The Advocate - March 7, 1963 - CORE

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Seton Hall University eRepository @ Seton Hall e Catholic Advocate Archives and Special Collections 3-7-1963 e Advocate - March 7, 1963 Catholic Church Follow this and additional works at: hps://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate Part of the Catholic Studies Commons , and the Missions and World Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Catholic Church, "e Advocate - March 7, 1963" (1963). e Catholic Advocate. 274. hps://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate/274

Transcript of The Advocate - March 7, 1963 - CORE

TheAdvocateOfflcUl Publication of the Archdiocese of Newark, N. J-, snd Diocese •( Paterson, N. J.

Vol. 12, No. 11 THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1963 PRICE: 10 CENTS

Cardinal Reports Progress

'Church, Light ofNations'

Chosen as Council ThemeBy REV. WALTER M. ABBOTT, S.J.

UALINES. Rclgium (RNS)Leon-Joseph Cardinal

Suenens, Primate of Belgium,said in an interview here that

the central theme of the Sec-ond Vatican Council will be

"Eeclesia Christ!, Lumen Gen-tium" (Church of Christ, Ughtof the Nations Lr'

The Cardirial. a member ofIte-'Council's Secretariat forExtraordinary Affairs andalso of Com-mission, said the first part ofthis theme title would coverthe Church in its internal as-

pect and the second part theChurch's external aspect.

THE CARDINAL said thatat the meeting of the Co-ordinating Commission (Jan.21-28) the council schematawere divided out among the

•even Cardinals of the com-

mission. Jle added: "By theend of the seven days we hadall completed our revision of

the schemata entrusted to us.

Wc unanimously accepted thework of each Cardinal."

"Incidentally." the Cardinaladded, "there has been a com-mon mistake in the pressabout the schemata. One readsall the time that there wereTO or more schemata that hadto be boiled down to 20.Actually there were not70 schemata. There were 70

or more fascicles (divisions),but in some cases there werea number of fascicles for one

schema."Cardinal Suenens said "the

Holy Father approved thework of our commission, andhe called the heads of thevarious council commissionstogether for a meeting with us.We transferred to them thedirectives we had worked out

for the new revision of theschemata."

"The schemata under thefirst part of the new theme(‘Eeclesia Christi'),” the Car-

dinal stated, "have the titles

they already had, but for thesecond part we will use the

heading. ‘l’raesentia Ec-

clcsiae in Mundo Hodierno’(The Church's Presence in theModern World),"

"IT LS IN THIS part." heexplained, "that we will workout something on the dignityof the human person, familyproblems, economic questionsand social justice, and the in-Related Stories, Pago 4

Hohokus Will AppealZoning Decision

HOHOKUS An appeal willbe filed by this Bergen Coun-ty borough against the decision by Superior CourtJudge Charles W Broadhurst.which would permit a CatholicHigh School to be built on landpurchased by (he Archdiocesecf Newark two years ago.

The Borough Council voted4-1 to appeal the verdict withonly Councilman Arthur Cona-ty opposed. In a similar case

several months ago. the Mont-«dair Town Council also voted

Upper Montclair.

JUDGE BROADHURST heldthat a Hohokus zoning amend-ment barring all but Sundayschools from the northeast resi-dential area in effect discriminated against private or

parochial schools and thus vio-lated a 1962 New Jersey law

bamng such discrimination

The property involved had

been used as a riding stablebefore its purchase by thearchdiocese Plans were an

nounced shortly after the purchase for a boys high schoolto accommodate 1.500 stu

dents. Seven property owners

joined the borough at defendants in the court case

which followed

The Montclair decision wasalso based on the 1962 law.

|>mUm Milnt • Im nfJsT.lioo which limited tta enrollment in rotation to its playground area The court heldthat since no such limitationwas applied to a public schoolacross the street, the regula-tion discriminated against StCassian's. No date has beenset for a hearing of this ap-peal.

Atlanta's Movie-Rating Law

Reinstated by State CourtATLANTA. Ga. (NO The

Georgia Supreme Court rein-atated Atlanta's controversialmovie-rating ordinance butnoted it refrained from rulingon the legislation's con-

stitutionalityThe high court said a Fulton

County judge erred in holdingthe city's right to enact suchan ordinance is "invalid.”

"IN HOLDING that the or-

dianee in question is within thecharter powers of the City ofAtlanta," the decision said,"we make no ruling upon anyof the attacks challenging theconstitutionality of the ordi-nance, made but not reachedand passed upon by the trialcourt because of its ruling thatthe ordinance was not au-

thonred by the charter."While It would be desirable,

in this one review, to deckleall of the questions involvedin the case, that is impossibleWe are bound by the rule thatthis court will never pass uponconstitutional questions unlessit > clearly appears in therecord that the point was di-rectly and properly made inthe court below and distinctlypassed upon by the trialjudge,” the high court decisionsaid.

Ten movie producers anddistributors filed suit last Sep-tember attacking the or-

dinance, which requires themto submit sll films to the cityreviewer for ratings as "ap-proved," “unsuitable for theyoung" and "objectionable.”

LENTEN RITE - Pope John is shown walking toward Santo Sabina Church in Rome.blessing the crowd on his way to a lenten service on Ash Wednesday. The Pope urgedChristions to austerity in his lenten message. He finished his talk by remarking howmuch he enjoys bis trips outside the Vatican let the Pope go out from time to time.poor man ..." A crowd [?]timated at 100.000 lined the streets to greet him See Page 11.

Bishop's Fund

Pope Confident

Of U.S. CharityNEW YORK (NC> Pop* John has expressed confi

denre the geoercvsity of U S CatJsnhcs again will support a

relief program that will dimmish "the hardships and pnva-Uoos which are still the lot of so many members nf thehuman family "

The Pope's sentiments were etpres-sed in s letter toU S Bishops in connection with the Uth annual Bishops Relsef Fund aptwal. which will be conducted throughout th*nation on Tartar* Sunday. March 24 (See text. Page SO j

A MINIMUM goal ol |5 million has been set (or this year s

campaign The fund is. the principal source of financingCatholic Relief Services NCWC, which conducts a world-wide program of relief distributed solely on the basts of needwithout regard to creed

Pope John told the Bishops the "manner of your partiesRation in the council was a source of joy to the CommonFather"

"Your brothers in the hierarchy from other lands."Pope John wrote, "especially from mission countries andfrom South America, will also have told you of the hardshipsand privations which are still the lot of so msny membersof the human family.

"They wiU have explained to you." he wrote "thatuntil such time as their own Individual nations will haveachieved a certain measure of development and progress in

every field, they are obliged to look with hope to the HolySee and to the continued generosity of the Catholics of theU S for the maintenance and furtherance of their various

projects of zeal and charity "

POPE JOHN told the prrlates. "We are confident thatthe response of your beloved clergy and laity will continue tobe in keeping with your country's noble tradition and provide yet another eloquent token of graditude to Divine Provi-dence for the multiple blessings and benefits received."

FAMILY PLAN - Mrs. Cornelius McCarthy (left) raisedthree daughters who became Benedictine Sisters andthen went to work on the faculty of George A. BrownMemorial School, Lake Mohawk, where one daughter,Sister Annunciata, O.S.B., teaches first grade. First graders

are James and Thomas Awerda, twins. Mrs. McCarthy'sother daughters who are Benedictine Sitters of Elizabethare Sister Nora Marie, O.S.B.,a second grade teacherat Blessed Sacrament, Elizabeth, and Sitter Noel, O.S.B., a

high school teacher at Benedictine Academy, Paterson.

Peace Prize

To PontiffZURICH. Switzerland (NT)Pop* John has been award

rsiii«*iuLThe citation noted tha! the

prize "t* intended at a publicrecognition of the Pope s ac

tivity m favor ol brother hoodamong men and among all na

lion* through his appeals lorpeace and to the good wtll ofmen. and through his recentinterventions on the diplomatic level "

IT ALSO SAID that the

Pope's invitation to non-Cat holies to be observer» st theSecond V atican Council ereated between the churchet olthese confet-viont and Catholies a disposition toward greater understand (or the future which will have manifoldand imtxutant consequences "

The awards committee his37 members from 2! nations,including the Soviet Union So-viet members are th*physicists Nikolai Bogoljubovand Piotr Kapttia. composerDmitri Shostakovich and biologiat Noriar Stasakian Thelatter, a professor at MoscowUniversity, read the followingmessage from the Soviet government

"The Soviet government andits Prime Minister; NikitaKhrushchev appreciate in thegreatest degree the efforts ofthe Pope tor the cause ofpeace among ail nations Ni-kita Khrushchev approves thedecision of the committee andcongratulates it "

Pope John accepted theaward on behalf of the entireChurch in a message sent tothe foundation by Amleto Cardtnal Cicognani, Papal Secre-tary of State

"The Church, which worksactively as guardian and pro-moter of evangelical virtue inorder to establish brotherhood•nd (rue peace among men,is pleased by this high honor "

The award carries a grantof about $52,000.

Sexton Wills

Church FortunePHILADELPHIA. Pa.

(RNS)- A $lOO,OOO fortune,

amassed by a parish sextonhere during his long lifetime,has been willed to three Cath-olic institutions.

With the exception of SI,OOCleft to relatives, the estate ofHenry Mullin. sexton of St.John the Evangelist pariahhere, waa bequeathed to St.Charles Seminary, Overbrook,Pa.; St. John’a Church; andSt. Francis Seminary, Loretto,Pa.

Mullin, who died Feb. 21 atla. had been the sexton at St.John’a for 56 years. Althoughho refused to accept morethan $3O a week in pay, hemade a large amount ofmoney through frugal livingand wise investments.

Court Hears Prayer, Bible CasesWASHINGTON (RNS) -

The US Supreme Court heardfour hour* of oral argumenthere as to the constitutionalityof the recitation of the Lord’sPrayer in public schools ofMaryland and dally readingsfrom Ihe Bible In Pennsyl-vania’s public schools.

Before the arguments had

proceeded more thsn a fewminutes, it became apparentfrom questions from the benchthat the issues to be decidedby the Supreme Court mayhe narrowed to one— whethersuch practices are “religiousexercises" or merely part ofa secularly-oriented generaleducation program of moralsand character formation.

ATTORNEYS FOR the com

plaining parent! from bothMaryland and Pennsylvania

Insisted that they had no ob-jection. ai such, to the use ofthe Bible in teaching, so longa* it was not used in a con-text of religious worship.

They said it should simplybe treated as a significantbook In the development ofAmerican laws, morals, andcultures.

Francis Burch. City Solid-tor of Baltimore, told thecourt that If It forbidsrecitation of the laird’s Prayerin the schools it will be placingthe "establishment clause" ofthe First Amendment abovethe "free exercise" clause.

It is just as important, heargued, that the federal- gov-eminent take no action prohibiting the free exercise ofreligion by the majority as

that it prevent the "establishment of religion."

JUSTICE POTTER Stewart,who wrote an emphatic dis-sent in June. 1962. when thecourt overruled the so-called

Regents’ Prayer in New YorkSlate, repeatedly hammeredon the theme of the "free ex-ercise of religion" In his ques-tioning.

Justice Stewart also askedwhat harm comes to studentswho hear the Bible read intheir classrooms.

He said it was merely specu-lative in the Pennsylvaniaease as to whether they wouldbe ostracized by their fellowstudents if they exercised theirprivilege of being excusedfrom the classroom during therecitations. He also pointedout that the children of thecomplaining parents had notdone so.

In the Maryland case, however, evidence was offeredthat William E. Murray, 111.the complaining student, hadbeen ridiculed.

HOWEVER, AS (he question-ing developed it appeared to

observer* in the packedcourtroom that the decision

will probably turn on whetherthe dally Bible reading inPennsylvania ia a form of com-pulsory religious exerciseas a three-judge federal dis-trict court in Philadelphia hassaid or whether it is a formof general moral and charac-ter education.

Attorneys representingPennsylvania were askedif the Christian Bible were so

used, whether the MuslimKoran, the sacred writings otBuddhism or the Book of Mormon could also be used, andit was conceded that this was

possible.

BURCII. SPEAKING forMaryland, repeatedly soughtto show that recitation of theLord's Prayer has tended tobecome secularized to thelevel of a tradition.

He compared it withthe Sunday law* which once

were intended to enforce a re-ligious Sabbath but which arenow viewed merely as giving

a “community day of rest”and— as such wore upheldby the Supreme Court twoyears ago.

The prayer is a part of theliterary and cultural traditionof America, Burch held. Thecontention, however, producedsharp questioning from thebench.

Att, Gen. Thomas B. Finanof Maryland, who shared thearguments for the state, said,however, that the Lord'sPiaycr is a religious exerciseand, as such, is one that stu-dents need as part of theircharacter formation.

He held the states have a

right to insist that students betaught reverence for God intheir classroom so that theywould become law-abidingmoral citizens.

When the oral hearings haveended, the court will take thecase under advisement andwill deliver its written opinionprobably In late May or earlyJune

Seo Editorial Page 8;Related Story, Pag* 7

Subcommittees Will Hear

Added School TestimonyWASHINGTON (NC) -

The House Education Committee will divide Into throe subcommittees for more hearingson President Kennedy's omni-bus bill for aid to education

This derision reportedly was

Other School Stories, Page 7

made in a closed meeting ofthe committee in order to getmore detailed testimony on

each o( the 24 programs in theProvident » proposal

The pavt three week* nlhearing* were designed chieflyto receive opinion on whetherthe bill ihoukl be kept m it*prevent form or separated min»e\era! measures It wtii be

sept a* one bill

DESPITE Till. committee'*intention the »e*t>ons contin

uatly veered onto the questionof including church relatedamt other private elementaryar>d secondarv school* in thebill

At prevent, these school* are

cut Public schools, hovsevcr.would he given SI 5 billion infour years for selective amiurgent improvement "

The absence of aid to prikRig RMiut giUMi iiartanktast s»

«■*» be ataewaaed wiot-e hitensely when subcommitteehearings begin MigrIrrdenrk G Hochwalt. diroclor of the education departmeet of the NCWC. had toldthe committee the ?0 minuteperiod allowed (or eachwilnest was not time for a

"complete evaluation" of legislation "of such importanceto education and of such seri-

ous implications to million* ofcilizens "

A RABBI and two laymena Catholic ands Prote*

tant were among the wit

nesse* Who urged inclusion n(grants to parents or to pupilsin federal aid to education proposals

The Witnesses were ftabbiAlexander Mittelman of Hr,Chester \ ice president of theI KK chapter there. Glen Andrea* of Pella. lowa, who i* avsnouted with schools operatedbv the Christian ReformedChurch, and Vincent P Corleyot St latuis. a Calliohc who is

president of CEF* K) is the principal sup-

porter of the so called "G IBill for Junior " This proposal would give a flat gran!t< parents or to pupils whichmuM be spent at any school

—a system which proponentssay has a precedent in thepo*t war G I Rdl

THE St RIPT for participznts ;n future hearings on thesubject was clearly outlined inthe earlier sessions

one

or two others, chiefly representatnes of the booming Jew:sh parochial school move-ment vsitj urge equalconsideration for private elementary and secondary»< hoots

It is possible that arguments

of private school supporterswill be backed by others, per-haps some labor representa-tives ami the National As-sociation for the Advancementof Colored People.

The AKL-CTO executivecouncil urged that federal aidproposals give parochial andother private schools "asmuch assistance as is con-

stitutionally possible." A rep-resentative of NAACP told theHouse committee his organiza-tion does not oppose federalresistance to private schoolswhich have outlawed racialsegregation

OPPOSED TO them will bea formidable array. Led bythe 816.000-member NationalKduration Association it willinclude the Council of ChiefState School officers. theAmerican Association ofSchool Administrator*. theNational Congress of Parentsand Teachers, the National< ouncil of Churches of Christ,the l S Office of Education•nd some fringe groups such

K of C Supports Equal AidUNION CITS' - The New

Jersey State Council. Knightsof Columbus, has asked thestate s Congressional reprearntatives to oppose any federa! aid to education which'toes not provide equal treatmen! for students at parochialami private schools

James J McMahon of Montclair. chairman of the com-mittee on civil and religiousrights, said in a communlcation to New Jersey * two Senators and 15 Representatives"We are concerned by thereluctance of the administra-

tion in its recommendations tothe Congress for federal aidto education to proside equaltreatment for students attending public and privateschool* not operated forprofit

"> do not accept the ideaor contention that making acrant to citizens attendingprivate achnols would violatethe constitutional prohibitionagainst 'establishment of rebgion There are too manycentrsry precedents in our history to give validity to thisinterpretation "

Labor UnitBarks Aid

MIAMI BEACH (NC) - TheAKLCIO executive council ha*urged that any program offederal aid to education givenon public schools "a* muchassistance as u constitutional-ly possible

The labor council, in a

statement adopted here onPresident Kcnnedj's aid toeducation program, said theprogram "needs to be.strengthened" as it appbes tonon public grade and highschools

' No American, whatever hisrcbgious beliefs, can fail torealize the extent to whichpublic schools carry alarge share of the burden ofeducating the young," thestatement said

"These schools face many ofthe same crises confrontingthe public schools. We believethat non-public elementary andsecondary schools should re-

ceive as much assistance asis constitutionally possible "

Rhode Island Law AllowsBook Loans for All Pupils

PROVIDENCE (NC) - Abudget which will includefund* for Rhode Island's new

program of lending. textbooksto private school pupils willbe sent to the General Assem-bly within two weeks.

This was announced by GovJohn H Chafe* after he sign-ed the new program into law.The legislation to include pu-pils of parochial and otherprivate schools in the state'stextbook aid passed the Sen-ate by voice vote (Feb 19)and Ihe House by a 68 7 mar-gin (Feb 261

Although the Governor de-f< nded the constitutionality ofthe law- and a special com-

mission appointed to study thematter also upheld its legality, Protestant church bodiesand Ihe Ipcal chapter of theAmerican Civil Liberties Un-ion questioned it and calledfor a prompt court test,

Msgr. Arthur T. Geoghcgan.superintendent of Catholicschools in the Providence Di-ocese, expressed confidencethat the law "does not con-stitute directly or indirectlyan establishment of religion."

THE LAW ALSO establish-es for the first time a state-aided program of uniform ap-titude and intelligence teatsfor all school children, includ-ing those in non-public schools.This has not been as contro-versial as the textbook pro-gram.

Children attending parochial

and other private schools willnow be lent textbooks in threesubjects—science, mathematics and modem foreignlanguages

The books will be providedby community school commit-tees upon request The state'*'ll! pay between 25 and 50%of the cost.

The law charges the StaleCommissioner of Educationwith publishing each year alist of approved textbooks foruse in non-public schools.

The commissioner is instructed in the law to makethe books impartial on reli-gious matters. "He shall notrecommend any textbooks ofa sectarian nature or contain-ing sectarian material whichfor any reason would not beproper for use in the public

schools." the law states.

RHODE ISLLN'D has an es-

timated 51,000 pupils in non-public elementary and secon-dary schools. About 49,000 ofIhcsc students are in Catholicschools. They make up about25% of the total school popu-lation, the largest Catholicschool enrollment percentagein the 50 states.

Gov. Chafee said the legis-lation answers a "reasonablerequest."

"It is important,” he said,"that all our children get thebest possible education and Ibelieve this measure will helpin accomplishing this goal.

"This measure, I believe,meets the constitutional re-quirements as set forth by theSupreme Court."

On the Inside. . .

HOW THE COUNCIL may clarify therole of secular Institutes is dis-cussed on page 4

PATERSON’S PARISHES are aidingAID. See story on page 7

MARCH IS Vocation Month. Msgr.William F. Furlong tells what youc »n do on Pag# 14

(Continued on Page 4)

Continued on Page 2i

as Protestant and Other Amer-icans United for Separation ofChurch and State.

The committee's reaction tothe sharp division of opinionappears to be uncertainty.One sign of this is that thesubcommittee which will work

on the proposal for grade and

high school aid has put the

matter aside and begun hear-ings on the President's proposal for a youth conservation

corps and a youth employmentprogram.

In sharp contrast to thestands on the elementary andaecondary level, there ts no

similiar firmness about partic-ipation of church-related col-leges In federal aid. They are

treated equally with public col-leges and universities in theproposal before the commit-tee.

THE NEA. unalterably op-

posed to aid to private educa-tion on the elementary andsecondary level, neverthelessaaid it would support the ad-

ministration's proposal for

equal treatment of colleges ifit is kept in an omnibus hill.

The Kennedy administrationhas vigorously defended the

right of all types of collegesto share in its proposal, argu-ing that there exists a lengthyhistory of U S. assistance tochurch-related and other pri-vate institutions of higher cducation.

The American Council on

Education, principal spokes-man for American collegesand universities, also has de-fended participation of all col-

leges, citing the nstion's tra-dition of diversity in highereducation.

THERE HAS been no Sen-ate action on education aid.Bogged down for weeks in de-bate over its rules, the Senateonly recently has organised itscommittees No public an-

nouncement has been madewhen us education subcom-mittee will begin publicbearings

When hearings are held. Itis likely that the Senate com

mittee will take no formal ac-tion on the bill until it Is clearbow the House plans to handlethe measure

Senate leaders, confident ofSenate approv si of legislationbarked by its education com

mittee. reportedly do not wantto pats a bill which differ* so

drastically from the Houseversion that compromiseagreements cannot he reached

The three House subcommittees which will hear additionaltestimony are ’general ed

ucation.'' elementary and sec-

ondary schools, headed byRep. Carl D. Perkins of Ken-tucky; "special education."colleges and universities,headed by Rep Edith Greenof Oregon; and "select educa-tion." vocational and miscel-laneous education. Rep JohnH Dent of Pennsylvania

Harvard Law Dean

Chides High CourtSALT LAKE CITY (NC)

Th* dun of the influentialHarvard Law School hasaharply attacked the U. S, Su-preme Court for leadingAmericans into darkness on

matters of religion and publiclife.

Erwin ,N. Griswold alsostated flatly that the Courtwas wrong in ruling as uncon-

stitutional the voluntary re-citation in New York publicschools of a 22-word, non-sec-tarian prayer recommendedby the State Board of Regents.

