign will be conductedamong children in Catholicgrade and high schools, begin-ning Mar. 7, Ash Wednesday.Last year school childrengave the relief fund morethan $1 million.

ARCHBISHOP O’Boyle haspointed out in his letter that“as a result of the basic sup-port provided by the Bishops’Relief Fund, Catholic Relief

Services ... was able tomaintain last year a programthat had a value of $125,118,-000.”

He said CRS shipped food,clothing and medicine to 67countries and benefited morethan 28 million persons over-seas.

In 1961 for the fifth consecu-tive year- the overseas reliefshipments of CRS-NCWC to-taled more than one billionpounds of food, clothing andmedicines for free distributionto the needy, regardless ofrace, color or creed.

ACCORDING TO AuxiliaryBishop Edward E. Swanstromof New York, executive direc-tor of Catholic Relief Serv-ices, this makes CRS-NCWC,the largest voluntary over-

seas relief agency in theworld. Since its founding in1943, Catholic Relief Services

has sent overseas more than7.75 billion pounds of relief

supplies valued at more than$1 billion.

For the past several monthsCatholic Relief Services hasbeen reducing its refugeewelfare and resettlement pro-grams in Europe.

These programs are sched-uled to terminate in June, 1962,when the CBS-NCWC refugeeresettlement offices in Europewill be closed. Relief pro-grams will continue in sever-al countries such as Spain,Greece, Italy.

At the same time, CRS hasbeen expanding its operationsin the Middle and Far East,Africa and Latin America.

During 1961 CRS initiatedeight new relief programs inAfrican and Latin Americancountries bringing its relief

programs in Africa th a totalof 20 and in Latin America andthe Caribbean area to a totalof 21 countries.

In addition, CRS recentlyset up a socio-economic de-partment to implement proj-ects for housing, rural devel-opment, cooperatives, trainingschools, hospitals and dispen-saries in areas of needthroughout the world.

Negotiate on New

Polish Aid ProgramMILWAUKEE—CathoIic Re-

lief Services • NCWC is at-tempting to reestablish a fullprogram in Poland, AuxiliaryBishop Aloysius J. Wycislo ofChicago told the Polish Amer-ican Historial Associationhere. The Bishop had servedas assistant executive directorof the relief agency for 16years.

The CRS program in Polandwas discontinued in 1956 afterthe communist regime reneg-ed on its promise to allow-re*"lief supplies to enter dutyfree. Poland assessed a 60%tax on the relief goods.

In the last few years, the

Bishop said, CRS has sent rep-resentatives to Poland to dis-cuss the resumption of aidwith Church and governmentofficials. “Negotiations for re-establishment of a full-scale

program are being contin-

ued,” be. said.

Relief shipments had beenhalted onca before, in 1950,

and were not resumed for sixyears.

The convention was told thatthe Polish Catholic League,organized in this country in1942, has contributed morethan $4.5 million in religiousaid to Poland. Msgr. AlfredL. Abramowicz of Chicago,the league's executive direc-tor, said it has100% Sof the requests

Irony the Polish hierarchy”.Jop'vestments, texts for sem-

inarians, prayerbooks andother religious articles.

Rev. Constantine Klukowski,0.F.M., of Sturtevant, Wis.,was elected president of thehistorical association. Otherofficers are Sister Mary Clar-enta of Youngstown, Ohio;Dr. Eugene Kusielewicz,Brooklyn; Sister Mary No-bilis, Chicago; Rev. ZdzislawPeszkowski, Orchard Lake,Mich.; Sister Mary Cassiana,Yonkers, and Sister MaryBeata, Detroit.

Millions Go to CommunionOn Feast of Holy Family

BARRE, Mats. (NC) Atthe result of a devotion begun50 yean ago JSy~i medicalstudent;'lan estimated million

families in the free world willreceive Holy Communion on

Jaiy 7, Feast of the HolyFa/nily, in an appeal for world

peace.y The practice of monthly fam-ily Communion was startedwithin his family by Dr.Richard Rendlch of Brooklyn.It spread to relatives andfriends. In 1950, Dr. Rendichwas granted permission by thelate Archbishop Thomas E.Molloy, Bishop of Brooklyn, to

found a lay organization dedi-cated to monthly family Com-munion. It was called the Fam-ily Communion Crusade.

Dr. Rendich died in 195 G.Shortly before his death hepersuaded the Blessed Sacra-ment Fathers to assist in thework of the crusade. TheFathers at their novitiate herehave carried on much of thework since that time.

In preparation for the com-

ing feast of the Holy Family,the Blessed Sacrament Fatherssent out two million leafletsprinted in more than 40 lan-guages, and 100,000 posters.

PurchaseNew Site for

Marsalin InstituteHOLLISTON, Mass. (RNS)

A priest who conducts theMarsalin Institute, a centerfor psychiatric research in

Brookline, Mass., has purchas-ed a large residence and 20

acres of land and plans to re-locate the enterprise on thenew site.

Town officials said the for-mer Sonnabend estate hasbeen bought by the instituteheaded by Rev. Jerome Hay-

den, 0.5.8., instructor at Cath-olic University of America,Washington.

Last January when FatherHayden sought to open an in-stitute in Milton, Mass., a

storm of protest followed. Resi-dents protested what they be-lieved would be a center fortreating mentally retarded,emotionally disturbed and mor-

ally delinquent persons.Father Hayden said the place

would only be used as a center

for'-'fSJychiatrists researchingproblems of integrating Catho-lic theology and philosophywith the scientific principles ofmodern, psychiatry.

In Milton the plan failedwhen the town refused to granta zoning change after a longcontroversy.

Reach AgreementOn School Support

WHITEHORSE, Yukon <NC)The Yukon territorial coun-

cil has unanimously approvedan agreement between, terri-

and Catholicauthorities on the constructionand operation of Catholic“separate") schools.

Under the agreement theCatholic scnools will in generalreceive ptiblic financial sup-port equal/ to that given publicschools in/ the territory.

SKY PILOT: Rev. (Capt.) Frederick J. McTernan,Army chaplain at Fort Sill, Okla., checks out with thecontrol tower before taking off on a solo flight fromthe post field. Father McTernan, a priest of the New-ark Archdiocese, recently completed training for a

private pilot’s certificate.

Places in the NewsAll 16 streets of anew sub-

urban settlement on the out-skirts of Hildeshcim, Ger-many, will be named afterCatholic and Protestantmartyrs of the nazi regime.

Municipal authorities inMangalore, India, joined inhonoring two Catholics mis-sionaries who have served withdistinction ih the industrialmetropolis.

The Catholic-oriented Orderof Charity in Paris will spon-sor the ninth annual WorldLeprosy Day on Jan. 28.

Priests and Protestant min-isters in Rio de Janeiro havebegun a series of joint meet-ings to study subjects relatedto the Second Vatican Counciland Christian unity.

Jcsujt operated St. Louis Un-

iversity will introduce a six-week academic program on

American freedom next sum-

mer at the Institute on Com-munism and Freedom.

The Lincoln, Nebr., diocesehas completed anew chan-cery, and will start construc-tion of anew cathedral nextyear.

Six Dutch missionariesabroad h£<i ta-Hss with theirfamilies v in

three-way raHio hookups ar-

ranged by the Dutch Catholicradio corporation KRO.

A $60,000 grant from thePontifical Mission for Pales-tine will be used to establishthe first center for the blind inLebanon, Syria, Jordan or

Gaza to undertake adult voca-

tional training and home serv-

ice programs.The governor of Missouri

has suggested that studyshould be given to a sugges-tion that retail stores be al-lowed to pick their own dayfor closing each week ratherthan being forced to close on

Sunday*.The next mission of the

S.S. Hope will take the hos-

pital-teaching ship to Peru.About 600,000 volunteers help

West Germany's 24 diocesanCatholic Charities organ-izations, together with more

than 150,000 full-time workers

Community Memorial Hos-pital in New Prague, Minn.,operated by the Sisters of St.Benedict, will start an $BOO,-000 addition.

The University of Daytonhas broken ground for anew

$1,250,000 dormitory for men,to be ready in September,1963.

More than 51 million goodworks were listed in a spir-itual bouquet gathered across

Canada and the U.S. to com-

memorate the 50th anniver-sary of the designation of OurLady of Guadalupe as patron-ess of the Americas.

The Chief Justice of Japanhas laid Japan's soaring ju-venile delinquency to a lackof moral training in childhood.

Missioners working amongKorea’s lepers are seekingcustoms exemptions on modicines and other items destinedfor relief of leprosy victims.

Archbishop John C. McQuaidof Dublin presided at cere-

monies opening the city's firstyouth club run by Dublin po-lice on the pattern of PAL

in the U. S.Catholics in Germany have

founded a ‘‘Montcssori Socie-ty for Catholic Education” tospread the teaching principlesof the late Maria Montcssori.

A National League of PublicMorality has been formed inLisbon to combat vice andprotect the morals of theyoung.

The Franciscan TeachingBrothers in Brooklyn havepurchased a 24-acre estate inOyster Bay to serve as a

novitiate.

A radio station in New Or-leans will inaugurate a Span-ish language program fcatui

ing messages from the exiledAuxiliary Bishop of Havana.

The 130-year-old CatholicTelegraph-Register of Cincin-nati is resuming its originalname, the Catholic Telegraph.

Latin Hite Catholics held a

mass meeting to protest thepromotion of birth control bythe coalition government ot

Kerala, India.

People in the NewsArchbishop Jean Baptiste

Maury has been named Apos-tolic Internuncio to Senegalwhile retaining the post ofApostolic Delegate for WestAfrica.

Cardinal Clcognani, PapalSecretary of State, has beennamed protector of the Pon-tifical Bcda College, a Romeseminary for English-speakingconverts and older men.

Mr. and Mrs. CorneliusCyprian D’Cruz of Bombay,India, whose three sons havebecome Jesuits, have beenawarded the Pro Ecclesia ctPontifice Medal by Pope John.

Msgr. John Patrick Carroll-Abblng, founder and president

nine Boys’ Towns and one

Girls’ Town, has received

Italy’s Grand Cross of the Or-der of Merit for his serviceson behalf of neglected or or-

phaned children. sin his Christmas pastoral,

Cardinal Ritter of St. Louishas asked families in his arch-diocese to pray that their sons

and daughters may have reli-gious vocations.

Rev. Gerard Laroche, M.S.,has been named first provin-cial of the new Midwest Pro-vince of the LaSalette Fatherswith headquarters in St. Louis.

Bishop Eugene Hornyak,0.5.8.M., formerly of the U.S.,has arrived in England' to takeup his duties as Auxiliary toCardinal Godfrey in the Car-dinal’s capacity as ExarchApostolic for Ukrainians ofthe Byzantine Rite.

Rev. J. B. Sullivan, who stu-died for the priesthood afterretiring from business, hasbeen ordained in England atthe age of 75.

Rev. John J. Naughton ofBaton Rouge, La., has beennamed director of Catholicpress and the diuccsan infor-

mation bureau there.

BishopsBishop Antonio Lopez Avlna

of Zacatecas, Mexico, hasbeen named Archbishop ofDurango.

Bishop-designate Gerald E.Carter will be consecratedAuxiliary of the London, Ont.,Diocese on Feb. 2 in Notre

Dame Church, Montreal.

Died ...

Archdeacon Thomas Duggan,71, Irish missionary who joinedthe Society of St. James theApostle two months ago, inLima, Peru.

Archbishop Emilio Llsson,C.M., 89, former Archbishopof Lima, Peru, who had beenliving in Valencia, Spain.

Paul M. Butler of Washing-ton, 56, former president ofCatholic Charities in SouthBend, Ind., and former chair-man of the Democratic Na-tional Committee.

Rev. Thomas A. Steiner,C.S.C., of South Bend, 84, for-mer provincial of .the HolyCross Fathers.

Epiphany ParlyAl Sacred Heart

BLOOMFIELD A specialprogram for families of Sa-cred Heart parish will be heldJan. 7 by the Parent Educa-tor Group of the Confrater-nity of Christian Doctrine andthe Family Life Committee.

An Epiphany party will beheld in the auditorium, towhich the children will bringpresents for the Christ Child,following the example of theThree Wise Men. The giftswill be sent to a missionaryfor redistribution to poor chil-dren.

Preceding the party, therewill be a brief service In thechurch at 3 p.m. Children andtheir parents will bo blessedand Benediction will be cele-brated.

Polish CardinalHits Police Move

WARSAW (RNS) A recentpolice raid on a Dominicanchurch in Poznan, where aCatholic youth meeting tookplace, was denounced by Car-dinal Wyszynfcki, Primate otPoland, as in “unheard iffviolation of relligious feelings/'

The raid oil Nov. 23 ip-parently was carried out/un-der anew law allpublic and private gatheringsof 12 or more individuals un-

less a police license is ob-tained.

Rosary RallyMANILA (NC) Rev. Pat-

rick Peyton, C.S.C., will con-

duct a rally of his FamilyRosary Crusade on Jan. 28 atSan Fernando, 35 miles fromhere, along the road used forthe Bataan Death March ofWorld War 11.

ST. SEBASTIAN Is thepatron saint of athletes.

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School Issues Result in ControversiesReligion in the public schools and aid to private education

became topics of controversy 'in scattered areas throughout theUnited States this week. A roundup of developments follows.

School PrayersPHILADELPHIA (NC) —A

•pecial three-judge federalcourt has taken under advise-ment a challenge to Biblereading in the public schoolsof Pennsylvania. The same

case was before the U. S. Su-preme Court once before andcould go there again. In argu-ments before the federal courthere, Attorney Henry W. Saw-yer, representing Edward L.Schempp, said the practice"prefers one religion over an-

other, contrary to the basicconcept of the First Amend-ment.” 1

Schempp, a resident ofnearby Roslyn, Pa., first chal-lenged the Bible reading piac-tice in 1958. In September,1959, a federal district courtruled that since the Bible is"essentially a religious work,”its reading in the publicschools “amounts to religiousinstruction.”

The decision was appealedto the U. S. Supreme Court.But in the mcantimo the statelegislature enacted anew lawpermitting children to be ex-

cused from attendance at theBible reading sessions at therequest of their parents.

The high court then return-ed the case to the lower courtfor reconsideration in light'ofthe new development.

• '■

To Reargue CaseANNAPOLIS, Md. (NC) -

The Maryland Court of Ap-peals' has directed that a case

involving a challenge to Biblereading and prayer in Balti-more public schools be re-

argued before five judges- of

the court Nov. 14. It is to bereargued before all seven

judges of the tribunal.

Pay for Tran sportALBANY - The State' Edu-

cation Commissioner ruledthat a Catholic school pupilmust be given tax-paid trans-portation to the school shereaches by island-hopping.

Commissioner James E. Al-len Jr. made the decision on

an appeal sent him by Mr.and Mrs. Carl Cooper of

Greenport who were deniedtransportation help by theUnion Free School DistrictNo. 10 of Southold, N. Y.

THE PUPIL is 14-ycar-oldPatricia Cooper. She attendsSacred Heart Academy, SagHarbor, and to get there musttravel 9.85 miles by a ferryboat ride from her home toShelter Island, .across the is-

land by road and again byferry boat to Sag Harbor.

A recent amendment to theNew York school transporta-tion law requires that schoolhoards must provide transpor-tation for any school child wholives less than 10 miles fromhis school and whose parentsrequest tax free transpor-tation.

The Southold school districtargued that the distance issupposed to be measured bythe nearest available highway.Ferry routes don’t count, itsaid, and if Patricia goes byland, she travels beyond the10-mile limit.

However, Allen said that a

New York Court of Appealsdecision has held that a ferryroute is deemed a highway.The Coopers say their daugh-ter’s transportation costs run

around $36 a month.

Hits Text DenialPROVIDENCE, R.I. (NC)

The Rhode Island Board ofEducation's action in tabling a

request for tax-paid textbooksfor parochial school studentsevoked a critical statementfrom the Catholic School Boardof the Providence Diocese.

The state board announcedit had tabled the request pend-ing action by the coming ses-

sion of Congress on federalaid to non-public schools. Theboard said the propriety of

providing aid to non-publicschools should be decided atthe national level.

*

The Catholic School Board’sstatement emphasized that“the propriety of a state’s

providing texts to non-publicschools was determined at

the national level 31 yearsago by the Supreme Court”when it ruled that a state

could provide textbooks forprivate schools.

The Catholic board express'cd “dismay" that the stateschool board “saw fit to de-cide this question without hold-ing any kind of hearings.”The procedure on such a re-

quest “deserves full publicdiscussion” and the stateboard’s action “inhibits thefunctioning of the democraticprocess,” the Catholic state-ment asserted.

Remedial ReadingTULSA, Okla. (RNS) The

Tulsa school board was peti-tioned here by the father of a

parochial school pupil tochange its policy so that hischild may be admitted to

remedial reading classes of-fered by the public schools.

Vincent J. Sposato made themove in an attempt to openthe course to his 12-ycar-oldson, Michael. The boy; his 13-

year-old sister Nancy; and Bill

Kavanagh, 10-year-old son ofMr. and Mrs. J. P Kavanagh,were refused-admission to thereading class this fall because

they arc not enrolled in thepublic school system. All threeattend a local parochial school.

Neal E. McNeill, Sposato’sattorney, sent the petition to

Claude H. Rosenstcin, theschool board attorney who ear-lier this year advised the boardthat pupils could not attend

special service classes unlessthey were regularly enrolledin the Tulsa public schoolsystem.

McNeill indicated that unlessthe school board changes its

policy, he intends to file an

action in the Tulsa DistrictCourt to seek admittance ofthe Sposato (child.

Bus Bill Advances

MADISON, Wis. (NC)—TheState Assembly has passedand sent tci\the Senate a com-

promise bill to provide some

tax-paid bus transportation forparochial and other privateschool pupils.

The bill stipulates that pub-lic school boards shall furnishtransportation for all childrento the public school which“they are entitled to attend."Parochial and other privateschool pupils would have to

walk or make private trans-

portation arrangements to getfrom the public school to the

one they attend.

Problem for CourtsDENVER (RNS) Gov.

Stephen McNichols said herehe would not include the issueof free public transportation of

parochial school students inhis message to the. state legis-lature opening Jan. 3.

He said the question oftransporting parochial pupilsfree in public school buses isa constitutional matter and a

problem for the courts, not thelegislature or the State Boardof Education.

The governor sharply crit-icized a recent ruling by State

Commissioner of Education

Byron W. Hansford which as-

serted that public school dis-tricts supplying transportationto parochial and other privateschool pupils woulc|tfdose state

“Hansford, in my opinion,has no authority to impose a

penalty on anyone,” Gov. Mc-Nichols said. “It’s not up tohim to inflict penalties. Idon’t think the 4aw gives himthat right."

A ivait Decision

STEUBENVILE, Ohio (NC)The Board of Education has

granted ‘“unofficial” permis-sion to six Catholic school chil-dren to ride a public schoolbus pending a decision on thelegal Issues involved.

_William E. Rhinehart, board

president, said the boardwould meet with the city so-

licitor to consider the legalityof having the children ride thepublic bus.

The children attend St. Pe-ter's School. They had beenriding the public school busregularly until . the practicewas discontinued recently.

Rides ApprovedBIDDEFORD, Me. (NC) -

Voters here overwhelminglyapproved tax-paid school bustransportation for parochialand other private school pu-pils.

By a 4,263 to 127 vote, Bid-deford becomes the third com-

munity in recent weeks to ap-prove such transportation un-

der an enabling act adoptedby the Maine legislature earlythis year.

Sees CatholicScience Lag

HARTFORD, Conn. (NC)Sir Hugh Stott Taylor, deanemeritus of Princeton Uni-versity’s graduate school, ex-

pressed the belief here thatCatholic colleges arc not giv-ing sufficient attention to thefield of science and education.

The education, a prominentCatholic knighted by Pope PilsXII, is president of the Wood-row Wilson National Fellow-ship Foundation. The founda-

tion, supported by a $24 mil-lion grant from the FordFoundation, concentrates on

selecting promising futureteachers of social sciences.

In an interview here, he saidthat Catholics are failing towin their share of the Wilsonfellowships, lie advocated thatCatholic parents encouragetheir children in scientific re-search and said:'“Unless weCatholics play our part, weshall surrender science to

those who would fetter it withfalse philosophy, bind it inservitude to ruinous ends.”

Youngest Bishop’s HERTOGENBOSCH, The

Netherlands (NC) Theyoungest Bishop in the Nether-lands, 35-year-old AuxiliaryBishop Jan W. M. Bluyssen of's Hertogcnbosch, was conse-

crated in St. John’s Cathedralhere by Bishop Willem Bck-kcrs of ’s Hertogcnbosch.

WASHINGTON MEETING: Cardinal Cicognani, Secretary of State to Pope JohnXXIII and former Apostolic Delegate in the U.S., receives William F. Johnson ofWayne, president of the National Council of Catholic Men, and Mrs. Elizabeth Zepf,president of the National Council of Catholic Women, during his recent visit to

Washington.

January 4, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 3

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Big Government No OgreNEW YORK (NC) Is

government on all levels“throwing its weight aroundtoo much” in the nation’s eco-nomic life?

Rev. Benjamin Masse, S.J.,an associate editor of Ameri-

ca, national Catholic weeklyreview, posed this question atthe two-day meeting of theCatholic Economic Associa-tion.

Father Masse, president ofthe association, asserted that"our sprawling governmentestablishment can be amplyjustified on moral grounds.”He advocated a “middle-of-the-road” philosophy ofgovernment that would avoidthe pitfalls of socialism on

the one hand and economicliberalism on the other.

FATHER MASSE said thatwhile “socialists are delightedwith developments over the

past three decades and are

disappointed only that govern-ment hasn't gone further thanit has

...the economic lib-

erals in our midst. . . sigh

nostalgically for the good old

days of untrammeled laissez-faire.”

Between these two extremes,he stated, lies a third groupthat can best be described as

“middle-of-the-road.”' It rec-

ognizes the state as the su-

preme political power in so-

ciety, but “does not accord it

unlimited authority.”

“It holds that individualsand families are prior to thestate and possess rights inde-

pendently of it.”

HE STATED that althoughhe believes government on alllevels in the U. S. is not too

big and is justifiable on moral

grounds, this does not imply“blanket approval of all gov-

ernment programs” or “the

competence with which theyare administered."

“It means,” he asserted,“only that from the viewpointof subsidiary function I cannotfind very much to quarrelwith."

Father Masse then cited

statistics from the U. S. Com-merce Department’s Office of

Business Economics which

show that the federal, state

and local governments com-

bined spent a total of $137.1billion in 1960.

Of this amount, he con-

tinued, about $72 billion was

spent on national defense, gen-eral government, international

affairs and finance, and vet-

erans services and benefitswhich “plainly fall within theprovince of the government.”

“Another non-controversial$20.6 billion,” he stated, was

spent on “a number of pro-grams under health, educationand welfare, and under com-

merce and housing”; and “thetotal spending on education,

public utilities and agricultureamounted to $22.6 billion.”

FATHER MASSE said theremaining total of about $22billion was spent on two siz-

able programs “which over

the years have generated con-

siderable heat.” These are the

government’s efforts to dealwith poverty and hardship,

and its activities in the fieldof natural resources.

He stated that public assist-ance, jobless benefits, and oldage and survivors benefits ac-

counted for nine-tenths of the$22 billion.

“Now if anybody wishes toprove,” he continued, “thatunder contemporary conditionsgovernment welfare and- so-

cial security programs arc an

unjustified excursion into a

sector reserved to individualsand private groups, he is wel-come to the task. He certainlywon’t find any support for hisposition in ‘Mater et Magis-tra’.”

TURNING TO the argumentof some people that big gov-ernment is destructive of free-dom and initiative, FatherMasse said:

“It is true that a vast ma-jority of American workershave some protection, throughgovernment-sponsored insur-ance programs, against thehazards of unemployment, in-dustrial accidents and old age.I find it hard to believe thatthe minimum coverage pro--vided through law is sappingtheir initiative and corrodingtheir will to support them-selves and their families.

“Although welfare state hasbecome a dirty word in some

quarters, and cradle-to-gravosecurity a topic of easy witand outraged comment, thereis precious little evidence thatworkers today are any less in-tent on improving their livingstandards than their fathersand grandfathers were.”

FATHER MASSE statedthat ‘“despite high taxes,American consumers continueto enjoy more freedom ofchoice

. . . then any otherpeople in the world.” He said“their personal income last

year hit $402 billion beforetaxes; they paid personaltaxes of $50.4 billion; theyspent $328.9 billion on goodsand services; they saved al-most $23 billion.”

“Is this a picture of peoplecrushed by the weight of a

ponderous government? Or isit one that suggests that a

measure of security in life en-larges rather than restrictsthe area of personal freedom

and responsibility?”

ANOTHER SPEAKER,James E. Kenney, professorof economics at LeMoyneCollege, Syracuse, told the as-

sociation that the farmer islow man on the totem pole inregard to income.

Farmers, as a group, are

not keeping pace with the in-creased material prosperity ofthe non-farm sector of thepopulation, he said. In 1960, headded, the average annual in-dividual earnings for all indus-tries was $4,705, while in farm-ing it was $1,555.

Kenney, basing his talk onthe examination of farm prob-ems in the encyclical “Materet Magistra,” said the keyquestion is the following: “Canwe say that the farmer is notgetting a fair share of the na-

tional income?"

Kenney gave no definitiveanswer to the question, but hedid point out the threat to so-ciety if the farmer does notget an adequate income.

“Farming, particularly thatdone on the family farm, isa fundamental American in-stitution,” he stated, and “low

or falling farm income threat-ens the extinction of a wayof life which should be pre-served for the good of thewhole nation.”

Cardinal Praises

Racial CouncilCHICAGO (NC) Albert

Cardinal Meyer, Archbishopof Chicago, termed the Chi-cago Catholic Interracial Coun-cil “a work of very great im-portance” during a meetingof its board of directors.

Cardinal Meyer said the in-

terracial council members are

“translating the life of theChurch into the temporal or-

der” and arc “acting as a

catalyst in the cause of Christ-tian justice and Christian un-

ity.”

WAGON KEYS: Mary C. Burns, president of the auxiliary of the Little Sisters ofthe Poor Home for the Aged in Newark, presents keys of anew station wagon forthe home to Mother Augustine, p.s.d.p., provincial, during her visit there recently.At left is Mother Beatrix, p.s.d.p., superior of the home, and, at right, Mrs. Charles

M. Moore, honorary president of the auxiliary.

Economists Pick University DeanNEW YORK - Dr. Arthur

J. Noctzel, dean of John Car-roll University, Cleveland, hasbeen elected president of theCatholic Economic Associationat its 20th annual meetinghere.

He succeeds Rev. BenjaminL. Masse, S.J., of America

magazine, who in the mainaddress defended the conceptof big government (see storyat left).