HE TOLD a University ofUtah audience that it wouldbe ‘ sheer invention” if thecourt reasons that the Con-stitution requires that alltraces of religion must be keptout of public activities.

The high court is guilty ofnarrow ''constitutional absolu-tism” and this reasoning is

"more likely to lead us intodarkness than to light," hesaid.

He cited Justice HugoBlack's decision for the major-ity against public school

prayer as an example of the"absolutist” or "fundamental

theological" approach.“If ona thinks of the Con-

stitution as a God-given textstating fixed law for all time,and then focuses on a singlepassage, or indeed on twowords 'no law* without

recognizing all the other wordsin the document and its rela-tion to the society outside thedocument, one can find the an-swers very simply," Griswoldsaid.

This apparently was a refer-ence to Black's comment

as he read the opinion Blacknoted that the First Amend-ment says Congress shall"make no law respecting theestablishment of religion. . ."

Black commented that“when it says ‘no law.' thatis what it means 'no law.'"

Griswold said the FirstAmendmtid does not meanthat religion must be taken out

of public life. America, hesaid, is historically a Chris-tian nation with a spiritualand cultural tradition relatedto Christianity.

Bias Banned

Class Ruled

Open to AllJEFFERSON CITY, Mo.

(NC) Missouri'* attorneygeneral has ruled that children

attending non-public schoolscan benefit from a tax-paidprogram of special educationfor handicapped which it cur-

rently operating in St, LouiaCounty.

Atty. Gen. Thomas F. Eagle-ton's opinion said that the pro-gram of the Special SchoolDistrict for Handicapped Chil-dren must be open to allof the students "without dis-crimination.”

The ruling means that part-time correctional classes con-

ducted by tax-paid instructors,chiefly in speech and hearing,will now be available in paro-chial and other private schoolsthroughout Uie County of St.Louis.

Previously, a group of par-ents of handicapped childrenenrolled in Catholic schoolscomplained that the specialdistrict had denied admittanceto their children unless they

were withdrawn from church-related schools and enrolledas full time pupils in publicschools.

IowaBill Would

Allow Bus RidesDES MOINES, low* (Net _

A bill has been filed in thelow* House to permitparochial and other privateschool pupils to rule on litpaid achool buses in tine witha suggestion made by Gov.Hamid Hughes, in his mau

gural address He suggestedthat children attending privateachnols he permitted to ndeachool buses

The bill would require thatbus routes be established to

terse both public ami privateachool pupils

If there is no buj transporta-tion. parents would be paid bythe local school board for taktng private school children toschool, just as pajments are

now made to parents who car

O' public achool pupili toachool.

Texas School Case

Ends on Quiet NoteWACO. Texas (RNS) — A

three year legal fight overCatholic Sisters in religiousgarb serving as public schoolteachers tn a churctwvwnedbuilding came to a quiet endin U. S. District Court here.

The Bretnond School Boardraid the dispute was now »moot question since it has discontinued leasing St Mary'sElementary School from theparish for use as a publicachool, and won a request tohave the case dismissed

CULTURE AWARD - John Q. Adams of Montclair, receivesthe 1963 Christian Culture Award from Rev. E.C. LeBel,president of Assumption University, Windsor, Ont. in con-

ter is Rev. Stanley J. Murphy, C.S.B.

People in the NewsRev. I-ouis A. Gales, founder

and president of the CatholicDigest, has received the 1963Frank Murray MemorialAward of the Guild of St.Francis deSales for outstand-ing journalistic work.

Rev. Andre louf. 32, hasbeen elected Abbot of a

French Cistercian monasteryalthough the eanonical age forholding such office is 35 Hiselection must be confirmed bythe Holy See

Anthony J. Celebrene. Sec-retary of Health. Educationand Welfare, will receive theSt. Peter Cantsius Medal ofthe Cantsius College AlumniAssociation tn Buffalo April 7.

Archbishop Sals store Sllno,Apostolic Nuncio to the Philip-pines, was welcomed byMoslem leaders during a visitto Sulu. the only Moslem prov-ince In the predominantlyCatholic republic

R. Hargrnt Shriver, directorof the Peace Corps, receivedthe first annual PatrioticAward at the Bishop GriffinGeneral Assembly. Fourth De-

gree Knights of Cotumbus. inPrinceton

Res. Austin E. Miller. 8 J .dean of student affairs atCreighton University. Omaha.Neb. has been appointed a

public member of the FederalAdvisory Council on Employ-ment Security. Also namedwss Dr lena Frances Edwards, formerly of Jersey Cityand now at Si Joseph * Mis-sion. Hereford. Tex

Dom lldefoavo Res. Abbot ofthe Benedictine Abbey of

Monte Caasino, has beennamed Titular Bishop ofCoroM.

Henry Cabot lodge, formerl'. S ambassador to theUnited Nations, has beennamed to receive the Bellar-mine Medal of BcUarmine Col-lege, Louisville. Ky.

Charles Collingwood. CBSnewsman, received the 13thannual Journalism Award ofLa Salle College. Philadelphia

Name DiplomatTo Curia Post

VATICAN CITY <NC>— PopeJohn has appointed ArchbishopGenoa ro Verolino. ApostolicNuncio to Costa Rica since

1*S? as Secretary of the Sa-rred Congregation of Ceremoma! He succeeds the lateArchbishop Beniamino Nardone

The Congregation of Cere-monial supervises the liturgi-cal and non liturugical cere-

monies of the Roman Curia

Archbishop Vrroimo. iS*n horn m Naples He was

ordained m ISC* and enteredthe Holy See i diplomaticService m

In !»iS be wss force*! toleave hia post at the apostolicnunciature tn Hungary by thearrival of Soviet troops Two>eara Later, he again ran intotrouble with the communistssoil w*s forced to leave hispost ol chsrge d'affaires of thenunciature in Prague He hasabo served in Colombia. ElSalvador. Guatemala. Italyand Portugal.

Pedagogical 'Flying Squad'Instructs Australian Youth

SYDNEY. Australia (NC)In Melbourne a car pulls 'upbefore a public high school in

mid-afternoon The driverreaches past a medical kit bagon the seat next to him tn

pick up a notebook and severalschool books He hastens to-ward the classroom wing.

At a remote "outback”crossroads a storekeeperwaves at a car hurrying by.driven by a man in clericalgarb and containing two pas-sengers similarly dressed. Thestorekeeper checks his watchas the car disappears into thedust, as if verifying the time

by the vehicle's passing.On lonely King Island off the

Tasmanian coast a pair ofPresentation Sisters are greet-ed warmly by a group In a

public school classroom.

THESE EVENTS are partof a program to bring reli-gious instruction to the thous-ands of Catholic children at-

tending Australia's publicschools.

The Melbourne doctor hasanswered the appeal of theCatholic Education Office forprofessional men tn serve as

lay catechistsThe Brothers who pass th*

outback "check point" are

part at a large number ofteaching religious, includingmany Sisters, who have beenorganized into "flying squads 'to bring religious instruction toCatholic children in the dis-tant country areas

On King Island, the Catholicpastor had to choose betweenestablishing a school or serv-

ing Die students in the island'spublic schools He decided toinvite two Sisters, providethem with a convent and an

automobile, and ask them toset up a schedule of teachingvisits to 200 Catholic childrenattending four scattered stateschools.

“THE SECULAR educationof these children will he leftto the government." the pas-tor declared. "No doubt this

work will be watched with intcrest alt over Australia Thetime ij coming when th*Church will not be able tobuild schools In Isolated coun

try areas because of the greatcost involved "

An important accessory' toth* work of the lay catechistsand the traveling religious Dth- institution of an attractiveseries of catechism work-sheets that the children takehome and complete with th*supervision of their parents.Since 1961 more than 1,500.000of these sheets hsv# been dis-tributed. most of them to laycatechists

The lay teachers of religionhave been known tn Australiafor 80 years, but about fiveyears ago anew emphasis wasplaced on the program when itbecame obvious that Aus-tralia's priests. Rrotbers andSisters could not cope with theproblem of instructing all ofthe commonwealth's Catholicchildren.

Special Session

At NCEA TalksWASHINGTON (NC) - Lay

people active in support ofCatholic education will get a

special briefing on current

problems during the con-vention of the National Cath-olic Educational Association.

Invitations are being sent tomen and women across thecountry to take part in thesession to be held on April 17,the second day of the conven-tion In St. Louis.

Federal aid will be a topic.

Board Vetoes Credit

For Religion Class

HAMILTON, N. Y. (RNS) -

Tha Hamilton Bchool Boardhas rejected a Catholicpriest'a request that aca-

demic credit be given highschool pupils for religious in-struction at ita church duringschool hours.

In a 3-2 vote, the boardturned down the appeal ofRev. John Carey, paator of St.Mary’s Catholic church, thatthe students be given a quart-er credit per aemaster.

Four Theologians

Catholic U. Faculties CriticalWASHINGTON (NC) - The

faculty of two schools at theCatholic University of Ameri-ca has criticized the refusal ofthe administration to permitfour prominent theologians tohe considered as speakers ata campus lecture scries.

The faculty of the School of

Sacred Theology and of theGraduate School of Arts andSciences, two of the nineschools which make up theuniversity, said the institutionha* a duty to provide oppor-tunities for public discussionof issues of "general intellec-tual concern."

IN IDENTICAL resolutions,the faculties disagreed withthe contention of the universi-ty's administration that the in-

stitution's impartiality on sev-

eial controversial Church is-

sues would be sacrificed If thefour spoke' on the campus

The rriticitm is part of a

controversy over a decision bythe administration to remove

the four theologians from a list

of 12 speakers suggested for a

lenten lecture series sponsoredby the graduate student coun-cil.

The theologians are Rev

John Courtney Murray. S J

and Rev. Gustave Weigel.SJ., both of Woodstock (Md iCollege, a Jesuit seminary,Rev Godfrey Dick man

OS B , liturgical scholar andeditor of Worship mags/ine.and Rev Hans Kueng of the

University of Tuebingen. Ger

many, a figure prominent inecumenical council mattersbecause of hu book, "The

Council Reform amt Re

Msgr. William J. McDonald,rector of the university, hassaid the four were removedfrom the list of candidates as

speakers for the lecture seriesbecause they are known tohold “a similiar, definitepoint of view" on certainChurch issue* being debated in

the ecumenical council.Msgr. McDonald said that

the university has "no officialposition" on these council is-sue*. It was suggested that thefour not be invited in orderto maintain the university'simpartiality.

TWO RLSIfOPS were criticalof the university's action Bishep John King Mussio ofSteubenville. Ohio, accused the

school of “thoughtless actions”which will embarrass theChurch.

Bishop Victor J. Reed ofOklahoma City and Tulsa saidhe would do what he was able"to insure true liberty of ex-

pression" at Catholic Universi-ty He described the four the-ologians as "sound men de-voted to the welfare of HolyMother Church ”

Father Weigel, invited toaddress Catholic University'sgtaduating class, said thisweek --a previous commitmentto speak at commencement ex-

ercises at Alfred Universitywill prevent his appearance in

WashingtonAmerica, weekly Jesuit

magazine, said the university’sresponse to criticism on thematter was inadequate.

See editorial, Fog* 8

Theology Meet

Speakers ListedNEWTON. Mass (RNS) -

Prominent Protestant andCatholic theologians will par-

ticipate in Boston College'stheological conference to beheld here on the Jesuit school'scampus April IS 16

Conference speaker* will in-

clude

Rev Han* Kueng. »

young Swiss theologian who is

dean of the Catholic theological faculty at the University atTuebingen. Germany Rev

Jean Danielou SJ . theologyprofessor at the Catholic In-stitute of Pans Dr Jarosl.vv

Pelikan Jr Uutheran and profevsor of ecclesiastical historyat Yale Vnivervity and Dr

Robert Mr \fee Brown Presby-terian and profrssor of reli-

gion at California % StanfordUniversity

2 THE ADVOCATE

Added School Testimony . . .

(Continued from Page t)

March 7, IMS

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13,000 to Take Exam

For High SchoolSOUTH ORANGE - Over

13,000 eighth grade pupil* inparochial and public schoolsof northern New Jersey willtake the annual entrance ex-amination for secondaryschools in the Newark Arch-diocese March 9 at 34 centers.

The three-hour test willcover general intelligence, lan-guage arts, arithmetic andreading achievement. .Thesame test will be given in allcenters beginning at 8:45 p.m

STUDENTS of parochialschools and Confraternity ofChristian Doctrine class ’nBergen, Essex, Hudson andUnion Counties will report tothe centers designated fortheir respective parishes. Allpupils from the Paterson Di-ocese will report to Seton HallPrep, South Orange, and allstudents from the Trenton Di-ocese to St. Mary's HighSchool, Elizabeth.

In the event of extremelypoor weather conditions, post-ponement of the test will beannounced over radio stationWNEW (1130) at 7:15 and 7:45a.m.

The emergency date will

be March 16 at the same cen-ters.

An alternate test will be heldMarch 16 at four county cen-ters for any pupils who wore

legitimately impeded by ill-ness from keeping the March9 date. The centers are Im-maculate Conception HighSchool, Lodi, for BergenCounty; Seton Hall Prep.South Orange, for EssexCounty and pupils from out-side the archdiocese; St.Aloysius High School. JerseyCity, for Hudson County, sndSt. Mary’s High School. Elisa-beth, for Union County.

Notification of acceptance or

non-acceptance will be mailedto students on April-10 by thesecondary schools. Formalregistration of accepted pupilswill be held April 23-26.

Unity MissionAt Mt. Carmel

JERSEY CITY - A Dominican mission for Church unitywill be held at Mt. Carmelparish from March 17 throughApril 7, it was announced thisweek by Msgr. Walter P.Artioli, pastor.

Rev. Francis O'Connell.0.P., will preach at the Eng-lish-speaking services forwomen, March 17-24. and formen. March 24-31. RevBertrand Pandolfo, OP, will

preach at the Italian-speakingservices for men and women.March 31-April 7.

CWV PROCLAMATION - Gov. Richard J. Hughes signs the annual proclamation on theCross of Peace drive of the New Jersey Department of the Catholic War Veterans. Thedrive, which opened March 2 and will continue through March 17 is for the supportof the CWV welfare programs, particularly foe hospitalized veterans. With the Governor

are left to right. Cresenzi W. Castaldo of Bayonne, notional judge advocate; state com-mander Alexander 5. Gentile of Point Pleasant and Nicholas M. Nimetx of South Plain-

field, state service officer.

AOH to Mark

Patron's FeastNEWARK Archbishop

Bound will preside at a

Solemn Mass in honor of St

Patrick to be sponsored by the

Ancient Order of HiberniansMarch 16 at 10 a m at St. Roseof Urn a Church.

The sermon will be preachedby Auxiliary Bishop Stanton.

The cclehranl of the Masswill be Rev. John T lawlor,pastor of Our Lady of 1/iurdesWest Orange, and state chapDm of ty AOH and its Ladies

Auxiliary

Current Events

Institute TopicNEWARK - The Cope Pius

XII Institute of Social Educs-Uon will sponsor a aerie* offour open forum* starlingMarch 14 at Emm CatholicHigh School The theme willbo "The Cathode View point on

Important Current Event# "

Rev Alov siu* J Wciah. in-

atitute director, taxi that eachforum will begin with an op-portunity for those present toexpress their preference for

one of the many topic* lorfirat discutaiun Topic* will in-clude "Catholic* and Con-traception." "Federal Aid to

Religious. Non-Profit Schools,""The Council." "Automatioo ami L‘nempio> ment." and"Pope John'* Kncychca) ”

There will be no charge forthe forum* and registration I*not required Each session willbegin at A pm. and last for90 minutes

Accident Study

Seton Hall Research TeamTakes Blame off GgremlinsJKRSEV CITY Is there such a thing »» an accident pronedriver' Or can it all be blamed the gremlins'A team of psychiatrisls from Seton Hall Lmversitv has

completed a study of psychological weaknesses which causeaccidents Their findings absolve the ■ tittle people" and putthe blame squarely on damaging psychological tensions "

Dr W Godfrey Cobhner sad Or Leo Shatin have foundthat the psychological traits most frequently present in drivenwho cause accidents are 1) youth of the driver. 2) an attitudereflecting disregard or contempt for risk and danger. 3i strongemotions causing disorganization and 4i social irresponsibility

HOWEVER, they also found that these traits are usually(ounlertiatanced by forces that keep drivers awray from theaccident It is when there is a strong decrease in the counter-forces that the accidents take place

"This happens to people when they pass through a criticalw fheir life, a time when their normal balance of psy-chological forces and counter forces u upset, making (hern

vulnerable to any environment stress." Drs CoMiner and Shatinadd

They propose to explore in greater depth the warning sig** U l*o appronrh of . ••ertlieat period" in the dziv-er • life and thus provide s guide for each motorist in personalaccident prevention and also open new areas for driver educa-

tion

Hospital Makes EffortTo Keep Patients OutTEA.NECK A clinic for

congenita! defects has beenannounced by SisterPhiiomeni Mary. C-SJ, admimstrator of Holy Name Hospital here, making a total of21 clinics which help to save

hospital beds for the acutely111

Holy Name serves more

than 12.000 in-patients duringthe year ami almost thatmany through its variousclime services Some are in

patients who are enabled togo home sooner, while theothers are treated entirely on

an out patient basisThe encephalography depart

men! treated 179 patients inits first year of operation, the

allergy clinic visits grew from600 to 956 in its second year,and the arthritis clime visitsjumped from 100 to 178 in itssecond year

It Is estimated that thePoison Control Center saves

almost 2td lives each year as

it operates on a 24 hour bamand rrspoods to emergencieseither by telephone or bytreating the patient in theemergency room

Among the speciatiredclinics, the hematology labgave care to 147 patients lastyear without necessity of hospitahraiton. «W patients recetved 3,500 treatments in re-

habilitation and physiotherapyand almost 9 000 patients re

ceived X ray treatment as out-

patientsTo help receive these pa-

tients, the entrance to theout-patient department hasbsen expanded and allows fora protected 'heated area, ac-

commodating three cars or

ambulances abreast on one

level.

Double Anniversary

Bishop McNulty to Preside

At Armenian Rite LiturgyPATERSON - Bishop Mc-

Nulty will preside at a SolemnDivine liturgy to be cele-brated at Sacred HeartChurch here March 10 at 10

a.m., marking a double cele-bration for the ArmenianCatholic Community of thiscity.

For Rev. Paul Kouchakji.pastor of Sacred Heart, whowill celebrate the Liturgy,marks the 50th anniversaryof his ordination March 8 andthe 25th anniversary of hispastorate June 30. The parishis also celebrating the clearingof all debt on the church,which was built in 1927-28.

FATHER KOUCHAKJIcame to this country 30 yearsago from Lebanon, where hewas educated at the Jesuitcollege in Beirut and was or-

dained March 8. 1913 He re-

sided for five years at theJesuit Church of the Nativity.New York, while serving thefirst two years in Brooklynand the next tjirec inPaterson

The Armenians of Paterson,who came to this city to workin the silk mills, were firstvisited by a priest in 1909Rev Manuel J, Bazirganiancontinued to say Mass in the

basement of St. Michael’sChurch until his death in 1922.He was replaced by Rev.Peter Hawassabian, who came

from Rome in 1925 to foundthe new parish.

The parish was canonicallyformed in 1926 under BishopO'Connor of Newark, in theabsence of an Armenian Or-dinary in this country. Thecornerstone for the churchwas laid Oct. 30, 1927, it was

dedicated June 24, 1928, byArchbishop Walsh and the firstLiturgy was sung July 1, 19-28

SACRED HEART IS theonly Armenian Church inNew Jersey. The ArmenianLiturgy is derived from theGreek (Byzantine) Liturgy ofSt. Basil the Great and is of4th century origin. It thusbelongs to the same family ofthe Liturgy as those cele-brated in the other EasternRite churches of North Jer-sey Melkite, Ukrainian and

Carpatho-Ruthenian.After three years of assist-

ing Father Hawassabian,Father Kouchakji was namedpastor in 1938. At the time,his parish had $l6 in the bankand a debt of $BO,OOO. Despitethe need of increasing thisdebt to make neccsary repairsto the church, the parish hasmanaged to pay off its obliga-tions.

Following the I.lturgy March10. there will be a dinner atthe Brownstonc House in Pat-erson.

Slovak LeagueMarks Jubilee

ELIZABETH — Rev Stephen Gethk of Perth Amboywill preach March 10 at thettouble auni'ersary celetiraDon of the Eastern District ofthe Slovak league of America

The Mas* util be held at10 30 a m at St Joseph s

Church, with Rev MichaelSimko, pastor, as celebrant Itwill be followed by a dinnera! 1pm at the EluabrthCarteret, at which John A

Sabol. president of the FirstCatholic Slovak Inion of thel’ S . will speak

The celebrating marks the11th centennial of the arrivalof SS Cyril and Methodius in

Slovakia and the 24th an

mversary of Slovak mdependen re

Msgr. HamiltonTo Be Honored

HOBOKEN ~M.gr JamesA Hamilton, pastor of StPatrick s Church, will be bonoced at the annua! dinner ofthe Friendly Son* of St Patnek of Hudson County March14 at the L ruon Club

Msgr Hamilton will be prraented with the traditionalIrish shillelagh, along wrtb a

citation ofv meritorious

achievement Last yearsgue*t of honor, Gov RichardJ Hughes, has been invitedto make the presentation

Guest speakers at the af-fair will be Rev Charles F XDolan. S J . of St Peter 1 *

College and Dr MauriceLeahy of Fordham tmversityHarold J Ituvoldt is chairman

for the affair

Morgan AppointedCh urch Trustee

BLOOMFIELD_ J,me* P

Morgan of Glen Ridge a

member of Sacred Heart parish for 33 years, has been appointed a trustee of thatchurch.