Other new officers are Rev.Richard E. Mulcahy, S.J., ofSan Francisco University andDr. Alice E. Bourmcuf of Bos-ton College, viefc presidents,and Milton C. Taylor ofMichigan State College, JohnJ. Hooker of Catholic Uni-versity, Rev. William T.Hagan, S.J., of Fordham. andFrancis T. Ullrich of Manhat-

tan College, who have been,named members of the execu-tive board of the EconomicAssociation.

Pittsburgh Man Is Vercelli WinnerNEW YORK (NC)~ David

M. Martin of Pittsburgh hasbeen named to receive theVercelli Medal, National HolyName Society award givenannually to a layman in rec-

ognition of outstanding serviceto the society.

The award, named for Bless-ed John Vercelli, 13th cen-

tury Master General of theDominicans who founded theHoly Name Society to promotereverence and devotion to the

Holy Name of Jesus, will bepresented in Pittsburgh on'

Mar. 18.

Martin, 75, has been en-

gaged in work of the HolyName Society for more thanhalf a century and has servedas president of the PittsburghDiocesan Union of Holy NameSocieties.

Philippines Hold

Vocation MeetingMANILA (NC) The Philip-

pines have held their firstNational Convention on Voca-tions.

There is an average of onepriest for every 6,000 Catho-lics in the Philippines. This in-cludes priests engaged inteaching or in administration.

THERE ARE some 3,200members of the Young Chris-tian Workers in the U. S.

4 THE ADVOCATE January 4, 1962

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Papal Bull Convoking 2nd Vatican Ecumenical CouncilNCW'C News Service

Following is the text of an Etfglisb translation of the bullissued Dec. 25,1961,6 V Pope foists XXIII convoking the SecondVatican Ecumenical Council for 1962.

John, Bishop, servant of theservants of God, for perpetualmemory:

IntroductionThe Divine Redeemer Jesus

Christ, Who before ascendinginto heaven conferred on theApostles the mandate topreach the Gospel to all peo-ples, in support and guaranteeof their mission, made thecomforting promise: “BeholdI am with you all days even

unto the consummation of theworld” (Matt. 28, 20).

This divine presence, whichhas been alive and active inall times in the Church, is no-

ticeable above all in the mostgrave periods of humanity. Itis then that the spouse ofChrist shows itself in all itssplendor as the master oftruth and minister of salva-tion. And it is then also thatit deploys all its power ofcharity, prayer, sacrifice andof suffering, invincible spirit-ual mean3, and the same usedby the di\rtne founder, Who inthe solemn hour of His life de-clared: “Have faith for I haveovercome the world” (John,16, 33).

Painful

Considerations-.

*.•"•

~ - , /Today the Church is wit-

nessing a crisis under waywithin society. While human-ity is on the edge of anew

era, tasks of immense gravityand amplitude await theChurch, as in the most tragicperiods of its history.

It Is a question in fact of

bringing the modern world in-to contact with the vivifyingand'perennial energies of theGospel, a world which exaltsitself with its conquests inthe technical and scientificfields but which brings alsothe consequences of a tempo-ral order which some havewished to reorganize exclud-ing God. This is why modern

society is earmarked by a

great material progress towhich there is not a corres-

ponding advance in the moralfield.

HENCE THERE is a weak,cuing in the aspiration towardthe varies of the spirit. Hencean urge for the almost exclu-sive search for earthly pleas-ures, which progressive tech-nology places with such easewithin the reach of all. Andhence there is a completelynew and disconcerting fact:The existence of a militantatheism which is active on a

world level.

Reasons for

ConfidenceThese painful considerations

are a reminder of the dutyto be vigilant and to keep thesense of responsibility awake.Distrustful souls see oplydarkness burdening the face ofthe earth. We, instead, like toreaffirm all our confidence inOur Savior, Who has not leftthe world which He redeemed.

Indeed, we make ours therecommendation of Jesus thatone should know how to dis-tinguish the “signs of thetimes" (Matt. 16, 4), and we

seem to see, in the midst of so

much darkness, now a few in-dications which augur well forthe fate of the Church and ofhumanity.

The bloody wars that havefollowed one on the other inour times, the spiritual ruinscaused by many ideologiesand the fruits of so many bit-ter experiences have not beenwithout useful teachings.Scientific progress itself,which gave man the possibil-ity of creating catastrophic in-struments for his destruction,has raised questions.

IT HAS OBLIGED humanbeings to become thoughtful,more conscious of their own

limitations, desirous of peaceand attentive to the impor-tance of spiritual values. Andit has accelerated that prog-ress of closer collaborationand of mutual integration to-

ward which, even though inthe midst of a thousand un-

certainties, the human familyseems to be moving. All thisfacilitates, no doubt, the apos-tolate of the Church, sincemany people who did not real-ize the importance of its mis-sion in the past arc, taught byexperience, today more dis-posed to welcome its warn-ings.

Present VitalityOf the Church

Then, if we turn our atten-tion to the Church, we see thatit has not remained a lifelessspectator in the face of theseevents, but it has 'followedstep by step the evolution ofpeoples, scientific progressand social revolution. It hasopposed decisively the mater-ialistic ideologios which denyfaith.

Lastly, it has witnessed the

rise and growth of the im-mense energies of-the aposto-late of prayer, of action in allfields. It has seen the emer-gence of a clergy constantlybetter equipped in learningand virtue for its mission; andof a laity which has becomeever more conscious of its re-

sponsibilities within the bosomof the Church, and, In a spe-cial way, of its duty to collab-orate with the Church hierar-chy.

TO THIS SHOULD be addedthe immense suffering of en-

tire Christian communities,through which a multitude ofadmirable Bishops, priests and

laymen seal their adherenceto the Faith, bearing persecu-tions of all kinds and revealingforms of heroism which cer-

tainly equal those of the mostglorious periods of the Church.

Thus, though the world may

appear profoundly changed,the Christian community is al-so in great part transformedand renewed. It has thereforestrengthened itself socially inunity; it has been reinvigorat-cd intellectually; it has beeninteriorly purified and is thusready for trial.

The 2nd Vatican

Ecumenical CouncilIn the face of this twofold

spectacle —a world which re-veals--a grave state of spiritualpoverty and the Church ofChrist, which is still so vi-brant with vitality we, fromthe time we ascended to thesupreme pontificate, despiteour unworthiness and bymeans of an impulse of DivineProvidence, have felt immedi-ately the urgency of the dutyto call our sons together, togive the Church the possibilityto contribute more efficacious-ly to the solution of the prob-lems of the modern age.

for THIS REASON, wel-coming as from above the in-timate voice of our spirit, weconsidered that the times now

were right to offer to the Cath-olic Church and to the worldthe gift of anew ecumenicalcouncil, as an addition to, andcontinuation of, the series ofthe 20 great councils, whichhave been through the centur-ies a real heavenlyprovidencefor the increase of grace andChristian progress.

The joyful echo broughtby its announcement, followedby the prayerful participationof the whole Church and by a

truly encouraging fervor inthe work of preparation, aswell as by the lively interest,or at least respectful atten-

tion, on the part of non-Catho-

lies and even of non-Chris-tians, proved in the most elo--quent manner that the histori-cal importance of the eventhas not escaped anyone.

The forthcoming council willmeet therefore and at a mo-

ment in which the Churchfinds very alive the desire tofortify its Faith and to con-

template itself in its own awe-inspiring unity. In the sameway it feels more urgent theduty to give greater efficiencyto its sound vitality and to

promote the sanctification ofits members, diffusion of re-vealed truth, the consolida-tion of its agencies.

THIS WILL BE a demon-stration of the Church, alwaysliving and always young,which feels the rhythm of thetimes and which in every cen-tury beautifies itself with new

splendor, radiates new light,-achieves new conquests, whileremaining identical in itself,faithful to the divine imageimpressed on its countenanceby its Spouse, Who loves herand protects her, Christ Jesus.

Then, at a time of generousand growing efforts which are

made in different parts forthe purpose of rebuilding thatvisible unity of all Christianswhich corresponds to thewishes of the Divine Redeem-er, it is very natural that theforthcoming council shouldprovide promises of doctrinalclarity and of mutual charitythat will make still more alivein our separated brothers thewish for the hoped-for returnto unity and will smooth theway.

AND, FINALLY, to a world,which is lost, confused andanxious under the constantthreat of new frightful con-

flicts, the forthcoming councilmust offer a possibility for allmen of good will to turn theirthoughts and their intentionstoward peace, a peace whichcan and must, above all, comefrom spiritual and supernatu-ral realities, from human in-telligence and conscience, en-

lightened and guided by Godthe Creator and Redeemer ofhumanity.

Working ProgramOf the Council

These fruits that we expectso much from the council andon which we like so often to

dwell, entail a vast programof work which is now beingprepared. This concerns thedoctrinal and practical prob-lems which correspond moreto the requirements of perfectconformity with Christianteaching, for the edification

and in the service of the Mys-tical Body and of its supernat-ural mission, and, therefore,the sacred books, venerabletradition, the sacraments,prayer, ecclesiastical disci-pline, charitable and relief ac-

tivities, the lay apostolate andmission horizons.

THIS SUPERNATURAL or-der must, however, reflect itsefficiency in the other order,the temporal one, which on so

many occasions is unfortu-nately ultimately the only onethat occupies and worriesman. In this field the Churchalso has shown that it wishesto be “Mater et Magistra,”according to the words of ourdistant and glorious predeces-sor, Innocent 111, spoken on

the occasion of the FourthLateran Council.

Though not having directearthly ends, it cannot, how-ever, in its mission fail to in-terest itself in the problemsand worries of hero below. Itknows how beneficial to thegood of the soul are thosemeans that are apt to makethe life of those individualmen who must be saved more

human. It knows that by vivi-fying the temporal order withthe light of Christ It revealsmen to themselves; it leads

ithem, therefore, to discover inthemselves their own nature,their own dignity, their own

end.

HENCE THE livings pres-ence of the Church extends,by right and by fact, to the in-ternational organizations, andto the working out of its socialdoctrine regarding the family,education, civil society and allrelated problems. This hasraised its magisterium to a

very high level as the mostauthoritative voice, interpre-ter and affirmcr of the moralorder, and the champion of therights and duties of all hu-man beings and of all politi-cal communities.

In this way the bencficalinfluence of the council delib-erations must, as we sincere-ly hope, succeed to the extentof imbuing with Christian lightand penetrating with ferventspiritual energy not only theintimacy of the soul but thewhole collection of human ac-

tivities.

Convocation of

The CouncilThe first announcement of

the council made by us on

Jan. 25, 1959, was like a littleseed that we planted with anx-ious mind and hand. Support-ed by heavenly help, we thenreadied ourselves for the com-

plex and delicate work of

preparation.Three years have passed

during which we have seen,

day by day, the little seed de-

velop and become with theblessing of God a great tree.

Contemplating the long andtiring road covered, there ris-es from our spirit a hymn ofthanksgiving to the Lord forHis generous help that every-thing developed in a suitablemanner and in a harmony ofspirit.

BEFORE DECIDING thequestions that had to be stud-ied in view of the forthcomingcouncil, we wished to hear be-forehand the wise and enlight-ened opinions of the College ofCardinals, of the episcopate ofthe whole world, of the sacredcongregations of the RomanCuria, of the general super-iors of orders and religiouscongregations, of Catholic uni-versities and of ecclesiasticalfaculties.

This work of consultationwas carried out within a yearand there emerged clearlyfrom this the points that hadto be submitted to a thoroughstudy.

We then instituted the dif-ferent preparatory organiza-tions to which we entrustedthe arduous task of drawingup the doctrinal and discipli-nary projects, among whichwc will choose those we intendto submit to the council. Wefinally have the joy of an-

nouncing that this intensework of study, to which theCardinals, Bishop's, prelates,theologians, canonists and ex-

perts from all over the worldhave given their valuable con-

tribution, is now nearing itsend.

Trusting therefore in thehelp of the Divine Redeemer,the Beginning and the End ofall things, in the help of HisMost Excellent Mother and ofSt. Joseph to whom wc en-

trusted from the very begin-ning such a great event itseems to us that the time hascome to convoke the SecondVatican Ecumenical Council.

AFTER HEARING thereforethe opinion of our brothers theCardinals of the Holy RomanChurch, with the authority ofOur Lord Jesus Christ, of theHoly Apostles Peter and Pauland of our own. we institute,announce and convoke for theforthcoming year 1962 the ecu-

menical and universal council,which will be Ijeld in the Vat-ican basilica, oh days that willbe established according to theopportunity which good Provi-dence may deign to grant us.

We consequently wish and

order that to this ecumenicalcouncil, instituted by us, thereshould come from all parts ourbeloved sons the Cardinals,the venerable brother Pa-triarchs, and Primates, Arch-bishops, and Bishops bothresidential and titular —andalso all those people who havethe right and the duty to at-tend the council.

An Invitation

To PrayerAnd now we ask each in-

dividual member of the faith-ful and the entire Christianpeople to continue participat-ing in most lively prayer thatit may accompany, vivify andembellish the preparation ofthe forthcoming great event.

MAY THIS PRAYER be in-spired by ardent and perse-

vering faith. May it be accom-

panied by that Christian pen-ance which makes it more ac-ceptable to God and more ef-ficacious. May it be strength-ened by an effort of Christianlife which may be an an-

ticipated token of the decisionstaken by each of the individualfaithful to apply the teachingsand the practical directivesthat will emerge from thecouncil itself.

Wc address our appeal bothto Jhe secular and regularclergy, spread throughout theworld, to all categories offaithful. But in a very specialway we entrust its success tothe prayers of children, know-ing well how powerful is thevoice of innocence with God,and to the sick and to the suf-fering that their pains and lifeof sacrifice, by virtue of the-Cross of Christ, may be trans-formed and rise in prayer, inredemption, in a source of lifefor the Church.

TO THIS CHORUS ofprayers we invite also allChristians of churches separ-ated from Rome, that the

council may be also to their

advantage. We know that

many of these sons are anx-

ious for a return of unity andof peace, according to theteachings and the prayer ofChrist to the Father.

And we know also that theannouncement or the councilhas been accepted by themnot only with joy but also thatnot a few have already prom-ised to offer their prayersfor its success, and that theyhope to send representativesof their communities to followits work at close quarters. Allthis is for us a reason of greatcomfort and of hope, and pro-fusely for the purpose offacilitating these contacts we

instituted some time ago thesecretariat for this specificpurpose.

MAY THERE BE repeatedthus in the Christian familiesthe spectacle of the Apostlesgathered together in Jeru-salem after the Ascension ofJesus to heaven, when thenewborn Church was complete-ly united in communion ofthought and of prayer withPeter and around Peter, theshepherd of the lambs and ofthe sheep. And may the Di-vine Spirit .deign to answer ina most comforting manner theprayer that rises daily to Himfrom every corner of theearth:

“Renew Your wonders inour time, as though for anewPentecost, and grant that theHoly Church, preserving unan-imous and continuous prayer,together with Mary, the moth-er of Jesus, and also underthe guidance of St. Peter, mayincrease the reign of the Di-vine Savior, the reign of truthand justice, the reign of loveand peace. Amen.”

Given at Rome at St. Pe-ter’s, Dec. 25, Feast of thebirth of Our Lord Jesus Christ,1961, fourth year of our pon-tificate. I, John, Bishop of theCatholic Church.

Jubilee Masses

At Two MissionsPASSAIC Bishop McNulty

will celebrate a Solemn Pon-tifical Mass on Jan. 7 at 10

a.m. at Our Lady of FatimaChurch in celebration of theeighth anniversary of the es-tablishment of the mission forSpanish-speaking people here.

A similar Mass will be cele-brated Jan. 14 at Our Lady ofProvidence Church, Paterson.The two missions were estab-lished jointly eight years agoand are now in the charge oftwo Chinese-born priests, Rev.Stanislaus B. Chang and Rev.John B. Ly.

There will also be the bless-ing and dedication of the newday nursery at Our Lady ofProvidence on the 14th. Thenursery will be conducted bythe Salesian Sisters.

Illinois CoupleFamily of Year

WASHINGTON (NC) Acouple with eight children whohave used their educationalbackground to strengthen bothfamily and community lifehave been named as the Na-tional Catholic Family of theYear.

The honor goes to Francisand Margaret O'Dowd, mem-bers of St. Francis Xavierparish, Wilmette, 111. Theyhave played an active role inCatholic affairs Mncc theirmarriage 16 years ago.

The award, a specially de-signed plaque, will be pre-sented to Mr. and Mrs. O’Dowdon Holy Family Sunday, Jan.7, by Cardinal Meyer ofChicago.

Seamen. ChaplainsGranted PrivilegesNEW ORLEANS (NC) Na-

tional directors and chaplainsof the Apostlcship of the SeaConference have been grantednew faculties by the SacredConsistorial Congregation inRome, it was announced hereby Rev. Thomas A. McDon-ough, C.SS.R., secretary of theconference in the U. S.

He said national directors ofthe Apostoleship of the Seanow have the power of ap-

pointing a substitute for chap-lains and of conferring on himall the faculties established in

the “Leges” (norms set downfor apostlcship chaplains bythe Consistorial Congrega-tion). This power is grantedwhen it is impossible to haverecourse to the Holy Sec Ye'p-resentative.

ALSO WHEN recourse to

the representative of the HolySec or the national director ofthe apostleship is impossible,

all duly appointed chaplainshave the power of appointinga priest undertaking a sea

voyage as chaplain for the du-ration of the voyage and ofinvesting him with the powersthis function entails, he said.

In cases where it would bedifficult to transport the altarstone, Pope John XXIII hasgranted chaplains going to of-ficiate on board ships permis-sion to use the “antemcn-sium" (corporal with relics)blessed by the Hishop accord-ing to the usual formula.

The Sacred ConsistorialCongregation has also grantedto Apostleship of the Seachaplains for a period of twoyears the faculty of offeringMass for the benefit of sailorson Sundays and on Holy Daysof Obligation at 12:30 am.,and the faculty of offeringMass without a server incases of necessity.

January 4, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 5

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•H# Dm limit Impcnod

a Year

EXTRA BENEFITS . . .

1. DIVIDENDS STARTEVERY MONTH.

2. DIVIDENDS PAIDON ALL SAVINGS.

3. EXTRA DIVIDEND

DAYS EVERYMONTH. SAVE BY

THE 20th —EARNFROM THE Ist.

SAVINGS INSUREDTO $lO,OOO BY

AGENCY OF T H EU S. GOVERNMENT.

OFFICERS & DIRECTORS: ‘HARRY J. STEVENS,Chairman of Board; ‘HARRY J. STEVENS, Jr., Pres •‘JESS J. WASSERMAN, Trc’os.; WALTER A.

Jr, Exec. Vice Pres.; *DR. IRVING 8. COE, Vice Pres.;‘LEON DRESKIN, Vice Pres.; HUGH BARNES; EDWING. FISHER, Jr.; HAROLD LEVEEN; RICHARD A.McDonough, jr; harry p. tepperman.*also Directors

COUNSEL: SAMUEL DRESKIN, ARTHUR S COYNEEDWJN A. DRESKIN. ~ . '

NNtviarl'tTint FrJrral Estcx County's Urgtil

EWARK FEDERALSAVINGS and loan

association

508 Central Avenue, cor. Bth StrcotNewark 7 • MA 4-9540

Hours; Daily 9 fo 4; Fridays until i p.m.FREE PARKINO at 47 So. Bth St., juit north of our offS(f •ioooo Xv

No Town Is an IslandSopiety is a union of many com-

munities working together for the com-mon good. Ideally that is the way itought to be. Applied to our own areaof community living, it means that todayour municipalities depend upon eachother for mutual help in their economic,political arid social'life. Specifically our

suburban towns today, whether they likeit or not, are being forced to think andplan on a regional basis in reference to

zoning, water supply, sewers, schools,and other municipal services.

No town can go it alone any more.

There are still some town fathers, how-ever, who can’t see it that way. So therest of us, as well as themselves, are infor trouble in more ways than one.

REGIONAL SCHOOLS, modern andwell equipped, today are a must. The

obvious advantages of having more ofthese central schools is being sacrificedin some instances because of the selfishinsular thinking of a local planningboard or municipal government. Boardmembers claim they represent citizenswho feel that a regional school, whetherit be a high school or college, is going to

place their town at the mercy of theherd. Zoning laws are built up like a

wall to protect their little enclave.Legally a community may have the

right to do what it likes in zoning itsland; but at the same time a community,

morally, is not free to do as it likes. A

community may have the right-to makeits own way of life in independence, butevery right implies a corresponding duty.

Every community is called to serve

the common good and, like an individual,a town must have a sense of vocation.Social justice requires that we cooperateand even sacrifice some self-interests inorder to achieve the maximum develop-ment of all our citizens, not just those of

your own town. We are called to helpmake America great. Once you allow a

community to sink into the status quo of

selfish insular thinking, you forget theideal of common obligation to be ful-filled for the common good of the na-

tion. You forget your vocation as Amer-icans.

WE ARE FREE citizens but we

are not free of our duties to society. Allthe blueprints of experts for a plannedcommunity might just as well be torn upif isolation is the basis of our thinkingand planning. Regional schools providingfor the common good may interferewith the selfish interests of a few.When such a question arises, we needin every municipal government men of

vision, strong leaders, free from com-

munity selfishness and immature poli-tics. To every civic association we maywell say, with an apology for the cliche,“No Town'ls an Island.”

For Two in AuthorityThere are duties before God and man that

are the common obligation of all men. But thereare duties before man and God that are thelonely lot of the elected few. Two of those feware John F. Kennedy and Richard J. Hughes.The one now begins his second year as Presi-dent of the United States. The other is aboutto take, up his duties as Governor of the StateNew Jersey. Both by the election of the peoplewhom they govern assume duties for which theywonld not otherwise be held by God to account.Each by reason of his bffice is deserving ofthe prayers of all whom he governs. It is bythe vote of the governed that they have beenelected. It is on behalf of the governed that

they have accepted the burden of additional du-des toward God.

Man achieves his salvation in proportion tothe degree to which he practises well the vir-tues demanded by the duties of his state inlife. When the duties of one’s state in life reachout to include the executive direction of a stateor nation, the demands of virtue are an

awesome challenge. Life is no longer the mere

ordering of one’s personal doings; it becomestha terrifyingly complicated doings of cities andstates of people.

IN HIS WAY of providing God never bur-dens a man beyond his strength. The strengthmay not be the man’s own. His sufficiency isfrom God. God gives not only the ability lorthe task that becomes a duty. In addition Hegives gifts that increase the case with whicha man uses his God-given abilities. This is the

profoundly simple formula of supernaturalizingeveryday obligations.

Both our President and Governor-elect havereceived in Baptism and Confirmation thegrace, abilities and helps of God to fulfill theduties of their state in life with supernatural sue-

cess. It remains for each to use those giftswell. God works in the souls of men by thepromptings and inspirations of the Holy Spirit.It is all the more urgent then that we praythese men be sensitive to those inspirations. Inour prayers we look not merely to our own

material welfare under their direction. We prayas much and more that their terms of officebe a segment of their lives well led and pleas-ing to God.

THEY NEED A delicate sensitivity to God’steaching and law, as they pertain to the execu-

tive office. That is wisdom. They need a sharpperception of the vanishing values of material

prosperity and personal prestige. That isknowledge. They need a facility of decision indetermining in the concrete what God expectsof man and nation. This is counsel. They needa readiness to accept the truths of God despitethe apparent enigma of mystery. That is under-standing.

How greatly do they need piety, an aptitudefor prayer. So very much do those in high of-fice need fortitude. This is their strengthagainst pressures and prejudice, rash judgmentand undue criticism, slurs, and personal sacri-fices.

All these they must expect in the practiceof virtue in their demanding positions. Whatmore comforting fear could they have than fearot the Lord, a son s awe at offending his Father.

There is nothing more forceful at the mo-

ment than the plea of Paul, the Apostle, "Iurge then, first of all, that supplications, pray-ers, intercessions and thanksgivings be offeredfor all men:

... for all who are in authority,that we may lead a quiet and tranquil lifeadorned with perfect piety and dignity” (ITimothy 2:1).

The Choice CollegeThat season of the year has come when

parents and sons and daughters begin to seekthe college' or university of their choice. Onlytoo often, instead of seeking the choice college,they seek admission to the one which will cater

to them. Unfortunately they try mistakenly to

fit the college to their personal desires insteadof fitting themselves to the basic philosophyand educational pattern of a sound, proved cur-

ricular discipline.Parents and their offspring are prone to

look upon a college as either a service stationor an educational cafeteria where they may sur-

feit themselves with the purely pleasant or thesolely pragmatic. They seek an educational en-

vironment that, like the weight lifter’s exer-

cises, overdevelops in one area and leaves an-

other in grotesque weakness.

TIIE FAULT IS not the parents’ alone.

Colleges and universities, too, have practisedsome of this "cafeteria” philosophy. They haveyielded to pressures, some economic, some mi--takenly educational, to offer courses, or instruc-tion ("education” would scarcely be the word)in a bewildering variety of subjects little re-

lated to academic discipline.The astute student is not unaware of this.

With a wariness worthy of a better quarry,he pursues the “fresh air” courses which leavehim with nothing but credits at the end of a

semester. The student is scarcely to be blamedfor taking advantage of what the institution so

blatantly offers.It would be prudent, then, for parents es-

pecially to explore the educational philosophyof the college or university they think of select-ing.

The recent Griswold-Hutchins report hasmade it frighteningly clear that too many col-

lege-level institutions are jettisoning time-hon-ored disciplines in an effort to plicate wealthybackers, be they individuals, corporations, or

endowment groups. Obviously these collegesand universities arc more interested in impart-ing factual information than they are in im-planting a philosophy which will make the use

of those facts useful and beneficial.

PARENTS WOULD amply fulfill their re-

sponsibilities if they, together with their sons

and daughters, chose those colleges which are

determined to shape the student rather thanbe shaped by him. Parents could do much foreducation by acknowledging the choice collegeand making it the college of their choice.

Mr. Bishop Visits NewarkA recent article in the Pittsburgh Post

Gazette by Jim Bishop: Reporter, was titled“Newark: Worst City in America.” The openingline: “No city in America looks as bad and•mells as bad as Newark, N. J." . . . “itsquats peeling in its own stench beside thePassaic river,” etc., etc.

FOR A REPORTER of Mr. Bishop's usual

care, this is a most unusual and carelessarticle. If he had stated: “One of the worst,"although we would still disagree, he would havebeen on relatively safe or debatable ground.But the flat declaratory, "Worst city,” “nocity smells as bad,” etc., imposes a heavy bur-den of proof upon Mr. Bishop. Admittedly inhis profession he travels a great deal. But one

doubts if he has been able to "look at andsmell” the 17,-215 incorporated cities in Ameri-ca either by himself or through the eyes andnostrils of others.