He succeeds James PMylod. who died Jan t»

Morgan is assistant dean ofboys at Seton Hall Prep anda past president of the SacredHeart Holy Name Society andthe Holy Name Federation ofWest Essex

Goans Protest

Birt h ProposalGOA. India (RNS) The

Goa Planning Boards pro-posal lo introduce family plan-ning as a measure of econ-

omic development in this formcr Portuguese colony has

been condemned by Catholicleaders

Some 40" of the Goan population of 600.000 is CatholicUntil India wrested the ter

ntory from Portugal in

December. 1961. the Porluguese authorities had binneddistribution of family planninginformation

Indian Catholic leaders regtitered sharp protests over the

beard's proposal

Liturgy WeekIn Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA (NC) -

The Philadelphia Archdiocesewill be host to the 21 th NorthAmerican Liturgical Weekfrom Aug. 19 22.

Theme of the 1963 meetingwill be "The Renewal ofChristian Education"

Discussions will explore therenewal taking place in Scrip-ture studies, liturgy, theology,catechctics, the lay and familya postulates and other aspect*of Christian life

Major convention sessionswill take place in the city'*Convention Hall.

March 7, 1963 THE ADVOCATE 3

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ternational field. Some newmixed commissions will haveto be formed to deal with someof the questions under the newsecond heading."

Cardinal Suencns said mem-bers of the Coordinating Com-mission will return to Romein March to follow up on theprogress that will have beenmade In revision of theschemata by the various com-

missions of the ecumenicalcouncil.

"When we began our work,"the Cardinal said of the coun-cil’s first session, "we foundourselves confronted withschemata that Wore very jurd-ical in content and in tone.We lost a lot of time pruningthis away. Things went slowlyat first, but there was a graceof the Holy Spirit operating allthe while in the fact that theBishops were able to get toknow each other. It meant an

enrichment of the life of theChurch, and that is im-portant

"

ON CHRISTIAN unity, the.Cardinal said: ”1 am sure thatthe next session of the councilw-ill see a study of the re-

lationship between the Popeand the Bishops. 1 hope thatthe definition of papal infal-libility which was made at theFirst Vatican Council will be

re presented in a manner thatwill remove many misunderstandings on the part of Prot-estants and members of theOrthodox churches

“By stressing the role of thelaity in the Church, we willreassure the Protestants thatwe hold something very dearto them the sharing of thepeople in the royal priesthoodof Christ

"Thus '. he said, "the SecondVatican Council will be an actof charity to our separatedbrethren Orthodox. Angli-cans and Protestahts justas it will be an act of charityto Catholics in Its return to the

the Gospel message."

Congress of LaityTo Follow Council

ROME (NC) A world con-gress of Catholic laymen to

help implement the decisionsof the ecumenical council wasplanned here during a meetingof the board of directors of thePermanant Committee of In-ternational Congresses of theLay Apostolate.

Martin H. Work, executivedirector of the National Coun-cil of Catholic Men in the U.S.and a member of the board,said the congress would meetabout .18 months after thecouncil's end, perhaps during1965, at the call of Pope John.

“THERE WILL be a pre-

congress of 200 or 300 expertsabout six months after the endof the council,” he added.

"This pre-congress willstudy the ordinances of the

council and in a sense will pre-pare the program of the worldcongress itself,” Work said.

“This third world congrosaof the lay apostolate," he con-

tinued, “will undoubtedlystand among the most impor-tant meetings of laymen inChurch history because its ma

jer task will be to take up thefindings of the Second VaticanCouncil relating to lay peo-ple."

The permanent committee,he said, intends to spread in-formation on the council'steachings and directives re-

garding the laity. It is also en-

couraging inquiries into thebases of unity among Catho-lics. between Catholics andnon-Catholic Christians andamong all men.

Study outlines. Work re-

ported, are being sent to layapostolate groups throughoutthe world The results of thestudies in each country will bereturned to the committee.

Recollection DayThe monthly day of recol-

lection for priests will beheld March 14 at Immacu-late Conception Seminary,Darlington.

CouncilClarifyingRole ofSecular Institutes

By REV. STEPHEN HARTDEGEN, O.F.M.

NCWC News Service

Following it on* of a ttrits of articles by experts on ques-tiom up for consideration whtn lbe Second Vatican Councilreconvenes S*pt. 8. Tbt wrUtr, a prominent Scripture tcboUr,it on lb* faculty of Holy N*m* College, Franciscan Hons* ofStudies in Washington,

Secular institutes have al-

ready proven their value, andthe Fathers of the SecondVatican Council In their workof revitalizing and moderniz-

ing the Church will devotesome attention to them.

The status of aecular in-stitutes is still up in the air.Their members pledge them-selves to poverty, chastity and

obedience, as do religious. But

they do not wear uniformclothing, are not bound to con-

ventual life, and do not changetheir social status.

IT WAS Pope Pius XII whogave formal approval to theseinstitutes in 1947. That their

present law is not to be re-

garded as complete and finalis evidenced from the Instruc-tion of the Sacred Congrega-tion of Religious, Cum Sanctis-simus. of March 19, 1948. Itstates that “the complete amidefinitive norms respectingsecular institutes are bet-ter deferred to a more oppor-tune time lest the presentevolution of these institutes berestricted "

Are secular institutes to beaccorded a special place in a

revised canon law code simi-lar to that of religious in-stitutes, such as orders or

congregations of priests or Sis-ters? Present legislation rec-

ognizes three classes of persons clergy, religious and

laitySocieties having the charac-

teristics of secular institutes

must no ionger remain

"among the ordinary associa

tuu of the faithful, but mustbe brought and raised to the

proper state and form of secu-

lar institutes which perfectlycorresponds to their character• nd needs” 'Pius Xll's Motu

Propio; Primo fellciter,March 18, 1947.)

SOME ARGUE that clericalmembers of secular institutessimply remain in the class ofclergy, and lay members in

the class of laity because suchinstitutes constitute a private,not public, state of perfection.

It seems more realistic toconclude that members of sec-ular institutes will follow theclass of persons called Reli-gious, in the code, and precedethe class called the laity.Members of secular institute*would then constitute anewclass of canonical persons.

There are those who wouldlike to see secular institutesless religious. They would eli-minate distinct branches forpriests, men and women with-in the same institute Othersare opposed to any kind of tiebetween a secular institute anda religious order, even if it beonly that of sharing the samecharacteristic spirituality.

THE ECUMENICAL councilwill probably emphasize thesecular character and apostolate of the institutes rsthcrthan increase their resem-blance to religious congrega-tions.

This will Increase the pos-sibllity of membership, especially among those whose cir-cumstances of U/e would notpermit them to live together,much less wear distinctive uniform or garb.

Pnests as well as lay peopie may belong to secular institutes In the institutes ofOpus Del and the Company ofSt Paul a proportion of clerisal members is maintained to

serve the lay members Whatabout a dtoeesan priest’ W'hatdoes a secular institute add tobis life’ Are its requirement*compatible srith the cirrum

stances of his Ufe’These quest ion v are raised

cooeermng institutes for diocesao priests, such as theSacerdotal Society of the Sacred Heart There ha* been a

<ertain caution aod hesitancyon the pan of Bislwps to en

courage such membershipamong their clergy, due no

doubt, to the comparative new

ness of such institutesBut proof of the v aloe of the

secular institute way of life

for diocesan clergy lies in iheapproval and strong en-

couragement given It by PopePlus XII and Pope JohnXXIII, and in the zeal andloyalty of priest-members.

PEOPLE unfsmlliar withsecular institutes exceptthrough hearsay speak of thegreat secrecy surroundingthem, and they hope the coun-cil will abolish this.

There is a certain reserve

required of members of a

number of secular institutes,not concerning their manner of

life but concerning their identi-ty

This Is especially true inthose institutes whose workembraces all the professionsand occupations of civil life.

Its purpose is to preventunfair hindrances to freedomof action in the Christian apostolate, especially in secularenvironments A clarificationof this issue could greatly helpthe progress and spread ofsecular institute*

The problem confronting thecouncil Fathers is how to use

secular institutes more effeclively in dioceses. A sure wayof aiding the total apostolicprogram of a diocese is to inform the Bishop of the personnel, training and skills of

diocesan groups of secular in

stiiute members and to showwtillngne** to serve the nerdvof ihe diocese according to ca

parity and circumstances

Married people frequentlyask to yoin secular InstitutesSome secular institutes admitmarried people as auxiliaries,hut not to full membershipThey share in the apostolateand cultivate the respectivespirit of the institute

BUT FULIC membership canbe enjoyed only by those whoprofess the evangelical coun-

sela. including the promise or

vow of perfect chastity. Therearc those who hope the coun-cil will approve full member-ship for married people in aec-ular institutes.

This is hardly to be expectedIn view of the theologicalteaching concerning a state ofperfection. Perfect chastity isa part of this state. In no waydoes this disparage the sancti-ty to which married peoplemay and do aspire.

Third orders secular, highlyapproved and recommendedby the Church, are well ableto satisfy- the spiritual needsof married people if fully ex-plored according to their truepotential of leading people to

sanctity in the world in andthrough Christian marriage.

Programs for promoting vo-

cations have till now given rel-atively little attention to secu-

lar institutes. The Fathers of

the council in (heir discussionson secular institutes; wellmight support and encouragevocations to secular institutesand make use of the help theycan provide.

IN THE COUNCIL'S unitedeffort for Church reform andreunion, secular institutes can

serve as a "leaven, small inquantity yet ever active," as

Pope Pius said in 1947.

"Always and everywhere atwork, it mingles with allgrades of society from highestto lowest, strives by word, ex-

ample and in every way to

reach and permeate them,each and all, until the wholemass is transformed andwholly leavened in Christ."

4 THE ADVOCATE March 7, IMS CouncilTheme...

(Continued from Page 1)

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The SEED SOWING WEATHER WATCHER

From sunup to sundown you csn sss this bird working In his fields, milking the cows, feeding the chickens,collecting eggs,.. furrowing, hoeing, planting, mowing, threshing, storing. His work is never done. He veryseldom takes a vacation from his farm. Without him we could not exist.

One very Important aspect of Farmer-bird's life is the weather. If it's too dry, too wet or just right makesall the difference in the world to him. Ha depends on the elements for his livelihood and the NEWARK NEWSto provide him with accurate weather reports. It Is his dailyguide to sowing,cultivating, harvesting.

The Weather-Watcher depends on his newspaper for his daily contact with the city, the country, the world.He depends too on the most accurate coverage, the most Interestingaccounting... his complete relaxationafter a hard day's labor... the NEWARK NEWS.

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tvealag and Sunday

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Jfemork Kerns'/Imi Tfaula tfm'

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German Catholics’ DonationTo World’s Poor at $5O Million

BONN (NC)—German Cath-olics on the receiving end ofcharity for many years fol-lowing World War II havegiven more than $5O million incharitable aid abroad the pastfive years.

This effort is concentrated intwo campaigns:

* The Adveniat campaign,which provides religious aidfor Latin America and whichis held on Christmas. Itbrought $5,750,000 in its firstdrive in 1961.

• The Misereor campaign,which promotes social wel-fare. and which has been held

every Lent since 1959. It hasnetted $42,625,000.

The organisation which ad-ministers Misereor funds hashelped set up a center to trainvolunteer workers for the de-veloping countries, the Centerof Development Aid in Co-logne.7 V;-;'

THE MONEY collected forLatin America in the Adveniatcampaign is used to build andexpand seminaries, and totrain lay religion teachers tooffset the continent's shortageof priests.

The German Bishops wereable to handle only 213 of the406 appeals for help whichcame in from Latin Americaafter the 1961 campaign. Mostof the applications for helpcame from Brasil.

THE MLSKRF.OR drive be-gan in 1956 when the GermanBishops, at their annual con-ference at Fulda, decided toask German Catholics to makea special sacrifice during Lentin 1959 to help combat hungerand illness in the world,

Misereor has two main so-cial aid programs:

• Short range emergencyrelief: the distribution of food,clothing and medical suppliesin disasters such as floods,epidemics ami famines

• Long range economic

help Building institutionssuch as hospitals and homesfor the aged; financing self-help projects such as coopera-tives and agricultural. ptWos-sional ami domestic trainingcenters; training people to

help others doctors, nurses,engineers, agricultural ex-

perts. cooperative organisers

PLAN SURVIY - Peter A. Confalone, right, advertisingmanager of The Advocate, plans with Dr. Marco Baeza,head of the department of marketing at Seton Hall Uni-versity, for a survey to be taken on the shopping habitsof North Jersey Catholics. The survey, a follow-up to onedone in 1960, will be made by 85 students from the SouthOrange and Newark Campuses of the university. Thesurvey is a cooperative venture of Seton Hall's marketing

department and The Advocate's advertising staff.

'Dropout' Aid

Seen in BillWASHINGTON (NC) - The

administration's youth employ-ment hill would he of par-ticular benefit to boys whodrop out of high school, thesecretary of the National Con-ference of Catholic Charitiestold a Senate subcommittee re-cently

Msgr. Raymond J. Gallaghersaid that under the Youth Em-ployment Act of 1963 suchyoung men would be able tocontinue the basic learningprocess interrupted when theyleft school He testified beforethe Senate subcommittee on

employment and manpower.The $lOO million youth em-

ployment program seeks to es-

tablish a 13.00ft-member YouthConservation Corps to work inrural areas and a HomeTown Youth EmploymentCorps of 50, on<) for the townsand cities

Birth ControlPlans Denied

U* ANGELES (NC) - Daski E Bell, administrator of

the Agency for InternationalDevelopment, said here AIDha* no program foe providinginformation to foreign nations

on hlrth control

Bell made his statement ata Regional Foreign PolicyBriefing here in response toan audience questtoo Bell saidom< -Hu. v. a ammmmmhas taken the clear positionthat we are not going to tellany country what IU policy on

these matters should be ThuU their own affair.”

Direct Action UrgedAgainst Racial Bias

CHICAGO (NC) The Nationat Catholic Conference iorInterracial Justice has urgedthat Catholics take part in "di-rect action movements'against all racial discrimin-ation.

The conference's board of directors issued a statement declartng that "institutionalcautiousness in race relationsis not consistent with thedemands o( justice and love."

IT SPECIFICALLY askedthat Catholic institution* WT'tenon-discrimination clauses intotheir construction supply aod

service contracts, and called(or support of desegregationin seven Catholic diocesesthat have segregated schoolsystems.

"We offer our wholeheartedcooperation." the conferencestatement »»id. "to those re-

sponsible for following up andmaking concrete the stimula-tion provide*! by the NationalConference on Religion andRace, and we urge other C'atholir institution* and organiza-tions to participate in a grow-

ing Interreligious movement tond our society of racism "

Baltimore's Archbishop ShehanBans All-Race Discrimination

BALTIMORE (RNS) - The

spiritual head of 430,000 Cath-olics In Maryland has vigor-ously condemned all forms ofracial discrimination andcalled for an end to segrega-tion In all aspects of religiousand civic 11/e.

Archbishop Lawrence J.Shehan of Baltimore, in a

3,000-word Lenten pastoral, of-ficially banned any practice ofdiscrimination based on racialor social origin in all Catholic

schools, churches, social or-

ganizations and charitable in-stitutions.

The 65-year-old prelate saidCatholics have sn obligation to

observe the principles laiddown by the Church in 1958.when the American Bishops at

their annual meeting issued a

statement entitled “Discrimin-ation and the Christian Con-science."

"EVEN TO enumerate ourpresent duties and policiesbrings vividly to our mindsour past defects," he said."These defects we frankly ad-mit. With humility and regret,we Catholics must acknowl-edge that we have been alltoo slow in the correction ofour shortcomings.

"In the light of the experi-ence of many of our fore-fathers, we should have beenparticularly sensitive to theunjust inequalities suffered byother groups. For this reason,we have a special obligation toplace ourselves in the forefrontof movements to remove theinjustices and discriminationswhich still remain.”

lie spoke, the Baltimore-horn prelate said, "in fulfill-ment of my own duty of con-science.” The centenary yearof the Emancipation Pro-clamation makes such a letter"particularly appropriate," headded

Even after 100 years. Arch-bishop Shehan said, "it is no

exaggeration to say that inhardly any slate of the Unionhas complete social, political,economic and educationalequality been established."

IN MARYLAND, he speci-

fied, "recently 'experienceshave shown that much— verymuch— remains to be done;that grave wrongs still needto tie righted."

The Christian faith, the prel-ate reminded Maryland’sCatholics, imposes a specialduty of justice and charity to-ward "all men, no matterwhat may be their racial andsocial origin.”

"Within this household of thefaith, this temple holy to theLord, this dwelling place ofGod in the Spirit, this MysticalBody of Christ, there can beno room for racial discrimina-tion,” he said.

The Archbishop specified a

policy of “no racial discrimin-ation” in Catholic churches,parish activities, secondaryand elementary schools, dio-cesan organizations and char-iiable institutions. Catholichospßals, he added, agreed"*ome months ago" to policiesof non-discrimination.

March 7, 166S THE ADVOCATE 5

For an enjoyable vacation

and something different ....

FRANCISCANPILGRIMAGES

MiXICO13 Full Days - $615.00 - leave May 4 - Return May 18

Price Include» transportation by scheduled Jet flight, first dost hotel

accomcodotions. 3 moots doily, all gratuities and taxes and handlingof luggoge. The highlight of this pilgrimage Is the world renown Shrine

of Our tody of Guodalupe.

NEW ENGLANDWeekends $48.00 Friday night to Sunday night.

Leave: May 3, May 24, June 14, Sept. 13, Oct. 18.

Fries Inctwdvt S first clou hot.l occonmodolwm. IrampertaHofi.gratuities and oil taxes. Visit the Shrines of St. Anthony In Soston.Our lody of laSoiette In Ipswich, Mass., ond our Franciscan College in

Rye Beach, N.H.. ond other places of historic notional Interest.

WASHINGTONWeekends $45.00 Friday night to Sunday night,leave: April 5, 19, 26, May 17, June 7, Sept. 27,Oct. 25, Nov. 1 8.

Price includes some os New England above. Visit the Shrine of theImmoculate Conception, the Francitcon Monastery Churth of the Holyland, the Cotofambs. ond other ploces of Notional interest.

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June, July, August, SeptemberPrice Includes 12 meals, first doss hotel occommodotions. transport©t»on, gratuities, ond all taxes. Visit die Shrines of Our Lody of the

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places of interosct.

CALIFORNIA23 Days August 3rd to August 25th $645.00

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BALTIMORE-WASHINGTONWeekends $45.00 Friday night to Sunday night.

Leavo: March 29 and November IS

Price Includes 4 meals, first clots hotel occommodattoos. transportation,

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NIAGARA FALLS4 Full Days $85.00 leave: April IS Return: April 18

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Price includes S meolt. first class*

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Thursday Eve., April llth,to Sunday morning AprilMth.

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Book Reviews

Fleming MisfiresTHE GOD OF LOVE, by

Thomas J. Firming. Doable*day. 347 pages. $4.95.

With his (actual study of thebattle of Bunker Hill ("NowWe Are Enemies") and withhis first novel of. the disinte-gration of a political machine(“All Good Men”), JerseyCity-born Tom Fleming hit thebulls-cyc. His second novel,however, has shot somewhatwide of the mark.

IN THIS BOOK. Flemingtakes up the story of the char-acters of “All Good Men” five

years after the election nightthat ended the 30-year rule ofthe Dave Shea machine. Thereare Jake O’Connor, an ambi-tious politician who has angri-ly rejected his Faith; hisbrother. Rev. Paul O’Connor,surely one of the strangestpriests of the strange lot foundin modern fiction, and DoloresTalbot, now Mrs. Ruddy Blair,wife of the only son of MattBlair. Dave Shea’s successoras mayor and rule of The City.

It is this marriage which

triggers the tragic action, andit is on this point that the bookfalters. No strong case Is ever

made why Dolores shouldhave married the bullyingBlair and. what is worse, a

reading of “AH Good Men"leaves the motivation even

weaker.It was a rebound marriage,

for Dolores’ true love Is and

always has been Jake O’Con-nor, a fact which is quiteplainly—and sometimes crude-ly-made evident in both nov-els., Yet it ia not enough tosimply marry off the girl forPlot purposes—in neither bookis it ever made clear why a

girl of gentle breeding (her fa-ther is one of The City’s distinguished Protestant citizensand an able surgeon) shouldeven have given the time ofday to a brutish oaf like BuddyBlair. The only reason for themarriage, it appears, is thatit is noccssary to the plotstructure.

THERE IS ANOTHER andQuite different problem forthis reviewer—one which willextend to many North Jerseyreaders. "All Good Men" w»s

a thinly-disguised version ofthe end of Hague rule in Jer-sey City. It was superbly doneand surpassed all past factualor fictional attempts at thedelineation of a big-city politi-cal machine. Tom Fleming,himself the son of a Hagueward leader, was perfectlyequipped for the task.

The author is still drawingon the memories of his bornetown as background for thisnovel, but he is writing abouta time when he himself wasliving several hundred miles•w ay in Boston. The result isthat the geographical —andmore important, the political—-

landscape is a composite.Those who most enjoyed orresented the first novel willthus be the most confinedby this one.

The plot is basically simple.Dolores wants to break hermarriage with Ruddy, prefer-ably by Church annulment.Jake knows she has no chancefor this, but spun her to tryso that she will join him In hisdisaffection for the Church.Rev. Paul O'Connor—not real-izing his brother's illicit rela-tionship with Dolores is firstthe ineffectual mediator withChurch authorities, then an

even more ineffectual media-tor between husband andwife.

After a brief reunion, Do-lores decides to run away fromboth Buddy and Jake and, inthe novel's most unbelievableincident. Is run off the roadby one of The City’s cops at

Ruddy's order, as Father Paulwatches in a pursuing car.

THE TRAGEDY of The Cityis a much larger one than ia

encompassed in these pages.In "AU Good Men," the per-sonal story took second placeand its inconsistency could beignored in absorption with the

main plot Had Tom Flemingbeen on "the scene" duringthe decade that followed 194*>.this would no doubt have been

s better, more valuable book.—Ed Grant

A Family’s FallTHE MOON FLOWER VINE

by Jetta Carletoa. Simon andSchuster. $4.95. 352 pages

Obvious literary talent iswasted in this book. Whatmight have been the story of a

family’s redemption has be-come instead the story of theirfall. And while there are re-

deeming features about thehook, none can quite compen-sate for this loss of humandignity and mot's! values.