There js a famed and storied city in theWest that nestles in the foothills of the Rockies.One of Its main streets has a breath-takingview of the majestic mountains, but the streetitself and the environs arc breath-choking intheir squalor. There Is a city in the South witha manufactory on its perimeter that literallybefouls the senses of sight and smell. Manytravelers, Including, one is sure, Mr. Bishop,are familiar with the essence “Chicago No. 5”when the wind wafts It from the stock yardarea.

NO, MR. BISHOP, it is not quite accurateto say: "No city in America looks as bad andsmells as bad as Newark, N. J.”

Our archdiocesan city has its flaws and

faults, and none are more aware of these thanthose who were born here, live and work here.

But Newark also has its brighter sides,and the brightest facet of all is the new Newarkwhich is already emerging.

The men who make up the world of finance

have very sensitive fingers. They poke andprobe carefully before investing their gold.They do not invest in “ghost towns."

Mr. Bishop should read Newark's latest"report card” on capital investment in proj-ects: Completed, under construction or on thedrawing boards:

Business (private capital): $65.950.000. Res-

idential (private capital): $10,360,000. Urbanrenewid: $174,000,000. Federal highways andparking (including completed underground gar-

age): $122,600,000. Grand total of money al-

ready spent and to be spent in Newark: $372,-910,000.

THIS IS MORE money than it cost to buildthe great Boulder Dam in Nevada or the GrandCoulee Dam in the Northwest. Is it conceivablethat the men who control that kind of moneywould spend it in Newark, if it were true, as

alleged by Mr. Bishop, that Newark is the"worst city in America” . . that "no city ihAmerica looks as bad and smells as had as

Newark, N.J.”?The question answers itself, and Mr. Bishop.One final note to Mr. Bishop: Rising ma-

jestically übovo the city and gracing its sky-line with its soaring towers and spires is theCathedral of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, one

of the newest and most beautiful ecclesiasticaledifices on the entiro North American con-

tinent.

To Whom It May ...

Mary and JosephAnd Their Betrothal

By Frank J. Sheed

£od sent the angel Gabrielwith a message to Mary, a

young girl of Nazareth.

Mary is our way of sayingthe name Myriam, which alsoappears as Mariam and Mari-amne. In the 2,000 years ofJewish history covered by theOld Testament the name only

occurs once Moses’ sisterwas Myriam. But it had a

great flowering round aboutthis time. The New Testa-ment gives us not only Maryof Nazareth, but Mary of Cleo-phas, Mary Magdalen (andMary of Bethany, if she was

not Mary Magdalen).

WHY THIS sudden flower-ing, we do not know, \yhatmakes it a shade more puzz-ling is that we do not even

know what the name meant.Scholars have listed some

thing like 60 guesses as to themeaning, based not only on

Hebrew words, but on Egypt-ian, since the first Myriamwas born in Egypt.

An old tradition calls herparents Joachim and Anna.We know only one thing aboutthem with certainty, but thisone thing outweighs librariesof biographical detail: forthey were the only father andmother in all the history ofmankind who had a child con-

ceived immaculate. W'hat leg-ends could possibly gild that?

Her parents did not knowthat she had sanctifying gracein her soul from the first mo-

ment of her existence in hermother’s womb. At the time of

the Annunciation, Our Ladymay not have known it her-self: it is not fanciful to thinkthat she learned it first fromthe Son Whom she herselfconceived not only immacu-late, but virginally.

SHE WAS BETROTHED toa man called Joseph. Of him,too, we know very little. Didhe, like Mary, belong to Naza-reth at the time of the be-trothal? Scripture does not

say. He was a carpenter, andlie was of the noblest bloodthat Israel had, for he was a

descendant of King David.Why should a man of that lin-eage have been a carpenter?

We know that the house ofDavid had fallen into obscur-ity, and obscurity and povertywere practically interchange-able terms. In the great revoltled by the Macchahecs, whichgave the Jews their lastbreath of independence be-fore Home swallowed them,the sons of David played no

conspicuous partA century or so after this,

when the Homan Emperor DoIndian ordered the destruction

„of David's known descendantsas possible renters of revolt

against Homan rule, some atleast were spared becausethey were so poor and insigmficant that even the tyrantcould not see them as a ser

lous threat. It is all very puz-zling, to us, since we know thatthe Messias, the expectation ofIsrael, was to be- a son ofDavid

WE ARE TOLD that Joseph"as of Davids house. WasMary? Again, Scripture is si-lent. Catholics, I think, take itfor granted that she was. It is

true that the Jews consideredadoption as practically equiva-lent to physical generation:the acknowledgment by Jo-seph of Jesus as his childwould have been sufficient tomake Jesus a son of David.

But the language of the NewTestament seems to demandfor Our Lord something more

than a merely legal descentfrom David. In his first greatsermon, St. Peter speaks ofChrist Our Lord as “the fruitof David’s loins” (Actsii. 30); St. Paul speaks of Him

as “made of the seed of David,according to the flesh" (Ro-mans i.3).

These would be quite strongterms for a purely legal rela-tionship.

We have no certain knowl-edge, but there is somethingattractive in the idea, proposcd by many scholars, that St

Joseph was a close relation ofOur Lady, so that her ances-

try would be the same as his.

BETROTHAL, for the Jewsof that day, was not simply an

engagement to marry. Afterbetrothal, the couple were

husband and wife. Each con-

tinued to live at home for a

'year, if the bride was a vir-gin, for a month if she was a

widow. Then came the solemnentry of the bride into herhusband's house. In the periodbetween, the marriage actwould have been unusual, per-haps, at any rate in Galilee;but not sinful. For the couple

were husband and wife

Partially RightIsn’t All Right

By Louis F. Budenz

Self-betrayal within nationsand causes, arising from theirown partially wrong ideas aswell as outright subversion,has happened rnrore than once

in the history of man.

IN THE CONTEST withatheistic communism, we are

hound to acknowledge thatwithin our own camp therehave long existed half erron-

eous ideas which have plag-ued us into muny harmfulacts ideas based on incor-rect views of materialism andat the same time on reluc-tance to adopt courageous eco-

nomic reforms. Both of theseconcepts highlighted the en-

cyclical "On Atheistic Com-munism," which Pius XI pre-sented to the world 25 yearsago.

In almost the first wordsof this encyclical, Pope Piusbrought out that communismhad been prepared for bythose alleged “intellectuals"who had sought to “de-Chris-tianizc human society.” It also

underlined strongly that we

shduld have a "social-economic order” which would notbase itself alone on "free com-

petition."WE CAN therefore -Wlte~

more note today of thfr com-

munist endeavor to discreditprofit-sharing, fop-instance inThe Worker of Dec. 17 by as-

sailing the operations of sucha plan betwjeen American Mo-tors and thnUAW.

Profit-sharing was not de-vised to creaVe undue "speed-up ”

The extensive assaultupon profit-sharing hv Tbe'Worker makes Ti.H Tsval+w-Tfmtthe Reds are lying in wait tofind faults in such arrangements. since widespread profit sharing would interfere withtheir ambitions to bring aboutthe communist dictatorshipand its control over produc-tion.

TIIEKE IS A strong hint toforward the idea of profit-sharing, to insist that our

great monopolies adopt suchplans. For the choice of thefuture, as Pope John's socialencyclical, "Mater et Magis-tra” indicates, lies betweensuch "workers’ ownership"and worldwide communistmonopoly.

IK SOME PEOPLE are

surprised that in opposing

communism they have a dutyto promote profit sharing,many more expressed an-

guish that Nehru has not livedup in Goa to the "pacifist"visage which he presents toRed China. Our distraughtcondition is again based on a

false conception of Nehru’sphilosophy.

In International Affairsfrom Moscow of November,1957, celebrating the 40th an

niversary of the BolshevikRevolution, we note this con-

tribution from Nehru:"... The Soviet Revolution

had advanced human societyby a great leap and had lit a

bright flame which could nothe smothered

... It had laidthe foundations for that new

civilization toward which theworld could advance.”

SUCH ADULATION of "theSoviet Revolution" was ex-

pressed in a larger way byNehru in his "History of theWorld," written from prisonfor his daughter. We have had

ample foreknowledge thatNehru, when the chips arc

probably do allthat jne cNn to help Sovietcommunisirrs cause, and our

blindness Jo such facts haspiloting.

It iybot surprising that theOctober Political lAffairs is sowell( pleased with/ the outcomeof the Rclgradej Conference,presided over hyl the commu-

nist Tito and tpximinently rep-resented by Nehru’s influenceDespile Ihp/sympathv we have

/grTTmTito and Nehru, the Relgrade Conference, says Politi-cal Affairs, "clearly repudiat-ed the effort of Washington to

pressure the neutrals into a

condemnation of the SovietUnion" on testing

THAT THIS IS due not onlyto the Nehru and Tito philoso-phies hut also to blurred viewswithin our own camp is wit-nessed by recent issues of theNew Times from Moscow.This communist line organ

thought so well of "the Amer-ican Juggernaut” series byFred .1. Cook in The Nation of(his country presenting the.U S. as "a warfare state”that it reprinted tlie articles.

We cannot escape the real-ity that wrong views and interpretations within our own

ranks present a big handicapin dealing with communism.

THE QUESTION BOXRet'. Leo barley, S.T.D., and Kev. Robert Hunt, S.T.D., of

Immaculate Conception Seminary, Darlington, Ramsey, N, ].,are editors of The Question Box. Questions may be addressedto them there for answer in this column, or to Question BoxEditors, The Advocate, 31 Clinton St., Newark 2, N.J.

Q. What sin docs a personcommit in going to see a

“B” movie after taking theLegion of Decency pledge?

A. sin .that he maywell be committing even if hehad not taken the Legion ofDecency pledge! The pledgemerely brings into focus thosemoral obligations which are

already present by virtue ofthe natural law: for example,the obligation of giving wideberth to those pictures whichare an occasion for sin forhim, and the further obliga-tion of not frequenting mo-

rally objectionable films lesthis presence there be a sourceof scandal for others.

And while We are at it, let’sclarify this notion of scandal.In popular usage, “to scan-dalize” is made synonymous

with “to shock” or “to hor-rify." In moral theology, how-ever, it has a much broader

meaning. “To scandalize” is“to perform any action whichis cither evil or has the ap-

pearance of evil and which of-fers an occasion of sin to* an-

other in the sense that itweakens his resistance to sinor makes it more attractive tohim.”

MORE OFTEN than not, a

person is scandalized without

being "shocked” or “horri-fied.” He sees his neighborgoing to “B" movies, or pad-ding his expense account, or

unnecessarily shopping on Sun-day, and concludes, “Well, ifhe and other Catholics are do-ing it, it can’t be so bad afterall!” Here is scandal in all ofits ugliness.

Instead of getting encourage-ment from his neighbor to

“fight the good fight,” he ismade to feel alone in his nev-er ending struggle with the

forces of evil. Little wonderthat he is tempted to throw inthe sponge and follow thecrowd.

Further, over and aboveavoiding occasions of sin andscandal, one must alwaysavoid to the best of his abilitycooperating in immorality.

The price of admission to a

morally objectionable film isa vote for even more objec-tionable films. It is a ques-tion of "dollars for dirt,” thedirt that is smearing our in-nocent youth and choking offthe breath of God’s life with-in them. Need we say more?

Q. I beard that there are

some excellent Catholic re-

cordings available on how togive sex Instructions to youth.Where may I obtain them?

Also, can you recommend anyother literature on this sub-ject which would be helpful toan anxious and hesitant par-ent?

A. The Christopher record-ings on sex instructions and

an accompanying booklet are

published by Christopher Pub-lications, 18 E. 48th St., NewYork 17, N. Y. Some other in-expensive books and bookletswhich might prove quite help-ful are: Sattler’s “Parents,Children and the Facts ofLife,” Image Books, GardenCity, N.Y.; Kelly’s “ModernYouth and Chastity” andBruckner’s “How to Give SexInstructions,” Queens’ Work

Publications, St. Louis, Mo.;and “Accent on Purity,” Fidcs

Publishers, Chicago.All of these items may be

obtained through any Catholicbook or religious article store,or by writing directly to thepublisher.

Forty Hours

NewarkJan. 7. 19*2

F#a*t of Holy FamilySt Aloy*iu«. Flemlnf Avc A Free

SI h Minii» IJo*pil.*J. 2'> h Ham.lon PI . Jorary City

Jan. 14, 19*3Socond Sunday Aftor Epiphany

St. Benedict's. 63 Barbara St..Newark

Holy Ansels' Institute. Main St.,Fort Lee

All Saints. 201 Pacific Avc., JerseyCity

Holy Rosary. 3*4-6th St., JerseyCity

PatersonJan. 7. 19*2

First Sunday After EpiphanyHoly Family, Lloyd A\e. Florham

Park

St Joseph. Comly Rd . LincolnPark

St Joseph. 390 Market St., PatersonJan. 14, 19*2

Second Sunday After EpiphanySt Joseph's Hospital. 703 .Main St .

Paterson

Mass CalendarJan. 7 Sunday The Holy Fam-

ily. 2nd Clan. White. Gl. Cr. Pref.only of Kplphany

Jan 8 Monday. Mass of IstSunday after Epiphany. 4th ClassWhite. Gl 2nd Coli. C (P). No Cr.Pref. of Epiphany.

Jan 1)-

Tuesday. Mass of IstSunday after Epiphany 4th ClassWhite Gl. No Cr. Pref of Epiphany

Jan 10 Wednesday. Mass of IntSunday after Epiphany. 4th ClassWhite. GJ 2nd Coll. C CP). No Cr.Pref of Epiphany

Jan 11 Thursday Mass of IstSunday after Epiphany 4th ClassWhite Gl. 2nd Coll. St. Hyglnus.No Cr. Pref. of Epiphany.

'an. 12 Friday Mass of IstSunday after Epiphany. 4th ("lass.White Gl. 2nd Coll. C <P>. No Cr.Pref. of Epiphany

Jan 13 Saturday. Commemora-tion of the Baptism of Our Lord.2nd Class. White Gl. Cr. Pref. ofEi iphany. ( Hie Mass is said as

Bi*en In the Missal for Jan 13>.Jan. 14 Sunday. Second .Sun-

day after Epiphany. 2nd Class.Green. Gl Cr. Pref. of Trinity.

KEY Gl. Gloria; Cr. Creed; Cfrom the Votive Mass of HolyGhost; N Archdiocese of Newark. PDiocese of Paterson; Coll. Collect;Pref. Preface.

InYourPrayersremember these, your de-ceased priests:

Archdiocese

Of NewarkRev. Umberto Donati, Jan. 7,

1943Rev. Joseph Zablochi, Jan. 8,

1922 .

Rev. William F. Burke, Jan9, 1954

Rt. Rev. Msgr. George H.Doanc, P.A., Jan. 9, 1908

Rev. John A. Banks, Jan. 91951

Rev. James A. Keough, Jan10, 1932

Rev. Perry G. De Witt, Jan.10, 1957

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph F.Dolan, Jan. 12, 1959

Rev. Bcneventus Rudolph,0.F.M., Jan. 12, 1960

Rev. Michael J. Conley,CSS R , Jan 12. 1961

Diocese

Of PatersonRev. Joseph J. Spielman, Jan.

9, 1943

Rt. Rev. Msgr. John J. Dauen-hauer, Jan. 9, 1954

Rev. John J. Duggan, Jan. 10,1945

AROUND THE PARISH

Mr. O’Brien learns the bitter truth that he isn’t as

young as he used to be, and decides he’ll coach theCYO team by word rather than example.

6 THE ADVOCATE January 4, 1962

TfceAJvtfcateOfficial Publication of

Archdiocese of Newark and ofthe Diocese of Paterson.

Most Rev. Thomas A.

Boland, S.T.D., Archbishop of

Newark.Published weekly hy The Advocate

Publishing Corporation; Moat Rev.Thomas A. Roland. S.T.D.. Pres-ident; Rt Rev. Msgr. James AHughes. PA . J.C.D.. V.G.. Vice

President. Rt. Rev. Msgr. James F.Looney. A M . Secretary: Rt. Rev.Msgr. Caesar M. Rinaldi and Rt.Rev. Msgr, Paul Knappek. PA .

Trustees 31 Clinton St., Newark 2.N J MArket 4-0700

Member of the Catnollc PressAssociation and the InternationalI’nlon of the Catholic Press. Sub-scriber to tho N.C.W.C. News Scr\-

Editorial Board Most Rev MartinW Stanton. ST D., Ph D.; Rt. RevMsgr. William C. Heimbuch; Rt.Rev, Msgr. John J. Dougherty.STL.. SSI). Very Rev. Msgr.George W. Shea. S.T.D.; Very Rev.Msgr. Thomas M. Reardon. L.LU .

Rev William J Duffy. S.T.L.; Rev.Hugh J. Fituimmons. MR.; Rev.James W\ O'Neill; Rev, William N.Field. M LS.; Rev William Keller,A M., S T L.; Rev. Francis J. Hough-

ton. STL.Executive Director: Rt. Rev. Msgr

John J. KileyPaterson Representative. Rev. Carl

J Wolsin. STL.Managing Editor; Floyd Anderson.

K.S.G.

Subscription Price: $4 30 yearly.Second Class postage paid at New-

ark under act of Mar. 3. 1879.

Is a Child of DivorceA Bad Marriage Risk?

By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J.Assistant Professor of Sociology, St. Louis University

.

W.

e

,'?

I

ron

1g forbidding our son to continue dating a girl with a bad familybackground. He is 24, and she is 17. Her parents are divorced. Her grandmother is

a lallen-awayCatholic, and her father never goes to church either. During the sum-mer, her grandmother and mother go around the home half-dressed. Our son claimshe asked his confessor about it, and he said it would be all right to marry this girl.

On the basis of what youhave written, I think mostwould agree that your reac-tion is quite understandable.Studies of divorce in threegenerations indicate that mar-

ital failure is much more like-ly if one or both the partnerscome from broken homes.

If his family - setting is un-

happy, the child may respondin similar fashion in his ownmarriage. The quality of pa-rental relationships influencesthe personalities and conse-quently the marital success ofthe children.

The questionable religiousand moral tone of the girl’sfamily offers further groundsfor apprehension. Fallen-awayCatholics ofteri try to justifytheir position by bitter attacks

on the Church or religion ingeneral, while a father whodoes not attend church serv-.

Ices provides a harmful modelfor his children. The full ef-fects of such deleterious in-fluences may not be revealedclearly until later in life whenfidelity to religion may requireconsiderable effort or sacri-fice.

HOWEVER, SINCE not allyoung people with unhappyfamily backgrounds are un-

successful in marriage, itwould be an error to excludeall such persons from the list

of eligible marriage partnerswithout further investigation.An unhealthy family settingdoes not predetermine a childto marital failure.

In growing up, children are

subjected to a great variety ofother influences from neigh-borhood, school, and church,while as rational creaturesaided by divine grace, theyare not mere passive productsof their environment. No twoindividuals are <6ver quitealike even though they come

from similar backgrounds.

YET THE FAMILY settingmerits serious consideration inthe selection of a marriagepartner, for marriage is thelifelong union of two personal-ities, and the family is thecradle of personality. Throughhis inter-action with his par-ents and other family mem.

bers, the child learns many ofthe roles he will play later inlife. The love, response, en-

couragement and support hereceives within his family cir-

cle inevitably help to mold thepersonality that he brings to

his own marriage.Studies show that young hus-

bands and wives tend to imi-tate parental models in defin-ing their mutual rights, duties,and expectations. These arc

the only models they knowfrom first-hand experience.

and from childhood on, theyhave probably regarded themas more or less “natural.”

IN THE LIGHT of thesebrief considerations it shouldbe clear that the personalitydevelopment of children raisedin families disrupted by di-vorce proceeds under a ser-

ious handicap. Before the ac-tual disruption, the family at-mosphere is usually chargedwith conflict and hate. Oftenchildren are used as mere

pawns in the struggle. Confus-ed and torn between compet-ing loyalties, they are boundto feel rejected by the depart-ing parent yet experience ser-

ious secret guilt as their loveand esteem turns to hate.

Because they lack adequateparental models, many haveno clear conception of theirown roles in marriage or ofwhat to expect from theirpartners.

SOME ARE OVERLY anx-

ious about success, fearfullywatching for the first signs oftrouble, almost as if they were

doomed to failure as theirparents before them. Othersfind it difficult to place com-

plete trust in their partners,feeling that their loyalty hasbeen betrayed before and it issafer to proceed with reserveif not suspicion.

On the other hand, personsand circumstances may differ

so widely, as I have suggest-ed, that we must be carefulin passing judgment on indi-vidual cases. Although the un-

healthy family background ofthe young lady providesgrounds for serious concern,there are other considerations.If she has received good reli-gious training, is faithful inher practice of religion, ap-pears emotionally well-bal-anccd, and reveals an ade-quate sense of responsibility,you might reconsider your op-position.

I FEEL FREE to suggestthis, since your son appears tobe a serious young man, andhis confessor undoubtedlygave his favorable decisionwith adequate knowledge ofthe circumstances.

Anti-TrustAct

And UnionsBy Msgr. George G. Higgins

There is a campaign afoot tobring unions under the Sher-man Act and other federalanti-trust statutes. Delegatesto the recent AFL-CIO con-vention in Miami declaredtheir awareness of the serious-ness of this campaign and di-rected the federation’s execu-tive council to respond with a

vigorous education and publicrelations program to acquaintpeople with the campaign’snature and character and to

alert them to the harmful ef-fects to the entire labor forcewhich would flow from sub-jecting unions to our Federalanti-trust statutes.

The Miami AFL-CIO resolu-tion was based on the assump-tion that "the gains which theAmerican worker has madethrough collective bargainingwould be completely and ut-terly halted if unions were

subjected to the provisions ofthe anti-trust statutes."

THIS MIGHT be a slight ex-

aggeration, but there is nodoubt that labor's position issubstantially correct. To sub-ject unions to our anti-truststatutes might not be com-

pletely disastrous to organiz-ed labor, but it would' naostcertainly be very harmful to

&best interests of Americanr* I—-»1—-»

The reasonableness of la-bor’s position on this was offi-cially recognized by the U. S.Congress as long ago as 1914

in Section VI of the ClaytonAct, which specifically ex-

cludes from its anti-trust pro-visions such union activitiesas collective bargaining andthe right to take collectiveaction in defense of wages.

Should this section of theClayton (Act be repealed, un-

ions would be seriously weak-ened and, in some cases,

might even be reduced to

complete ineffectiveness.

NATIONAL OR even com-

pany-wide collective bargain-ing would presumably beeliminated. Workers employedby many of our multi-plantcorporations would be pre-vented from using their col-lective strength to improvewages and working conditions.Collective bargaining would belimited to the plant level as

though each plant of the mul-ti-plant corporation were a

completely separate entity.

Director, Social Action Department, NCWC

It is-interesting to note thata study group of the Commit-tee for Economic Develop-ment, an organization of for-ward-looking employer*, is al-so opposed to including unionsunder the Sherman Act. TheCED, in a study report on col-lective bargaining issued a

week or so ago, proposed amodified anti-trust restraint on

labor when prices andproducts are affected andcompetition is threatened.

THE CED REPORT oppos-ed application of anti trust leg-islation to trade unions as itapplies to business but ac-

knowledged that unions were

permitted activities in productmarkets as contrasted to la-bor markets that are not al-lowed to employers. The re-

port urged "the law be chang-ed so that unions are not per-mitted activities in productmarkets that would be pro-scribed if undertaken by em-ployers.”

It added, however, that thechange should be in nationallabor legislation rather than inexisting anti- trust law. Itwould be illegal under theCED proposal for a union tocondition work by its memberson maintenance by a firm ofa given price list or on thepurchase of a firm’s suppliesfrom a given group of em-

ployers.

ORGANIZED LABOR, itseems to me, would be welladvised to go along with theCommittee for Economic De-velopment on the latter point.Labor’s opposition to inclusionof unions under the ShermanAct is well founded. Not so,however, is its opposition toelimination of certain forms ofcollusive price fixing betweenunions and employers.

If labor will take the initia-tive in eliminating these col-lusive practices by legisla-tion if necessary it willstrengthen its own-hand intrying to counteract the cur-rent and very unfortunatecampaign by some employergroups to repeal Section VIof the Clayton Act, which haslong been known as labor'sMagna Carta.

Notre Dame Prof

Heads ScientistsDENVER Dr. Frederick

D. Rossini of Notre Dame Uni-versity was reelected presi-dent of the Albertus MagnusGuild of Catholic scientists atits eighth annual meeting atRegis College here.

Rev. Patrick 11. Yancey,’S J., of Spring Hill College";Mobile, Ala.,, was reelectedexecutive secretary-treasurer,and Dr. Lawrence H. Balding-er of Notre Dame was namededitor of the guild’s monthlypublication.

Vocation IndulgencesMembers of the Apostolatc

foi Vocations can gain a plen-ary indulgence under the or-

dinary conditions on:

Jan. 6, Feast of the Epiph-any

Jan. 7, Feast of the HolyFamily (Sunday within theOctave of the Epiphany)

A partial indulgence of 100days may be gained for eachact of charity or piety per-formed for the intention of fos-tering vocations to the priest-hood.

STEANGE BUT TRUELittle-Known Facte for Catholics

By M. J. MURRAY MO, lfjaWA iw MM

God Love You

‘I Was HungryAnd You Gave’

By Bishop Fulton J. Sheen

Many Jews and Protestantsare very good to the missions.During a meeting of the So-ciety for the Propagation ofthe Faith in San Francisco,three letters arrived with of-ferings: one with $lOO from a

Jew, another with $25 from a

Protestant and another with$25 from a Catholic.

Certainly, two of these don-ors gave without any explicitreference to the Church as theTruth and Love of Christ con-

tinuing through the centuries.And yet there was some im-plicit knowledge of it. It couldvery well be that to some Godis seen as veiled.

After all, if Christ showedHimself in the Eucharist asHe really is, we would beblinded by His glory, and ourfaith would be destroyed. Forthen we would see Him withcompelling evidence. It is not

necessary to see Christ in thefullness of His revelation toaccept or reject Him.

ON THE LAST DAY, OurLord will speak to those whohave been saved, and they willreply: "When was it that we

saw Thee hungry, or thirsty,or a stranger, or naked, or

sick, or in'prison, and minis-tered unto Thee?" And Christwill answer that what they didunto the least of His brethren,they did unto Him.

They may not have knownit, but in keeping the com-

mandment about loving one’sneighbor they were to someextent keeping the first aboutlove of God.

HOW MUCH MORE shouldMe who are invited to the

King’s table, who have our

wounds bound in the confes-sional and, on the last journeyof all, have our bodies puri-fied for the Resurrection—howmuch more should we expressour gratitude to the Lord.

Africa is our problem;Korea is our problem; LatinAmerica is our problem; Indiais our worry; Burma is our

care.

FORTUNATELY, there isone way to aid all and wisely,and that is by sending yoursacrifices to the Holy Fatherthrough his Society for thePropagation of the Faith. Hereceives what you give;’ hedistributes what you give. Heis your father; he is the fatherof all the missions.

For just 54 a week? you can

care for a leper in one of our

400 leper colonies. Think of it!Why not send that amountevery month to make up forthe leprosy of sin?

Cut out this column, pinyour sacrifice to it and ad-dress it to Bishop Fulton J.Sheen, National Director. So-ciety for the Propagation ofthe Faith, 366 Fifth Ave.,New York, or to your diocesandirector:

Bishop Martin W. Stanton,31 Mulberry St., Newark, or

Rt. Rev. Msgr, William F.I.ouis, 24 DeGrasse St.. Pater-son.

Letters to the Editor’ •

v,d ?°"* t Uli *’ *• Editor, for publicationkJt cdui * n 'Jl >1, y * i >o *U b* timely, signed by thi Wfittr, andbrtef wherever possible.)

She Thanks God

For Santa Claus

Gertrude Heiser,East Orange.

Editor:Christmas, IU6I, has come

and gone, the hubbub and ex-citement are subsiding andamong most men of good willthere is the “peace of Christ-mas” the sense of well-being and deep gratitude intheir hearts for the manyspiritual and material bless-ings received on Christmasday.

And this is written in de-fense of the spirit of SantaClaus for those who would pre-fer to Europeanize our Amer-ican tradition of gift-giving on

Christmas. . .As children, we

believed in Santa’s toy-bearing,yet as the years pass, findourselves recognizing with tre-mendous warmth of love andjoy the whole spirit of theChrist Child, God the Father’ssupreme gift to man.

We acknowledge this in theatmosphere and decorations ofour homes, by the Christmascribs, the lovely evergreensthat symbolize Life, the cardssent in the name of the Childwe honor, the pure iaith, hopeand love of our children whosay, "Thank you, Baby Jesus,for our toys and food.”

We need never sec the com-

mercialization of Christmas ifwe live the sprit of Christ,by keeping the Command-ments, if we not only “keepChrist in Christmas" but allthrough each day of our lives.

So, “Thanks sweet Infant,for Santa Claus and the hap-piness created by You throughhim.”

True MeaningOf Christmas

Barbara Bernarz,Clifton.

Editor:Once again, the smell of

evergreen and spruce per-meates the air, and the Joy ofBethlehem lightens hearts andquickens steps.

How pleasant and inspiring

to view this holy season withsuch an attitude! For indeed,although commercialism veilsChristmas, its true meaningstill shines forth . ..

THE REFRAIN, "PutChrist back in Christmas,”typifies a pessi-mistic viewpoint; since Christhas never been "out of”Christmas. He is present inevery sprig of mistletoe, inevery Christmas stocking, in

every smiling face, and inevery joyous greeting of theseason. You must know justhow and where to look forHim!

With little thought, manyhave forgotten the originalmeanings of such items as

Christmas trees and hollywreaths . . .

Industry cannot be judgedentirely responsible for suchtragic circumstances; a largeportion of the blame should beattributed to the individual.

HAVE PARENTS enhancedthe spiritual outlooks of theirchildren on Christmas? Or arc

youngsters taught that lightedcandles and decorated treessignify Santa Claus instead ofthe "Light of the World” orthe "Tree of Life”?

Does each and every one ofus groan when obliged to waitin a Christmas shopping line?Or do we remember the longyears the world waited for theBabe of Bethlehem?

In the "money-making rat-race” of today’s world, we

should not expect industry to

bn the first to reform ... It Is

certainly foolish to think prog-ress will be made by criticiz-

ing business, and not doinganything else.

Rather than this, why not a

personal broadcast by eachand every one of us ...

Guadalupe Shrine

Is ReplacedSANTA FE, N.M., (NC) -

Archbishop Edwin V. Byrne ofSanta Fe has dedicated anew

Church of Our Lady of Guada-lupe here which replaces thaoldest U. S. shrine to Our Ladyunder that title.

The old church, which willremain standing, was built In1777 by immigrants fromMexico.

January IntentionsThe Holy Father’s general

intention for January is:That the preparation for

the ecumenical council may

proceed with the greatestpossible care.

The mission intention sug-gested to the Apostlcship of

Prayer by the Pope is:That the ecumenical coun-

cil may spread the truelight of the Gospel trutheven through the non-Chris-tian world.

January 4, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 7

PRINTINGHARRY F. MURPHY

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SUNDAY AFTERNOONS 3:30 - 4:30

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A Novena of Holy Hours will begin January 7, 1962and will continue on Sundays until Lont

Jan. 7, Hi« Birth

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Teb. 4, Hit Teaching" 11, Hit Miraclet

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Preacher:

I lie Very Reverend J. J. McLarney, 0.P., S.T.M.

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Book Reviews

Notes That Made a Greene NovelIN SEARCH OF A CHAR.

ACTER, Two African Journals,V Graham Greene. Viking. 93

(frees. $3.50.No human process is so

mysterious and yet so fascin-ating as that by which a real-istic novelist distills life intothe pages of his book. GrahamGreene’s journal of his 1959trip to the Belgian Congo togain background material for“A Burnt-Out Case” is “must”reading for anyone who hasalready enjoyed that absorb-ing tale of a man’s searchfor himself in the farthestreaches of civilization, an Afri-can bush leper colony.

Greene is a writer who be-lieves in thoroughly research-ing the physical backgroundfor his works, while he plumbsthe resources of his own mind(and soul) for the psychologic-al background. •

The turmoil in the Congoprevented Greene from mak-ing more than the one journeyrecorded in these pages (hemade four trips to Indo-Chinafor “The Quiet American”). Itis quite possible then thatMessrs. Lumumba, Kasavubu,Mobutu; Adoula, Gizenga, andTshombe played a small andvery unintentional role in thefinal formation of "A Burnt-Out Case.”

GREENE WENT to Africawith just the germ of an ideafor his novel. "... All I knowabout the story lam planningis that a man ‘turns up’ andfor that reason alone I findmyself on a plane betweenBrussels and Leopoldville . . .He flings himself with aban-donment into the life of theleper-colony is that a prac-tical possibility? —but whathis motives are I know nomore than the priests and thedoctors at the station.”

With this as a taking-offpoint, he gradually feels hisway through the route thatQuerry takes in the novel. Thegeography is naturally differ-ent: the journal’s main leper-colony lies at the beginning,not at the end of the ride inthe Bishop’s boat down the riv-er. But, on almost every pageappear the scraps of informa-tion which later find their wayintact into the novel: thenames of African characterslike Querry’s servant, DeoGratias, the details of life ina leper camp, the quirks ofthe priests who serve there.

THE CHARACTERS of thepriests evidently presented thegreatest problem. 'T have nev-er yet found in a missionarypriest either the naivety whichI want for certain of them,nor the harshness toward hu-man failing, nor the inquisi-tiveness. These men are toobusy to worry about motives

they are concerned with ce-ment, education, electrical

plant not motives. How canI get rid of this falsity?”

In the end he acquiescedand presented the priests as

he found them, using, as coun-

terpoint, one who followed thepattern he had expected tofind. His doctor, too, turned

from Querry’s antagonist (andperhaps his assassin) to an un-

derstanding friend. “The caseof a character who would notconform to the plan,” Greenenotes.

Tho second and shorter jour-nal was written on his convoy

trip to. Africa in 1941. It hasno direct connection with “TheHeart of the Matter” and istherefore of much less inter-est. It fattens out a slim, yetworthwhile addition to the longand varied list of Greene’sworks. E.J.G.

Discussing the NegroTHE NEW NEGRO, edited

by Mathew H. Ahmann. 145pages. Fldes. $3.50.

Here is proof again that con-

vention proceedings don’t al-

ways 'make in book form a

solid contribution to the under-standing of a particular prob-lem.

“The New Negro” is com-

posed of four papers deliveredat the 1961 convention of theNational Catholic Conferencefor Interracial Justice, plus a

transcript of a broadcast sym-posium on “The Role of theNegro in American Culture.”While it presents an insightinto American Negro thinking

—and for this reason can berecommended to the student ofracial problems it is dis-jointed and marred by over-

simplification, generalizationand lack of depth in some ar-

ticles.

CONTRIBUTORS are Ste-phen J. Wright, president ofFisk University, who discusses“The New Negro in the

South”; Kenneth Clark ofCity College of New York,who considers “The New Ne-gro in the North”; DianeNash, a Fisk student whosefirst-hand experience is told in“Inside the Sit-ins and Free-dom Rides”; Rev. WilliamKenealy, S.J., of Loyola Uni-versity, Chicago, on “The Le-gality of the Sit-ins"; ThomasP. Mclady of the Africa Com-mittee _ of a Catholic peacegroup on "African Indepen-dence and the Negro Peo-ples,” and the symposium par-

ticipants.Father Kenealy’s article is

out of place and bears littlerelation to the'over-all theme.Those taking part in the sym-

posium spent most of theirtime discussing the manner inwhich Negroes are pictured inliterature. Both Wright andClark maintain that the Negrois impatient to accept his re-sponsibilities as well as gainhis rights, but they limit them-selves to outlining the rightsand his efforts to secure them

while ignoring what the Negroconsiders to be his. responsi-bilities and what he is doingto meet them.

MELADY ERRS in refer-ryig to South Africa ns a "co-lonial” power in an effort tobolster a particular argument.Further, he infers that theChurch in Africa has draggedits feet in developing a nativeclergy and has preferred tominister to its white constitu-ents rather than concerningitself with the dire needs ofthe native population. Whilethis may be true in particularareas, it is hardly true of Afri-ca as a whole.

By far the best contributionis that of Miss Nash, whotells of the spirit behind thesit-ins and the Freedom Ridesand her part in those move-ments. Editor Ahmann mighthave been better advised to

have published this and Fa-ther Kenealy's article in pam-phlet form and let it go atthat. J.R.T.

'Children ’s Hour' Doesn't

JustifyLiftingfilm TabooBy William H. MooringWithout ever doubting that

perversion, as a dramatictheme, can be given artisticscreen treatment, I have con-

sistently questioned that themass medium of movies is theplace. Until recently. Holly-wood’s voluntary code of eth-ics and morals said it was not.

William Wyler’s remarkablemovie dramatization of LillianHeilman’s play, “The Chil-dren’s Hour,” is, I think, the

exception that proves the ruleIt describes the virtual de-struction, by malicious gossip,of-two schoolteachers (AudreyHepburn and Shirley Mac-Laine), whom a spiteful, psy-chotic child wrongly accuses

of having an unnatural rela

tionship.

THE SUBJECT is exploredin terms of rumor, rather thanreality, although in the endone of the victims confesses,without serious reason, herown doubts about the purityof her love for the other. Shethen commits suicide, attend-

ant poignancy tending to cre-ate confused sympathy for thecondition as well as the con-

demned.

Many people may revolt atthe suggestion that a little girlhas knowledge of such degen-eracy. Others may wonderwhat effect such a spectacleof juvenile corruption is tohave upon youngsters who seethe film even though it is in-

tended only for mature adults.I share the high critical ap-praisal of “The Children’sHour” without changing my

position as to screening thesubject.

IN 1936-37, Wyler filmed“The Children’s Hour” as

“These Three,” suppressingthe homosexual implicationswhich then were forbidden bythe movie code. This earlierversion was not as good be-cause it was not as well writ-ten, as tautly directed or as

sensitively acted, althoughmany critics argue that omis-

sion of lurid detail weakenedthe film’s motivation. Beyondreasonable doubt Wyler now

repeats the story because therecent code revisions permithim to spell out plainly(though he does not do so pru-riently) Miss Heilman's ap-palling thesis.

By making “The Children’sHoui ”

one of the most signifi-cant films of 1961, Wylerproves that the subject can betreated with dramatic powerand a degree of propriety.Time and other perversiondramas that shall followmust prove whether, for gen-eral movie audiences, homo-sexuality can be treated withsocial prudence.

Commercially I anticipate a

brief boom, then a “bust.”

THREE YOUNG MENwearing Hollywood studio fa-

tigues were shooting a moviein the Lawrey’s living room.Doing the work that wouldtake a dozen men in any Hol-lywood studio, were FathersKarl Holtsnider, 0.F.M., Si-mon Scanlan, 0.F.M., and Ed-ward Henriques, 0.F.M., ofThe Hour of St. Francis.

They were filming “Pagesof Death,” a murder mysteryexposing the pornographic lit-erature racket. This shortlywill be available for parishand civic groups through Fa-ther Simon, 1224 S. Los An-

geies St., Los Angeles.The Citizens for Decent Lit-

erature put up the idea. TheThird Order of St. Francishelped put together the mon-ey. One member, JuanitaVaughan, assisted with thestory. Joseph Santlcy, well-known Hollywood director,was guiding the professionalcast, mostly volunteers.

This way a movie thatwould cost $50,000 to $75,000can be made just as well (orbetter) for a fifth of the price.

MOVIES SSLJft *te2 0n o*partm»nt, ihfsrnation*! federation of C*tHeli< Alumna#

For further Information ctU: MA 3-5700 or AD 2-0900

Morally Unobjectionable for EveryoneAlakaxam. OreatBabel in Toy landBen HurBright RoadComancherolDavid * GoUathDare of Thrllli

Jc LaughterDownEl CldErrand BoyBverythlnf'a

DuckyFrancte of AaililFrontier UpriilngGreyfriare Bobby

Guns of NavaroneHand in HandJourney to Center

of EarthJuke Box RhythmKing is ILadle# ManLast Days of

PompalLeft# Right

* CanterMidsummer

Night's DreamMysterious IslandNikki

Ola RexOutlaw StallionPirates of

TortugaPurple HillsQueen of Pirates

Romanoff AcJuliet

Satchmo. theOreat

Search forParadise

Second TimaAround

Secret of MontaCriato

Sergeant WasLady

7th Voyage ofSlnbad

Silent CallSummer to

RememberTarxan's Savage

FuryTeenage

MillionaireThief of BaghdadTom ThumbVoyage to Bottom

of SsaWhite Christmas

Unobjectionable for Adults, Adolescentsid.

«. .. * . 7AldaBattle at

Bloody BeachBeware of

QiUdrenBridie to SunCat Burglar

Cyclops

DeadlyCompanions

Dead to WorldDemetrius Ac

GladiatorsDevil at 4 O'clockFerry to Hong

KongFlower Drum

Song

——Gldget Goes

HawaiianGun Fight at

Dodge CityHomicidalI Bury the LivingJourney to

Lost CityJudgment at

Nuremberg

Law Ac Jake WadeMan in MoonMr. SardonlcusPocketful to

Miracles20 Plus 2

TycoonWarlockWoman ObsessedYoung Savages

Morally Unobjectionable for AdultsApartmentBachelor In

ParadiseBreakfast at

Tiffany'sBy Love

PossessedClaudelle

IngllshCome September

Crime AcPunishment

Exodus3 Golden HoursFrench MistressGirl With SuitcaseGreat WarHustlerInnocents1. 2. J

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Summer Ac SmokeSusan SladeThunder of

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Morally Objectionable in Part for EveryoneBack StreetBlood St HoiciBtur StopExplosive

GenerationJailhouae Rock

Laat SunaetMan TrapMarinea. Let's

GoMarkNever So Few

Parla BlucaPretty Boy FloydRevolt of SlaveaSeptember StormSplendor In

Grass

Tea 4 SympathyWondera of

AladdinWorld By Night

Separate Classificationmorally* U lo ctrUln Aim** which, while not

« .in the Im »t,lv ®»* require aome analyala and explanation aa

conPclua*on» t 0 lh* unlnform ®d

wrong lnterpretatlbna and false

La Dolce Vita King of Kinga

CondemnedCold Wind In

AuguatLea Liaiaona

DangereuseaSaturday Night

St SundayMorning

Truth (LaVerlte)

Blue Army

Films on TVNEW YORK - The Blue

Army. directed by Msgr. Har-old V. Colgan, pastor of St.Mary’s, Plainfield, has com-

pleted a series of 13 half-hourfilms on international commu-nism.

The format will include a

short dramatic sketch follow-ed by interviews Among thoseinterviewed will be PresidentKennedy, Cardinal Cushing,former U.N. Ambassador Hen-ry Cabot Lodge, PhilippineAmbassador Carlos P. Romu-lo, and Gen. Alfred N.Grucnther, Red Cross presi-dent.

Ihe films, being offeredwithout fee as a public serv-

ice, have already been re-

quested by 67 TV stationsthroughout the U. S.

Titled "Crisis," the scriesincludes: “Will Russia AttackUs?" "What Is Communism?"“Can the U.N. Save Us’’,”"Communism Here" and“Communism and God."

Current Plays in BrietNew Plays

Take Her, She’s Mine

Amiable, often funny, familycomedy with Art Carney as theharried father of a lively, fad-following coed.'

First Love A French nov-elist’s rueful memories of a

hectic boyhood dominated byan Impoverished mother fana-tically determined that he ex-

cel in everything. One scenein bad taste and some dubiousmoral values.

Ross Well-wrought char-acter study, with Freudianovertones, of the British des-ert leader known as Law-rence of Arabia.

Subways Are for Sleeping-Lively dance routines sparkthis snappy salute to thoseamiably unencumbered NewYorkers who boast no fixedabode.

A Man for All Saoionl _ Intenseenerosslnc drama about the last

cru-da! contest Of St. Thomas More withthe despotic irenry VIII. III«hly tec-ommended for all.

*''J" Lov * - u«ht. literate, enter-f musical version of Shcridan'ii

Rival*. One brief scene in In du-bious taste.

Anthony on Ovortlmo Rip-roaringfun-for-all Blackfrlars* comedy aboutthe match-making moves of an Irre-pressible Italo*American aunt who en-trusts all family crises to the Saint ofPadua.

Tho Blacks wildly non-conventlonal

European play scoring racial 'preju-dice. Includes some gutter talk andblnsts Church os dated tyranny.

Camalot Splendid pageantry, cap-tivating tunes and a likeably idealisticbook make this Lerner-Locwe Arthur-ian musical a brave and Joysomegeate.

Tho Carotakor Effective three-character British drama In which a

disreputable old derelict loses himself« haven by arrogantly patronizing hisbenefactors.

Carnivall Charming, wistfully gaymusical about an orphaned French girlbefriended by the performers of atraveling circus.

Jho Complaisant Lovsr—Rather con-triangle comedy by Graham Greene

that yet subtly indicts its guilty lovers

as selfish, irresponsible and immature.Diff'rent Melodramatic and aomr-

what amateurish early O’Neill playabout a prudish. frustrated New Eng-land spinster.

Do Re Ml Fresh, fast and funnymusical with Phil Silvers comicallyfrantic as a shoestring operator out tobe a Jukebox blgshot.

A Far Country Absorbing psycho-logical drama, in which a young Dr.Freud proves that a patient's cripplingIlls can be traced to emotional pres-

Oay Life Elegant and tuneful, iftrivial, musical about a young libertineIn old Vienna finally coaxed Into mar-riage. Moral values negligible.

Ohocts Intensely dramatic revivalof Ibsen’s drama attacking the doublestandard. Still a shocker as in itsanger It denounces Christian moralstandards as well as hypocritical con-

ventions.Gideon Lively, stimulating Chay-

evaky drama about an Old Testamentgeneral who finds divine orders hard toobey. Exception can be taken to someaspects of its humanized portrayal ofthe Lord.

How to Succeed In Business WithoutReally Trying - Clever staging andcatchy tunes make enormously enter-taining this witty, cynical musicalabout a blithe young opportunist blitt-ing his way up to executive status.

Kean Lavishly mounted, well-act-ed drama concentrating on the drearyIllicit love-life of a 19th century stageidol.

Mary, Mary Jean Kerr’s funny,frothy adult comedy about an all-but-dlvorced pair too stubborn to admitthat they're still deeply In love.

Milk A Honey Melodic musicalsalute to modern Israel’s young farm-ing pioneers. Accepts divorce and re-marriage. but otherwise has soundvalues.

Misalliance Unusually deft off-Broadway revival of Shaw’s comedylampooning the rigid social conven-tions of his time.

My Fair Lady Brilliant melodicadaptation of Shaw's comedy about theCockney flower-girl transformed bythe proud professor of speech. Somelow, broad humor In scenes featuringher raffish father.

Sail Away Melodic Mediterraneancruise now and then briefly aground inprofanity and vulgarisms.

A Shot In ths Dark Heavily sug-gcativc French farce sentimentalizingthe plight of a parlor maid of easyvirtue accused of murdering one of her

paramours.The Sound of Music Enchanting

song-fest about the lively convent girlwho launched the Trapp children'schoral career.

Sunday In Hew York Contrived,suggeative comedy about a confusedyoung woman, whj feels that perhapsan Illicit affair might boost her popu-

larity rating.A Taste of Honey Naturalistic

British play about a shlftleas agingtrollop and her bitter wayward daugh-ter. Objectionable for underlying cyni-cism. sesmy situations and coarse dia-logue.

Write Me • Murder Ingeniousmyatery drama about a British crimewriter who decides to utilize his bestmurder gimmick to solve a real-lifeoroblem.

Television• SUNDAY, JAN. 77:45 a.m (7) Christophers.8 «.m. (5) Face of World.8 *3 »,m. (8) Christophers.?A 3S„ ,m - ,4> T *>* About Cod.10:30 a.m. (3> Look Up and Live.1:30 p.m. (4) Catholic Hour.Landscape of Soul.”2:30 p.m. (11) - Insight.

SATURDAY, JAN. 132 p.m. (11) _ Christophers. “Science

Force for Good."

Radio

WNEW 1130. WNBC 660. WHOM1480. WCBS 880, WOB 710, WMCAS7O, WWW. 1600. WVNJ 820. WBNX1380. WABC 770. WFHA-FM 106 3WFUV-FM 90.7. WSOU-FM MS

SUNDAY, JAN. 16 15 am. WNEW Sacred Heart7 a m. WNEW Hour of CrucifiedI-'*® “ m tXSiSP —Francia Hour.7:. 0 a m. WHOM—Sacred Heart Hour.I " m WOB Marian Theater.8:30 a.m. WMCA—Ave Marla Hour8:30 a m. WWHI,—Ave Maria Hour.9:30 a.ih. WVNJ Living Rosary10JO a.m. WFHAFM "Our Spin,

ual Mother.*'12:43 e m WFUV FM-Sacred Heart.1 p.m WFUV IFM) Ave Marla2:30 P.m. WNBC Catholic Hour• Inner Search."* Rev. Hubert vanZeller. 0.5.8.

5 pm. WFUV IFM)—Ave MarlaHour.

8 pm. WFUV IFM)—Hour of Cruel-fled.

S p m JXBKx — B ‘.*. Jutle Novena.7 P-m. WWRL Hail Mary Hour.7:43 p.m WBNX .vovenato p.m. ln Action.

2 p.m. WSOU IFM)—Sacred Heart.7.43 P.m WBNX - Novena.

TUSSDAY, JAN. ♦2 p.m. WSoU IFM>—Sacred Heart.7:43 pm. WBNX Novena.9:30 p.m. WSOU IFM) George-

town Univeratty Forum.10:03 p.m. WSOU IFM)—Chrlatophera.

WiONIiDAY, JAN 162 p m WSOU IFM)—Sacred Heart

THURSDAY, JAN. 112 pm WSOU IFMl—Saered Heart930 p m WSOU IFM) Ave Marla

FRIDAY, JAN 112 pm. WSOU IFM)—Saered Heart8 p m WBNX Novena9.10 p.m. WSOU IFM) Hour n(

Crucified.10 03 p.m WSOU IFM) Hour of

81. Francla.

Sisters of CharityPublish New BookCONVENT-The four-volume

set of “Daily Missal Medita-tions'’ by the Sisters of Char-ity of St. Elizabeth is one

step nearer to completion withthe recent publication of Vol-ume 3, Summer (Benziger,$7.50).

It contains meditationson the liturgical season ofPentecost, from the vigil ofthe feast through the Satur-'day of the 11th week afterPentecost.

VOLUME 1 Winter, and Vol-ume 2 Spring, appeared inDecember, 1959, and March,1961, respectively. The lastvolume is planned to includemeditations for each day forthe weeks following Pente-cost, the autumn season.

The meditations, based on

the proper of every day’sMass, were begun by SisterMiriam Teresa, Bayonne-bornSister of Charity whose beati-fication cause is under study.The work is being completedby a committee of Sisters ofCharity with Sister M. Zita aseditor.

SISTER ZITA, who holds theunusual master’s degree in re-

ligion, emphasizes that themeditations are intended forlay men and women as wellas priests and religious. Bish-op McNulty, in his preface tothe four volumes, notes:"Meditation . . . (is) not justsomething nice to do, but

something necessary to do ifwe are to have adequate par-

ticipation in the life of OurLord.”

In the preface to Volume 3,Sister Zita sets forth the pat-tern of the liturgical year,showing how the phasereveals the work of the HolySpirit. This theme of love andsanctification recurs through-out the meditations.

Films on TVFollowing it a Hat of film* on TV

Jan. 6-12. There may be change*in dome due to cuts for TV use, butgenerally the original Legion ofDecency ratings may be accepteda« correct.

FOR THE FAMILYAdventure In Maverick Queen

Baltimore OkinawaAdventures of Oklahoma Raiders

Sherlock Holmes Return of

Black Bandit BadmcnBorn Reckless Revolt of Zombie*Fighting Coast Ship That Died

Guard of ShameJoe Smith,

American

ADULTS, ADOLESCENTSBackfire Love BeforeBetow Sahara BreakfaatBride Came Master Race

C.O.D. Passage toBride of Gorilla Maraeille*California Pool of LondonChicago Deadline Rebel WithoutCleudta a CauseFabulous Ride a Violent

Suzanne MileFalcon Takes Rose of Wash-

over ington So.Hcliflre SaigonHere Come the Sweater Girl

Waves Trouble AlongHighway Dragnet WayI Married an

What Price

Angel GloryKiss the Blood

Off My Hands

OBJECTIONABLEBorn to Kill My ForbiddenFinger Man PastFrankenstein's Nightmare

Daughter Sheep Has 6High Sierra LegsI Wanted Wings Taming ofLisbon DorothyMissile to Moon Without Pity

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16mm Sound Motion Pictures for Churches & Schools

"THE CURE OF ARS"THE PRIEST and THE DEVIL!

The amazing story of the Cure of Ars:St. John Baptist Vianuey The Patron of the Parish PriestThe unusual but true—the day by day struggle Tar the soulsof his parishioners between a humble French priest—and—-the devil himself! The devil had these people in his graspuntil the poor, simple, but saintly Cure came to Ars. It was

like a declaration of war on hell! But the faith, the humilityand courage of this extraordinary priest were more than a

match for the trickery, the sorcery and the arrogant prideof any devil. The Rev. John F. Mooney, author, playwrightand member of the Catholic Actors Guild provides the tech-nical advice for this film. Father Mooney is a parish priestat Our Lady of Mercy Church in Queens,. New York City.The greatest film on the life of a Saint ever produced.