The family is that of schoolteacher farmer Matthew andCallie .Soames and their four

children. Jessica. Iteonle,Mathy and Mary Jo. The set-

ting is the Missouri backwoodsand covers a time span of thelast 50 years.

The theme is rejection byeach member, at one time or

another, of the rest of thefamily; of their environment;of God and the beliefs thatgoverned their llTea. Themoonflower vine is the sym-bol of purification, whichnever really takes place.

THE PLOT centers on the■parents’ efforts to rule theirchildren’s lives, until they can

marry them off to some up-and-coming young gentlemen.They fail when first Jessica,then Mathy. run off The la!ter, whose story ia the centraltragedy, is killed in an air-plane accident. Lconie, primand proper, reneges on herconvictions by marryingMathy’s widower.

In other character dellneattons and oft-overdrawn de-scriptions of their actions, itis mealed that 1 MatthewSosmes’ aesthetic, respectableexterior hides a core of infidebt) to his wife, and 2<■ allie Soames' resignationstems partly from a guilt feeltng Malhy's death, as washer life, is looked upon as a

punishment for their alns.The theme of redemption ia

miasing from the novel be-cause the characters do notw-ill to overcome their faults.There is much talk about re

hgion and God s will (includmg one or two jabs at Cath-olics) and much regret over

the past, although this it not

so much for sin as for Itsconsequences. We are left withthe impression that the characters would do the same

things all over again An

UMnette TomanelU

Bishop DoughertyBook in Paperback

NEWARK Auxiliary Bish-op John J. Dougherty's book"Searching the Scriptures,"has be*n published in paper-back edition Originally thebook, described as a popular introduction to the Bible,was published in 1359.

The paperback edition is one

of 10 new "Image Books" tohe published together by Doubleday at prices ranging from75 cents to It 35. *

Bishop Dougherty, who isnow president of Seton Hall,penned the book while a pro-fessor of sacred scripture atImmaculate Conception Semi-nary-. Darlington.

Prayer CaseTV Subject

NEW YORK (NC) - The

background of the SupremeCourt's controversial schoolprayer ruling of last June 23will be traced on a nationaltelevision program March 13

The development of theschool prayer case will be the

subject of the second part of"Storm Over the SupremeCourt." to be telecast from7 30 to I 30 p m. by the Cotumbis Broadcasting System

leading figures in the schoolprayer controversy will appearno the program, which will•how how cases move fromlower courts to the SupremeCourt.

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INTEFAITH PANEL - A discussion of "The Crisis of Faith" will be conducted on the LookUp and live program, March 24 and 31, ch. 2, by, from left. Rev. George Hagmaier,C.S.P., psychologist) Joseph Cunneen, editor; Rev. Joseph Fichter, SJ. sociologist who it anative of Englewood; James O'Gara, editor; Rev. Gerard S. Sloyan, teacher and priest ofthe Trenton Diocese; Dr. Martin E. Marty, Protestant pastor and editor, and Dr. Vincent

Smith, professor of science.

Plays in BriefBy JOAN T. NOURSE

ISeir PlaysJack Benny Show Gen

erally pleasant program ofmirth and music certain to

satisfy the comic’s adult fan*Oklahoma! _ Snappy 20th-

anniversary revival of Rodgers and llammerstein't popu-lar musical western

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The Annual

Guess-GameBy WILLIAM H. MOORING

Guessing slong with the stu-dent groups end "crystal bsll’’readers I hazard the followingforecasts on the Oscar awardsThese are based upon politicalas well as academic considera-tions.

BEST FILM: "Lawrence ofArabia," with only "Mocking-bird” to beat.

Best Actor: Gregory Peck("To Kill a Mockingbird"),with Peter (“Lawrence")O’Toole, his only threat.

Best Actress: Bette Davis("What Ever Happened toBaby Jane?"), by sentimentaldr ciston.

Supporting Actor: Telly Savilas (“Bird Man of Alratraz").

Supporting Actress: AngelaLansbury ("Manchurian Can-didate”) with Patty Duke

("The Miracle Worker"), hermost obstreperous rivsl

Best Director: David 1-oanC Lawrence of Arabia") withonly Hobert Mulligan ("Mockingbird") to beat

HeviewsFive Miles to Midnight

(Good; adultsi A Left-Banktale about a young wastrel un-

happily married to an older

woman whom be forces into a

colossal insurance fraud. Mur-der is condoned.

Girt Named Tamiko (Weak;

objectionable in part) Triteand draggy story which pre-sumes to deal with conflictsbetween traditional and mod-ern Japanese mores and mor-

als and provides, according tothe Legion of Decency, “insuf-ficient compensation for thelow moral tone which per-vades its trite and unmotivatedstory."

Monkey in Winter (Good;adults) Warmly human andsurprisingly interesting Frenchcomedy-drama about an olddrunk with a military pastand a young drunk with no

marital future —and how one

fellow helps the other.

Catholic PublishingHits Record High

WASHINGTON (RNS» - Arecord number of Catholicbooks 1.1*4 was pubhshed in the (' S during 1962,a Catholic University officialannounced here

6 THE ADVOCATE March 7, 1963

A Wedding Reception•I tho

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She Was in a Position to Give Help, 50...By ANNE MAE BUCKLEY

PATERSON - The afternoonshe spent in the Garden ofGethscmanc is part of the rea-son why Mario Tuozzo willsoon be on her way to La Pax,Bolivia.

Marie, a graduate of N.J.School of Practical Nursingwho worked for 17 years in a

doctor’s office, is a memberof the Papal Volunteers forLatin America, the first fromthis area. Next month she willreport to Auxiliary BishopGonnaro Prata in LaPaz to set

up a series of medical dispen-saries for the poor.

Home with her parents andtwo sisters after completing a

rugged four-month prepara-tion at the Center of lntcrcul-tural Formation in Cuer-navaca, Mexico, Marie talkedof her reasons for joiningPAVLA.

SHE BEGAN BY admittingthat it was not an easy de-cision. "It took long days andnights of thinking," she said,her dark brown eyes shining.‘‘l am very happy. 1 have a

good home. I had an excellent-

paying job. . .my own car.

I love good times and beauti-ful clothes. I knew what it

would mean to give it all upand live on sto a week."

Yet, It wax precisely these

things which started her onthe idea of helping in LatinAmerica. "How easy it ia tolook at the pictures in themission magazines," she said,shuffling through a stack ofcopies of Maryknoll on thecoffee table. "You see the

pictures of starving children,and you hear about the dif-ficulties facing the ChMrch inLatin America. And you putmoney in an envelope for theannual mission collection."

Rut Marie Tuozzo began to

realize something as shelooked at those pictures: "Iwas in a position to help. . .

"Why not a Catholic handstretching out toward thosestarving, illiterate peoplerather than a communistone?" she asked herself."With all I had. I felt 1 hadto do more than I was doing."

IN 1961 SHE spent Holy Weekin Jerusalem during a pil-grimage. Easter afternoonfound her alone in the Gardenof Ciclhscmanc. the traditionalsite of Christ's agony beforeHis crucifixion. She remem-

bers feeling "unworthy" andasking herself, “Who am 1

that 1 should lie here?" andthinking of people in Latin

America who "can't practicetheir F’alth because they haveno priests."

The chaplain of the pll-grimage happened to bo Msgr.F'enton Runge of St. Louis, sec-retary to Cardinal Ritter, whowas the first U.S. prelate tosend diocesan priests to LatinAmerica. Msgr. Runge toldMarie about Christ the Kingparish in La Paz, which ia a

project of the St. Louis Arch-diocese. and he also mentionedPAVLA.

After the pilgrimage theycorresponded, and in one let-ter Msgr. Runge noted thatChrist the King parish neededa nurse. guess," Marie re-

call*. "that was when I wasawakened by the Holy Spirit."With the St Louts Archdioceseas her sponsor she appliedfor the Cuernavaca trainingcourse which would equip herfor PAVLA work in BoliviaShe was accepted and Octoberfound her among the 47 laypeople, priests and Brothersand Sisters in the intensiveprogram designed to fit themtor Latin American missionwork.

Among her fellow studentswere Rev. Vincent J. Prestera.Rev. Frederics M. Eid andRev John J Landers, priests

of the Newark Archdiocese"who will staff a pariah in theRepublic of Honduras, as wella* another Pateraonlan. BudChldiac, who will go to Boliviaas a member of the Associa-tion for International Develop-ment (AID).

I>AYB AT Cuernavaca beganwith 8:30 a.m. Mass, Includedclasses (in Spanish, anthro-pology, Latin American his-tory and geography, psy-chology), chores, spiritual ex-ercise*. and field trip*. Amongthe many things Marie learnedwas how to shampoo herhair in cold water and howto survive on "plenty of bean*and tortillas —but no sparetime"

A few times, she confessesto wonderia;,, "What am 1 do-ing here”' but at the close ofthe course she was able towrite to Msgr Runge ami saythat next to the trip to Jeru-salem, she had never enjoyedanything quite so much as theCuernavaca course. She was

firmly committed after herfirst field trip assignment

.This was in Zacualpan,Mexico, site of an old monas-tery' and pueblo, where Maneand another nurse from theinstitute were sent to

vaccinate the children. Theyset up their "dispensary" un-der a tree, Marla recalls. “Be-tween 80 and too childrenlined up. They were

poor, barefoot, many wearingonly under clothing. All were

filthy dirty. But they werebeautiful and lovable, everyone of them.

"1 only knew about sixwords of Spanish then butwith children you use youreyes and hands and no wordsare necessary."

SINCE MARIE signed as a

Papal Volunteer wilh the St.Louis Archdiocese, her Boliviaassignment has been alteredfrom the original plan of help-ing in Christ the King parish,to the diocesan dispensaryprogram of Bishop Prata's. Toher. all that matters is thatshe will be helping.

Right now she is gatheringphysician's samples of medi-cines that will t>« useful themany friends she made amongpharmaceutical salesmen dur-ing the past 17 years are co-

operating generously, she saidShe U contracted for three

years with PAVIA, but she

says thoughtfully. "If I amfruitful in Hie missions I hopeto slay on in La Par"

PACKING HER BAG- An old doctor's bag and pharmaceutical samples are the big item,

inMarie Tuozzo 's packing as she prepares for her trip to LaPaz. Bolivia, as a PapalVolunteer for Latin America.

Parish Records Oldest in U.S.ST AUGUSTINE, Fla

The oldest written records ofany kind in the U. S are

preserved here in the archivesof the Cathedral of St.

AugustineThey are baptismal records

of St Augustine's parish, old-est in the country, dating fromthe year 1594. New interest hascentered on these documentswith the celebration in 1965 ofthe 400th anniversary of thefounding of the city of St

AugustinePedro Menendei do Aviles

and a band of Spanish ex

plorcrs landed here on Sept S,1565 With them was Rev Mar

tin Francisco Lopez de Men-doza Grajales. a diocesanpriest The Spaniards named

their landing site "Sombre de

Dios " "Name of God." andtheir settlement St Au-

gustineThe first community act of

the landing party was to assist

at Mass offered by FatherLopez It was the first parishMass in what is now the I S

EARLIEST existing records

cf St Augustine are the parishregisters dated 1594 The first

page oi the bapUsmal record

MWiiEscobar da Sombrana.

The mamage and burialrecords arc less complete, dat-ing from 164.1 and 1720. re

spectively Records for the 29

years previous to 1594 are lostAt one time it was thought

in St. Augustine that the present records had also been lostbeyond recall In 1761 after19S years under Spanish rule.St Augustine and Floridawere ceded to England Spanish residents of the old cityand parish fled to Cuba, taking with them their most valu-able church furnishings andthe entire set of parish regis-ters

English occupancy of St.

Augustine lasted 20 years.During that period a colony ofCatholic Minorcans from theill-fated British settlement atNew Smyrna moved to St Au-gustine under the leadershipof Rev. Pedro Camps FatherCamps' church register, col-loquially called “The GoldenBook of the Minorcans,” ispreserved today in the cathe-

dral archives, and forms a

record of continuing Catholiclife in the pioneer parish dur-ing most of its brief Britishhistory.

IN 1783 Florida reverted toSpanish rule and anew

volume of parish registers was

installed. This new registerruns continuously to the present day. The original volumes,however, remained tn Cubanarchives, and. as the yearspassed into the 19th century,memory of them faded

Sometime in the 1880s, Bishop John Moore, second Bishopof St Augustine < 1877 1901 1discovered the ancient reguUrs of the parish church,which had been made a cathe-dral. were in Cuba. John Gil-mary Shea, ptoneer historianof the Catholic Church In the

l S . went to Havana and.after an arduous search, un

covered the mission volumesSome of the oldest pages

were pocked by mold and in

sect damage, but otherwisewere in fair to good conditionIn 1906. during the tenure of

Bishop Moore's successor.Bishop William Kenny, theregisters were returned

On their arrival in St Augustine it was discovered that

one volume was missing. Thisvolume remained a questionmark until its chance di*cover) in ike Havana archives

bfresr,o A3d',tr.^r^*si:sects, in the late 1930s

Following negotiations thatinvolved Bishop Patrick Barnof St Augustine. ArchbishopManuel Ruiz y Rodriquez of Ha

vans, and Bishop George JCaruana. Papal Nuncio to Cu-ba. the mission volume was laken on board the SS Floridaat Havana by a special courier.Rev. Richard B Washington ofRichmond. V* , who handedthem over to St AugustineCathedral officials on F'cb 2.1939. m Miami

THE ODYSSEY of the parish records was not yet com

pieted In 1942 German submarines were prowling dan-gerously close to St Augustineshores, so cathedral officialsdecided to send their store ofoocuments to Notre Dame Uni-versity for safekeeping Thedocuments remained at the

university until 1962 whenthey were brpugnt borne to beplaced in special vaults administered by the cathedral

A special library and exhibition hall to house these andother historically importantdocuments of the pioneer parish will tie built soon on theground* of the Mission ofSombre and« Dus*, sue 0 <Menendei' landing and of thefirst parish Mass in 1565

A special librar) and exhibition hall to house these andmiser hutwicsUy imfortaMdocuments at Ule pioneer parish will be built toon on thegrounds of the Mission ofSombre de Dios, site ofMenendei landing and of thefirst parish Mass in 1565

Si ng Luther Hymn

Music Has Interfaith CharmBERKELEY, Cal (RNSI Martin loither's hymn, "A

Mighty Fortress Is Our God." was sung here at Berkeley'sFirst Congregational church by an unusual group eiebtJesuit pnesta.From the church * choir loft the priests, who came from

Alma College in Las Gatos, sang the hymn with the rest of thecongregation. They were participating in a pastoral confer-ence in connection with a lecture senes at the church

After the service, one priest was asked how he had cometo sing the hymn.

"It's a great tune, isn't it”' he replied.Rev. Daniel O'Hanlon. SJ. suggested that students at

Protestant and Catholic seminaries "get together once In awhile and have a real songfest.”

Earlier, dunng the conference. Father O'Hanlon notedPope John XXUI's belief that hrotherhood must preeede substantial doctrinal dialogues between Protestant, Catholic andOrthodox scholars.

"The problems wc face in resolving our differences canonly be settled when pursued in an attitude of love.' he said"We will endeavor to cooperate fullv with the work of God sgrace.”

Inferior Us

- RepriseBy JOSEPH A. BREIG

If it seem* to you that there• * a look of dumb horror in

m> eyes, at of one who hat!>ecn put on a diet of tptnach.

or sentenced to listen tn radioannouncers. 1 can only tell

you despairingly that you are

right Hideously rightI fear for all of us with a

great (ear. because I see that

we are going to be put throughanother interminable goaround on the subject at Amerlean Catholic intellectual in

feriontyF.ven at t «,,ie. the letters

Pitying letters patronizingletters, denunciatory iettrrsarw beginning la iuwr tn Umpsiblic prims And f am sureI can hear the first faintsounds at a revival of thatdread tribal chant "Whereare our Catholic Einsteins.Oppenheimers, Salks’"

IN IMAGINATION I can

look across our once happyland and envision the preparatioos for our new martyrdomI can see the perennial con

venlion speakers dry-washingtheir hands and chuckling as

they contemplate the sadisticpleasure of stripping us. come

summer, of our last shredsof self respect

It is a more fearful thing,indeed, than the self-accusation orgies of the communists,because at least the rotnmiin

i*ts have their tongues in theircheeks

It will not be so w.-thus Our breasts are going tobe piously beaten for us byall kinds of earnest Catholicpublications, pundits and lecturers.

NOTHING SHORT of a

miracle certifiable to the Congregation of Rites. I fear, can

dissuade Ave Maria magazinefrom sending men with ma-chines to tape-record solemn .inters lews with our duly

l'ccnscd great minds, who willanalyte our mretal deficienciej and perhaps suggest a bitmere oxygen to the brain

In the vision vouchsafed to

me 1 can hear Commonwealmagaiinc commenting uponthe situation with clarity, char

it) and civilizes! expression* of

is-grct for our mindlessnessI see telephone dials whirl

mg a* eager program chair

men beat the wires with mes

sages arranging for learnedpapers proposing a commitmeat to excellence'

THE JEMTTS at America

magazine wui tunica hath indefend us (we being subscribers »hose dollar is justas good as a thinkers) andto pimißf our brains andfind them resoltmg

Dan Herr of Critic, Our Offteial Headsman, will cut off

some heads Msgr John TracyEllis will repent himself anew

that he ever wrote a bookabout Catholics and the tnte!

lectual Ufe

So much for our friendsfrom whom heaven protect us

1 shudder to think what Prot-estants and other Americana,Etc , F’tc . will say aboutmedieval obscurantism, mono

llthic uniformity and hler

archival authoritarianism

Not to one single mind, ofcourse, will it occur that loosegeneralization* are bad rea

sonmg. that a couple of officials at Catholic Universityof America are not the Church'"in America, and that if one

were to search assiduously,one might find a Catholic cam-

pus where the Four Thenlogians w-ould be welcome, evenif they did shake the founda-tions of the cosmos by sayingtbal it would be nice if Catholics could know what theyarc saying when they assem-ble for divine worship

Parishes Share Mission

Aid to AID With DividendsPATERSON A program

to aid AID is growing hereAID means Association fur

International iFcvrlopment.the volunteer or gam ration ofCatholic laymen winch sends

skilled petq.ir abroad to helpunderde* eloped nation* prineipaily as iinr MI) spokesmanput it by preparing leaderswho Will pros sir a Christianinfluence in a changingworld till has its beadquarters here by invitation ofBishop Mr Null)

Aid to MI) means parishesof the Patrrsor. Diocese and a

lew in other parts of the

country > are participating in

the agency s worldwide a post o

late by contributing to the support of AID workers overseas

With variation* dependingupon economic factors in particulir areas it costs an aver

*•» iiusi pec uiualii ia mamtaw an All) couple overseas,

plus an average of J2O perchild Single members of AIDteams need an average of 1100

a month for support

ALTHOUGH THE projectwhich goes by the title <,( AIDParish Support Program, i,

Just getting underway St

Philip's pan*h Clifton hasbeen pioneering the work forthree sears first under the

last Msgr Thomas Molloy and

now under M*gr Francis li

Murphy. Special collections a:

Philip's for AID have re

suited in an average of S2W a

month for the past three yearsWhen the AJD Advisory Coonril was formed, with the prtncipal objective of enlisting parish help for AID s work Bishop McNulty appointed MsgrMurphy its chaplain JosephAbbott, who is public rclat.onsdirector of ITT Federal Labs,t* chairman at the AdvisoryCouncil

Now AID men. under diree

tion of Mexico-veteran FrankPavis are engage*! in visitingpastors tn ask them to Join theassistance program They car

rv with them a letter from

Bishop McNulty which describes VID as a creature ofthe wisdom and zeal of popePius XII i who i realized the

important place that must beoccupied by Cathobc laymen of exceptional spiritualformation and a sense of ded.cal ion to the Church

Hem* from the progress re

twirl 5 1529 59 collection at SIPaul * Prospect Park a S4V)collection at St Agne* Palerson » 4175 donation from immaculate Heart of MaryWayne 5100 (rom st \ incent s. Madison

PASTORS of parishes whichha*c been aiding AID are

quick to poem out that the program la not a one way street

Say, Msgr Murphy Everyparish and every individualshcwald lie consciously aware ofthe global apostolic rrspons.hililics of the Church at awhole and himself as a mom

tier of the Church This aware

ness has been growing at S:Philip * parish -and participation in the AID program seemrd to be the key to the beginnings of it

Some parishes have madetheir participation in the program a personal thing by"adopting" an AID familywith whom parishioners cor

respond, so that moral as wellas financial support is theircontribution

NOTABLE among these is

Immaculate Heart of Mary.Scarsdale, N Y . where an AIDchapter has been formed to

"adopt" the William Dodgefamily on AID assignment in

Colombia Will Dodge is de-veloping a social service pro

gram in BogotaMsgr William P Little, pas-

tor of the Scarsdale parish,even paid a visit to the Dodgeslast year When he returned howrote a letter to all his parish-ioners in which he said. "With-out the laity tFie marvelous en-

cyclicals are just paper workThe lay missionary is the an-

sw cr

U takes great courage fora young married couple withchildren to poll up stakes' andmove to a foreign land . .

Probably no family of our

parish will go lo the missions,”he conjecture*!

But he said, ' every famd> can aDd should do its duty

let us all join the workand guarantee support to theDodge family i with its twosmall children) It means somuch to GoJ with whom in

live person t*l Our Lord we are

the whole CFirist ' ”

A BridgeOf Size

CARDIFF'. Wales (NO—-

( athohe Archbishop JohnMurphy of Cardiff indicat-ed at the close of a Chris-tian unity meeting at a

Methodist church here thathe thinks there should be a

limit to the ecumenicalspirit of the times

I would hesitate to makeany uncharitable remarkscontrary to the advice ofother speakers.” he satd.