French dialogue—English titles—l6mm sound film100 min.—B A W Rental—s3o.oo

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EPIPHANY: On Jan. 6, the Feast of Epiphany, the Church celebrates the mani-festation of Christ to the Gentiles, personified by the kings from the East bearing

gifts. "The Adoration of the Magi,” above, is Botticelli’s interpretation of the eventas it can be viewed in the National Gallery, Washington.

Escaping Communism

Last Stand for FaithSAIGON, 'Vietnam (NC)

They voted with their feetagainst communism over manya weary mile. Now they can

only vote with their arms—-firearms.

They are the Chinese refu-gees, mostly Catholics, who livein Binh Hung village at the farsouthwest end of Vietnam.Against the Viet Cong (Viet-namese communist) guerrillasthey are making the last standof desperate men defendingtheir homes, their families andtheir Faith.

they FIRST KNEW com-munism '

in Kwangtung andKwangsi provinces, China. Theydidn’t like it and they didn’twant it for their children. Justbefore Christmas, 1950, about2,000 .of them slipped away inboats to north Vietnam.

They found that they hadsailed right into the Indo-Chinawar, in which Ho Chi Minh’scommunists had taken over theindependence movement.

Some refugees obtained workIn north Vietnam towns. Others

headed overland for Cambodia.

THROUGHOUT their wander-ings they grouped themselvesaround Rev. Chrysostom T.Yuen, a Chinese priest whohad escaped from a communistprison in Kwangtung. Manyhad been his parishioners inChina.

Now a citizen of Vietnam, thepriest has a Vietnamese name,Nguyen Loc Hoa. He is a mild-mannered man, 53, with grey-ing crew-cut hair. He wears

glasses and looks like a benignscholar. He is now the parishpriest of Binh Hung.

FATHER YUEN, or FatherHoa as he is better known,stayed with his refugees inCambodia. After some yearsthey decided they should seektheir permanent home and live-lihood elsewhere. He traveled,in search of a haven. He foundwhat countless other refugeeshave found: few countries willoffer them shelter and a chanceto settle down.

President Ngo dinh Diem of

Vietnam was an exception. Heoffered them land in a regiondepopulated by the war.

It took months to get exitpermits for all the families toleave Cambodia and to makethe journey to Binh Hung. Thelast group arrived Mar 171959.

THEY BUILT HUTS of mat-ting on which they have nowput tin roofs. They built awooden church and eight chap-els in the surrounding districtof Hai Yen. They went to work

on the abandoned rice land,each family receiving threehectares, (about seven acres).Msgr. Joseph J. Harnett andRev. Paul J. Duchesne, M.M.,of Catholic Relief Services

NCWC gave them indispensablehelp.

u settlements have grown

;r0 ?L abo

.

ut 60 Chincsc familiesto 300, of whom about a thirdare non-Christians.

THE REFUGEES were inBinh Hung for some monthsand had made solid progressin their pioneering when com-munist guerrillas attacked. Thepeople decided they were notgoing to be pushed farther-there was nowhere else to coin East Asia.

As many villages used to doin north Vietnam, Binh Hungformed its own local defenseforce. The communists at-

lOj

Srea,er s ‘rength.They burned seven of the eiehtchapels. b

The Binh Hung people en-listed defenders from outside.Now their defense force num-bers about l,ioo men and in-cludes Vietnamese and Nungs(a tribe from north Vietnamthat is strongly anticommunist)

as well as Chinese. The govern-ment of the Republic of Viet-nam contributes to their payAbout one third of the BinhHung soldiers are Catholics.

v I A Y, T,,K,R chaplain,”father Hoa explained. “I amnot their commander.”

The commander assigned bythe government is CaptainKhue, who is not a Catholic

home of Father Hoa's fellowpriests would prefer to see himless closely connected with theactual defense force. He has

an answer that is hard to re-but :

"If you were in my position,with those people to take careof, you'd do the same, and per-haps more.”

He’s QuartermasterTo Alaska MissionsPORTLAND, Ore. (NC)

His name is Rev. Paul C. O’-Connor, S.J. But to 28 Jesuitmissionaries, many Brothersand nuns serving the far-flungAlaska missions he is a com-bination of St. Nicholas andan efficient quartermaster.

A FORMER PROFESSORat Gonzaga University in hisnative Spokane, Father O’Con-nor’s best equipment for hisjob as procurator and execu-tive director of the AlaskaJesuit Missions is the nearlythree decades he spent as asoldier for Christ in Alaska’sbleak Arctic.

“It is not a question ofbuilding expansion programswith me," said Father O’Con-nor. “It is simply supplyingfood to my missionaries sothey can survive. Many ofthem have government jobslik® postmaster in a tiny vil-lage.

“The salary does not makethem rich, but it does helpthem survive. Most are pret-ty handy with a fishing rod, a

net or a gun. They also scoutaround for driftwood to keepthe home fires burning.”

A TALL, IMPRESSIVE man

who belies his more than 60

years, the Alaska Jesuits' proc-urator described the survivalwork he directs from his Port-land headquarters.

"I go to Alaska generally inFcburary and get the food andfuel orders of my mission-aries. I then return, processthe orders and arrange for thefreight,” he explained.

“Freight, incidentally, costsme $l5O a ton just to get it on

location. The routes are dc-

vious. Some go by way ofSeward and Nenana and thenfloat down the Yukon river.These orders are handled asoften as five times beforereaching the missions.

"Others go by AlaskaSteamship Company vessel toSt. Michael, Nome and Kotze-bue. Still others are handledby the North Star, a govern-ment ship which calls at iso-lated places like King Islandand Nelson Island. The rout-ing of supplies is rathertricky.

“AFTER THE FOOD is ordered and freighted to Alaska,I look around for the cold cashneeded to pay the bills. Amissionary costs about $3,000to $5,000 a year to live in anisolated district in Alaska. Tolive means to live without lux-uries. Many of them do nottaste an apple or an orangemore than twice a year. Freshvegetables during the winterare simply nonexistent.”

In financing food and fuelfor the outpost missions, Fa-ther O’Connor misses no

tricks. He arranges for sale ofChristmas cards done by Es-kimo and Jesuit artists, givesldctures, sells postcards,shows movies, reviews booksand writes articles.

His best source of missionincome, however, is a monthlynewsletter.

AS A FORMER memberand chairman of the AlaskaHousing Authority, Father O’-Connor is known as the sales-man who engineered Federalassistance in building and re-

pairing 700 isolated Eskimohomes.

father O’Connor sums upthe philosophy of his work thisway: "If the Church in Eski-mo land be but the tiny fingerof the Mystical Body of Christ,still it is part of the whole.When the hand goes to its res-cue, the eye examines it, themind is concerned and theheart troubled they do itnot to a stranger or a foreign-er, but to one member that isa part of the whole."

Motel-Type HomeDETROIT (NC) Rochford

Terrace, the Archdiocese ofDetroit’s unusual residence forthe aged, was dedicated here.The 26-unit, two-story, motel-type structure was erectedwith the aid of a federal loan,the first of its kind, grantedby the Federal Housing andHome Finance Agency.

Civil War Hero From Sussex, N.J.

By Floyd AndersonSUSSEX -'A story in Father

Flynn’s “The Catholic Church in NewJersey" is interesting during this per-iod of renewed interest in Civil Warheroes. It reports:

“It was said that it was owing to|Rcv. G. W. Corrigan’sl missionaryspirit that the Hon. Judson Kilpatrickbecame attracted to the CatholicChurch on whose peaceful bosom hewas' laid to rest ... lie was a brave,daring and efficient officer in whomhis superiors placed the fullest confi-dence and was idolized by his sol-diers

... It was at his suggestion andlargely by his efforts that St. Monica’sChurch was built in Ddckcrtown. Hewas received into the Catholic Church

a short time beforo his death whichoccurred Dec. 4, 1881."

DECKERTOWN is now Sussex,N. J. —but who was Judson Fitz-patrick?

The son of a farmer who livednear Dcckertown, Kilpatrick wassometimes called the “fighting fool"during his amazing Civil War career.Courageous he was, without a doubt,and a brilliant leader of cavalry, hav-ing originated the saying that “cavalry

can fight anywhere except at sea.”

WHEN WAR WAS declared inApril, 1861, Hugh Judson Kilpatrickwas a member of West Point’s Class

of 1861. lie drew up a petition urgingthe immediate graduation of his class,37 classmates signed, and he sent it toPresident Lincoln, The petition wasgranted, and 2nd Lt. Judson Kil-patrick, though but 15th in a class of50, gave the valedictory address.

In June, Kilpatrick was a captainin Duryea’s New York Zouaves; thatsame month he was wounded in a

charge at Big Bethel, Va. In Septem-ber he was back on active duty as alieutenant colonel —and by 1863, afterthe battle of Brandy Station, he wore

the star of brigadier general.

GENERAL KILPATRICK was a

small, fiery, fearless man. He fought at

Gettysburg, and led a futile effort inFebruary, 1864, to free thousands ofUnion prisoners held at Libby Prisonand Belle Island near Richmond.

One of his most exciting adven-tures happened after Kilpatrick, now a

major general, joined Sherman on hisfamous march to Atlanta and the sea.

MANEUVERING in the Carolinas,Kilpatrick had camped for the nightat Monroe Crossroad. Gen. WadeHampton, commanding the Southerntroops, came up to the camp just be-fore daybreak, capturing the Unionguards and outposts.

The attack was completely unde-tected till the Southern bugles soundedthe charge —and then there was

in the Kilpatrick camp. The

Northern troops were captured, theirartillery taken, their horses scattered-and Gen. Hampton and his aideswere smashing in the front door of Kil-patrick’s headquarters. At that sametime, Gen. Kilpatrick was escapingthrough an attic window at the rearthe general, in his night clothing, be-cause he had no time to dress.

HIS CHIEF of scouts found a horsefor him, and Kilpatrick was driven intoa deep swamp with about 100 of hismen and their horses.

The Southern forces disregardedthe soldiers in the swamp; they feltthey could pick them off as they wan-dered out of tho watery jungle —andthey weto sure they could not ridethrough to the other side. However,they did not know General Kilpatrick.

Soon he was at the edge of theswamp, watching the Southern sol-diers looting his camp. They wefc en-

joying their victory, and felt they didnot need watch for a counterattack.

KILPATRICK RALLIED his menand, as the Southerners started to hauloff his artillery, gave the signal tocharge. The Union cavalry's attack hitthe Southern soldiers by surpriseand it was completely successful atfirst.

When they began to rally, Kil-patrick was equal to the occasion. Re-covering his artillery, he positioned itto fire almost at pistol range at the

Southern soldiers, as they tried to re-form their ranks. Panic-stricken, theSouthern troops fled, and Kilpatrick’smen enjoyed their moment of victory.It had been a narrow escape —but a

wonderful victory in the face of al-most certain defeat.

AFTER HE HAD left Atlanta,General Sherman paid this tribute to

Kilpatrick:"The fact that to you, in a great

measure, we owe the march of fourstrong infantry columns, with heavytrains and wagons, over 300 milesthrough an enemy’s country, withoutthe loss of a single wagon, and withoutthe annoyance of cavalry dashes on

our flanks, is honor enough for any

cavalry commander.”

AFTER THE WAR, Maj. Gen. Kil-patrick returned to New Jersey, andbecame acquainted with Father Corri-gan.

Kilpatrick was named Minister toChile in 1865, and served until 1868. He

was reappointed in 1881. He had mar-

ried shortly after his graduation fromWest Point, but his wife and young son

had died in 1863. He married for thesecond time in Chile, to the niece ofthe Archbishop of Santiago, and theyhad two daughters, Julia and Laura.

He was only 45 years old when hedied in Santiago on Dec. 4, 1881. Hehad been received into the Church ashort time before his death.

Holy Hour for Peace

Elizabeth Prays for WorldBy Ed Grant

ELIZABETH Three yearsago, the Holy Name Society ofSt. Genevieve’s parish decidedto hold a weekly Holy Hour in

•order to pray for world peace.The suggestion was rrittdcijy

Neal Payne, a member of thS*Catholic Action committee ofthe society. For the next twoyears, a small group of men

met once a week to recite the

Office of the Most BlessedSacrament.

In January, 1961, it was de-

cided to open the service tothe parish in general in hopesthat attendance would be in-creased. For the past 12months, the Holy Hours have

attracted an average of 35people each week, Jbout even

ly divided hetwee/ men andwomen, with aVfew

youngsters also on tymd.

THEare con-

. ducted. by laymen,with* a different leader eachweek so that all of the men

get a chance to participate.They consist of the canonicalhours of the evening and sea

son from the office, spiritualreadings and private meditation.

Rev. James Reilly, an as-

sistant at St Genevieve's,serves as moderator. JosephMc.Namee began his term asdirector last month. His dutiesinclude choosing the readerfor each week, conducting theProgram and setting up thechurch for the service.

EAGER TO SPREAD thPiridea, the Holy Name mem-bers of St. Genevieve's ex-plained their program at ameeting of the I'nion CountyFederation recently and it isnow being discussed by thecounty officers as a possiblesuggestion for other units.

While world peace remains•he chief purpose of the serv-ices each Tuesday at St. Gene-vieve's from 8 to 9 pm, spe-cial private intentions are alsoprayed for by the entiregroup.

WEEKLY DEVOTION: Men and women of St. Genevieve’s have weekly Holy Hourfor world peace.

Hohokus Woman ComposedMass Music for St. Luke’s

lIOHOKUS - "Missa Pet,race” sounds like an ancientimported title for a piece ofliturgical music, but parishion-ers of St. Luke’s here knowit belongs specially to them.

"Missa Pro Pace" Massfor Peace was written byMrs. David Mclntyre of St.Luke's and sung at the recentChristmas Midnight Mass aswell as at noon Mass on thefollowing Sunday.

MRS. MCINTYRE, motherof four, has always longed towrite music for a Mass, eversince her days at Caldwell

College for Women where shemajored in music, and wasgraduated in 1950.

The Mass took a little morethan 10 hours to write,” saidthe former Virginia Farrell."It was written for threevoices and adheres strictly tothe rules of the liturgy."

The title was chosen to stressthe importance of the Christianmessage in the modern worldin unrest, she said.

■lev, William J. Duffy, pas-tor, keynoted the commentsof parishioners at St. Luke's:‘‘Just out of this world."

That They MaySee...in Saigon

By Rev. Patrick O’ConnorSAIGON (NC)—Vietnamese

men and women who seemeddoomed to tap their way inblindness will now keep theirsight, thanks to the eye clinicin Our Lady of Good Counselhospital at Honai near here.

American ophthamologistswho traveled to Vietnam attheir own expense and donat-ed their services have con

ducted the clinic. Brothers ofSt. John of God from Mon-treal, conduct the hospital.The eye clinic is sponsored byCatholic Relief Services -

NCWC and the German Bish-ops’ fund. The patients are

treated free.Since last February, the eye

clinic has been in operationfor four periods of one to twomonths each. About 2,000 pa-tients have been treated, 750of them surgically. Many re-ceived used eye-glasses sentfrom other countries.

THE FIRST visiting oph-thamologist was Dr. Eliott B.Hague of Buffalo, who re-ports “a tremendous need fordiagnosis and treatment of eyedisease in Vietnam, especial-ly among the refugees fromthe north.”

All the visiting specialistswere struck by the prevalenceof trachoma, an eye infectionthat causes loss of vision invarying degrees, includingblindness.

"DURING THE first month679 patients were examined,”Dr Hague said. “Avery ap-preciable number came fromdistant towns, even as faraway as Hue, 700 miles fromSaigon.”

The conductor of the secondeye clinic, Dr. J. S. Tchao ofLewiston, Me., said “as manyas 154 were examined andtreated in a single day in theoutpatient department.”

Dr. Herman A. Iverson ofEureka, Calif., and Dr. AlexE. Krill of Chicago conductedthe third and fourth clinics.

THE CANADIAN Brothersof St. John of God opened OurLady of Good Counsel hospitalin the heart of the new refu-gee settlements, about 20miles from Saigon, in Decem-ber, 1956. The hospital wasbuilt with the assistance of theAmerican aid program.

Msgr. Joseph J. Harnett,Far East director of CRS-NCWC, planned the eye clinic.Rev. Paul Duchesne. M.M., di-rected the program.

BESIDES TRACHOMA, thespecialists found glaucoma,cataracts, corneal ulcerationsand at least a dozen other eyediseases.

Dr. Hague observed thatthere are no more than threeophthamologists in Metropoli-tan Saigon, with a 2,000.000population, and probably notmore than five for the approx-imately 12,000,000 people insouthern Vietnam.

"In my opinion,” he said,“a permanent eye sendee atthe hospital at Honai will beurgently needed for someyears. It can operate fairlywell, even if activity is re-

stricted to a few months a

year. An examination in theoutpatient department and a

stay of a week to 10 days inthe hospital will restore visionin a great number of cases.”

/m | J

The Advocate9 January 4, 1962

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Park Ridge Boy Wins Junior Young Advocate ContestBy June Dwyer

The good news for the NewYear will make the Junior

Young Advocates happy. The

judges spent the long holidayweekend checking over theletters to the Christ Child forthe recent Christmas contest—and the results are in!

The choice was a hard one

to make—time and time againthe judges had to talk it over

before the final winners were

selected. But here they arc,the top three winners andtheir messages just in timefor Little Christmas, Jan. 6.

TIMOTHY ROCHE, a fourth

grader from Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge, will'be receiving the first placeprize of $5. A student of Miss

Nulty, Timothy lives at 116.Warren Rd., Park Ridge. Youcan read his letter on this

page.

PETER GIANONATTI, ajsecond grader from Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge, hastaken the second place prizeof $3. A student of Miss Pri-

cola, young Peter lives at 9

Pine Dr., Park Ridge.That third place check for

$2 is going to Stanley Adam-

cryk, a third grader from HolyRosary, Passaic. A student ofSister Infanto, Stanley lives at18-20 Essex St., Passaic.

Congratulations to all of qur

winners and to the many boysand girls who won themselveshonorable mention certifi-cates. We are so proud of

you and your work—and you

certainly gave the Christ Child

a wonderful Christmas pres-ent.

HONORABLE Mention cer-

tificates are awarded to the

following Junior Young Advo-cates (names are listed in al-

phabetical order):Ann Marie Aiena, grade 4,

Our Lady of Mercy, Park

Ridge. Muss Nulty.

Joan Alarlind, kindergarten,Our Lady of Mercy, Park

Ridge. Mrs. Kuhn.

Stephen Albanese, 4, St.Francis Xavier, Newark. MissDiFino.

Beverly Ambrose, 2, St.Francis, Newark. Sister MaryDiLillo.

Barbara Avenall, 2, Our

Lady of Mercy, Park Ridge.Sister Gabriel.

Laura Behrens, kindergar-ten, Our Lady of Mercy, ParkRidge. Mrs. Ruth Williamson.

Bruce Alan Bennett, 3, St.

.Joseph’s, Paterson, Sister Te-resa Joseph.

Claire Boyer, 4, Our Lady ofMercy, Park Ridge, Miss Nul-ty.

Sharon Boyer, 2, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge. Mrs.Spatola.

JANICE BOZZAY, 4, St.Aloysius, Caldwell. Mrs. Nann.

Mark Broderick, 1, St. Mi-

chael’s, Palisades Park. SisterGrace Elizabeth.

Mary Jane Brown, 3, St.

John’s, Bcrgenficld. Sister Le-onilda.

Pamela Chmielowiec, i 3,Holy Rosary, Passaic. SisterM. Infanta.

Joseph E. DeJulio, 4, ~Our-Lady of the Lake, Verona.Sister Thomasita.

Maryann Fallon, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge. MissDc Tita.

Patricia Foley 4, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge. MissNulty.

Eugene Frosini, 2, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge. SisterGabriel.

Philip Ganz, 2, St. Stanis-laus Kostka, Garfield. SisterMary Claurica.

Victoria Gentempo, 2, Im-maculate Heart of Mary, Mah-wah. Sister Mary Marceline.

Esther Rose Giannini, 2, St.Aloysius, Jersey City. MissConnolly.

CHRISTINE GOIS, 4, St.Mary’s, Plainfield. Miss Tier-ney.

Susan Greco, 2, Our Lady ofMercy, Park Ridge. Mrs. A.Spatola.

Noreen Haren, 1, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge, SisterFilomena.

Heidi Hartmann, 1, OurLady of the Lake, Verona.Sirs. Wilson.

Keith Hildcrbrandt, 2, Our

Lady of Mercy, Park Ridge.Mrs. Spatola.

Richard Haczka, 3, St. Mi-chael’s, Union. Sister EllenPeter.

William Keane, kindergar-ten, Our Lady of the Lake,Verona. Sister Anne Joseph.

Anne Kellehcr, 3, St. Mi-

chael’s, Union. Sister EllenPeter.

Thomas Kachanski, 1, Our

Lady of Mt. Carmel, Ba-

yonne. Sister Mary Lucia.

JOHN KOWALCHUK, 2, Our

Lady of Mercy, Park Ridge.Sister Gabriel.

Michael Lasprogato, 4, St.

Michael’s, Palisades Hark.Mother Ann Jeanette.

Stpphen Lyons, 4, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge. MissNulty.

Marilyn Mahoney, 2, OurLady of Mercy, Park Ridge.Mrs. Spatola.

Regina Mahoney, kindergar-ten, Our Lady of Mercy, ParkRidge. Mrs. Kathleen Pardti.' Anthony Maimoni, 4, St. Al-

oysius, Caldwell. Sister Mi-chael Marie.

Maureen Mancini, St. Aloy-sius, Jersey City. Sifcter Ma-rian Theresa.

Georgann Mardo. 4, St. Jo-

seph’s, Paterson. Sister JeanBernard.

A. Matusiewicz, 3, Mt. Car-mel, Bayonne. Sister Adjuta.

SARAH MERCURI, 3, St.'Francis, Newark. Sister JanetMiscia.

James Mulhern, St. Aloy-sius, Jersey City.

Monroe Oakley, 3, Our Ladyof the Lake, Verona. Sister

M. Julia.Donna O’Driscoll, 3, Mt.

Carmel, Bayonne. Sister Ad-juta.

Robin O’Neill 1, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge, SisterFilomena.

Lawrence Pantlen, 3, OurLady of Mercy, Park Ridge.Miss DeTita.

Anita Pccararo, 4, St. Fran-cis, Newark. Sister Anne Gcr-vasia.

Robert Rapp, 3, Our Ladyof the Lake, Verona. SisterJulia.

Jean Reiser, 1, Our Lady ofMercy, Park Ridge. Miss AnnSchneider.

EDWARD SKIP, 1, St. Aloy-sius, Jersey City. Sister Ma-rian Theresa.

John Schabcrg, Holy Trin-ity, Hackensack. Sister Juli-anna.

Kevin Soul, 3, St. Thcrcse’s,Cresskill. Sister Mi-chele.

John Stahmann, 4, Our Ladyof Mercy, Park Ridge. Mrs.Hcder.

Michael Sullivan, 4, OurLady •of Mercy, Park ltidgc.Miss Nulty.

Geraldine Swicrczcwski, 2,St. Hedwig’s, Wilmington,Del. Sister Mary Claudia.

Andrea Tecza, 4, Holy Ro-

sary, Passaic. Sister Infanta.Marian Tluchowski, 2, As-

sumption, Jersey City. SisterFranccne.

Susan Towcy, 4, St. Fran-cis, Newark. Miss DiFino.

Gactan Trascente, 1, SacredHeart, Bloomfield. Sister Ma-rian Dolores.

Margaret Wolan, 4, BenderMemorial Academy, Eliza-beth. Mrs. Sullivan.

FIRST PRIZE Timothy Roche

Dear Jesus,Your birthday will be here soon. I wish that I could give

you a special present. I usually get one present I like best whenit’s my birthday.

I know your best present would be world peace. I wish thatI could get every leader of every country together, and that Ihad the gift of preaching brotherly love and peace on earth tothem. Then there would be great joy on earth as well as inheaven.

But, since I know I cannot give you this great gift, I willpray twice as hard on Christmas day, and every' day until theworld can give you a wonderful birthday present.

Have You Read...?The following questions are based on articles that

appear in this week's issue of The Advocate. See how well

you remember what you base read. I / you want to refer to

the story later the page number it listed with each answer.

Give yourself 25 Points for each correct answer, 100 is

excellent; 75 is good; 50 is faii^is is poor; 0 means you bad

better reread this issue :

1. Who was the “fighting fool” of the Civil War and from

where did he come?(a) General Judson Kilpatrick, Sussex, N .1

(b) General Washington, Mt. Vernon, N. Y.(c) General Sherman, Richmond, Va.

2. What community is celebrating Us 50th anniversary Jan. 6?(a) Dominican(b) Jesuit(c) Maryknoll

S. The winner of the Young Advocate Christmas contest inthe Junior division is from:

(a) Our Lady of Mercy, Park Ridge(b) St. John’s, Bergenfield(c) St. Thomas, Paterson

4. The Hudson County CYO is planning a trip to:(a) Bermuda(b) Canada

(c) Mexico

ANSWERS:l-(a),page9;2-(c),page11;3-(o),page10;4-(&),13-

AcceptableComics

Action Comics Lone RanterAdventure ComicsLoodey TunesAdventures into Man in Flight

the Unknown Marines in BattleAll American Mazlc

Men of War Mickey MouseAll Star Western Mighty MouseAndy Burnett Mr. DistrictAndy Panda AttorneyAngel MouseAnnie Oakley MusketeersArchie Mutt and JeffBaby Huey My Great Adven-Batman " t ureBeetle Bailey Mystery In SpaceBen Bowie Nancy

Betty & Veronica Navy CombatBlackhawk New FunniesHlondle OklahomanBob Hope Our Army at WarBrand of Empire DogBrave and Bold Our FightingBrave Eagle ForcesBroken Arrow p at the BratBuccaneers patsy and HedyBuffalo Bill Jr. Paul Revere'*Bugs Bunny RideBuzzy Prp

Candy Peter PandaCasper Peter PorkchopsCatholic Boy Peter BabbitCatholic Comics PlutoCheyenne PopeycChilly Willy Porky PigChip *n’ Dale Prince ValiantCisco Kid Priscilla's PopClassics Raccoon Kids

Illustrated Jr. Real ScreenClementina ComicsCotton Woods Red MaskCovered Wagons Red Ryder

Ho! Rex AllenCrusader Rabbit RexDaisy Duck Rin Tin TinDaffy Robin HoodDagwood Roy RogersDale Evans RudolphDaniel Boone Sad SackDennis the Men- Scamp

see Sergeant BilkoDate W'lth Judy Sergeant PrestonDetective Comics SilvertlpDick Tracy Six Gun HeroesDonxld Duck Smokey the BearDuck Album SparklerFelix the Cat Spike and TykeFV 'ln’ *sptn and Martylust Americans Star Spangled•ox and the Crow War StoriesFrancis Steve Csnyonl 1unday Funnies Steve DonavonGangbusters Strange

Gene Autry AdventureGoofy Strange TalesGuilty Sugar and SpikeGunsmokc SupcrboyHardy Boys Super DuckHenry SupermanHI Vo Silver SupermouseHomer, the Texas Rangers

Happy Ghost Three Mouse-Hopalong Cassidy keteersHot Rod Comics TimmyHot Stuff Tip TopHouse of Tomahawk

Mystery Tom and JerryHouse of Secret* Tom-ToinHuckleberry Tonto

Hound TweetyIndian Chief Two-Gun KidJackie Gleason Uncle ScroogeJerry Lewis Walt DisneyJimmy Olsen Western ComicsJoe Palooka Western RoundupJughead WilburKid Colt. Outlaw Will yumLavsle Wings of EaglesLittle Angel Wonder WomanLittle Audrey WoodyLittle Dot WoodpeckerLittle Genius World’* FinestLittle lodine Wyatt EarpLittle Lulu Zan« GreyLittle Max Comic*

Is. It Silent NightOr a Lullaby?