But I must tell you of a

visit which the (Anglican)Bishop of U-mdaff paid tomy house a few days ago

"When he was going, hetook my hat

..I think this

is taking the ecumenicalmovement a little too far."

TkeAdvocate7 March 7, 1963

First Sorrowful MysteryTHE AGONY IN THE GARDEN

Our Father

Jesus came with them to Gethsemani/and he began to be saddened and ex*

ceedingly troubled...

Matt 26:36.37Hail Mary

Then he said to them, 'My soul is iu»dt

even unto death./Wait here and watchwith me.*

Hail MaryMail. 26:38

And going forward « he fell onthe ground/

and began to pray.

Hail MaryMark 14:35

'Father, if thou art willing, remove *h?«

cup from me;/yet not my will but thine be done.’

_, Luki 22:42

Hail JZ?'Mary

And there appeared to him an angelfrom heaven/

to strengthen him. &

m&m-Uk, 22:43

Scriptural Rosary

Part 6

And falling into an agony/he prayed the more earnestly.

UUU^Mu,MM

And his sweat became as drops oblood/

running down upon the ground.

Then he came to the disciples and foundthem sleeping./

And he said, 'Could you not, then,watch one hour with me?’

Hail J&* MaryHalt. 26:10

*Watch and pray/thatyou maynot enter into tern;

'ptation.’alt. 26:41

'The apirit indeed isbut the flesh is weak.’

Hail MatyMatt. 26:41

Glory be to the Father, and to the Son,and to the Holy Spirit/ As itwas

in the beginning, is now,and ever shall be,

world withoutend. Amen.

Editor's Note: This Is one of the 15decadesScripturalRosary ,

a modern versionth f*a y ,he Rosar y *' as once prayed in

the Middle Ages. We are presenting thecomplete Scriptural Rosary In 15 install-ments as a service to our readers. You areinvited to save these meditations for futureuse. Or you may obtain the completeset InIllustratedprayer-bookform by sending $1tSVifVrWt ScripturalRosary Center,6 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago 2, Illinois.

17th SEASON

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Separation of God, State?The attention of our nation is now

directed to the Supreme Court of theUnited States which has begun hearingson the constitutionality of Bible readingand the recitation of the Lord’s Prayerin the classroom. At long last, this issueis where it should be so that the citizensof America will know what our highestCourt thinks about it.

THERE IS NO DOUBT that our Su-preme Court has avoided rendering a de-cision on this very issue when it had theopportunity to do so in the Everson casewhich involved the same issues pertinentto parents of high school children attend-ing a public high school at Hawthorne.

Twenty-eight states have joined inthe hearing of this case as "amici curiae’’which are defending the statutes of theirindividual states, which statutes have beenruled constitutional by the SupremeCourts of their respective states. In thebrief of the Maryland case, we read thefollowing: "If the recognition of the exis-tence of and our reliance upon a divineProvidence cannot constitutionally be al-lowed in our public schools because It con-

stitutes indirect coercive pressure on re-

ligious minorities, certainly no less pres-sure is exerted by the reading of our basicand organic documents and the singingof

our officially espoused anthems, "whichestablish such recognition as the funda-ment of our national heritage.”

Jefferson and Madison are wronglyconsidered to be the patron saints of theabsolute separationists of Church andState, of religion and public life. TheMaryland brief reminds the Court thatJefferson and Madison recognized theAmerican people as being a religious peo-ple whose institutions presupposed a Su-preme Being.

IT IS FRIGHTENING to anticipatea- decision of our U. S. Supreme Courtthat would bring about a separation ofGod and State. No right-thinkingAmerican can help but fear that our

Court will give more recognition to a

minority atheism and agnosticism than toa vast majority of religious-minded par-ents and children. We look forward hope-fully to our Supreme Court, that a "modusVivendi" will be found.

Morality without God can becomevery shallow. Respect for the Bible, theword of God, is not too much to ask of

any child in the public schools; respectand reverence for the Lord's prayer can

help to engender religious-minded citi-zens of our great country. Hopefully dowe await this decision.

American Success StoryThe name of Seton has an especial

significance for the Archdiocese of New-ark and the Diocese of Paterson. It is a

name with which the Catholics of thisarea are already familiar because theyhave seen and known the work of thedaughters of Mother Seton, the Sisters of

Charity of Convent Station. It is a name

which is mentioned every time the arch-diocesan university, the largest in the

world. Seton Hall, is lauded for its end-

less achievements. The work of Mother

Seton and of her venerated nephew, Bish-

op James Roosevelt Baylev, is one of thebulwarks of the Province of New Jersey.

NOW THE NAME of Seton will ac-

quire anew luster. No longer will MotherElizabeth Ann Seton be known just in

those areas in this country w here her Sis-ters of Charity do their work in schools

and hospitals and where schools, acade-mies and colleges bear her name Thename of Seton will be cried out in StPeter's in Rome on March 17 and thence-

forth, as Blessed Elizabeth Ann Seton. the

frail woman who died almost a centuryand a half ago will be venerated through-out the world.

It is a long distance from the little

stone house by the side of the rushingstream in Emmittsburg to the great basil-ica in Rome; it is a long distance from

the quiet grinding poverty and near ig-nominy of those early years to the cere-

mony of beatification, it is a long distancefrom the tiny lights bobbing in the Sisters'hands on the battlefields of Gettysburgto the splendor of the illumination thatwill surround their foundress on March17; it is a long distance from the seclusion

of the classroom to the renown of thecalendar of the Blessed It is a long dis-tance except for sanctity which is wroughtin unseen places and at unknown times

and then, in time, receives recognitionTHE STORY of Mother Elisabeth

Ann Seton is another typical Americansuccess story Typical’ Not exactlyWe have been spellbound for generationsin the nation by the "rags-to-riches "theme, the Alger pattern, all geared to

material success This is the same type of

story but it runs from sacrifice to sancti-ty It is a spiritual success story It is an

inspiration to know that in this land such

a story is possible, that the material does

not outdistance the spiritual, that the wayof sanctity can triumph even in the U. I

Sex on the CampusSarah Gibson Blanding is president

of Vassar College. Speaking to her as-

sembled students, she was asked by themto clarify this statement that appeared in

the college handbook: "The college ex-

pects every student to uphold the high-est standardsln answering she said thatpremarital sex relations and excessive

drinking are indecent and immoral, and

that any student who could not live up tothe college standards in these matters,had better withdraw voluntarily.

THE EVIL IS far more widespreadthan most Americans realize The Nation-al Association of Deans and Counselorsdevoted an entire issue of its journal to

this problem. Kate Hevner Muller, editorof the journal, made this surprising andpresumptuous statement: "Youth is ig-norant and reckless but the world is harshand unforgiving and the dean's job as

mediator Is a difficult one. It is the coun-

selor, not the clergyman, who must devel-

op youth's conscience; it is the educatorwho is called upon to take the leadingethical role.” In these few unsubtle wordsshe is telling priests, ministers and rab-bis to stay out of this business thatsex trangressions arc not a moral but a

social problem.Professor Kirkendall, a sociologist

from Oregon State, says: “We are still try-ing to motivate and control the sexual be-havior of youth by citing the traditional

negative (whatever that means') conse-

quences of sexual experiences premaritalpregnancy, venereal infection and com-

munitydisapproval " This is nothing morethan a lot of high sounding words, verbalnonsense, done in modern style, that omitsthe most important item sexual trans-

gressions are a violation of God's Com-

mandmentsWe are sinking millions and billions

of dollars into our educational system.Would it not be a blot on American his-tory. and a sad commentary on the sagaci-ty and prudence of its people, tf we

neglected the moral and spiritual train-

ing of our youth by supporting a programthat could produce a generation of degen-erates?

WE HAVE MANY Catholic boys and

girls in these non-sectarian colleges Par-ents who glibly and calmly expose theirchildren to such institutions might exam-

ine their consciences and answer a fewquestions: How great are the challengesand dangers to my boy or girl’ What pro-tection will they have? Is there a New-man Club there, and shall I know if myson or daughter takes an active interestin it?

Religious schools and colleges get no

federal aid and they alone supply a moral

and spiritual background to their stu-dents

Have you given this serious thought?

Catholic University’s ‘Ban’Catholic University’s authorities have

been under attack from both Catholicsand non-Catholics for what has come to

be called the “banning”of four outstand-ing theologians from its lecture hall.

THE GRADUATE student councilroutinely presented a list of 12 names,from which four would be chosen and in-vited to lecture at the university. The ad-ministration deleted the name of Rev.John Courtney Murray, S.J., Rev. GustaveWeigel, S.J., both of Woodstock College;Rev. Godfrey Diekmann,0.5.8., St. John’sCollege, Minnesota, and Rev. Hans Kuengof the University of Tuebingen, Germany.

The rector’s defense of the deletionof the four names explains the high mo-tive behind it in terms of these points:

1) These mon hold "a definite pointof view on certain pivotal ecclesiasticalissues and policies being debated by theBishops in the ecumenical council.”

2) “The university is under the juris-diction of all the Bishops of the U. S. Be-cause of this unique status, the universityhas taken no official position on thoseissues and policies still unresolved by thecouncil.”

But is this defense adequate? It rais-es even more qu|^ions.

FOR ONE THING, the very fact thatall four of the theologians ruled out aslecturers are of one "definite point ofview” in certain pivotal ecclesiastical is-sues. is found to give many the impres-sion that their point of view is not onethe administration wants presented.

The university admirably wishes notto embarrass the American Bishops bytaking sides on important conciliar mat-ters. The action of the university admin-istration, however, may embarrass theBishops because of the stand the univers-ity seems to have taken against the "onedefinite point of view" on Church issues.

THE PRIESTS not welcome to lec-ture in C. U. at present hold viewpointsknown to be those of many of theChurch’s highest authorities includingmenibers of the Sacred College of Cardi-nals, and their devotion and loyalty tothe Church must not come out of thiscontroversy in the least bit suspect. What-ever has to be done in this vein, we canbe sure, will be done.

Lenten Gifts

Wedding at Cana:

'They Have No Wine'By TRANK J. SHEER

There can be no incident if.

Our Lord's public life bcurrknown than the Wedding Kraalof Cana Le! u» remind our

aelvei what a wedding (fastwti

The marriage would have

taken place a year before At

that imall. private ceremony,the man and the girl becamehuihand and wtfe They re

turned to their o*n home*,and the Wife »pem a year pre-paring what ahe should needwhen at the end of the timeabe moved into her husbandshouar. and tbeir married lifestarted

.Normally t tie re wa» i>->

consummation of the mar

riage during the year of wait

mg. but U there waa. it »i>

not amful. and :f a child an

born, it waa legitimate

THE WEDDING lltclf waa

rot a ceremony l! waa a time

of feasting singing and general mirth The celebration*might taat (or many day* thatwould depend upon the bride-groom'a wealth

We find more than one wed-ding feast in Our IdmT*parable* We remember theone from which the guest hadbeen hurled into the darknesicutalde becauae he had no

wedding garment, our moulhacan water stall at the beevesand fallings" under,which thetablet groaned

But the feast given in Canaby friend* of Our Lady, closerelation* perhaps would nothave been of that sort ofsplendor Our lord i new /Itsciple*. Peter and the ro»t. are

not likely in have worn any-thing very notable In Ihe wayof wedding garments

Some small amount of meatthere would have been, be-cause a wedding was *o spe-cial an occasion, but nor-

mally the poor of Galilee »aw

precious little meat from one

year's end to another. At a

wedding of their aort, every-thing would depend on thewine. And the wine ran out.

THERE CAN lIARDI.Y be a

commentator who hat not

connected the running out ofthe wine with thd Jtjrivil ofOur Lord, who may hf»v * beenexpected, and Hl* five dis-

ciples, who could hazily havebeen. This particular half dozon would have maP* * differ-ence to the celebration* aa a

whole. /There wouVd have been a

good adaf of whispering aboutJeaut the Carpenter and iliafailure to get Himself a wife.Celibacy was all very well forKsaenca. living secluded intheir own small colonk-a; butthe town carpenter waa no E*sene. Within a few mlputei,Peter would have been holdingthe floor. It waa hit nature to.John may have attracted leasnotice. What matters to ua isthat he was meeting the wom-an who would be given to himas his mother on Calvary.

It waa she who interveneddecisively to save the miser-able embarrassment of emptywine Jars and a feast in fullswing. It is nearly 20 year*since we heard her first re-corded words to her Son—whenthey found Him in tha Templeafter three deya.

NOW | OR 1 second lime*t hear her speak to Him"They hive no wine She

rtmjHy dfaas Hi* attention tothe problem she doe* not tellHim how to solve it HeadingHis answer, we would gel theimpression, not only that He<*id not mean to *otve it, butthat He saw no reason why Heshould Hearing Hi* answer

Our Lady knew that He would

Few thing! He rtrr saidhave been so elaborately dt*rvssed "Woman what u that

to me ami to thee’ My hour is

not yet come The discus

non has been upon threepoints mainly—Hit addressingher as Woman, Hts using a

phrase which sounds like a re

fusal lo concern Himself the

mysterious remark shout llishour

'New Stalin'

Cult PredictedBy LOUIS F. BUDENZ

The Worker of Keb S7 produced an eight page supplemen! on the Stno Soviet debate, but added nothing new

What we come to recognizeit that The Worker is in

slfueting the American com

rades on how they should present the debate ,n the Amencan community

After the Twentieth Congresa of the Communist Partyof the Soviet t'nioa in 1959 ttaslogsn of "different paths lo•ocislism m different coun-

tnes" caused the growthamong non communists of an

idea that there were certain"reasonable" communist parties to whom the West couldmake concessions So today.Khrushchev it presentingthe discussion a* one betweenpeace advocacy on his partand nuclear war on the partof the Chinese communists

THE WORKER’S editorial in

the supplement strikes this

note. It says that we were“on the brink of nuclear dev-astation" laat October, whichia a common communistclaim. It then goes on to quotecertain indiscreet conserva-tives to the alleged effect thatnuclear war may not prove so

Injurious. To which it adds:"Such views are no less dan-

gerous when put forward byadherents of socialism who un-derestimate the dangers fromnuclear war to the future ofmankind and socialism ”

What we do see emergingout of this debate is the begin-nings of a "New Stalin" cult.

Such is to be witnessed Inthe over-eagerness with whichThe Worker championsKhrushchev’s cause, in the al-most bated breath with whichItalian communist PalmiroTogllalti accuses the Chineseof having dared to criticize"Comrade Khrushchev," andin the unanimity with whichIhc communist parties of theworld endorse Khrushchev'sview* over those of the Alban-ian and Chinese Reds.

IT DOES NOT go to Ihelength of this same TogliattiIn IMB, for inatance, when heexclaimed: "With Stalin’*name on our lips, all victorieswill be oura." That cannot bedone now becauae of the In-tenalve campaign against "thepersonality cult." but it lathere In the making.

"hat does Ihe developmentid this new cull foreteir* One

o! the great advantages that

Khrushchev has it that he is

First Secretary of the "Partyof Lenin " II is Ihe control oIthis party and of the Interna-

tional conspiratorial apparatusthat goes with It that enabledStalin to dispose first of Trotsky and then of Bukharin andZinovlev

Hut this party must alwaysachieve everexpanding communist rule, for ihe promise ofMarx and Lcmn was "worldsocialism "

TIILS CONSIDERATION is

reinforced by The Worker it

self when II quotes the 81

Party Statement of 1960 Thecoexistence of states with different social systems is a formof class struggle between so-

cialism and capitalism"

TheDecember World Marxist lieview pomtiy tells that

Cuba's example "highlightsthe fact that the socialist worldsystem and the peoples' liberalion movement are assertingtheir superiority over theforces of imperialism not only-on the overall glohal scale but

on every continent, in everyarea of the world."

We can therefore look for-ward to Red commotions allover the world designed lo

spread the area under com

munist rule.

The "Party of Lenin" mustalso proceed lo ihe achieve-ment of the communiat so-

ciety. Khrushchev has anothergreat asset here, in havingpinpointed the coming of thatperfect aociely by 1980. Theprediction has now been ex-tended to cover all "the soclaliat countries," so that fromEast Germany and Red Po-land eastward all will beblended together toward thatend.

Intentionsfor MarchThe Holy Father’s gen-

eral intention for March is:Renewal of (be Church

through the self reform ofeach individual.

The mixtion intention

suggested for the Apostle-ship of Prayer by the Popel«:

Native apostles in Viet-nam.

The QuestionBox

What About Eve

And Evolution?Rev. Leo Ferity, S.T.D., end Rev. Robert Hunt, S.T.D., ot

Immaculate Conception Seminary. Darlington, Ramsey, N.ere edtlort ot The Question Sox. Questions may be addressedto them there for ensuert in this column, or to Question BoxEditor, 7he Advocate, 31 Clinton St., Seuark 2, S. I.

Q. Your receat series on evo-

lution raised this problem Inmy mind: what about the ori-gin of the body of Eve, thefirst woman? Where doesthis fit in an evolutionist hy-pothesis? And what about theBible story that Eve came

from the rib of Adam?A. Let's start with the

Bible Story In the book ofGenesis, c 2, vv. 18-25. God

judge* that it is not good forman to be alone Since Adamdoes not find a suitable help-mate among the animalswhich God created for him.God gives him a real compan-ion To do this, He puts Adaminto a deep sleep, takes a rtb(Hebrew "sell," meaning rib.side, or part of the side), putsIhe flesh back again, andmakes the body of the first

snmin from Ihe rib

Adam recognizes in thewoman bone of my bon--,flesh of my flesh ." (hat Is.pertaining to the same sloe*I’ting a popular etymology,the sacred author adds a re-

flection that indicates the idcnlilv of nature between man

and woman, the mutual coor-

dination of the sexes, the In-dissolubility of matrimonyThu derivation of woman

from msn Is recalled by StPaul in the New Testament(1 Corinthians tl, 8-9)

The problem here, of course,

u to distinguish (be divinelyattested truth contained in thisdescription from the literary-device and ornament user! in

teaching this truth

AT THE PRESENT time.

Catholic theologians and Seruvture seholari are in agreementthat the use of Adam's rib in

the formation of the first wom-

an need not be interpreted lit

erally Beyond this, the exact

import of the verse* in ques-tion is not the subject of uni-

versal agreement

t'ntll very recent times all

readily admitted that the bodyof the first woman was form-

ed by God In some way or an

other frnm the body of the firstman although not prectse;>from his rib Thu positionseemed to be the only one tenable in light of the response offbe Pontifical Biblical Commission in 1909 and the allo-rution of Pope Pius XII to the

Pontifical Academy of Scicnees in !M1 And the dertv a

tion of the body of Eve in

some wa> from Adam still

seems well founded, especiallyin consideration of a rather

strong theological tradition in

tin- pastAt present, however, some

theologians and scripture exe

grtra would totally abandon

the physical ortgtn of Eve

from Adam, and sec tn the

Genesis narration solely the

revelation that Eve possessedthe same nature as Adam, herexemplar—and nothing more

HOW ROES EVE FIT ntothe evolutionist hypothesis ’This depends on which opinion

is chosen concerning the nor nof theology on the origin ofEve.

If Eve derives in someway from Adam, a consistentevolutionist hypothesis be-come* quite difficult to sus-

tain, since it would not extendto Eve's body, except by a

violent stretch of the scientifici m - gin >t lion

If, however, as some con-

temporary scholar* would **y,the origin of the body of thelust woman is not touched byany norm of faith or thcologv.then this problem is subordi-nated to and dependent uponthe more general problem ofthe origin of the body of thefirst man Hence, it would bea question enjoying the same

freedom which the Church al-lows in (he general question oft-v- manner in which Adam s

body took its origin —a tree

dom described by Pope PiusXll in the part of HumaniGeneris which we quoted in

thr Feb 14 Question Box

<J. When iv a Catholic ro

longer bound hy the law of

fast, at 59 or 60?

A A Catholic is bound bythe law of fast up to the com-

pletion of his 59th year of ageThis takes place, of course, on

his 59th birthday, and not, as

some believe, on his 60th.

Q. On a fast day meatIs permitted once and at theprincipal meal. What then is

toe difference between a lastday and a day of fast and par-tial abstinence'

A There is absolutely no

difference for per -on* who are

bound by the law of fasting,that is. for Catholics who havecompletes! their Zlst year ofage and have not yet beguntheir 60th year

However there is a great andfference for those who are net

bound by the law of fast but

only by the law of abstinence,that u for Catholics betweenthe ages of 7 and 21 and thosewho have celebrated their 59th

birthday. On a simple Is st

day these [versons may eatwhat they want and as muchas they wan! always withintbe hounds of Christian mod-eration, of course But on a

day of fast and partial absti-nence these same personsmay base meat only once and

at the principal meal

<i t» it permissible for one

bound by the law of fast lo

base meat at iunch instead o(at Ihe principal meal?

A No it is not The law

clearly indicates that m.-atmay be taken only at the prin-cipal meal

For VocationsMembers of the Aposto

iate for Vocations can gaina plenary indulgence under

the ordinary conditions on

The Ember Day*. March8 and 9

Once a week for recitingdaily, with piety, any pray-er for vocations approvedby the ecclesiastical au

thorny.A partial indulgence of

300 days may he gained foreach act of chanty or pietyperformed for the intentionof fostering vocations tothe priesthood

Our Parish

8 THE ADVOCATE March 7, 1963

TkeAiliiH'aleOfficial Publication of the

Archdiocese of Newark and ofthe Diocese of Paterson

Most Rev Thomas A.Boland. STD. Archbishop ofNewark

Published eswkly by TX« Adverat*rv.M.>*uu VecjwsOwß. Mm r„.TVoim s Roland. STD. President;Hi Re> Mur Junes X Huxhes. PA.JC D VC. V« Ptm RLMs«t James r Looney. pa„ a.m..secretary; Hi Rev Ma*r. Caesar M.RtoaJdl sad HL Re. Msrr Paul r-»r--pe». PA. Troasee. J 1 cnam R,Newark X. X. J SlArteS SeJat

Member <M ihe Catholic I-rear Amo-ctEikoa End IS# la km si

Catholic praaa. Subscriber toXC W l News Service and llatifiousXcwa Service

Editorial Board Mm Rev Martiaw Stanton. ST D . Ph D ; Mm Be,Joha J Itouaberty. S.T to. SSD ; RlRe Mur Wuliam C. Hetmbora:S' £*' °?T r *» »• **•*- S.T.D i{' *•> Ma»r Hurt, j rnutmmosu.* **?>, £*'. “Hr Thomas M.Reardon. LLB. Very Rev. Mart Wil-liam X INelil. MLS, Rev. WUllam JDully. STL. Rr, James W. 0-NeUIRe, William Keller. AM. IT LlRe, Prancis J llourMoo. ST L

Eleven, e Director Rl Rev. MirJohn J KUey.