OTTAWA, Ont. (NC)—Whenthe strains of “Silent Night”filled Ste. Anne’s Church hereat Christmas Midnight Mass itwas weU past the organist'sbedtime.

Presiding over the three-manual pipe organ for thesong was six-year old JeanYves Dupcrron, who Is follow-ing in the footsteps of his fath-er, Albert Dupcrron, the regu-lar parish choirmaster and or-

ganist.

A Good StartHONG KONG (NC) -

“I’m a stamp collector, Fa-ther, do you have any

stamps?” asked a refugeeyoungster.

So Rev. Eugene A Thal-man, M.M., of Wilmette,111., looked through hisdesk, found four foreignstamps, and gave them to

the boy. “How manystamps do you have inyour collection, now?” heasked. The child repliedmatter-of-factly: "Four.”

Savios List

Poster ContestNEW ROCHELLE—The St.

Dominic Savio Classroom Clubhas announced the launchingof its first National PosterContest, Jan. 1-31. The con-

test is open tb all its mem-

bers. ,

Five posters best depicting a

Savio slogan or virtue will bechosen and the winners willreceive a trophy. Each postermust be 9 x 12 inches. All en-

tries will be judged especiallyfor theme and neatness.

Club Formed

In RoselleROSELLE The New Fron-

tiers Civic Club of St. Jo-

seph's School received its of-ficial charter from the Com-mission on American Citizen-ship in Washington recently.

Officers of the newly organ-ized club are: Charles Las-cari, president; Edward Mur-phy, Suzanna Baumbach, Vir-ginia Hoffman and Robert Mc-

Curdy.

FLYING ADDIE: To make

a flying Addie paste her

picture on a piece of card-board and cut her out. In-

sert clips where the ‘X’ is,attaching the wings and

the head to the body. Then

watch her move.

St. Clare’s GiftDENVILLE The local unit

of the Licensed PracticalNurse Association of New Jer-

-scy presented a patient lift to

St. Clare's Hospital here re-

cently. Mrs. Gretchen Storcr,division president, presentedthe gift.

10 THE ADVOCATE January 4, 1962

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Quote of theWeek

“TKe home” of today’swomsr must reach ‘‘farbeyond the sheltered peri-meter Oi her family circleto the community, nationand world

. . .Neither the

wife-mother nor the singlewoman must allow her so-cial influence to suffocateby constraining it to thefamily unit alone. Womanshould make her overturesinto those areas where manneeds her genius, where heis inferior to her. She mustapproach man not as a

competitor but as a comple-menter, filling what is lack-ing in him.

Woman's genius “is herIntuition into the mysteriesof beauty, the inner life,and surrender; her intui-tion into people, events andthings; her intuition intochildren, the weak, thehunted, the weary, the tur-bulent and the guilty.

“Unless a woman ac-

knowledges motherhoodeither physical or spiritual

—as the most meaningfuland fulfilling experience she

can achieve, she will betorn by inner tensions andhungers . . . The wife-mother is a fulfilled per-son. No male can substitutefor her. Such a person can

give uniquely to the world—and such a woman the

world urgently needs. Rev.John McLaughlin, S.J., ofFairfield University (Conn.)addressing the College ofNew Rochelle.

Honey Bun HadReal HangoverMEMPHIS, Tenn. (NC) -

“Honey Bun” got loadedand the Sisters of the GoodShepherd prayed "excit-edly, as fast and hard as

we could.”“Honey Bun” is a pony,

pet of the children at theConvent of the Good Shep-herd here. It really wasn’tHoney Bun’s fault, veteri-narian W. L. Austin diag-nosed. He said tfie childrenfed the pony apples and thefruit lodged in the caecum,

a pouch-like cavity betweenthe large and small intes-tines. There it fermentedand the result was alcohol.

Horjey Bun took to

staggering around the con-

vent grounds, setting theconvent Sisters in a panic.But eventually the resultsof the clogged apples wore

off and Honey Bun was

back to normal.

TEAMWORK: When there is work to be done theMcLaughlins try. to do it together. They are pictured

above checking tickets for a scholarship affair.

Serving Three

Meat LoafMrs. Walter McLaughlin of Summit fs living a busy life right

now. Asa nurse at St. Mary's Hospital, Orange, and a housewifeshe still finds time to plan for her first child and to cook for ahungry husband.

Sara Jane suggests the menu below when two are very hun-gry or when the man of the house brings that unexpected guest.

McLaughlin Special1 lb. chopped chuck V» tsp. pepper1 slice soft bread (in pieces) 2 tblsp. minced onion1 egg, beaten (may be omitted)Mi tsp. salt can (8 oz.) tomato sauce

Mix above ingredients in bowl; then place in loaf bakingpan. Bake in 350 degree oven for 50 minutes. Top with remain-ing half can of tomato sauce and continue baking for 15-20minutes.

No Cards Mailed

In Bergen OfficeLODI Thanks to the em-

ployes of the InternationalTelephone and TelegraphCommunication Systems Inc.in Paramus, all the childrenat Immaculate ConceptionHome here received Christ-mas gifts.

The employes voted to dis-continue sending Christmascards to each other and to use

the funds for children fromthree Bergen County homes.

A giant “Merry Christmasto my fellow employes” signwas placed in the office. Therewas room on it for the namesof each of the 252 children in

the homes. Next to eachchild's name was one of theemployes who “signed up” to

be a Christmas patron.Peter Shapter was ITT

chairman.

Stamps PayPlane Fare

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)Trading stamps paid the air-plane fare and then some for

three Sisters who left here to

establish a mission school inPeru.

The Holy Names of Je-usand Mary Sisters took withthem $2,000 in supplies and ap-plances and $l4O in cash as a

result of redeeming thestamps, Students -at the 36Holy Names schools in Cali-fornia contributed 1,045 booksof the trading stamps for theproject.

ST. JOSEPH Cafasso is thepatron saint of prisons.

Japan’s PrincessAt Sacred Heart

TOKYO (NC) - CrownPrincess Michiko went backto Sacred Heart Universityhere for a Christmas concertgiven by the glee club. Thecarol-singing .also drew a

number of ambassadors andother diplomats. The Princessis an alumna of the universi-ty.

Silver, Gold JubileesAt Maryknoll Jan. 6MARYKNOLL, N.Y.-A dual

anniversary will be celebratedat the mothcrhouse of theMaryknoll Sisters of St. Dom-inic Jari. G which will honora local jubiliarian and, in-directly, the 35 Maryknoll Sis-ters who have come fromNorth Jersey.

Sister Miriam Elizabeth(Schulz), formerly of Bloom-field, will celebrate her 25thjubilee as a Sister and theMaryknoll . community willreach its 50th anniversary.

SISTER MIRIAM Elizabethgraduated from Sacred HeartCommercial High School,Bloomfield, before enteringMaryknoll. After her professionshe was assigned to the Sis-ters’ missions in Hawaii whereshe was in charge of theMaryknoll High School storein Honolulu. This year SisterMiriam Elizabeth was assign-ned to the motherhouse at

Maryknoll.Her brothers, Peter and Ed-

ward, and her sister, Mrs.Michael E. Ryan, live inBloomfield. Another brotherwas .Maryknoll Father Wil-liam E. Schulz, who was kill-ed in an automobile accident

in 1953.

THE MARYKNOLL Sisterswere founded in 1912 by Moth-er Mary Joseph Rogers ofJamaica Plain, Mass., underthe direction of Rev. JamesA. Walsh, later Bishop Walsh.At the same time the Mary-knoll Fathers were organized.

There are presently over1.600 Maryknoll Sisters serv-

ing in the United States, Asia,Africa, Latin America- andthe Pacific Islands.

Springfield Girl

Receives HabitADRIAN, Mich. Catherine

Farrell of St. James, Spring-field, was among 75 youngwomen who received the habitof the Adrian Dominican Sis-ters in Lumen Chapel hereDec. 27. She will be known asSister Mary Campion.

MORE THAN 50% of Ameri-can donations have been ex-

pended by the Extension So-

ciety for the support of thehome missions since its found-ing in 1905.

ON THE JOB: Sister Miriam Elizabeth is shown ather former mission in Maryknoll High School, Hono-

lulu, where she headed the school store.

North Jersey Date Book

JAN. 5St. James’ Hospital Auxiliary to the Guild,

Newark Meeting, Hotel Robert Treat, New-ark, 8:30.

Sacred Heart Jr. Rosary, Irvington Meetingfollowing evening Mass; installation of of-ficers.

JAN. 6St. Joseph's College, New Jersey Alumnae

i>ay of Recollection, Carmel Retreat House,Oakland; Mrs. W. H. Wolf, Paterson, chair-man.

JAN. 7Immaculate Conception Rosary, Montclair

Tea, 3 p m., Madonna llall; Mrs. JosephDurkin, Mrs John O’Keefe, chairmen. RitaMurphy of Seton Hall University, speaker.

Paired Heart Jr. Rosary, Irvington FamilyChristmas party. 1 p.m., auditorium; Mrs.Marie Filing, Mrs. Edith Waldele, chairmen.

JAN. 8l! Tl : ’ -y Rosary, Westfield Meeting, 8

p.m.; program on hooks and literature.C r Lady of the Lake Rosary, Verona Meet-

ing following novena; Rev. Richard McGuin-ness, director of the Mt. Carmel Guild depart-ment for the blind, speaker.

St. Cecilia’s Rosary, Kearny Meeting, 8:30,cafeteria; Mrs. William Petkewicz, chairman.

St. Leo's Rosary, Irvington Meeting, 8:30.St. Mary’s Hospital League, Orange Meet-

ing, nurses’ educational building, 8:30; EdithBattista, Mrs. A1 Magno, chairmen.

St. Vincent’s Marians, Bayonne Fifteenthanniversary dinner, 7 p.m., Hi-Hat Club, Ba-yonne; Mrs. John Brennan, Mrs. William

Lane, Mrs. John Gaddis, chairmen.

St. Aloysius Kosary, Jersey City Meeting.8 pm., auditorium; Mrs. James Rochford,chairman.

Immaculate Heart of Mary Rosary, MaplewoodInstallation and meeting; 8:30.

JAN. 9St. Rose College, New Jersey Alumnae Meet-

ing, home of Mrs. James Coughlin, Hohokus,8:30.

Regina Mundi Guild, Christ the King, NewVernon Meeting, parish hall, 8 p m.; speak-

er on North American Wildlife Foundation.JAN. It

Court Patricia, CDA, Maplewood Twenty-fifth anniversary dinner, Essex House, New-ark.

Se on Hall College of Medicine and DentistryWoman's Guild—Meeting, dormitory building,Seton Hall University, South Orange, 12:30;luncheon. Showing of "Operation Abolition,"movie on communism.

St. James Hospital Alumnae, Newark—Meet-ing, 8 pm , auditorium; Dr. WilliamGriefinger, St. James medical director,speaker. Elections.

JAN. 13St. Elizabeth's College Alumnae Welcoming

of class of 1962 to alumnae; Communionbreakfast, alumnae lounge. Mrs. Justin J.Murphy, chairman; Mary McKcon, nationalpresident, presiding.

JAN. 16

Catholic Woman's Club of Elizabeth Meeting,2 p.m.; Rev. Owen W. Garrigan, I’ll. I)., Se-ton Hall University, speaker on “Ten Daysm Russia."

HAPPY HOSPITAL: Noless than 11 different

groups were on hand at

Holy Name Hospital, Tea-

neck, to brighten the hol-

iday weeks. Joining in thefestivities in a pose typi-cal of hundreds of othersthroughout the area are:

Joan Marie Theuer Jr.,nurse; Sister M. Evelyn,C.S.J., voluunteer servicedirector; Santa; Mrs. Rose

Lynch, receptionist; andMrs. Joseph Hogan, volun-

teer services associate di-rector. Boys from BogotaHigh carrolled for thefourth year in a row in a

snowstorm.

Mt. St. Mary’s Finds FriendsTo Help Rebuild College

LOS ANGELES (NC)—Stan-ford University has con-

tributed 200 valuable books tohelp Mplacc those lost by Mt.St. Mary’s College in the re-

cent fire that destroyed 500homes and caused $1 milliondamage to the college.

The college library itselfwas not damaged, but thevaluable Moreana collection inthe convent’s St. Thomas MoreSeminar Room was destroyed.

Mt. St. Mary’s librarians were

invited to Stanford to searchfor replacements.

IN ANOTHER gesture, pi-anist Johana Harris gave a

concert Dec. 29 in Santa Moni-ca Civic Auditorium to helpreplace losses to the collegemusic department.

Athletes, too, are doing theirhit to assist the stricken col-

lege. Loyola University of LosAngeles will play University ofSan Francisco and PepperdineCollege will meet University ofSanta Clara in a basketballdouble-header at Los AngelesSports Arena Jan. 12.

African Women

In U.S. to UniteWASHINGTON (NC) A

plan for an organization of an

estimated 300 African women

students now studying at U. S.colleges and universities was

discussed at a week-long pro-gram for 11 African women

students at "trinity Collegehere.

The plan calls for an or-

ganizational meeting of theAfrican students and a semi-nar in June at a site yet to beselected.

The seven day program,which ended Dec. 27, had as

its theme "African WomenFace the Future.” It was

sponsored by the Grail move-

ment, the Christian FamilyMovement, Trinity Collegeconducted by the Sisters ofNotre Dame de Namur andthe Foreign Visitors Office ofthe National Catholic WelfareConference.

Sing AlongLITTLE ROCK (NO - .\

little girl, who accompaniedher mother to the GuardianI’ress Store here, a religiousarticles shop, stood gazing at

a big bearded statue of St.

Francis of Assisi, his arms

-outstretched. The youngsterturned to her mother and said:"Look, mommy, sing alongwith Mitch."

January 4, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 11

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Catholic HS

Bowling Event

Slated Jan. 13ORADELL Plans for the

first All-Catholic High SchoolDoubles Bowling Tournament,sponsored by Bergen CatholicHigh School, were announcedthis week. The event is setfor Jan. 13 at Paramus Lancs,Paramus.

Boys from Catholic highschools are eligible to enterin either of two divisions, sen-

ior-junior or sophomore-fresh-man. Prizes will be awarded.Games will begin at 10 a.m.

and 12 noon.

Boys, with the exception ofthose who have bowled in ABCor money leagues, may regis-ter with their athletic direc-tors. Entry forms must be re-turned by Jan. JO.

Further information may beobtained by calling BergenCatholic.

Pirates to PutUnbeaten SwimRecord on Line

SOUTH ORANGE—Perhapsone of its stiffest tests is com-ing up for Seton Hall Univer-sity’s undefeated swimmingteam at 2 p.m. Jan. 6 whenAdelphi College comes to

Archbishop Walsh MemorialAuditorium pool.

The Pirates’ longest winningstreak in a decade fourwill be on the line against a

team which has a 4-1 markand rates second only to Vil-lanova as Seton Hall’s strong-est foes.

Co-captain Dick White willlead the locals in the 220 and440 with the other co-captain,Bill Delebar of South Orange,handling butterfly and breast-stroke.

Seton Hall’s next meet willbe against Long Island Uni-versity here Jan. 13.

Bowl BoundIn 1962?

JERSEY CITY Happywith the results of its firsttrip to Florida, St. Paul of theCross’ football team is now

thinking about a possible re-

turn to the Sunshine State in1962.

Although St. Paul lost, 28-13,to Opa Locka in the TeenBowl at Opa Locka, Fla., itimpressed officials of the Holi-day Youth Bowl. Thus, St.Paul received a bid to playin lhal event next year atCarol City, a suburb of Miami.

Rev. Vincent Ward of St.Paul said no decision will bemade oh the bid until next

season when the coaches can

see how well the team is pro-gressing. Fourteen of the 41players who made the south-ern trip will be eligible to playnext season. The remaining 27have played their final gram-mar school games.

Rettino Scores 2

VILANOVA, Pa. Scoringtwo touchdowns, Lou Rettinoof Jersey City led a largeNorth Jersey delegation whichhelped Villanova to a 17-9 SunBowl victory Dec. 30.

Out of the Frying Pan...

Pirates in MSG

College Quintets Slate Interesting Contests. SOUTH ORANGE—The firstof three—the final three—Madison Square Gardengames this season is on tapfor Seton Hall Jan. 5. Com-bined with important gamesfor St. Peter’s and Seton Hall(Paterson), this gives thecollege basketball schedule an

interesting flavor for the com-ing week.

The Pirates, who had nip-ped four straight opponentsbefore a meeting with high-flying Villanova Jan. 3, willtake on Memphis St. in thefirst half of an MSG twin-billtomorrow evening.

ST. PETER’S will entertain

Upsala Jan. 4 before travel-ing to Wagner Jan. 6 and lonaJan. 10. The Paterson Pirateshave just one game listed, butit is with a local rival, Pater-son State, Jan. 6.

While Memphis St. may notprovide as formidable a foeas did Villanova, it still shouldgive Seton Hall a tough test

since the game will be play-ed in the big New York arenaand many Pirate regulars are

sophomores, who have never

played there before.

NICK WERKMAN, a 61forward with a deft scoringtouch, has been the paceset-

ter for the Pirates in theearly going. With DanCoombs, the team’s No. 2

scorer; Sunny Sunkett, a topdefensive player and key sub,and Randy Chave, a some-

times starter, Seton Hall hasa sophomore nucleus to itsteam. Senior captain A1 Sena-vitis is the steadying influ-ence for the club.

Coach Richie Regan willtake Seton Hall on the roadagain next week for a visit to

Loyola (Baltimore) Jan. 9.St. Peter’s is fresh from a

pre-holiday scoring binge inwhich it blitzed the basketsat two Florida schools. Al-though the Peacocks split thetwo games, they showed thekind of offensive which couldmake them interesting towatch and dangerous to allcomers.

JUST HOW dangerousthey’ll be will depend upontheir ability to sharpen theirdefenses. Both southern foesscored well and showed weak-

nesses in the St. Peter's de-fense. This is the area in.

which Coach Don Kennedy istrying to improve his team,which has won five of its firsteight games.

Coach Jim Comcrford’s Pat-erson Seton Hall five was offto a slow start before theholiday, losing five of six

games. However, that one

victory came at the expenseof Paterson State.

Thus, the Pirates would liketo right themselves and drivetoward the .500 level. Andthey’d like to open that pro-gram against the local rivals.

Dollar a MonthCINCINNATI (NC) - Long-

range support of the PapalVolunteers for Latin America(PAVLA) program was pledg-ed here by a group of Cincin-nati Gas and Electric Cos. em-

ployees. The 25 office workerswill give $1 a month each tothe diocesan PAVLA commit-tee for three years to supporta Papal Volunteer for thatperiod.

Editor Named

ByPeace Corps(RNS) A promi-

nent Catholic labor leader hasbeen named assistant admin-istrator of the U. S. PeaceCorps in the Philippines.

He is John C. Cort, execu-

tive secretary of the Newspa-per Guild of Greater Boston

and associate editor of Coipr-'monweal, a national Catholicweekly published by laymen.

He has been prominent in

the Catholic Labor Guild ofthe Boston Archdiocese and theNational Catholic LiturgicalConference. He has also scrv

cd as staff member of TheCatholic Workers and associate editor of Labor Leader,Catholic trade unionists publi-cation.

A native of Woodmere,N. Y., he is a convert. Hiswife and nine children will ac-

company him to the Philip-pines.

Ski Lessons Help BridgeCultural Gap in Alaska

ANCHORAGE, Alaska(RNS)—A French missionaryin the Yukon Territory, whois a skiing expert, views thesports as a bridge to close thegap in understanding betweenthe cultures of the white peo-ple and the Indians in the farnorth.

“People do not like to bepatronized," Rev. Jean-MarieMouchct. 0 11,1 , explained,“and it is very hard for thewhite man to extend help to

anybody without seeming tolook down a bit. I have feltthat skiing might help the In-

dian when he meets the whiteman, as be must do more andmore in these changingtimes.’’

TIIE OItI.ATE priest added:“If he skis well, he can com-

pete against the white man

on his own level in sportsevents—and this is very im-

portant."For the past l. r> years, Fa-

ther Mouchct has carried on

an intensive ski instructionprogram among the IndiansHe has taught skiing in OldCrow, Telegraph Creek in

British Columbia, as well as

at the University of Alaskaand Ladd Air Force Base.

Before becoming a priest 1Cyears ago, Father Mouchctwas an instructor duringWorld War II for the Frenchski troops. He visited Anchor-

age en route to Mabuisson,France, for his first trip homein seven years.

Tourney SetIn Paterson

PATERSON—Six teams will

compete for the seventh an-nual Paterson Diocesan Bas-ketball Tournament champion-ship at the close of the regu-lar season, it was announcedlast wpek by Rev. Thomas J.

Boyle, Paterson Seton Hall athletic director.

Seedings will be decided fromthe teams' records as of Feb.12 with the opening gameslisted for Feb. 2G at Manleyllall in Central High School.

Semi finals will be held Feb.28 and the final Mar. 3.

St. John's, the defendingchampion, is in the field alongwith St. Joseph's, St. Mary’s,Morris Catholic, Our Lady ofthe Lake and St. Bonaventure.

MEMBERSHIP in the pon-tifical Order of the GoldenSpur is limited to 100 persons.

Unbeaten List Trimmed

Five Teams Cop Cage CrownsNEWARK—Five teams are

sporting crowns and the ranksof the undefeated have beentrimmedsto just two teams—Marist and Seton Hall—as a

result of a busy week of holi-day basketball tournaments.

Marist, which leads all areateams with a 5-0 record, re-

peated as Division B cham-pion in the Marist InvitationTournament in Now YorkCity.

Stan Nowicki and . JoeBonner combined to spark theRoyal Knights past three op-ponents, all in comfortablefashion.

SETON lIALL wasn't in anytournaments, but it did man-age to pick up its fourthstraight triumph in an inde-

pendent game With NewarkTech. ’

St. Benedict’s, seeded thirdbehind East Orange and WestSide, provided the biggest sur-

prise in the tournaments^.asit nipped top-ranked Easf Or-ange, 44-43, in the final aif theEssex County Coachesciation Tournament at Up-sala.

IN LESS surprising results,Bergen Catholic shaded DonBosco, 60-57, for the BergenCounty Holiday Festival titleand Archbishop Walsh stop-ped DePaul, 58-47, for theDon Bosco Tech Holiday Tour-nament laurels. Both DonBosco and DePaul sufferedtheir initial losses in thosegames.

St. Cecilia’s (K) proved it-self a power to he reckonedwith by winning the St. Mary’s(H) Invitation Tournamenthonors. The Saints beat St.Anthony’s, a surprise finalist,44-43; in .the last game.

IN ADDITION to DePauland Don Bosco, the unbeatenranks lost St. Bonaventure inthe Don Bosch Tech tourney,St. Peter's and Holy Familyin the 'St. Peter’s College In-vitation Tournament and St.Patrick’s in the Notre DameChristmas Tournament.

Several individuals were

outstanding during the tour-naments with Bill Connell ofSt. Cecilia’s (K) and JohnHammcl of Bergen Catholic

contributing the most to theirteams’ causes. Connell helpedthe Saints to their title with 71

points in three games whileHammel tossed in 67 in three

games to pace the Crusaders.

STAN MODESKI helped St.Anthony’s to runner-up in theSt. Mary’s (R) tourney with67 points in three games. A

couple of other top point mak-ers included Jim Brown ofDon Bosco (63 points), No-wicki (62); Chuck Dimminie,St. Bonaventure (62); PhilTaylor, St. Benedict’s (54);Chuck Mennary, Walsh (53),and Bonner (52), all in threegames.

Johnny Kupchak . was a

standout in defeat for St. Pat-rick’s, firing in 43 points intwo games. Single game hon-ors went to Jack Barbour,who scored 30 points in DonBosco Tech’s opening gameloss in its own tourney.

Busy Schedule

School Fives Return to ActionNEWARK - With the holi-

day vacations and tournamentsbehind, basketball will swinginto high gear Jan. 5 with a

full slate of 16 games involv-ing North Jersey Catholic highschool teams.

Post-holiday contests werelisted Jan. 2 and 3, but thecomplete return to actionwon’t be until Jan. 5.

HIGHLIGHTING the busyevening will be four leaguecontests. Each of those leaguebattles promises to be inter-esting. Archbishop Walsh, new

in the Don Bosco

Tech Holiday Tournament, willvisit St. Anthony's, runneKupin the St. Mary’s (R) Tourna-ment, in what could be a keyNorth Jersey Catholic Confer-ence struggle.

Walsh has beaten six of sev-

en opponents in its best sea-

son yet and holds a 1-0 NJCCmark. St. Anthony’s is also1-0 in the circuit and is thedefending Division B cham-pion.

BERGEN CATHOLIC andDon Bosco, co-favorites in theTrLCounty Catholic Confer-ence, will have league actioncoming up the Dons at St.Joseph’s (WNY) and the Cru-saders at home to Queen ofI’cace.

St. Bonaventure, one of thepre-season choices in the Pas-saic-Bergen Catholic Con-ference, will visit St. Luke’sin that circuit.

Several other attractivematches arc listed with Mar-ist's visit to St. Peter’s ratingthe most attention among theindependents.

MARIST ALSO figures inone of the other leading gamesduring the coming week. TheRoyal Knights will tangle withBayonne in a big intra-citybattle Jan. 9.

High on the list of impor-tance among league games ontap is DcPaul's trip to St. Bon-aventure Jan. 7. The hostswere rated the team to beatbefore the campaign opened.