Paterson Repreeenlauve: Rev.Francis J Rndlmer

Managing Editor Joseph R Thomas.■Subscription Price M.SO yearly.Second nasi point, paid at Newark,

andrr act ol Mar 3. Iris

Letters to the Editor„a7 , .

»• mm md address of tbs writer must be Included be * tetterblended for publication, but they will be withheld if requested.

Suggests Bible

For Hospitals

Mrs. A. Klimowicz,Newark.

Editor:Why not a Bible at every

bedside in every hospital?This would be a wonderful

project for school children,clubs or other groups to workon.

With God's help, thiscould be the beginning of put-ting a Bible at every bedside.

Plenty of Room

For Criticism

Edna M. LaVecka,West Orange.

Congratulations to Paul

Thuring on his fine letter "Si-lence Not Always Blessed.”

You bet silence is not al-

ways blessed, or golden as thecommon phrase goes. It can

be just plain yellow where thecauses of justice and truthare concerned.

To remain silent in the faceof such staggering abuses as

racial inequalities, discrimina-

tory measures in federalaid to education, the smut traf-fic, unfair rental controls andteenage liquor laws can hardlybe termed discretion or pru-dence.

This is downright hu-man respect, unless it be

apathy, cowardice, laziness or

timidity.Let’s call a spade a spade!

And let's speak up es-

peeially letters to our news-papers, legislators and thosein public office, expresing our

righteous indignation over biaslegislation and disreputablepractices.

Public opinion, if sufficientlyaroused, can act as a mightyforce to crush the evil tideof materialism and immoral-ity that is sweeping over ournation today.

Wants No Part

Of New Crusade

Edward L. Allaire III,Elizabeth.

Editor:The editorial "The Moham-

medan Menace” of Eeb. 21 isin my opinion not worthy ofThe Advocate,

The actions of the Sudanese

government are certainly tobe condemned, but the entireIslamic world should not beblamed for the actions of one

country. Wc Catholics don'twant to be blamed for thecustoms once practiced inSpain. .

Pope John recently thankedKing Hussein of Jordan for his

protection of our Palestineholy places. The last home ofthe Blessed Mother is in Tur-key. a Moslem country ...

Many of the Eastern Rite pa-triarchs reside in Moslemstates, and no harm hascome to these churchmen nor

will it if they remember to

support the just aspirations of

their people ...All people cannot be mark-

ed at evil because of the ac-tions of a few.

It seema that with all thetrouble In the world today,we can do without declaringanew cruaade.

Would Dissolve

United Nations

John Hrach.Newark.

Editor:

There is a vein runningthrough the body that makes

up the UN that wriggles likea snake.

No organization can

be truly united with com-

munism unless it gives upGod.

How can there be peace-ful coexistence when the Com-munist Manifesto advocatesthe forceful overthrow of allother existing socisl condi-

tions?If we accept their philosophy

of peaceful coexistence with-out demanding that they relin-

quish their manifesto, we ad-vocate the overthrow of our

own society.In view of the UN’s audacity

in supporting the Castro move-ment from American shores.1 propose its dissolution andthe formation of a World Al-

liance of Free Nations in itsplace.

Program to ImplementAnti-Bias Suggestions

By MSGR. GEORGE G. HIGGINS

Director, Socisl Actiom Dept., \CITC

(f« tuo recent columns I rtfrrreJ to the Ssliomsi Con-ference on Religion jnJ Rste sni rmpbuheJ ibsl it uonli

prott to bsit hern much sio shout nothing umltit iti re-

«ommrnjstion i srs implemented ss loom si pom hit si tbslout level. Tbit ueeh, lor tbots uho uouli hit to imitistr s

program iu ibrtr on n communitisi, I preirnl tbr iuhitan,e

of s report by the temporary follou-up lommilter of the con-

ference.)

• Set up a committee ofthe top religious leadership of

the community. A first and

essential step is enlisting the

support of the president of the

local council of Churches, the

president of the Synagogue

and the Catholic Bishop or

Archbishop (Smaller com-

munities will have to adjustto their local circumstances )

Committee chairmanshipshould be drawn from officialnon-staff religious leadershipWhatever approaches are

necessary should be made to

reach these persons for their

cooperation before other stepsare taken.

Through personal or tele-

phone contact approach shouldthen be made to all the localequivalents of the churchesand organizations involved in

the National Conference to se-

cure commitment and involve-ment from the top leadershipof each

More will be accomplishedthrough an approach to topleadership than through the

It U extremely important thatfrom the beginning you ob-

serve the following

I. INCLUDE representationfrom as many of the A spon-

soring groups as are found inyour community

2 Include m a consultativecapacity organizations with

knowledge, experience andskill in racial matters, e g .Urban league, NAACP,' localand regional organizations,municipal, state and federalagencies in your communities

3. Relate directly to existing

agencies carrying on pro-

gram: eg . mayor’s commis-

sions.4. Insure that the group

from the beginning is inter-racial (this is not guaranteed

by the structure of the majorreligious groups) and that re-

sponsible Negro leadership beinvolved.

5. Include representation of

other ethnic groups, eg,Puerto Ricans. Cubans, Orien-tals. Indians, etc.

• Plan a meeting or seriesof meetings in which repre-sentatives can be given a re-

port of the conference, andcan look frankly at the localsituation, its needs, and the

potentials for change. Localcircumstances dictate the

ways by which this must pro-

ceed. and whether the meet-

ings should be local, regional,or statewide in character Insome communities, there are

already existing channel* of

cooperation, governmental or

voluntary• Make use of existing re-

sources of personnel In largercommunities, there are staffs

working on behalf ot the or-

ganizations which participatedin the conference. Such staffresources might be put at theservice of the local commit

tee. particularly in view ofgrowing inter religious co-

operation.• Select a local ageoda

whieh Is specific snd important This could include non

discriminatory principleswhich affect the religious Inslitutions of the communitythemselves i*.g. hospital* andagency hiring and intake prat

licet); joint reaction to ten-sion caused by racial inci-dents. and support of indivi-duals Involved in crises as wellas community problems, etc.

On issues in which programis already being undertaken nygovernmental and unofficialgroups (eg. housing) action

by the religious leadershipshould be carefully co-

ordinated with community ef-forts. At an early date, there-fore. local communities shouldbecome intimately related toand supportive of responsibleexisting programs

• Make use of the mass

media, e g., by panel reportson the conference and com

munity follow-up. The Na-tional Conference had externsive coverage in the press, andon radio-television. Stones on

local follow-up can be linkedto ones of activities in othercommunities. Contact the con-ference secretariat for infor-mation on available kinescopesand other matenals

• Please send accurate andfull reports of your plans, pro-grams. and actions to the in-terim conference executivesecretary, the Rev. Dr. GalenWeaver, 289 Park Ave. South.New York. 10. N.Y.; and theRev. Arthur E. Walmslry,2*l Park Ave. South. NewYork 10. NY.

• For assistance in develop-ing the follow-up work of theconference, anew conferencesteering committee is in theprocess of formation. In themeantime, questions about thefollow-up may be addressed to

the Rev. Dr. Galen Weaver.

Mass Calendar

Starr* U - halt; Scroad Suatarel Loot IU Claa. VioM. Na CLIWra u a Cr. part tl Laal

Marsh U - MaMo ao.r2nd Sunday el Lral. Jrd (lua VMM.No Cl. 2nd Coll. C <P>. Pro*, at Uw.

Monk U Toaadir Tuoodov allot

2nd Sunday at loot. Jrd llwi Viola*.

No Cl. 2nd Cell SI. Cn-cary !. Plot,

ot loot.March U Wtdnondoy Wodnoadar

Utrr 2nd Suoday o< tool Jrd ClaoaVlelot No Cl. 2nd CoU. C IP). Pro! atlost

March M Tkuradajr Thuraday alt ortad Sunday nt told Jrd Claw. VMM.

Na Cl. Prof, ot loat.

March IS - rndoy. Friday alloy 2nd

Sunday at lout. Jrd CUaa. VMM. NaCL 2nd Call. C <P> Prat at Ion!

Marx* M - Saturday Saturday allot

2nd Suoday ot loaf. Jrd Clow. VMMNa Cl Prat, at load.

March 17 Sunday Third Sunday atLon*. lat Claaa. Vudot No Cl. ThoroM o Cr. Prof, ot lout

Key: Cl. Ctartai Cr. Crordi C (torn

Um VoUvo Mato ot Holy Choal N

Archdrotoao ot Non ark. P Ihoroao at

Patoraoo. CoU. CoUoct. Prof. Prolaro.

STRANGE BUT TRUE

Little-Known Facts For CatholicsBy M. J. MURRAY IWNIH •*»*

Forty Hours

NewarkMarch IS. I*ol

IUOUI fwnSoy <1 Lon*Ou Logy of Iho Rotors. 171 EmiMlft.. Non ark

* Vtacooi'c. Hit Art. C,. RaroaiwSocrog Ho oil, TANARUS»Hroog ft . lifoomllolgA&s .s™i&iMkH~'* u *' - *

igTjSKtf*.fcffJGS!M *•» York Ava..

March 17. I SCIThlrg longer of Loot

C*M ,U» Wag. Mi Columbia Av«„

Our Lady of Cwrtachowa. i*> ftuaoaft., Jereoy Clly

’sorlirtMld ** *

Sam. HoapHal. Teaneck

PatersonMarch It, IHI

ft.Oar 1-agy of Compel. 7» Murray Avo.,

***"""March 17, IMI

TMnTSvngav a* Lon*

: r. ..... .

God Love You

A Saint Has

No Spare TimeBy BISHOP FULTON J. SHEEN

A Russian Orthodox priestwas asked how, in a com-munist government, seminar-ians were recruited for thepriesthood. He answered thata man never enters the semi-nary without a complete andtotal renouncement. One dayhe walks out of his home with-out telling a soul and without•tying goodbye.

He walks to the seminary,often a distance of 100 miles;there he assumes anew name,so that he cannot be traced.Not even the seminary offi-cials know his family name.

We asked a Bishop of Borneoabout the spiritual live* of hisprimitive people. He told us

that they quickly reached aneminent degree of sanctity, be-cause when they entered theChurch they put a period aftertheir old Uvea rather than a

comma.The old ways of living were

completely broken off. leavingmore room for the laird

WHAT IS IT that makes a

saint? It is always havingsomething to <lo for Christ anilthe Church, something to giveup for the spread ot Hts Cospel perhaps a neighbor to

convert, someone sick to visit,some sinner to bring back tothe Sacraments A saint never

has time on his handsCatholics of the U S should

n't be just "Sunday Catholics.”but "Take up your Cross dailyand follow Mr Catholics "

Give

yourself a mission.

Why not stgrt with this idea?

Every morning, resolve to

deny yourself during the daysome little luxury worth adime. Make a like sacrifice

daily; do it for the poor inAsia ... or Africa

... or

Oceania. At the end of themonth, send the $3 to the HolyFather.

GOD I.OV'E YOU to D.T. for$10: "In answer for a favorreceived." To J.R.W. for $6 S3:

"This represents savings fromeating some meals in a cafe-teria instead of a good restau-

rant. on s recent business

trip" To P.A.D. for $5:"Please accept this moneywhich was given to me by my

recently ordained cousin. The

money was a gift to him; he

gave it to me; I give it to

you."Are you on our Mission

mailing list? Mission, youknow, is the magazine containml articles, anecdotes, car-

toon* sod pictures which ispublished every two monthsby the Society for the Propa-gation of the Faith.

Cut out this column, pinyour sacrifice to it and addressit to Bishop Fulton J. Sheen,Nstnnal Director, Society forthe Propagation of the Faith,M 6 Fifth Ave . New York, or

Bishop Harim W Stanton. 31

Mulberry St.. Newark, or

Msrr William F Louis, 2*

DeGraise St . Paterson

The In-Law Problem:

Never Easy to SolveBy REV. JOHN L. THOMAS, S.J.

Auittent Profettor of Sociology, St. Louis UniversityShouldn't parents treat all their married children equally? My husband’s folks

have never really accepted me and seem to go out of their way to show it. They’lldo everything for their married daughters and their families, but our family is oftenleft out. Our children receive the cheapest presents, and there is never an offer tohelp in sickness or need. My husband always has some excuse for their actions. Don’t

you think a husband should stand up for his wife and children?None of your questions has

a simple answer. Working outsuccessful in-law relationshipsoften requires more prudence,patience, and understandingthan many people possess.

Although it should be ob-vious that marriage requiresa change in family relation-ships. a surprising number otpeople fail to understand this.

1 THINK everyone acceptsyour general principle thatparents should treat all theirmarried children equally, butthere may be many consciousor unconscious reasons whythis principle ia not easily ap-

plied. You state that his folkshave never accepted you. Thismay or may not be true—we

can easily be mistaken in our

judgments concerning whatothers think of us—and thecause may be found in you or

in them.They may not have wanted

their son to marry you—or to

marry at all! You may find it

difficult to relate satisfactorilyto older people—your parent*or his.

At any rale, you seem

to have sound reasons tor be

lieving that they are not treat-ing you and your family withthe same consideration theyshow to their other children.

What can you do about it?The first point to remember isthat regardless of the reasons

involved, we cannot makepeople like us, and wc cannot

demand that they like us, even

if wc happen to be in-laws. Wehave a right to Christian char-ity. and justice demands thatparents treat all their childrenwith reasonable equality, but

affection and friendship must

be won rather than claimed as

a right

A GREAT DEAL of inlawtension, jealousy, ami ill feel-ing stems from the mistakenassumption that in laws oughtto “like" each other Experience shows that our affection,friendship, likes and dislikesare not that easily manipulat-ed W> are bound by the

norms of universal Christiancharity and justice, but our

natural inctinaUon to likesome people more than others—often we don't know why—isa different matter

Much resentment over un

equal treatment in familieswould never arise if the indi-viduals who feel they havebeen treated unequally wouldcarefully examine what realclaims they have to differenttreatment.

Wc are bound to feel hurtwhen we are not "accepted,"and at times serious failuresof chanty may boinvolved, but oilen we demandfrom others as a right what is

essentially a gift.

YOU ASK whether a hus-band shouldn't stand up forhis wife and children. What ishe to do? Denounce his rela-tives because they don't likeyou'.'

If there is real injustice or

lack of chanty, he shouldvindicate your rights, but hecan't order them to like youand should not he asked tobreak oft all relations withthem because they don't Yourhappiness will be found pri-manly in your own family cir-cle Form new fnendships as

a unit, and you will have lesstime and need to be disturbed

i-bout the treatment of your in-

laws

March 7, 1963 THE ADVOCATE 9

H /s

MOREbecause it’s

FULL RATE-NO WAITYour savings at The Howard start earningdividends immiiiatmly at the full rate of

A YEARV/oCURRENT QUARTERLY

DIVIDEND

on oil balances of $lO. to $25,000. from day ofdepoul. compounded and credited 4 ft met a rearMarch I, June I, September I, December I.

OVER $4,720,000LARGEST QUARTERLY DIVIDEND EVER PAID TO

SAVINGS ACCOUNT DEPOSITORS IN NEW JERSEYwo* credited to Howard depositor* for the quarterly period

ending February 28, 1963

'TkeHOWARD SAVINGS

institutionThe Lergett Saving* Sank in New Jersey Established 1557

At»el* In excet* of $535,000,000.

■•Vi?

Your Howard passbook can be usedat any Howard office.

MAIN OFFICE i 76S IXOAD ST.. NEWARK I.N.A

OTHER OFFICES IN NEWARK

lleomfield Ave. at Qifton Ave, South Orange Ave. at Sandford Ave,

Springfield Ave. at Bergen St. Plane St. at Raymond Blvd.

IN SOUTH ORANOE: South Orange Ave. near Lackawanna Station

Coll At Any Howard Office or

FILL OUT AND SEND THIS COUPON,

TO OPEN YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT |

THE HOWARD SAVINGS INSTITUTIONF. O. SOX 833, NEWARK 1, N. J.

' • . x* "

/ - V •I enclose $ Please open a sovings'occounl and tend the passbook to me.

(To Open Your Accounti Make out your check or money order to The Howord Saving*Institution. For a Trust Account, write on the bock of check "In trust for" and the fullname of your beneficiary. For a Joint Account, write “Jointly with" and the name

of the other person to share the account.)

IN NORTH CALOWELIi 27 Bloomfield Avo. near Mountain Ava.

*

Insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporellen

. riil-

sf>

Name

Address

City.Enclose with.

Zone Stale.

i or money order

U.S. News Roundup

Urban Renewal Official Denies

POAU's Favoritism ChargesWASHINGTON <NC)-A fed-

eral official saya a group ac-

tive in disputes over allegedChurch-State issues is guiltyof unwarranted charges aboutCatholic involvement in ur-ban renewal.

Urban Renewal Commission-er William L. Slayton identi-fied the group as Protestantsand Other Americans Unitedfor Separation of Church andState.

IN A LETTER to Glenn L.

Archer, executive director ofPOAU, Slayton said the or-

ganization has made chargesof special treatment for Cath-olic churches and schools inits monthly magazine,"Church and State.” and ina pamphlet, "Urban Take-Over."

Expressing "concern" overthese accusations, Slayton says

they are "unwarranted on thebasis of ascertainable facts"and may lead to misunder-standing of federally assistedrenewal efforts.

Slayton said "particularlydisturbing" arc POAU chargesthat "through urban renewalRoman Catholic churches ob-tain land at much less thanother developers and less thanits real value: the urban re-

newal program benefits theRoman Catholic Church atthe expense of other religious

and lay groups: and RomanCatholic churches receivepreferential treatment fromurban renewal officials andagencies."

“We have never discrimi-nated against any group infavor of any other group,and. to the best of our knowl-edge. neither have local agen-cies pursuing urban renewalobjectives," commissionerSlayton said.

Slayton noted that manyschools and churches havebenefited from urban renewalactivities in their cities. Hisletter has been distributedacross the country to localpublic agencies engaged in ui-ban renewal to answer inquir-ies about POAU charges.

Wall TumblesATLANTA (NC) A wood

and steel barricade erected bythe city to separate Negro andwhite homeowners in thesouthwest district was torndown within an hour after a

state judge ruled that it wasillegal

Superior Court Judge GeorgeWhitman ruled that the bar-ricade denied rights “createdor protected by the federalConstitution."

He said the purpose of thebarricade was "to establish a

racial buffer barrier or zonewith the view of stabilizing or

effecting stability for race

ownership and occupancyand preventing or attemptingto prevent property ownershipand occupancy of said areas

by members of the Negrorace."

Abortion HillTOPF.KA. Kan (NC) - A

bill to legalize further abor-tions in Kansas was in-

troduced recently tn the stateSenate.

Present Kansas law holds

such an operation can be per-formed only to aavd amother's life.

The bill provides for "Justifi-able" abortions in cases wherethe physician believes "con-tinuance of pregnancy wouldgravely impair the physical or

mental health of the motheror that the child would b«born with grave physical or

mental defects or in cases ofrape or incest.”

Controls for FilmsSALEM. Ore. (RNS) - The

Oregon Senate passed unani-

mously and sent to the Houseof Representatives a bill toplace motion pictures underthe state law against obsceni-ty.

In 1961, the legislaturepassed an anti-obscenity law,but tn a case involving a Port-land movie theater and foreignfilm the State Supreme Courtruled that the law does not

apply in the case of motionpictures.

• *

Sunday lMir AppealBROOKLYN (RNS) - The

American Jewish Congress hassaid it will appeal the conviction here of an Orthodox Jew-ish grocer for selling food inviolation of New York State'slaw which regulates Sundayclosing.

The Congress said it wouldgo to the U. S. Supreme Courtif necessary to appeal thecase.

The grocer is Charles Pam.who said he closed hit store

from Friday evening to Sunday morning in observance ofthe Jewrith Sabbath. He waaconvicted under a section ofthe New York Penal Lawwhich limits the Sunday saleof "cooked and preparedfoods" to the hours before 10

a m and between 4pm and’M pm on Sundays.

ST. JAMES CONVENT - Above is the architect's sketch of the new convent for St. Jamesparish, Newark, Msgr. Thomas M. Reardon, pastor. It will accommodate 12 Sisters. Atpresent, work is in progress on the new school and auditorium-gymasium for the pa-

rish. The architect is Anthony J. DePace of New York.

Pope’s Letter on Relief Appeali\ CVt'C. Newt S triu /

hollowing it the text ol * later from Pope John XXIIIto the US. Biibopt in connection with the 17 th jnnuel Bitbopt’Relief I nnJ.

it is natural that in writtn*to you at the beginning of theyear of Our lx>rd 1963. we

should make special referenceto the ecumenical council,which you attended in frater-

Catholic Relief Services of theNational Catholic Welfare Con-ference, and through assistance from the Common Fatherwhich was made possiblelargely by the generosity of

the American peopleYour hrothers in the hierar-

chy from other lands, especial-ly from mission countries

and from South America, willalso have told you of the hard-

ships anl privations which are

still the lot of so many mem-ber* of the human family

They will have explained to

you that, until surh Urn* as

their own individual nationsw*ll have achieved a certainmeasure of development and

progress in every field, thevare obliged to look with hopeto the Holy See and lo the con

tinued generosity of the Cath-ilics of the United State* fortie mainttnance and further-cnce of Hieir various projectsof teal and chanty

WE FI EL SURE, thereforethat your appeal this year foryour faithful flocks will b«

made in a renewed personalcoovieUo:i that the sacrifices

of the past were made tn a

rause that ts worthy and de-

serving end stiU vital, and we

nal commun-

ion with theBishops ofthe entireworld. andIn which youtook partwith suchfervor and

surh a clear

and univer-

sal vision ofthe Churcli'a problems Themanner of your participationip the council was a source of

joy for the heart of the Com-mon Father.