Now, off its showing in theDon Bosco Tech tourney. De-Paul figures to make it at

least a two team battle. Tillsgame could go a long way to-ward deciding the titlist in theP-BCC.

Other independent featuresfind Peddie at St. Benedict'sJan. 8 and Thomas Jeffersonat Seton Hall Jan. 9.

BasketballCalendar

Suril«JI**JSSL **/?*“ ,n * v *nln« ami

wlae ilotlST »H«rnoon. union olhtr-

HIOM SCHOOL. „ ~ . Thursday, Jan. 4

"U «• Mlchaol'a UCIIJonnoaco Tech at DaPaulSt. Mary’. (P, m Sl . joMph ., ~,,

., . Friday, Jan. s

;W»Ull at SI. Anthony'... fj!" ,„"“|. co „* 1 S1 - Jowph'. (WNV).

°< p «vo at Bergen CatholicSt. Bonavcnturo at St. Luke'.Harrlaon at O. L. ValleyImmaculate at St. Aloyilu.Marut at St. Pater .Paaaaic at Pope PluaPateraon Tech at St. John'a

*m

a fhol, £. *•"«! Heartui ;,K) Albertu. M.jtnu.St. Jamea at Barrlnaer

Divinity at OratoryKoulli Side at St. Benedict’!Sliaaex at O. L. Laket'nlon Hill at Holy Family_ „

Sdtvrtfay, Jan. 4Ewex CathoUc at Rostllc CatholicHoly Trinity at Westfield

.c. a a*»■*•*£ Jan. 7

•Rl Anthony*! at St. Jameaal Quern

I>eF aul at St. BonaventureHarrUon at St. Cecllla’a (K >Sacred Heart at St Mary's <F»St Mary'a »H» at W*lnhSt Michael'a (JO at St. Mary'a Jt »Seton llall Divinity at Immaculate

Monday, Jan, I!** S oo .®?*™ T ®ch St. Mary a tP)• M Luke*a at St. John'aPeddle at St. Benedict'a. 4 .pm.St Jamea at Bloomfield v Tech, 3:30

pm.‘ Tuesday, Jan. f

• I>on Boaco at Pope PluaHoly Family at EmersonImmaculate at St. Mary'a <R>Jefferson at Seton Hall. 3 30 pm.Mar Lat at HnvonncNr Icon* at Morris CatholicOratory at Bayley-KllardSt Aluyaiua at (). L. Valley

Wednesday, Jan 10St Joarph'a tWNV) at I>rmarr«tSt Bonaventure at Pateraon Te« h• North Jersey Catholic Conference

** Tri -County Catholic (Conference••• Paaaaic Bergen Catholic Confer-

COLLEGEThursday, Jan. 4

• I’paala at St. Peter'sSeton Hail <P> at Kings (N. Y >

Friday. Jan. 5Seton Hall va. Memphis St, at MS(»

Saturday. Jan. *St Peter's at Wagner

Seton Hall <Pi at Paterson StateTuesday, Jan. t

Seton Hall at Loyola (Halt )Wednesday, Jan. 10

St. Peter’a at lona• Carden State League

Public RelationsDirector Named

ST. LOUIS (NC) TheCatholic school system herehas hired a director of publicrelations for the first time.Msgr. James T. Curtin, super-intendent, said the action was

taken because the general pub-lic is unaware of the contribu-tion Catholic schools are mak-ing to the community.

12 THE ADVOCATE January 4, 1962

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Catholic

YouthVocation Notes

He Didn't

Like it EitherBy Msgr. William F. Furlong

Mary, not quite nine, had justlearned how to make the Wayof the Cross. During a visit with her mother to the parishchurch, she whispered: "Mommy, let’s make the Stations.” Themother’s refusal brought on the ever to be expected, “WhyMommy?”

Falteringly cable the mother’s answer: "Well, I— I justdon’t like the Way of the Cross.” After a moment of silence,Mary said thoughtfully: "Yes I guess Our Lord didn’t like iteither.” And you may be sure that He didn’t like it. But Hedid it because He liked us.

* * •

PERHAPS THAT IS THE SECRET to the saving of manyvocations. Young people whom Our Lord has called to thepriesthood or religious life should learn to do things they don’tlike to do simply because they like Him Our Lord Whowants them to do these things.

Priests, Sisters and Brothers did not like leaving theirmothers and fathers, brothers and sisters, their homes andfriends. Priests don’t like getting up at 2 a.m. to go on a sickcall. They don’t like sitting for hours in a confessional.

Sisters and Brothers often don’t like the long thanklesshours in the classroom. They don’t like the restrictions ofthe vows of poverty and obedience. We could go on and on.

There are many things about being a priest. Brother or anun that priests, Brothers and nuns might not like. But Theylike that Someone Who wants them to do these things. They«

ke ey love ~ Our Lord. As has often been said:"Nothing is too hard to do for one who is in love.” Andpriests, Brothers and nuns are in love with God.

' " ‘f "■ * • •

BOTH ST. VINCENT DE PAUL AND ST. JOHN BOSCOclaimed that 33 1/3% of our Catholic boys and girls have beencalled by God to the priesthood og to the religious life. If thatbe true then the Archdiocese -at Newark is much below par.From last June’s Catholic high school graduates only 4.42%entered seminaries or novitiates.

* • •

AND IF THAT BE NOT DISCOURAGING ENOUGH, thisyear’s percentage is .7% less than that of last year, and thatwas almost 1% less than that of the preceding year. Here arethe figures: In 1959, from a total of 3,683 Catholic high schoolgraduates, 213 entered seminaries or novitiates; in i960 therewere 191 out of 3,868, and in 1961 there were 127 out of 2,983.

The figures keep going down and down. Why? Well, if be-coming a priest or a Brother or a nun calls for sacrifices, andif sacrifices are easy for those who are in love, must we notconclude that most of our young people are not very deeplyin love with God? j .

• • •

WE SHOULD LIKE very much to have them prove us tobe wrong!y •• • *

Apostolate for VocationsNewark Archdiocese: Msgr. William F. Furlong, St. Merv’s

Elizabeth, N. J. Telephone: EL 2-5154.'

c uP ,at ?.r , son Diocese: Rev. John P. McHugh, DePaul High

School, Wayne, N. J. Telephone: OXbow 4-5759.

Ploying It CoolIs Hot Problem

At Some SchoolsCINCINNATI (NC) - One

of the hottest problems facinghigh school leaders is the at-titude of “playing it cool.”

Transited, this means thetendency of many students toavoid becoming involved inapostolic groups, in school ac-

tivities, in projects requiringresponsibility.

the DISCLOSURE came ata meeting of the High SchoolFederation at which delegatesof 13 member Catholic highschools talked over some oftheir apostolic goals and someof the social pressures and in-stitutions standing in the wayof their goals. They represent-ed Young Christian Studentand Sodality units at the 13

schools.Some of the current proj-

ects of YCS and Sodalitygroups in the high schools in-clude efforts to promote par-ticipation at Holy Mass, solvethe problem of cheating, im-prove faculty-student relation-ships and cultivate “schoolspirit”, discourage steady dat-ing, and break up cliques andcreate an atmosphere which isfriendly.

One school conducted a‘‘Cleaner Air Week” programas a campaign against vulgarspeech. "Pickets” wearingsandwich boards advertisedthe project and sprayed theair to overcome the effects oftlie “fallout” of vulgarity.Ys *or the “play it cool”

problem, one school reportedthat “the general attitude inour school is indifference andapathy.” "Most students claimthey are too busy to go out oftheir way to help others,” theschool’s delegate said, “sotheir logical conclusion is to‘let the other person do it'.”

Four Girls Seek

Snow Queen CrownNUTLEY Four girls will

be competing for the crown

at the Holy Family CYO an-

nual Snow Queen Contest heroJan. 5 in the school audi-torium. There will also bedancing between the hours of8 and 11 p.m.

Hoping to represent HolyFamily in the Essex CountySnow Queen contest Jan. 20at Seton Hall will be PatRobertson, Annette Bruno, Jo-Anne Galioto and CarolineNicalaro. Patricia Mozeika, the19G1 queen, will crown the win-ner.

St. Anthony'sWins Tourney

JERSEY CITY st. An-thony’s (UC) coasted past St.Michael’s (JC), 43-24, to cap-ture the championship in theHudson County CYO’s secondannual Christmas Tournamentat the Dickinson High Schoolgym.

_

St. Michael’s (UC). stoppedOur Lady of Libera, 29-23, inthe consolation final.

Greg Rac tossed in 15 pointsand John Cullini added 10 tospark St. Anthony’s. WaltWlyadka tallied 12 points forSt. Michael’s (JC) and wasawarded the most valuableplayer trophy.

St Bridget'sIs Leading Loop

JERSEY CITY - St. Brid-get’s holds the top spot in theHudson County CYO Gram-mar School Bowling Leaguewith a 10-2 record.

Our Lady of Victories isrunning second with a 7-2standard and All Saints holdsthird with 8-4.

Vocation DirectorsPlan Meeting

MIAMI BEACH (NC) Vo-cations directors from morethan 25 eastern dioceses willmeet here Jan. 2-4 to discussthe fostering of vocations.

Bishop Paul J. Hallinan ofCharleston, S.C., and Auxi-liary Bishop Philip M. Hannanof Washington, will be amongthe speakers.

HOSPITAL HELPERS: Carole Reilly of Dumont (third from right) received the volunteer of the year awardfor Holy Name Hospital, Hackensack, from Dr. Vincent D’Agati. Left to right, are: Sister M. Evelyn directorof volunteer services; Mrs. Joseph Hogan, associate director, Dr. D’Agati, Miss Reilly, Sally Ann Paisley of FairLawn, runner-up, and Judith McGrath of New Milford, who contributed more than 200 hours.

AWARD WINNERS: Displaying their prizes are some of the outstanding players in the Hudson Countv CYOGrammar School Football League. Front row, left to right, are: Dennis Garvey, accepting for his brother Ed,who was playing with St. Paul of the Cross in Florida; and Pat Dwyer of St. Michael’s (UC). Second row’ JoeBurzynski, Queen of Peace; Paul McComb, St. Paul’s (Greenville); Msgr. Henry J. Murphy, county director; Fred

Dally, Boystown, and Walter Bradford.

Electronic Assist

Computers to Aid VocationsROME (NC) Electronic

computers and automatic fil-ing systems may soon be add-ed to the resources of theHoly See's office for promot-ing vocations.

Plans to establish a statisti-cal center at headquarters ofthe Pontifical Organization forVocations were agreed on atthe recent vocations congressthat brought 1,437 vocations

experts to Rome.

REV. GODFREY Poagc,C P., of Chicago said herehe plans to return to theU. S. in January and will in-

vestigate possibilities for se-curing a UNIVAC and other

computers for the new center

Father Poage, director of theMidwestern Vocation Associa-

tion of Chicago, played a maj-or role in organizing the con-

gress.

lie said that a clearinghouse for vocation statistics is

vitally needed because atpresent there is no placewhere persons promoting vo-

cations can secure accurate

information of the world-widevocation picture and of thenumber of priests, Sisters andBrothers now at work.

Another proposal made at

the congress was the callingof a world meeting of the su-

periors of congregations of

Sisters after the close of thecoming ecumenical council.The congress would discusshow best to increase and pro-mote vocations among women.

Queen ContestDeadline Nears

MONTCLAIR The dead-line for entries in the 11th an-

nual Essex County CYO Snow-ball Dance queen contest isJan. 5.

The queen will be determin-ed by the parish which sellsthe greatest number of ticketsto the dahee, which will heheld at Seton Hall UniversityJan 20.

The 1902 queen will receiveher crown at the dance fromthe 1901 queen, Miss PatriciaOrlando of St. Peter’s (Belle-ville).

CWV PlanningOratorical Test

EAST ORANGE - Studentsattending Catholic highschools will compete in the

annual oratorical contest

sponsored by the Essex Coun-ty chapter of the Catholic WarVeterans and Ladies Auxili-ary Jan. 7 at 2 p in. at St. Jo-seph’s School auditorium.

Each contestant will give a

five-minute talk on “ForeignAid: A Moral Necessity.”

Contest co-chairmen arc:

Dr. Joseph Santiago, Leon Ry-giel, Mary Crilly, Mary Danci-sin and Marie Lippincott.

The winners, one girl andone boy, will receive theirawards at the county CWV <Convention Jan. 21 at St. Roseof Lima (Newark).

THE CATHOLIC Book Clubwas founded in 1928 to en-

courage the writing and publi-cation of books that mirrorCatholic philosophy.

CYO Football Champs,Players Receive Awards

JERSEY CITY - Joe Bur-znski of Queen of Peace tooktwo awards to head a list ofsix players who received indi-vidual honors at the HudsonCounty CYO Football Leaguedinner Dec. 27 at St. .Mi-chael's (JC).

Burznski was both highscorer, with 99 points, and

outstanding back in the North-ern Division. There was a tiefor top lineman in the Northwith Pat Dwyer of St. Mich

ael's (UC) and Fred Dally of

Boystown sharing the honor.

IN THE SOUTHERN Divi-sion, Ed Garvey of St. Aloy-sius was voted outstandingback and Paul McComb of St.Paul’s (Greenville) took linehonors. Walt Bradford was theleading scorer in the south.

St. Aloysius received theMsgr. Henry J. Murphyaward, a gold football, whichmust he won three times to beretired. St Michael's (UC)was runner up.

CKO Plans CanadaTripJERSEY CITY Plans for the Hudson County CYO’s

11th annual winter weekend and pilgrimage to the shrine ofSte. Anne de Beaupre Feb. 21-26 were announced last weekby Msgr. Henry J. Murphy, county CYO director.

A special train will leave Grand Central Station, NewYork, at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 21. The return train will arrive inNew York at 6:45 a.m. Feb. 26.

CYO MEMBERS AND their friends will stay at theChateau Frontenac in Quebec and travel by bus to the shrine.In addition to young adult members, parents and marriedcouples have participated in past trips.

Activities include ice skating, tobogganing, sleigh riding,street dancing, the CYO dance and skiing. There will also bedaily Mass at the Cathedral in Quebec City.

Applications may be made at the CYO Center, 380 BergenAve., Jersey City.

Seven Stay UnbeatenIn Essex Girls' Leagues

MONTCLAIR—Seven teamsremain undefeated in the fourEssex County CYO girls’ bas-ketball leagues, which are un-

der the direction of Paula Ca-talano.

Holy Family (Nutley), St.Rose of Lima (Short Hills)and Blessed Sacrament (EastOrange) are tied for first inthe Holy Family League with

two victories and no defeat*apiece.

HOPE HUNOVAU andKathy Hughes of Our Lady ofSorrows (South Orange) areamong the league’s three topscorers although their teamsplit its opening two games.

A two-way tic for first placeexists in the West Side JuniorLeague between St. Casimir’s(Newark) and Our Lady of AllSouls (East Orange). St. Casi-mcr's Sandy Buckly is theloop’s leading scorer, followedby Sacred Heart’s Eileen Ry-an. . x

ST. THOMAS the Apostle(Bloomfield) holds a one-halfgame- edge over three teamsin the Sacred Heart GrammarLeague. St. Thomas’ PatCaruso and Janice Heart’salong with Sacred Heart’s(Bloomfield) Joanne Caprioare the top scorers.

Montclair Immaculate Con-ception and Our Lady of Sor-rows are tied for the lead inthe East Orange CatholicGrammar League with twovictories each. Immaculate'sArlene Ruccio and Mary Scottare the big point getters.

St. Peter'sIs Unbeaten

JERSEY CITY Breezingalong with the only undefeat-ed record (18-0) in the three,,Hudson County CYO Catholichigh school bowling leagues,St. Peter's holds a three-game edge over St. Mary’s Ain the boys’ junior varsityloop.

In the boys’ varsity, St.Peter’s also leads the way,sporting a 20-4 mark, which iseight games better than run-ner-up St. Aloysius.

St. Dominic’s Academy andSt. Mary’s share the top spotin the girls league. Each teamhas a YlVi-V/t record.

January4, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 13

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Thailand Tots Need Food,What Will We DoAboutIt?

Children of a Thailand mis-sion have to be fed before theycan be taught catechism65,000 of them. Few of thesechildren in the schools, how-ever, are Catholic. In all, theCatholics number 110,000 outof a population of nearly twomillion. Eight per cent of thepriests are natives.

While these children are

potential children of God, notall of them will respond tograce. Some will look up toGod when their stomachs are

fed; others will look down-ward to more food.

It is the same with us whorealize the corporal and spir-itual need of these, title ones.

Some of us will make sacri-fices for them and send themto the Holy Father for the So-ciety for the Propagation ofthe Faith. Others! What will

they do? Let us hope therewill be no others!

‘Say a Prayer,'

Bishop Asks

Sargodha in West Pakistan,with a population of 1.5 mil-

lion, has two general hospitalsof only fair size. In the past

year the Mill Hill Fathershave added another one, St.Francis Xavier’s Hospital.

The new institution is staffed

by lay missionaries from theworld famous Medical MissionInstitute of Wurzburg, which

provided also one doctor andthree nurses. The hospital it-self was made possible byhelp from the German Bish-

ops’ Mission Aid Organization,Misereor, and by the RaskobFoundation and other helpersin America.

In Sargodha there is also a

new school for boys, St.Mary’s, which operates inrented buildings under FatherD. Breen of Cork, Ireland. St.Paul’s School for boys, also inSargodha, has been in exist-ance longer than St. Mary’s.It continues to grow under Fa-ther Almeida of Pakistan, butclasses are still held under thetrees.

The need for Christian train-ing of youth is more pressingthan ever in the missionswhere communist influencecontinues to grow day by day.Bishop Nicholas Hettinga ofRawalpindi, where Sargodha is

located, sends holiday greet-ings to the Society for thePropagation of the Faith andasks that members “say a lit-tle prayer, often, for us.”

Bishop Stanton

At GarfieldBishop Stanton will make

an appeal on behalf of the

Society for the Propagationof the Faith on Jan. 7 atOur Lady of Mt. Virgin,Garfield, Rev. Charles P.

Casserly, pastor.Bishop Stanton wishes to

express his deep gratitudeto Father Casserly and to

the other pastors of the

archdiocese for their coop-

eration in making these ap-peals possible.

Society for the Propagationof the Faith

Archdiocese of Newark:Most Rev. Martin W. Stanton, S.T.D., Ph. D., LL.I).31 Mulberry St., Newark 2, N. J. Phone MArkct 2-2803Hours: Daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 12.

Diocese of Paterson:Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F. Louis24 DcGrasse St., Paterson 1, N. J. Phone: ARmory 4 0400Hours: Daily, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 12.

Donations to the Society for the Propagation of theFaith are income tax deductible.

Refresher Course

For CatechistsResults of a refresher

course of the Catechist Schoolof Tongo, Ranchi, India, wererewarding, according to Rev.J. Staquet, S.J., its director.During a 10-day session,many phases of mission workwere covered, many doubtswere solved and a number of

useful suggestions were

adopted.Father Staquet took 21 of his

own catechist candidates toSoso for the refresher courseand retreat. This” group wasjoined by 110- others who tookup, among other things, treat-ment of illnesses and a studyof native medicines. “Knowl-edge of these by catechists iswithout doubt their bestmeans for success, both

among those of the fold andthose outside," Father Staquetexplains.

“We also treated social up-lift, adaptation to the quick in-dustralization of the country,cooperation with measures

taken by the government forthe uplift of people, as wellas business of the preciousmission helper, the catechist,whose spiritual influence is so

important.“Perhaps the subject that

took the greatest number ofhours was ‘propagation of thefaith.’ One of the new meanssuccessful in this regrad is thesending of groups of boystwice monthly to a pagan vil-lage and demonstrating whatthey' learn in our school. Notall these boys are as yet Cath-olics.

"I bore myself two-thirds ofthe expenses of the stay inSoso; I excused some from

paying their one-third; nay

more, I refunded to some of

them their journey expensesto Soso and back. I felt sure

that benefactors would makeup for it. I recommend thesegood people to your goodprayers.”

ObituaryIt is a holy and whole-

some thought to pray forthe dead that they may beloosed from their sins. Werecommend to the prayersof our readers the reposeof the soul of the followingwho has recently departedthis life:

John J. Sapeta Benedictines Meet in NewarkNEWARK The American

Benedictine Academy held itsannual executive board meet-

ing at St. Mary’s Priory hereJan. 1. Abbot Patrick M. O’-Brien, 0.5.8., was host, as-

sisted by Rev. GregoryShramm, 0.5.8., Newark,treasurer of the academy.

The group, led by the acad-emy’s president. Rev. Martin

Schirber, 0.5.8., of St. John’sUniversity, Colleßoville, Minn.,discussed future issues oftheir periodicals, the Ameri-can Benedictine Review andBenedictine Studies. Arrange-ments were also made for the1962 national meeting of allBenedictine Sections to beheld at St. Martin’s Abbey,Olympia, Wash.

BENEDICTINES PLAN: Officers of the AmericanBenedictine Academy met last week at St. Benedict’s,Newark, to plan activities for the coming year for the9,000-member organization. Left to right are Rev.Edward Malone, O.S.B., vice president; Rev. Martin E.

Schirber, O.S.B., president; and Rev. GregorySchramm, O.S.B., of St. Benedict’s, treasurer. The na-

tional meeting will be in August at St. Martin’s Abbey,Olympia, Wash.

14 THE ADVOCATE January 4, 1962

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for rhe Oriental Church

—~~ ' .t C• *, t..e priest wear*, oi couise,

vestment*. This happens inMAKYKULAM, southern INDIA,more often tlun you'd like to think... MAKYKULAM, with 3,000 Catho-lics, is remote, it times rich ynrcompletely isolated. Dirt roads (theylook like wagon-tracks) turn to sl-shuhcn drenched by the monsoon rains.Doctors and medicine, for most pa-rishioners, are 50 miles away . . . Ite-cently settled by poverty-strickenfarmers in search of soil. MAKYKC-1-A.M is a sordid collection of grasshuts with thatched roofs. "Home” Is

a one-room hut with dirt floor, no sanitary facilities, Insects,germs . . . Small wonder that our parish priest in MARYKU-I.A.M. zealous and devoted, is dismayed! The filth he sees—inthe streets, in the huts, all about him—breeds disease. Diseasebrings death, especially to children

... In INDIA, of all thechildren burn, one out of -ten dies before he is one year old.Thai's the reason for so many funerals "in white'. C’om-mon diseases like diptheyla. diarrhea, pneumonia, scarlet fever,can be prevented and controlled even in INDIA. Hut once

thry mu *‘ b c cured . . . The ARCHBISHOP OFCIIANOANACHKRRY writes us that he andlike to build a "hos-pital in MARYKI'LAM. The "hospital" will be a dispensary,where native SISTERS will give medical attention to the poor!It will also include a maternity ward, where mothers will eom#

A >Rr*iin.s; h

|uiDChlld^n

.

Saltly ■ • • To buUd thr "boapil.l" ‘heARCHBIMIOP needs $4,800. It will serve the poor, save hun-deeds of lives, for years and years to come . . . Will you help?Medicine, In the hands of SISTERS, can save souls as well aa

ABruBKHi !* yOU St-nd M,mrlhln K now—even Sl-to help theARCHBISHOP get started? . . . The ARCHBISHOP already hasthe site. Whatever you can do without—s3. $3O, $lOO, $l,OOO-- put "hospital" floors, walls, medicines, eciulpment, wherehey re most desperately needed . . . Measure your sacrifice bythe need . . . God will not forget your generosity!

Dear Monsignor:

"mASVctS""' l "'’ ““

Name

Street

Amount

CU T Zone State.

the sisters may he ours

M ARYKmS \M{ Mf

WH ° |W I LL STAFF THE "HOSPITAL" INMARYKULAM, (If someday soon, please God. It's built) chancelare these same SISTERS were trained by folks like you whoread this column. . tor years now, our readers hove beenhelping regularly to tram native SISTERS for work in conntries like INDIA Would you like to help train a SISTER?It costs only 41c a day In KOTHAMANGALAM INDIAright now. SISTER HUBERT. SISTER GEROSA. SISTER AD

f,A ' fl,ld S , IE IEH AUDREY, need help to complete their train-ing as MEDICAL SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH. You can "adopt"

one of these SISTERS. You may pay by the month ($12.50). bythe year isl d ol. or In one lump sum lor the entire two-yearcourse’ (s,lo°) . Write to us . Women like these give theirlives. Ought we not give something?

for" sisTLHS~IIN V»2l°u CAN HELP SISTERS REGULARLY, too, by joiningour club for SISTERS called MARY'S BANK . . . The due.only $ I a month (3c a day.-yel think what this means to themissions year by year. MARY'S BANK enables our SISTERS to

P an for the future, because they know they can count on "oirhelp regularly . . . just as long no you are able to help themlou can drop out." or course whenever you want to for any

MARY'S bTnk"/' T' "I"’ u" r ‘ CCIM " ' " H,r »" about

the detailsA * education of SISTERS. We ll aend you

fitl <f2ear £astOlissionsfMFRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pra.ld.nt

M*9 r - Joseph T. Ryan, Nat'l s»«’ySend all communication to:

r u.

c Na

AR EAST WELFARE association480 Lexington Ave. a» 46th Si. New York 17, N. Y.

Where your

LOCAL School

games are the

111. ONESTHE BIG SPORTS STAFF of New

Jersey will cover the High, Parochialand Prep School sports scene in

the Newark News this season. . .

HERB STUTZ reviews the topbasketball game of the day before

with a headline story every

Wednesday and Saturday . . . the

HOLIDAY BASKETBALL

TOURNAMENTS will be reported in

depth . . . EVERY MONDAY on

the Newark News sports pages you

can find out how your school

stands among the basketball

competition and how things look

for the upcoming week . . . INDOOR

TRACK MEETS will get the full

treatment with features on the stars

of the local school teams . . . HighSchool SWIMMING TEAMS and

the club meets receive the

attention of sports writer, Bill Quinn,in his Tuesday column . . . and

the SCHOOL WHIRL column every

Friday wraps up the week's

activities among the high, parochialand prep schools in all sports .In the field of SCHOQL SPORTS there

is no substitute for New Jersey'sbig HOME newspaper!

Getthe NEWARK

NEWS Every Day!

NEW CLUBHOUSE: Rev. Alexander Fronczak, chaplain of Most Sacred Heart ofJesus Council, R. of C., lays the cornerstone for the new clubhouse in Wallingtonat a recent ceremony. Assisting is Grand Knight Joseph Janiec. In the backgroundis Msgr. Charles C. Demjanovich, pastor of St. Mary’s, Rutherford. Father Fronczak

is also pastor of Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in Wallington.