Your presence at the coun-cil, veneiahie brother*, gave

us the i'VporUmity to expressonce again our commendation

of the work ol merciful rebelwhich you and your pncsUand people continue to per-form.

I.N YOUR meetings withBishop* from different coun-tries. you wtU have witnessedcordial manifestations of grat-itude for the beneficence theyreceived through your own

ere confident that the responseof your beloved clergy and

laity will continue to be inkeeping with your country'*r.oble tradition and provide yetanother eloquent token of

gratitude to Divine Providencefor the multiple bleiaings andbenefits received.

As a pledge of further graceand favors from on high, and

a* a mark of sincere thankful-ness for the valuable supportso constantly afforded us in

our apostoiate of chanty, we

cordially impart to you, vener-

able brothers, and to the ciergy. religious and faithful underyour care our special apostol-ic benediction

Methodists, Anglicans Study

Unity Movement in BritainLONDON (NC) Represen-

tatives of the Church of Eng-land and the Methodist Churchin Britain have proposed a

union which would begin withordination of Methodist min-

isters by Anglican Bishops andsimilar services tn which An-

glicans would be ordained byMethodists.

The plan, the result of seven

years of negotiations, providesfar full communion of the two

denominations by 1963 Com-

pleie union would presumablytake many years

TIIE PROPOSAL calls forthe consecration of certain

Methodist ministers as Bi»h-

rps Methodists m Britaintraditionally have no episcopaloffice —and the subsequentordination by Bishops of allministers The first stag* callsfor the mutually ordained cler-

gy to celebrate the Euchanftand to dtstrtbuta Holy Com-munion to congregations ofboth bodies.

The plan was disclosed In a

book entitled "ConversationsBetween the Church of Eng-land and the MethodistChurch." published here Feb.23

The second stage envisagesdisestablishment of the An-glican Church as the statechurch, and thus freedom

from control by ParliamentThe Church of England claimsa membership of 2 9 million

The Methodist Church,which has about 723.000 Brit-ish members, was begun byJohn and Charles Wesley as a

movement within the AnglicanChurch It became a separatebody before the end of tbe ltth

centuryTbe merger proposals here

are independent of those beingsuggested by U. S Protestant

group*

Sisters AppealRoad Derision

WASHINGTON (NC) -

A community of Catholic Sis-ters in San Antonio. Tex , hascarried to the US SupremeCourt it* efforts to preventconstruction of a highway on

public land adjoining itsproperty

The appeal was filed withthe high court by counsel forth* Congregation of Sisters of

Charity y the Incarnate Word.The Sisters are seeking to

prevent the City of SanAntonio from conveying to the

state part of RrackraridgePark for us* as an express-way. The park adjoins 250acres owned by the Sisters andused as the site of IncarnateWord College, a secondaryschool, a convent ami otherstructures.

Exiled Bishop Offers

Mass for RefugeesDALLAS (NC) Some 700

Cuban refugees attended a

Pontifical Mass offered in Sacred Heart Cathedral here by-exiled Auxiliary BishopEduardo Boza Masvidal ofHavana.

The Bishop now lives inCaracas, Venezuela.

Random HouseW ins Award

CHICAGO ( RNS) - Random House. Inc . has beennamed to receive the 19S2

Thomas More AssociationMedal for publishing in bookform Robert Bolt's play. "A

Man for AH Seasons." cur-

rently a hit on Broadway inNew York

The award was announcedhere by Dan Herr, presidentof the association, which pro-motes Catholic reading It willbe presented here at the as

soclatmn's 21th anniversarycelebration

"A Man for All Seasons’'concerns St Thomas More forwhom the award is named Inthe citation tbc associationquoted from a review of theplay in The Critic" by Bubop John J Wright.

Day of RecollectionUPPKR MONTCLAIR _

Rev James A Pindar of SetonHall University will conduct a

day of recollection for the La-cordatre Parents' Guild March14 from 10 a m to t 45 p m

Family Life

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WIDOWS. WIOOWIXS“OneParrel rsmlliax" bams forma*

c*u he srasa

Aid 20,000Cuba Exiles

WASHINGTON, D.C. (RNS)Catholic Relief Services,

NCWC, resettled 20,000 Cubsn

refugees In 1902 approxi-

mately twice as many as inthe previous year.

James J. Norris, assistantto the executive director ofthe Catholic agency, said par-ish sponsorship of resettle-ment was being expanded. Atthe same time, a governmentofficial noted the reset-tlement rate would have to bedoubled from 500 to 1,000 perweek.

Catholic Relict Service's Mi-ami office reported spending$45,000 last year in specialtypes of aid to. Cuban exiles.

10 THE ADVOCATE March 7, 198S

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Soviet Editor Cites

Pope’s Peace PleaROME (NC) - The pence

appeal issued during the Cu-ban crisis by Pope John "hada deep Impact on the Russian

people,” the editor of the Mos-cow dally Izvcstia and son-in-law of Soviet Premier NikitaKhrushchev said here.

Alexei Adzhubci also told a

press conference organized bythe Italy-USSR Society that“we welcome the release of... (Archbishop) Josyf Slipyifrom a Russian prison If thishelps to relieve tensions in theworld.”

The Ukrainian Rite Ordi-nary of Lviv was released

early in February after 18

years of detention in the So-viet Union.

ONE JOURNALIST asked."Do you consider an under-

standing possible between theHoly See and an atheisticstete such as the Soviet Un-ion?”

Adzhubei prefaced his replywith the remark that coexist-ence concerns nations, not

ideas—"even though we pro-claim that ideological contro-versies must not be solved by

war." Then he said:“It would be a mistake to

conceive the problem of rela-tions with the Catholic Churchas exclusively ideological. ThoVatican Is a state with its own

political organization and we

must take this into account. Ithas a great influence over

many countries."

STATING THAT PopeJohn is not only a religiousleader but also a head of

state, the 38-year-old editorsaid that it was In the lattercapacity that the Pope spokelast fall when he urged thesolution of international con-

troversies through peacefulmeans.

The Pope's appeal for a

peaceful solution promptedKhrushchev to send him his

good wishes on his 81st birth-

day in November, said Ad-zhubei.

It was here that h* addl'dthat the papal plea had had"a deep impact" on Soviet

public opinionAdzhubei and his wife visit-

ed St. Peter's Basilica the fol-

lowing day.

Prelate Paints Dark PictureOn the State of Modern Art

MILAN, Italy (NC) Giovanni Cardinal Montini hastaken a swipe at unintelligible modern art and its still lessintelligible critics, and urged artists who put their work at

the service of the Church to make it understandable so that

people "may be stirred spiritually."HE SAID: "Be in genuine communion with Christian

spirituality and worship, and then do as you please.The Archbishop of Milan was addressing delegates of the

Catholic Association of Italian Artists.He asserted that artists "seem to have abandoned the

idea of producing works which are intelligible."Critics in turn "use language that requires a special

knowlege in order to understand the meaning "

He continued: "We, the audience, make pathetic effortsto understand at least something. We believed that the kingdom of art was beatitude, whereas today it is pain and con-

fusion.‘The artistic language prevailing in our age is m fact

the language of irrational and impenetrable abstraction with-out sense. Indeed, the less the sense the greater the effortsto make it prevail, and the greater is the desire and need to

bewilder and hold the wonder of an audience which does not

understand what it is admiring "

Career Dav

At Seton HallSOUTH ORANGE - The

Seton Hall unit of Alpha Kap-pa Psi, national professionalbusiness fraternity, will pre-sent itp sixth annual career

day March U at McLaughlinLibrary on the universitycampus.

Hayden Jones of the Bendix

Corp. and Thomas Ford. New-ark attorney, will address the

group, after which representa-tives from over 30 prominentfirms wall conduct symposi-ums.

At their conclusion, a

mock Interview will be held,conducted by Kenneth Hick-man of Arthur Anderson andCos.

A luncheon sponsored bySeton Hall University's Schoolof Business Administrationwill conclude the activities forthe day.

New IndulgeneeVATICAN CITY (NC) -

Pope John has granted in-

dulgences for recitation, un-

der the usual conditions, ofthe invocation:

“O Mary, Mother and

Queen of Christian families,pray for us.”

A partial indulgence of300 days can be gained byreciting the invocation witha contrite heaft- A plenaryindulgence can be gainedonce a month by recitingthe invocation daily lor a

month, and fulfilling theusual conditions: Con-fession, Communion and

prayers for the intentionsof the Pope.

Vatican City News

Pope Urges Lenten PenanceVATICAN CITY (NC) -

Pope John began Lent witha radio appeal to Catholics topray and do penance duringthe season for the success oftho ecumenical council whichreconvenes in September.

The Pontiff’s Ash Wednes-day address also called onCatholics to practice austerity,which he called the mark of asincere Christian and the wayto bring justice into the homeand society.

EARLIER IN the day theTope h»d knelt and placedashes on his forehead. At hisregular Wednesday audiencehe told the thousands of peopleattending that the ashes were

a reminder of the certainty ofdeath, which must come "tothe father of souls and theVicar of Christ, who is alsoa man and who will return todust like all men."

Between the audience andthe broadcast, Pope John leftthe Vatican to visit SantaSabina's Church, one ofthe stational churches inRome where special peni-tential rites are held. Therehe again spoke of the ashesas a reminder that "our daysare numbered" and againurged Catholics to pray forthe council's success. The visitto Santa Sabina's was thePope's fifth since his electionto the papacy.

"WE ARE NOW enteredupon Lent, the first Lent afterthe opening of the council,"the Pope said in his broad-cast. "It is the period mostindicated to make progress inacquiring virtue and especiallyin the practice of charity to-ward God and man

"The sublime htrmonie* ofrevelation stand out in greaterrelief during the time of a

council It is therefore thecouncil which gives the toneto this year’s Lent by particu-larly stressing the task ofevery good Christian to livethe precept of chanty ratherthan merely to contemplateand rejoice at »his new flower-ing."

Pope John aaid that duringI-ept Christians should studyand teach the eternal truths,and ■ bring help to the hungryand homeless

"But we wish above all toexhort you to make use ofLent to apply yourselves," he

said, "in keeping with eachperson’s vocation and con-

dition, to the very grave dutyof religious instruction and togive to penance that true andefficacious place which belongsto it."

Pope John cmphailzed theduty of studying and medi-

tating on "the eternal truthswhich God has wished to com-municate to man."

He continued:"Thus, only in this light does

man find himself, does hecome to know his arduous andurgent duties and decide onthe generous practice of pen-ance at a sign of love for theCross. It is thus thst the sin-cere snd willing Christian isrecognized.

"IT IS only by an austereway of life, which lives and

puts into practice the povertyand self denial taught by OurLord Jesus Christ that thedomestic and social order can

be decisively moved towardrenewal in truth, in the free-dom of the sons of God andin a justice that is truer anddeeper because it is capableof uking from oneself to giveto the poor ami destitute."

The Pope noted that theChurch does not call Catholics"to mere external practicesbut to serious tasks of love•nd generosity for the goodof their brothers "

The Pope concluded"Let not the enjoyment of

this world's goods render our

hearts insensible to the cry ofthe poor, who lack the mini-mum necessary to feed them-selves. to cover their naked-ness and to gather their familyunder one roof."

ON HIS VISIT to Rome forthe Lenten stational obser-vances. Pope John firststopped at St. Anastasia'sChurch where the Ash Wednes-day procession began in an-

cient time*."Station" comes from a

Latin word meaning assemblyRoman stations are cburcheawhere on certain days In theearly Christian centuries the

clergy and people of Romewent In procession to attenda Man offered by their Biahopor his repreaentative,

Pope Hearn SermonVATICAN CITY (NC)-The

Apostolic Preacher, Rev.Ilarino da Milano. O.F.M.

Cap., began his traditional se-

ries of Lenten sermons in the

presence of Pope John.

Cardinals, Archbishops, prel-ates of the Church’s centraladministration and superiorsof religious orders also attend-ed Father llarino’s discourseIn the Apostolic Palace.

Pope in l!nity PleaVATICAN CITY (RNS) -

Christians must strengthen theties of charity in striving foreventual unity. Pope John toldthe new superior general ofthe Basiliao Order of St. Jo-sephs, an Eastern Rite Cath-olic religious community.

In « private audience. Protoarchimsndriie AthenesiusGregori Veltke was told thatcharity among Christians willprepare the way for "morefruitful understanding."

"It is a long and difficultroad which requires faith and

perseverance." the Pope said,"but one mus.t remember howmuch the Lord has done andaccomplished for each one ofus and how He continues to

love all the redeemed ”

"Therefore." he continued,"it is necessary that one never

cease to pray and to act untilachievement of the divineyearning 'That they allmay be one' is hastened **

Cyprus Prelate

May Visit PopeJERUSALEM (RNS) -

Archbishop Makarios, presi-dent of the island republic ofCyprus and spiritual leader ofthe Greek Orthodox commun-

ity there, may visit PopeJohn XXIII in May.

Observers said that Arch-bishop Makarios would go toRome in his capacity as headof the Cyprus government sndas such could call on the Popewithout consulting other Or-thodox leaders.

If he does visit the Pope, hewill be the first head of an

autocephalic Eastern OrthodoxChurch to do so.

"This would be a significantevent, and might possibly leadto wider participation of Or-thodox delegate-observers stthe Second Vatican Council,where only representatives ofthe Russian Orthodox Churchwere present during the firstsession." one observer said.

Methodist Calls the Council

Century’s Greatest EventJOHNSTOWN, Pa. (NC) A Methodist Bishop evalu-

ated the Second Vatican Council as "the most Importantand most outstanding world event in this century."

Bishop Fred Pierce Corson of Philadelphia, presidenLofthe World Methodist Council, told the Johnstown CatholicForum:

"I can’t help but believe that God is using him (PopeJohn XXIII) to bring men and women of all faiths to recog-nize the primacy of God, and to an organic expression offaith that all of us have in Christ, our Savior.” BishopCorson was an observer at the council.

THE METHODIST leader said had he been asked fiveyears ago “if such a council could take place and if Prot-estants would serve as observers, I would have said. ‘Wewill never see it In our day.’” lie added a belief that thecouncil and its observation by Orthodox and Protestantrepresentatives is the work of the Holy Spirit.

“I think that on the merits of its place in history, thecouncil is the most Important and most outstanding worldevent In this century," he said.

March 7, 1963 THE ADVOCATE 11

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North Jersey Date Book of Women's Activities

Publicity chairmen tr« invited to m»Ae um or thisMrvtco. W« will need lh« name of the apeeker til anylend topic, end the neme of the chairmen.

Information received by 10 a.m. on Monday o( theweek of publication will be Included in the Date BookInline unless there la an early deadline.

THURSDAY, MARCH 7

SS. Peter and Paul Rosary, Hoboken Chineseauction, 8 p.m., recreation center.

Auxiliary to the St. James Hospital Guild, New-ark Meeting, 8 p.m., Robert Treat, New-ark; Lucille Sangiacomo, chairman.

SUNDAY, MARCH 10Essex-Newark District Council of Catholic

Women Day of recollection, 1:30-4:30, EastOrange Catholic High School; Rev. Francis J.Houghton, high school chaplain, retreat mas-ter.

The Patrician Guild, Newark Mass, 9 a.m.,St. Patrick’s Pro-Cathedral, Newark; break-fast, Robert Treat Hotel. Msgr. Thomas W.Cunningham, Scion Hall University vice-presi-dent, speaker on the layman; Rita Donii,chairman.

St. Aloysius Rosary, Caldwell Day of recol-lection, 3 p.m.; Rt. Rev. Charles V. Coriston,0.5.8., abbot of St. Paul's Abbey. Newton,retreat master. Mrs. Charles McWilliams,chairman.

Junior Seton League Mass, Seton ltali Uni-versity Chapel, South Orange, 9 a.m.. Arch-bishop Boland, celebrant; breakfast. HotelSuburban, East Orange. Rev. Michael J. O'-Grady, Our Lady Help of Christians, East Or-ange, speaker; Mrs. Woodrow Tracy, chair-man. Bishop Dougherty, guest.

Our Lady of Grace Mothers’ Guild, Hoboken

Maaa, 9 a.m.; breakfast, school. Mra. JosephJ. Domas, New City, N.Y., speaker; Mrs.Martin J. Carr, Mrs. John T. Murphy, chair-men.

MONDAY, MARCH 11Sacred Heart Rosary, Jersey City Luncheon,

1:30, parish hall; Florence Knudsen, chair-man.

Our Lady of Czestochowa Mothers' Guild, Har-rison Meeting, 7:30, parish hall.

Court Bernadette, CD A— Meeting, 8:30, schoolmeeting room; white elephant sale.

TUESDAY, MARCH 12

Marylawn Mothers' Club, South Orange Dayof recollection, 9:45-3 p.m.; Mrs. Georg* J.

Mucnch, chairman.St. Virgil's Rosary, Morris Plains St. Pat-

rick's card party, 8 p.m.. auditorium.Essex Catholic High School Mothers' Club, New-

- Meeting. 8:30, cafeteria; hat show.St. Ann's Home Junior Guild, Jersey' City

Meeting, 8:30, St. Ann’s.SI. Mary's Hospital Senior Auxiliary, Orange

Luncheon-meeting. 12:45, nurses building;Mrs. James McMullen, Elizabeth Dtffily, Vir-ginia llalligan. chairmen

St. Brigid's Mothers' Guild, North BergenMeeting, 8:30, school hall

THURSDAY. MARCH ItSeton Hall College of Medicine and Dentistry

Woman's Guild Meeting. Seton Hall Univer-

sity, South Orange (dormitory building), 12:30;coffee hour.

St. Joseph's Guild for Boys and Girls, Inc.,Silver tea, St. Joseph's Village, Rockleigh;

Mrs. Charles Ira, Hackensack, chairman.Union-Elixabeth District Council of Catholic

Women Meeting, St. Mary’a, Elizabeth, 8

p m.; Msgr. William F. Furlong, pastor andarchdiocesan vocation director, speaker.

Catholic Women's College Club Meeting, 8:15,East Orange Women's Club; Magr. John M.Oesterreichcr, director of Seton Hall Univer-sity’* Institute of Judaeo-Chrislian Studies,speaker.

FRIDAY, MARCH 15Bayley Seton League Meeting, 1:30. Seton

Hall Unlveraity Little Theatre. South Orange;Malcolm Rogers, alidci on Mexico. Mr*.Elmer H, Van Wagner, program chairman;Mrs. Matthew Palmieri, hospitality. .

Mt. Carmel Rotary, Ridgewood Car'd party.8 p.m.. Swisa Chalet, Ramsey; Mrs. RonaidP. Mealey, publicity.

SATURDAY, MARCH 16St. Mary's Orphanage Guild, Newark Lunch-

eon card party. Thomm’s Restaurant. New-ark; Mrs. J. Richard Bevinetto, Mrs. JosephW. Marra. chairmen.

Mt. St. Vincent's College, (Riverdale. N Y.) Jer-sey Alumnae Meeting, 1:30. home of Dolor-e* Farrell, East Orange; Peter Kastner ofMerrill. Lynch. Pierce. Fenner and Smith.Inc., speaker.

St. Joseph College, (Emmitsburg. Md.) JerseyAlumnae Dinner dance, 8 p.m, Hotel Sub-urban, Summit; Mrs. Robert Failla. chairman.Proceeds to building fund

St. John Nrpomurene Rosarv, GutlenbcrgBlackfrtars’ Theatre trip. New York, 8:15

St. Anne's Rotary, Fair Lawn St. Patrick'sdance, 9 p.m., school hall; Mra. John Cava-naugh, Mra. Jamc* Woods, Mra. Walter Par-oby.

SUNDAY, MARCH 17Catholic Teachers' Sodality Lecture and tea,

St. Peter’* College, Jersey City. 3 p.m.; Dr.John C. Benson of St. Peter's College, speaker

on Ireland. Mary Bracanovic, chairman.Court Patricia, CDA Mass. 8 a m.. St. Jo-

seph's, Maplewood; breakfast, Olympic Res-taurant, Irvington. Margaret Ranke, chair-man.

Sacred Heart Mothers’ Guild, Hudson HeightsMast, 9 a.m.; breakfast, parish hall. Rev.Patrick Lenihan, 0.M.1., speaker; Mrs. DonaldKckhardt, Mr*. Edward Mickiewirz, chair-men.

TUESDAY, MARCH 19Catholic Woman's Club of Elizabeth Meeting,

2 p.m.. Hotel Winfiekl Scott, Elizabeth; speak-er on Easter Rite liturgy.

St. Michael’s, St. Anne Society. Paterson Cardparty, 8 p.m., church hail; Helga Di Falco,chairman.

Trinity C'olumbiettes, Hackensack Meeting.8:15, Rev. Brice E, Riordan. O. ('arm , Carm-el Retreat House, Oakland, speaker.

Sacred Heart Columbiette« Fashion show, Co-lumbian Club. Walhnglon; Mrs. Altun Wolak,Clare Petty, chairmen.

WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2*Court Pauluv Hook, CDA Card party. Canton

Tea Garden. Jersey City; Ruth Draney, KayMerritt, chairmen.

20 Jersey High Schools

In St. Elizabeth’s DebateCONVENT

- Twenty highschools will participate in theannual high school debatetournament to be sponsored bythe Dramatic Association ofthe College of St. ElizabethMarch 9 on the campus here.

The topic will be "Resolved:That the United States shouldpromote a common market forthe Western Hemisphere."