Pray for ThemSr. Assunta Crocenzi

MORRISTOWN Word hasbeen received at Villa Walshhere of the death of Sister As-sunta Crocenzi, M.P.F., 62,general econome of the Reli-gious Teachers Filippini, inRome. She died there on Dec.19 following an automobile ac-cident.

A member of the Americanprovince, Sister Assunta en-

tered the institute in 1917 atthe general motherhouse inRome. She came to the U. S.in 1921 and taught at : variouselementary schools in theArchdiocese of Baltimore, thethen Diocese of Newark andthe Dioceses of Trenton andCamden.

In 1938, Sister Assunth re-turned to Rome to becomegeneral econome of the insti-tute.

Sister Agnes AnitaCONVENT A Solemn Re-

quiem Mass was offered Jan.2 at St. Anne Villa Chapel herefor Sister Agnes Anita Turner,who died Dec. 29 after a longillness.

Born in Brooklyn, the daugh-ter of the late Sarah and Fran-cis Turner, Sister Agnes en-tered the Sisters of Charityin 1904. Following her noviti-ate, she taught at severalNorth Jersey schools, includ-ing St. Aloysius Academy andSacred Heart,Jersey City, andSt. Summit.

She is survived by one sister,Sister Marie Anita Turner, al-so a patient at St. Anne’s Vil-la.

Joseph A. RothBARbtnTON. Ohio A

Solemn Requiem Mass was of-fered on Dec. 27 at St. Augus-

tine's Church here for JosephA. Roth, 70, who died on Dec.24 after a short illness.

He was a native of Eliza-beth, lived in Bayonne for a

time and moved here 30 yearsago. Surviving are his wife,six children, including SisterMary Conrad of Ohio, andthree sisters, including SisterSt. Xavier, S.S.J. of GoodCounsel, Newark, and SisterCharles Albert, S.S.J., of St.Joseph’s, Roselle. He was pre-deceased by two brothers,Rev. Charles A. Roth, S.J.,and Rev. Albert C. Roth, S.J VCharles A. Turner

JERSEY CITY - A SolemnRequiem Mass was offeredJan. 2 at St.. Paul of the CrossChurch for Charles A. TurnerSr., 66, who died Dec. 28 atthe Jersey City Medical Cen-ter.

He was a lifelong resident ofJersey City. Surviving are foursons, two brothers and a sis-ter, Sister M. Patricia, O.P.

Robert J. McCannHARRISON A Solemn

Requiem Mass was offered on

Jan. 2 at Holy Cross Churchhere for Robert J. McCann, 51,who died on Dec. 28 at homeafter a short illness.

Born in Newark, he hadlived here for '4Byears. Surviv-ors include his wife, a son,three daughters, his father,two sisters, one of them Sis-ter Mary Rita of the Houseof Good Shepherd, Hartford,Conn.

John SapetaELIZABETH - A Solemn

Requiem Mass was offeredon Dec. 28 at St. Hedwig’sChurch by Rev. Joseph Sapetator his father, John J. Sapeta,

75, who died on Christmas Dayat Alexian Brothers Hospitalafter a long illness.

Born in Poland, he was a

resident of Newark beforemoving to Elizabeth 10 yearsago. In addition to FatherSapeta, who is an assiitant atSt. Hedwig’s, he is survivedby his wife and four othersons.

Guild to Hold Panel

On Jewish CatholicsNEW YORK - The Edith

Stein Guild will open its 1962program of Judaeo-Christianevents with a panel discussionon “The Jewish Catholic HisProblems and Difficulties”Jan. 14 at the Helper’s Audi-torium, 113 E. 85th St.

Holy Name

Immaculate Conception,Newark Michael A. Toma-selli will be installed as presi-dent of the society Jan. 7 byRev. Joseph J. Cestaro, ad-ministrator. Other new of-ficers are Vincent J. Purpura,Alfred R. D’Amato, Anthony J.Tamburro, Michael Gonnellaand Diego Zampiero. A buffetdinner and dance followed inthe parish hall.

St. Cecilia’s, RockawayThe annual‘reception of mem-

bers will be held Jan. 14 fol-lowing the 7 a.m. Mass. Fol-lowing the reception, there willbo refreshments in the churchhall, with a talk by JohnGrande.

St. Paul’s, Jersey CityEugene P. Kenny, former as-

sistant prosecutor of HudsonCounty, will be guest speakerat the inaugural breakfastmeeting on Jan. 14 at 9 a.m.in St. Paul’s Social Hall. Rev.John G. Hanley, spiritual di-rector, will also address thegroup. A 1

Mt. Carmel, RidgewoodThe annual reception of

members will be held Jan. 8at 8 p.m. in the church withRev. John W. Finn, spiritualmoderator, officiating. Candi-dates will be presented byRalph M. Jerskey, president.

Catechetical CongressPlanned in Spain

MADRID (NC) - Spain’sfirst national catechetical con-

gress opens here Jan. 2.

Dr. Brill NamedCommittee Head

PASSAIC—Dr. Robert Brill,director of laboratories at St.Mary's Hospital, has beennamed national chairman ofthe ad hoc committee onpituitary collection of the Col-lege of American Patholo-gists.

The committee, which alsoincludes Dr. Hugh- Grady andDr. Philip Henneman of SetonHall College of Medicine, was

appointed by Dr. F. C. Cole-man,-President of the collegeof pathologists, to promotethe collection of the glands

the country for ex-traction of growth hormone,to be used in treatment ofdwarfs.

Dr. Brill will attend a meet-ing in Miami, Jan. 8-9, atwhich the setting up of a cen-tral nationwide bank and col-lection program will be con-sidered by the medical com-mittee.

MaryknollMissioner

Writes of ‘Wild WestMARYKNOLL, N. Y.

Jersey Maryknoll missionary,Rev. Richard F. Higgins, hasan article in the January edi-tion of Maryknoll entitled,"Wild West of the Orient."

Father Higgins, a native ofNewark, writes of DavaoProvince in the Philippines,which has become the site oflarge settlements since WorldWar 11. Maryknoll priestshave been working there forthe past four years.

St. James SocietyGoing to Ecuador

LIMA, Peru Cardinal

Cushing of Boston announcedhere that the Society of St.James will take over three

parishes in Ecuador. It now

has 60 priests working in Peruand Bolivia.

GOOD SLOGAN: This billboard, erected by the Ridge-wood Council, K.of C., on Route 17 near the junctionwith Route 4 in Paramus, is typical of ones erectedall over the state by councils of the Knights of Colum-bus bearing the slogan, “Keep Christ in Christmas.”

Anglicans Plan Visit to Holy FatherLONDON (NC)—A group of

Anglican clergymen have saidthey Intend to visit Pope Johnto seek his advice on reunion.

The group, known as "the So-ciety of the Holy Cross, said itwould send a delegation to theVatican soon after Easter.

January4,1982 THE ADVOCATE 15

630 Main Street

Hackensack, N.J.

FREEZER OWNERSNo money down ... 4 months to pay!

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All ACCOUNTSINSURED TO

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Company1904 OUR 57th YEAR 1941

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Help Students to Become Priests$7 00 WILL MAINTAIN A STUDENT FOR ONE WEEK

WILL YOU HELP HIM ALONG?

vv

In our Divine Word Seminaries in India, Philippinesand Japan, we have a number of students preparingfor the priesthood. MANY ARE VERY POOR and needfinancial heilp to continue their studies.

Enclosed find $

to the priesthood for

for sponsoring a student

weeks.

REV. FATHER RALPH, nat l. dir.

S.V.D. Catholic Universities316 N. MICHIGAN CHICAGO 1

MICHAEL J. HARRISINC.

HIGH LEVELROOFING EXPERTS

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BAYONNE • JERSEY CITY . UNION CITYMEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM AND FEDERAI DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORN.

The Advocate

CLASSIFIED MARKET PLACEFor Rales. & General

Information CallMArlcat 4-0700

Deadline Mon. 12 Noon

AUTOS FOR SALE

Mercury 1957 $695Convertible. Automatic 8.

Power Steering it Brake*

Chrysler 1955 $5954-Door

Radio it Heater

NAPPA FORD INC.655 Newark Avenue Elizabeth

EL 4-AO3O

EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES

WE HAVE OPENINGS FOR

FEMALE-STENOTYPIST

SECRETARY

MALE - SALESENGINEERS *

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BURNSEMPLOYMENT AGENCY

| BROAD it A MARKET MA 2 7103

NEWARK

HELP WANTED - FEMALE

AIRLINE training and placement for

Hostess and ground , portion*. Mustbe 1B riO yrs 11. S. Grads For Inter-

view tend addreaa and phone No. toBox 484. E. Orange. N. J. or call

ORange 4-1442.WIDOWER seeks h

out#keeper, plaincooking, very light homekeeping, Car

at your disposal at any time. Time off.

good Catholic home. Clifton, three

amall children boy 8 glrla 3 and 4Live In. References. Write Box 121.The Advocate. 11l ( linton St., Newark

SUBSTITUTE mature mother to share6 room home In exchange for auperviMon and full care of 2 boya. 4 and

fl Call before 10 AM. or after 10 30

P M CA ft 11870

WANTED TO SHARE

Widow with 3 teenage children wouldIke to ahare her 8 room house with

another widow and achild. Write The

Advocate. Box 122, 31 Clinton St.

Newark 2. N. J.

RESUMESEMPLOYERS REQUIRE RESUMES

GET THE JOB YOU WANTCommand attention. "EFFECTIVE

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BUSINESS DIRECTORY

ALUMINUM PRODUCTS

SIDINcT•”STORM WINDOWS A DOORS

PORCH ENCLOSURES • ALTERATIONSJaloualea • Scrcena • Awnlnge

• Venetian Rllnda

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TE S-2.C1021160 lIAMBURO TI’K

POMPTON KALES WAYNE

APPLIANCE REPAIRS

HEIGHTS RADIO - TV SERVICEBUS Summit Ave.. Jeracy City 7. N. J.

RADIO. TELEVISION, 111-FL STEREO.P A. AMPLIFIER. TAPE RECORDER.PHONOGRAPH AND AUTOMATICRECORD CHANGER SERVICE.

•ERVICE INArlington Lyndhurat - KearnyHarrison - Elizabeth • Hillside

Irvington Newark .AND VICINITIES

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_

AUTO SERVICE & REPAIRS

G. M. Transmission ServicePlymouth. Ford. Chevrolet. Uuick, Olds-mobllc, Cadillac. any make auto; wewill Install a rebuilt transmission, guarantced 0 months; 1 price quoted, noups; EZ terms. I-dn.v service. 331 llal

sey St.. Newark. For prices call MI3 3534. 8; A M. fl PM

WAYNE TRANSMISSION

SERVICERepairs on all automatic

transmissionsLeo Whltty • Ray Nyhuis

21 Sherman St., Wayne. N. Y.OXbow 4 3308

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

GUTTER PROBLEMS?

A cos aluminum gutters Installed fnleas than worn! gutters iKUiitantcc<work by experts! Since 1040 Call WMiI.FORD Jll . HE 10110. W

ange Anytime.

JOSEPH H. MARTIN & SONest. 40 years

Aluminum AwningsCombination Windows

Doore - Venetian RllndaAluminum Siding Jaloualea

Porch EnclosuresOUR SPECIALTY

HY. 23 Puller. N. JTErmlnal b aooo

NURSING HOME

In Newark, N.J.ABBEY NURSING HOME

C’OMPLKTK KKIIVICK• tied., convtile.cfnl, rhronltally ill

86 VAN NESS PLACE,•off Clinton Avr 1

Bigelow 3 0303

BUSINESS DIRECTORY

NURSING HOMESLAUREL MANOK-A CERTIFIED HOMEfor elderly men end women; close at-tention and care; rates reasonable; ELm-wood 6-4100* P.O. Box 136. Sprint Valley. New York.

BUSINESS OPORTUNfTYDO YOU WANT TO MAKE MONEY

FOR YOUR PARISH OR CLUB? ? ?Our Military Band will play a concert,for a alight fee. Your organization aellathe tlcketa and keepa all the profit!.Phone WEbiter 9 503a. Mr. Wm. Schllp.director,

PIANOS - ORGANSWE BUY AND SELL

NEW and USED PIANOS and ORGANSROBBIE'S MUSIC CITY

514 Rout* 40, Want CL 0-1717P**Mle PR 0-74*4llackenaack HU B4IUNEWARK MA 5-BOM

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

RUGS FOR SALE0x12—512.30, alio other aim, wool

runnera 30c ft. Wool carpeting 12 ft,rolla $.130 Sq. Yd. Throw ruge $1.23bring ad and racelva lift with pur-chase, Warahouaa open Mon. and Frt.to $ PM. On via Mllla, 387 SpringfieldAve. Bl 2-0000. Newark. N J.

REAL ESTATE AGENTS

CHATHAM

CHATHAMTo buy or trll in Chatham TownshipMadison and Flnrhara Park call

MILLICENT M. UNDERWOODREALTOR

"Member Multiple Listing Service”180 Main Street. Chatham ME 5-7300

LAKE HOPATCONG

RENT BUY SELLBEATRICE BRADY, REALTOR

Office. West .Shore. Opp. Golf Course.Phone 308-0040 Eves. 39 H 04.12

MORRIS COUNTY

CARLTON jTbRUEN,Realtor

17 Elm «t J« »-3433. IVSI. JE 82017

MORRIS HUNTERDOrq WARRENCOUNTIES

JAMES V. DUFFY AgeneyMain St.. Cheater. N. J. TR 9 3200

Evenlnaa MUrray 8-1200

MOUNTAIN LAKES

MULLINS - RASMUSSIN INC.Rt. 48 Ml._l.akea PE 4 9400

Sanders & Bracken, RealtorsOne Boulevard Mountain Lekea

DEERFIELD 4-1318

MOUNTAIN LAKES & VIC.New "llatlnge" complete with photoa.

KLINTRUP, INC., Realtor130 Bird (Off Rt. 48) DE 4-0400.

Real Eeteto at "180 ** Since 1818~

RITA B. MURPHY237 W. Main St. Roonton. N. J.

DE 4 1788

NUTLEY

BUY NOW SELL oTCTRADEINVESTIGATE OUR TRADE-IN PLAN.We will Hat your home for sale, orconsider buylnt It If you purchaee an-other houro through our office. Letua know your requirements. Evening!and Holidays call Mrs. Kelly. WE 8-3922.

STANLEY JOHNSON23 High St.. Nutley. NO 7-8000

OAKLANDELLEN MrKENNA.

-

REALTOR49 Hiawatha lllvd. Oakland

FEdcrel 7-8414

RIDGEWOOD

GILSENAN & COMPANY"OUR REPUTATION IS YOUR

GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION"1.000 l.letlnga of the FinestProperties In Bergen County

219 E. Ridgewood Ave. Gljs-iflooRidgewood . Business A Residentialproperties for sale Call tho MurrayAgency realtors, 43 North Broad Strcel,Ridgewood. N. J, oi. 2-2181.

RIDGEWOOD & VICINITYWK CODDLE OUT OF TOWNERSOVER 300 MULTIPLE LISTINGS

SITHKNS REAL ESTATE GI 3-0000138 Franklin Ave. Ridgewood

OPEN 7 DAYS AND EVENINGS

RUTHERFORD

FRED P. KURGANIt'd Km wan in So. Hcik'un

Realtor41 Park Avenue, Rutherford

_

WK 9 8300

SUSSEX COUNTYReal EaTatoTnsuranee

Lake PropertiesALFRED E DINTER, lleallur

1 l.oomla Ave Sussex, N, J

TEANECKHOWSE REALTY

843 Palisade Ave.. TeaneckTE 8-1010 TE 8 2221

UNIONIn Union County 4i surrounding area.Let us help you to aeloct u homa foryour comfort and happiness.Our experience is your protection tobuy or sell. Call on

. JOHN P. McMAHON1503 Monla ave.. Union MU 8-3434

REAL ESTATE AGENTS

WAYNE"

HN WEISS CO.. Realtor1207 Paterson Hamburg Tpkt, Wayne,

OX 4 3300

WEST MILFORDYear Round i» Suxmnar Homta

at Plnediffe LekeSalea A Rantala

EDWARD A. CASEY,Realtor

13 Union Vale/ Road PA MKon Valcy R

UNO WANTED”

LARGE TRACTS or ESTATESSuitable for reeldentlil eutwllvleion,Industry or commercial developmentanywhere In New Jersey.

Ed. J. Fengya, Broker1341 Hambum Tpk. Wayne OX 4430»REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

LAKE PROPERTIESAT GREEN PONdTLaKE TAMARACKand other private lakee In NorthernNew Jeracy. Year round and anmmerhomes. Conveniently near Pateraon.Newark and New York City. Year-roundnomea from $10,300. Summer cottagesfrom 53,600.BUCKLEY A. WHEELER, Broker

Route 21 Newfoundland N. J.OX 7 7100 Evca, OX 7-4102FARMS - HOMES - ESTATES

New 3 BedroomRANCH HOMES

from $14,700TOWN & LAKE REALTY

ELIZABETHFIRST TIME ADVERTISED "

8-ROOM COLONIAL~r*'u r! _n* ,ro "‘ Porch. 4 bedrooma.tiled bath and lavatory in basement,huae kitchens 2-car garage, 50x200 lot.Convenient locaUon. Only a blockefrom St. Genevieve's School. Ownerpurchaaed smaller home.

brln * your drpotltnr., CLNT X. MILLER CO.REALTOR rii HOioAMEMBER N. J. MORTGAGE BANKERS

ASSOCIATION

PACKANACK LAKEImmediate Occupancy —3 Br SpillLevel largo family kitchen GKRange. Oven, Dishwasher 2\i batha,large Rec Rm with fireplace. 2 car gar-age. cellar, brick A shingle exteriotlarge plot near beach, schools andchurches.

•34.500. 30 yr. mtge.Open for InapectUm 7 days a week

Call OX 6-1418ALTON H. BOLLINGER CO.

BROKERSP.o. Bldg. Pacakanack Laki

ROSELLE PARK

NEW 2-FAMILYNEAR HIGH SCHOOL AREA.

3 4. 5. 1 CAR *29.000LOT 50 X 100

«n be reedy tomove in bv April.

Don’t welt and eay next year. "I routdhave bouiht.’’ Own It Now

VINCENT A. MILLER CO.REALTOR CH 39300MEMBER N. J MORTGAGE BANKERS

ASSOCIATIONSPARTA

P. M.'»HOUSE OF THE YEAR

Designed by a coalition of seven archi-tects and enlarged and embellished tomeet the high standards of

FOX HOLLOW FARMSFive bedroom*, 2 baths deluxe GEkitchen with 28* of cabinet* fl* x 17*entrance foyer panelled In birch, com-bination dlning-famlly room with fire-.place, full basement, oversize 2-carga.age and located on an acre lot In

FOX HOLLOW FARMSTO INSPECT CALI.

E. G. ANDERSON, REALTORaervln* Lake Mohawk . Sparta Area

HT IS. Center of Sparta I’A 931111

BETTER HOMESLAKE MOHAWK:

3 B.R 2 Rath Colonial Fat ate ofSeven Aire* •33.000

4 B R Stone front deluxe gameroom, near lake on golf course.•45.000.

FOX HOLLOW FARMS.3 B.R. 2 Rath Ranch. 2 fireplace*,

family room, 2lt acre*, 132,000.4 B.R. 2 Rath Ranch 2 family

room*, deluxe quality on 1 acre.

•42.500.

Inspect and Make Offer* Thru

E. G. ANDERSON, RoaltorItt. 13 Sparta ('enter PA 06181

SKYLINE LAKE

Before you buy or aell around NorthJoreey contact Joaoph Momllllo. Brok-er... TEnrplo 33357, Evea. PR 33:175.

FOUND

NunsThornt

Please

black shawl, found loat Sat.e St., Jersey City. Has a

marking with the number ft Icall S\V 33037.

FAREWELL GIFT: ArchbishopBoland presents a plaque to Floyd Anderson, retiring managing editor of TheAdvocate at the paper’s 10th anniversary dinner Dec. 28 at the Robert Treat Hotel, Newark. Looking on, left toright, are Msgr. John J. Kiley, executive director of The Advocate, Bishop McNulty, Bishop Curtis and Joseph

R. Thomas, newly appointed managing editor.

Homiletic Unit Elects

Msgr. John CasselsWASHINGTON—Msgr. John

J. Cassels of Immaculate Con-

ception Seminary was elected

president of the Catholic Hom-iletic Society at its fourth an-

nual convention at the Statler-

Hilton Hotel here Dec. 27-30.

He succeeds Rev. Thomas V.Liske of Chicago.

Bishop John J. Wright of

Pittsburgh gave the keynoteaddress at the meeting. Therewere special sessions on par-ish missions, the pastor and

parish missionaries, the

preaching of dogma, Sundaysermons and speech courses

in seminaries.

PURPOSES of the society,founded in 1958, are to assist

priests in all the fields of thesacred ministry and in effec-tive preaching, to promotethe teaching of homiletics

(preaching) and to encourageresearch and publication in

preaching theory and prac-tice.

Elected with Msgr. Casselswere Rev. Pius Leabel, C.P.,of Sierra Madre, Calif., vice

president; Rev. Thomas D.

Rover, 0.P., of Washington,secretary, and Rev. JosephT. Konkel of Milwaukee,treasurer.

Msgr. Cassels has been a

professor of homiletics, speechand English literature at theseminary since 1941. He is al-so archdiocesan visitor for theConfraternity of Christian Doc-trine and chaplain of theCatholic Petroleum Guild andSerra Club of Ridgewood. Heis acting chaplain of the East-ern Bergen County Serra Clubwhich is now being organized.'

Msgr. Cassels

Husband-Wife

Retreats SetOAKLAND Two husband

and wife retreats have beenscheduled at Carmel RetreatHouse for February by the

Family Life Apostolate of theNewark Archdiocese.

The dates are Feb. 2-4 andFeb. 16-18, it was announcedthis week by Mr. and Mrs.Thomas F. Powers, Ridgewoodchairmen. Reservations maybe made at OL 2-3272 or PL--5-1541.

Third Order to MeetBOGOTA Rev. Andre Hcr-

tel, O. Carm., will conduct themonthly meeting of the ThirdOrder of Mt. Carmel at St.Joseph’s Church Jan. 7 at 3

p.m.

'Priest ’ Features

Fr.McFarland

HUNTINGTON, Ind. -

Rev. James W. McFarlandof St. Columba’s, Newark,is featured on the cover ofthe January Priest maga-zine, published here. Theillustration shows FatherMcFarland operating hisBraille duplicator, which heinvented to cut the cost ofproducing Braille volumes.The magazine gives thisexplanation of the cover

photo:“Father James W. Mc-

Farland of Newark, N. J.,is shown operating his new

Braille duplicator. A 100-

page Braille volume now

can be reproduced in two

hours at a cost of $3.85 on

heated plastic molds. Pre-viously it would have cost$5O and taken 200 hours oftyping.

“Father McFarland, whoalso teaches; carpentryfor the blind, workswith the Mt. Carmel GuildApostolatc for the Blind inNewark.”

N.J. Church HistorySubject of Lecture

SOUTH ORANGE Re''.Edwin V. Sullivan of SetonHall University will speak on

“The History of the Churchin New Jersey” at the thirdin a series of lectures spon-sored by the Serra Club ofthe Oranges Jan. 9 in the Lit-tle Theater on the Seton Hall

campus here.

The lectures arc open tomembers, families and friendsof all Serra units in the area.

Those interested should callWilliam J. Grady, chairman(SO 2-5576). There Is a regis-tration charge.

Cana Calendar

CANA CONFERENCES•

Sunday, Jan. 14Harrison. Holy Cross, Spirituality in

Marriage 8 n.m. Hir 4 11104PRE-CANA CONFERENCES

Sunday, Jan. 14Jon. 2128 St. Theresa's, Kcnll-worth (EL 3-3597). Ilcv. WilliamDaly.

HUSBAND-WIFE RETREATSrob. 2-4 anil Feb. 16-18 The Car-

mel Retreat House. Oakland. OL2-3272

or PL 5-1541.

DIOCESE OF PATERSON24 DE GRASSE STREET

PATERSON 1, NEW JERSEY

ClergyAppointment

Rev. Francis J. Rodimer, to the post of Paterson representa-tive for The Advocate.

Effective, Jan. 1, 1962.

Federal Loan Given

To Caldwell CollegeCALDWELL Caldwell Col-

lege for Women has receiveda loan of $1,160,000 from theFederal Housing and HomeFinance Agency for its recent-ly completed Mother JosephResidence.

The dormitory, which hous-es 200 students and 35 facultymembers, .cost $1.5 million.The loan is payable in 40

years at 3 1-8% interest.

THE RESIDENCE, namedf<jr the late foundress and sec-

ond president of the college,was dedicated by ArchbishopBoland last Oct. 1, along withthe year-old classroom andlaboratory wing, RaymondHall. Total cost of the dualproject was $l.B million.

Sister M. Marguerite, 0.P.,president of the college, saidword that the loan had beengranted was received last

Thursday. She said the collegehad applied for the loan whenthe dormitory was 75% com-

plete. The Dominican SistersDevelopment Fund had yield-ed $375,000 toward buildingcosts.

The new building was neces-sitated by rising enrollmentsat the college, which was

founded in 1939. Last Septem-ber a student body of 650 was

announced, representing a

100% increase in three years.

Alumni to MeetNEWARK—A general meet-

ing of the St. Benedict’s Prepalumni will be held Jan. 9.Films of 1961 St. Benedict’sfootball games will be shown.

TIIE EAST edition of Indexof Forbidden Books was pub-lished in 1948.

Knights of ColumbusOur Lady of Fatima, New-

ark Archbishop Boland willbe guest of honor at the firstfamily Communion breakfastof the newly chartered coun-cil Jan. 7 at St. FrancisXavier School Auditorium. Thebreakfast will follow 9 a.m.'Mass at St. Francis XavierChurch. Guest speaker will beRev. James Johnson, archdio-ccsan director of the FamilyLife Apostolate. Co-chairmenare Orlando P. Nappi and Jo-seph A. Puzo.

Star of the Sea Council,Bayonne Officers were in-stalled by District DeputyJames C. Rochford of JerseyCity at a recent meeting. Thenew grand knight is JosephA. Ohalek, assisted by JamesJ. Mcrriman, Daniel J. Boyle,

William Novick, Francis X.McAleer, Arthur Flannagan,Thomas Dermody, James Don-nelly, Thomas Dowjtcs and

Chaplain is Rev.Joseph W. Nealon:

Archbishop’sAppointments

SUNDAY, JAN. 710 a.m., Communion

breakfast, Our Lady of Fa-tima Council No. 5184,Knights of Columbus, St.Francis Xavier School cafe-teria, Newark.

SUNDAY, JAN. 143 p.m., Confirmation for

adults, Sacred Heart Cathe-dral.

16 THE ADVOCATE January 4, 1962

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