ANNE Albrink. debate man-

ager and association vice-president, announced that Sis-ter Htldegirde Marie. St Eliza-beth's president, will greet the

debaters at the opening ses-

sion.

There will be three rounds

with the winners announced at

3:30. A trophy will be giventhe lop school snil the top de-bater.

TEAMS participating come

from Marist. Bayonne; Mt St.Dominic Academy. Caldwell;Academy of St. Elisabeth. Con-vent; Sacred Heart. St.Mary's and St. Patrick's.Eluaboth; Dwight Morrow andSt Cecilia's, Englewood; Glou-cester Catholic;

Also Sacred Heart Acade-my. Hoboken. St. Peter's.Prep, Jersey City; LindenHigh. Bayley-Kllard. Madison;Immaculate Conception. Mont-clair; Essex Catholic. New-ark. St Peter's, New Bruns-wick, St. John's. Paterson,Beil Hank Catholic. MaTytawrn,South Orange, and IV Paul.Wayne

Assisting for St Elisabeth s

will be Christina Wahl. EileenKrol and Judith Magrtno, as-

sociation officers

Woman WalkerMIAMI SHORES. Fla _

Madelon Popovich of Jer-

sey City, a student at Bar-

ry College here, was on*

of four young women whocompleted a 50-mil* hikein keeping with the newest

physical fitnesj fad. MissPopovich was one of fourwho finished the trip in

144 hours walking time(three hours rest in be-tween) after 17 studentsstarted.

Senate SalutesWASHINGTON (NC) — Sen

Hugh Scott of Pennsylvaniapaid tribute in the Senate to

the First Catholic SlovakLadies 1,'nion. now markingits 70th anniversary, and theSistera of Chanty in Perrysville. Pa , marking the 60th

anniversary of their arrnval m

the U S.

Caldwell Will Honor2 Thomases, March 13

CALDWELL - Caldwell Col

lege will celebrate the fesstday of Archbishop Boland,president of the board of trus-tee* March 1.1 in a program

that will culminate with a dinner and the presentation ofthe seniors

The Archtmhop s annual

visit To the college comes

clove to March T the lead s ,fSt Thomas Aquinas. Dominican theologian and the Arch

buhop'a patron

SHARON Schaible Gene nan

Actress Guild president, will

narrate the program which• til aUrt a! 4 p m The theme

is based on a medieval jhttn quest of truth

The Caldwell Colley air

will present a concert featurtag an original Pant* Anjeutut ' by Marta Del Vecchio. a

armor Misa Del Vecchio w:'lalso accompany Florence Mrrcurio, college solan t

The faculty and admmivtrvtion will attend the Archhivhop's dinner in the resident'adining room Following this

each senior will be presentedto the Archbishop

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY - The Bayley Seton Leogue ofSeton Hall University opened its silver jubilee year at theannual Communion breakfast March 2 Principals at theaffair included, left to right, Mrs. Joseph E. Hanson,toastmaster; Bishop Costello. Msgr. Thomas J Gilhooty,moderator; Msgr. James f. Kelley, Mt. Carmel, Ridge-wood. speaker; Bishop Dougherty. Mrs. Malcoim J.Rogers, president, and Dorothy Scully chairman. Mass

was celebrated in me Seton Hall chapel and the break-fast followed in Archbishop Boland Hall.

NCCW Plans

Racial TalksWASHINGTON (NC) - A

miniature version of the sue

cetsful Conference on Religionand Race held in Chicago in

January will be featured in

the National Council of Catholie Women's leadership train-ing institutes this year.

Mrs Joseph McCarthy.NCCW president, said finalplans are being drafted for theseries of six, three-day in-stitutes, theme of which willbe "Challenges 1963"

The institutes will be held inHershey. P* , Jdarch 23 25;French Lick, Ind., March 29

31; Miami, Ela., April 4 6;Highland Park. Ill . Sept12-14; Lincoln. Neb . Sept. 18-

20. and Oakland, Cal, Sept.26 28.

New Record

For SistersENGLEWOOD — "The Sac-

rifice of the Church" is thetopic of Rev. Clifford Howell'sconference for religious whichthe Conference A-Month clubhere will release in March,

Founded by the CarmeliteFathera Guild here, the clubeach month senda long-playingrecords of spiritual talks to al-moat 3,000 convents and mon-asteries.

Poet Named

In DelawareWILMINGTON, Del. (NCI-

Mother M. Aloyslua Peach ofUrauUne Academy here hasbeen named poet laureate ofDelaware by Gov. Elbert N.Carvel. She teaches Latin, his-

tory, English and music at thegirls’ academy, and la the au-thor of a volume of poems en-

titled, "One Fold, One Shep-herd."

OFF TO ROME - The Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabethwere asked to send a doll dressed in the community'shabit to Rome for the activities surrounding the beatifica-tion of Mother Seton March 17. Sister Margaret Maurice,a junior profesed Sister, had the job of making the habit

anddressing the doll.

Benedictines

Plan Dinner

For BishopELIZABETH The Bene

dictmr Sisters of Elizabethwill honor Bishop Costello with

a reception and dinner March

10 at « M in the motherhousehere in recognition of his re

cent elev ation to the

episcopacy Mother Cornelia.

OS B prioress, will presenta spiritual bouquet on behalf

of the SistersThe musical program will

be presented by the Sisters'

Choir of 50 under the direr

lion of Sister Germaine.

USB. with Sister Pierre(IS K . as accompanist Sis

ter Helen 1-oui*. OSR will

narrate the script which was

written b) Sister Stephanie((SB

Pastors of the missions

staffed by the community have

been muted as well as pastors from the churches m

Elizabeth

NCCW Head

Is HonoredWHANG'D >N \i SC i

Margaret Mealey, esrcutise di

rector o' the National Councilof Catholic Women, was hon

ored here with the CnfTstiin

Excellence Medal of Mary-mount College for exemplifying Christian excellence in pnvete awl public llte

Quote

Of the Week"Whc 1. really interests

me is to emphasize thatthe Church to widen itsseope for chanty has one

possibility only: ‘to be a

( hurch at the service ofhumanity—to be a Churchwhich senes ’ Of the priestit has been said that he is

man consumed Of the Sis-ters. ] would say that theyshould be women always atthe beck and call of char-

ity—women c onsumed"

Archbishop Sergio Pig-nedoli. Apostolic Delegate toto Central West Africa, toNigerian Sisters.

New Estate

For Grey NunsPHILADELPHIA—The Grev

Nuns of the Sacred Heart, whor« retied nationwide publicitylast IVcrmhcr when they re-

linquished a gif', estate in near-

by Haierford Township b»-

rj.i-e of a inning dispute have

arranged to purchase an es-•-•!e m |y.w,-r Makefirld Town-

ship as a site for their mother-ho»j sr

The arrangement hinges on

a special zoning exception to

use the property for religiouspurposes.

The Haverford Townshipboard of adjustment will heartestimony on Ihe questionshortly

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New Jersey

CollegiansWin Honors

NEW YORK - Two NewJersey Colleges placed in thefirst Catholic IntercollegiateWomen's Glee Club Associa-tion meet March 3 at Cardinal

Hayes High School here. The

College of St. Elizabeth wassecond in the field of six fol-lowed by Georgian Court Col-

lage in third position.The only two New Jersey

schools entered, the collegescompeted with the hymn, "As-siimpta Est Maria." Eachschool then sang one numberfor the entertainment of theaudience and joined with theother schools for the "Scene

and Prayer” from Mascogni’s"Cavallcria Rustic ana."

Ladycliff College, HighlandFalls, N.Y., won top honors.

St. E‘s Students

Set Dance DateCONVENT — In preparation

for Liturgical Study Weekendto be held March 30-31, a

group of students of the Col-

lege of St Elizabeth is spon-soring a supper dance in

O’Connor I-ounge, March 10,5-9 p.m. The proceeds will beused to defray the expensesof the liturgical project.

Caroline DeMonte of Union

City is chairman.

Orange Students

Visit KesslerORANGE — The senior stu-

dents of St. Mary’s Hospitalvisited the Kessler Institute forvisit the Kessler Institute forRehabilitation. West Or-ange, March 1. The visit is inconjunction with the advanced

nursing course, in which thestudents select and plan theactivities.

Ann Di Benedette, nursing in-

structor, is class director.

Wins ScholarshipBI.OOM El ELD — Stephen

Lc Verme. an eighth graderat Sacred Heart School here,has been awarded a four-yearscholarship to Regis HighSchool, New York

IT'S ABOUT TIME - Michael and Brian Costello of Holy Spirit, Pequannock, may looka little young for big decisions but they hove caught on to the March theme of thinkingabout their future vocations. It looks like they're planning to choose the single life. Will

it be a religious vocation, the single state or marriage for you?

Sure, St. Patrick Would Love Girl ScoutsBy JUNE DWYER

Isn't it nice that the calen-dar has tied the shamrock ofSt. Patrick with the symbol ofthe Girl Scouts. Oh, and yedidn't know that it had?

Faith, if ye just look at thecalendar. youTl find it's timeto get yer Girl Scout uniformpressed for the annual GirlScout Sunday Holy Hour Keepright on goln' through thewhole Girl Scout week andthere—smack at the end—is

Sunday, March 17, St Pat-rick's Day.

And by some strange coinci-dence the uniform you'll' be

pressin' is also the green thatwe sometimes connect withthe Emerald Isle

NOW. SINCE the two daysare failin' right in the same

time, we dare ye to try to findone thing in the life and deedsof good old St Patrick to dis-agree with the rules and reg-ulations of yer own Girl Scout

troops Just one. mind you.That's all ye need to provethe two occasions don't reallyfit together.

But ye see, the religion of

Patrick—yer own CatholicFaith—and the rules of the

Girl Scouts are aimed at thesame end Patrick taught us

about the Church and God andhow we could live better, more

courageous lives so w* couldearn heaves. Girl Scoutingteaches you the high idealsbased on God's Command-ments that will help you to

be better, more courageouscitizens of this world

Sure in scouting they call it

a good deed—in religion, we

call it a sacrifice In religfrmwe say to love yer neighboras yerself fer the love of God—in scouting, the message Isbrotherhood; that we are allsisters (and brothers) in theworld.

Scouting strives to developeach, individual child in a

way that will bring out the

best in ye and allow ye to con-

tribute to others Yer Church

tells ye that each ooe of us

was created especially by Godand that each of us must use

our gifts and talents to earnheaven

HOW DARK we combinethe two thoughts in one of

our letters to ye’ How darewe separate them, would be

more the truth.

If you arc a scout it's not

just fer todsy or fer as longas yer wearin' yer uniform—-if ye really believe ui whatyer doin', scouting will leavea wonderful mark on yer lifefer as long a* you walk

through the days If you are a

Catholic, It's not just fer thisworld—if ye really believeand work at it, yer Faith willleave that wonderful mark on

>er life that will lead ye rightthrough the gate* of heaven

May ye have a Messed week

—find shamrocks a! everyturn, good deeds to be done

in every waking minute, andthe smiles and graces fromheaven to protect ye in thepaths ye walk as Catholics,Girl Scouts and Americans

POPES DID not attend the

first eight ecumenical coun-cils. being represented by leg-a tea.

Elizabeth Prioress Gives

33 Science AwardsELIZABETH - Mother Cor

neha, OSB, Benedictine prt

oress. presented science

awards to students in schoolsstaffed by her congregation at

the science fair held in Bene-dictine Academy here MarchX-J.

Winners by class and schoolwere: grade ooe, William Ze-kat. Blesses! Sacrament. Khzabelh. Joseph Caughey. St

Joseph's. East Rutherford,and Georgianne Talarowskt.Sacred Heart, Elizabeth, two.Ann Marie Gnmwald. BlessedSacrament. Roseanne Wyglendowakl. St. James. Spring-field: and James Ragucci. StJames

Grade three. Richard Barn.Blessed Sacrament; SusanBabcock. Rev. George A.

Brown Memorial. lake Mo-hawk; four. Thomas Menen-des, St. Genevieve’s, Eliza-beth; Kim Abrahamson. St.James; Vincent GugUelmo.Blessed Sacrament;

GRADE FIVE, JacquelineLeszezak. Blessed Sacrament.

Theodore and Stanley Koster-owski. St Michael's, Cran-ford; KUen Agardy, St. Gene-

vieve's. Elizabeth,Also grade si*. Mar-

garet Kennedy, Blessed Sacra-ment. Karen Ann Kelly. SiBenedict s. Newark. GletiaVan Warrebey, Rev GeorgeA Rrown;

Grade seven. Katherine Jes-perten. Katherine Regan. StGenevieve's; Nancy . Gees.Bleised Sacrament. ThomasGallagher. St Michael s, Cran-ford,

Arid eight, Catherine Skier-

ski Blessed Sacrament; J-v

seph Fonseca, Raymond DelCrosse. Richard Kirekte. Ben-der Memorial. Elizabeth. Ray-mond ManfelU. Bender Memortal

The high school winners at

Benedictine Academy were

chemistry. Audrey Jarman.Gail dePlaoque. Nancy Eieb-orn. biology. Maria Vehlaitis.Nancy Veoezta. CatherinePenner; mathematics. Beat*Kidler ts. Joanne Treuvch andKathleen McCann

Have You

Read... ?Tbt tollou mg (sriliMi tit

btirj on srtitltt tbjt jpptjrin tbn uttk'i turn* of Tbt.iJioult. Tbt tmufti err st

tbt bottom of tbt lolnmn uilhtbt pjgt lifting for tbt till-

ilt.

1. A book salesman who hearda sermon by Blessed John ofAvila became

a St John the Baptistb. SL John Vtanneyc St John of God

2. Ltrordatre High School. Up-per Montclair, is stagingsomething special this weekR is a

a full length dramatic pro-duction

b hockey game

c basketball tournament

2. Missionaries are reachingthe Japanese people through

a educationb medical work

c construction of new

churches

4 The Pauitst Fathers' radio

program. "The Way to Go."will present March 10:

a a tour of St Paul'sChurch

b 1-enten sermons

C. a Passion Play3 Good ways to help the mis-

sions are bya daily sacrificeb being kind to nelghborac prayers

01 »*»d

’-9 »**d * v w»-«• '»>laged 11q i-y tyj aged '<*)•;!yt aged ‘tJl-t Jf?.ItSVK

10 ,000 Girl Scouts Have TheirDay March 10NEWARK Almost 20,000 Catholic Girl Scouts of the Arch-

diocese will close a double anniversary year March 10, GirlScout Sunday. Program* throughout the archdiocese will con-clude the 50th anniversary of Girl Scouting and the 20th an-niversary of the program under Catholic auspices here.

The 18,000 girls and 2,000 leaders will start the day by at-tending Mass and receiving Communion in their respective par-ish churches. Later in the day, some 10,000 Intermediate andSenior Girl Scouts will attend Holy Hours in honor of Our Ladyof Fatima at 11 regional churches.

The theme for the spiritual programs will be the first GirlScout law: "A Girl Scout*! honor Is to be trusted."

MBGK. JOHN J. KILEY, archdiocesan CYO director, willconduct the exercises at Sacred Heart, Vailsburg, for troops ofthe Newark-Essex area. Msgr. John M. Mahon of St. John’s,Newark, will speak.

The Newark holy hour will start at 2 p.m. All others will be-gin at 3 p.m.

Bloomfield area Scouta will go to St. Thomas the Apostle,Bloomfield, where Rev. Bernard Schlcgcl of Sacred Heart, Bloom-field, will preside and Wey. John I*. O'Connor, St. Thomas, willpreach. Mrs. Thomas Frawley and Dorothy Kcown are chairmen.

West Essex scouts will meet at Immaculate Conception,Montclair, where Rev. chntle* F. Theobald will conduct devotionsand Rev. Thomas E Davisl both of that parish, will speak. Mrs.Alvin Baer is chairman. I

WEST HUDSON scouta will go to Queen of Peace, NorthArlington, where Rev. Donald J. DiPasquale, Sacred Heart,Lyndhurst. will conduct the program and Rev. John N. Lombardi. Queen of Peace, will preach. Florence Delaney and Mrs.George Maher are chairmrn.

Hudson County troop* will mcetjit St. Acdan's, Jersey City,where Rev. Peter M. Cutillo, Immaculate Conception, Secaucug,will conduct the devotions and Rev. Robert E. Duffy, St. Acdan's,will speak. Mrs. Timothy Crimmins and Marie Miller are chair-men.

Bayonne troops will meet at St. Vincent’s, Bayonne, whereRev. Robert T. Svec, St. Vincent’s, will conduct the program.Mr*. Francis Katusal Is chairman.

EASTERN UNION County scouts will hear Msgr. WilliamF. Furlong, pastor of St. Mary’s, Elizabeth, speak in his own

parish. Rev. John F. Morley, also St. Mary’s, will be moder-ator and Stanley Francy, chairman.

Western Union County troops will attend St. Mary’s, Plain-field, where Rev. Charles H. Gascoyne, St. Mary's, will speakand Rev, Eugene C. McCoy, Holy Trinity, Westfield, willmoderate. Mrs. William Willoughby and Mrs. Paul Conly are

chairmen.

THREE BERGEN County holy hours are planned. Easternarea girls will go to St. Mary's, Dumont, where Rev. AloysiusS. Carney, St. John the Baptist, llisssdale. and Rev. Anthony A.Bryce. St. Mary’s, will conduct the program. Mrs. Robert Budcl-man ami Mrs. John Grady are chairmen.

In West Bergen, Rev. Justin Keles will conduct devotionsin his own parish of St. Anne's, Fair Lawn. Rev. John J. Morelof Nativity, Midland Park, will speak and Mrs. Frank Mirendaand Mrs. James Scullion are chairmen.

South Bergen scouts will meet at St. Mary's, Rutherford,to hear Rev, P. Francis Gutcrl, Holy Rosary, Edgewater. Rev.John E. Hopkins, St. Mary's, is moderator with Mrs. HelenGriffin and Mrs. T. J. Naulty as chairmen.

HELPING THEMSELVES - The Leaders of Tomorrow Civic's Club of Assumption, Bay-onne, raised $5O to Kelp buy more bocks for their school library. Presenting the moneyto Sister Inez Barbara DeSantis, M.P.F ., p[?]pal is Mary Jane Tarzio. Others left to

right are Francis Alfano, Michael Mingoia and Rev. Dominic J. Del Monte, pastor.

Caldwell College Wants ‘Johnny’To Have a Good School Library

C At-DWELL - Caldwell College took up the subject atgi»de school libraries last

wee* in anew program aimedat improving and servicingthe libraries in the 39 eirmcn

tary k bouts staffed by theDominican Sister 1

Under the direction at Sit-ter Margaret Anne of Catdwell College and sparked beSister M Margaret, supervisor of Dominican elemen-tary schools, four workshopshave been set up tor studentsand teachers of the gradeschools

The first session for 1U per-sons w-*s held Feb 28 from 1

to 5 p m It was attended byprincipals, a lay and a re-

ligious faculty member, andtwo students from the ftftti,sixth, seventh and eighthgrades of each school

March 7. the same programwill be repeated for the re-

mainder of the schools About161 persons are expected.

MSGR JOSEPH P TUITE.archdiocesan supervisor ofschools, welcomed the partiespants They were also greetedby Sister M Marguerite, Cald-well College president.

The workshop is broken Intothree sessions which rotatefrom claasel on processing,circulation. and reference information Twelve certified

librarians conduct the paneland discussion groups with

student teacher librarian*

from Caldwell College aidingm the classes

THE PLANNING hoard and

ataff includes Sister M Eileenand Sister M Aqutn of Cakl

well College, Sister GertrudeMane, acting chairman of the

new North Jersey CatholicLibrary Association - to be atfiliated during Easter vaca-

tion l. Sister M Veronica Jo-

seph, principal of Union Cath-

olic High School. Sister MBenign*. Stater Rita Francesand Suter Ann John

Two additional workshopsare planned for principalsand teacher* only, the last

Thursdays in March and April

The eollcge has also offeredthe full facilities of its libraryscience program to the gradeschools to help them set uptheir own libraries, even to

sending student librarians Into

the schools. The workshop pro-grams for the children are be-ing held in the college librarylaboratory where the children

are able to work with theirown book* rather than thoseof a college level

March 7, 1963 THEADVOCATE 13

For Boys 7-15

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CAMP PIUS ELEVENTHThe Uni Cuip Far Catholic Boya C to 14

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SEW)m

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Write Re» Father Director. Camp Pius Eleventh. Enfield. N H

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CENTERPORT, LONG ISLAND, N. Y.

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TNI lOSAL CATHOLIC CAMP FOR YOU* SOVI

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Youth Corner

Students Discuss

Dramatic ViewsBy ED WOODWARD

Viewpoints undoubtedly willvary through the course of a

new drama seminar programfor North Jersey schools whichhad its successful beginningsat Lacordaire March 3. How-ever, one opinion seems to beshared by students from thehost school, St. Benedict’s andCaldwell they want more.

About 50 students from thethree schools expressed theirideas and feelings on dra-matics in a lively discussionwhich left theip anxious formore.

THERE WILL be more.Caldwell will probably be hostto another session before theend of the current term withat least two other schools.West Essex Regional andMorristown, probably joining.

‘i think it’s a good idea foryoung people of a high schoollevel to get together to dis-cuss their viewpoints,” re-

marked Diane Barnhart,drama teacher at Caldwell.‘‘lt’s good for them to get outof their own schools and to

share ideas—to have a littlegive and take with other stu-dents. With so much empha-sis on math and science it isgood to give them a culturalview, too."

Thomas O’Neil of St. Bene-dict's reflected the reaction ofmany students when he said:“We need more opportunitieslike this to discuss the prob-lems. the enjoyment and theimportance of the theater in

our lives. I enjoyed it verymuch.”

“I THINK that this seminarwas very good,” noted GraceMary Costantin of Lacordaire."because it provided us withan exchange of views whichgave us an insight into howother high schools producetheir shows and the partici-pants' attitudes toward theirfinal product."

It was valuable in anotherway to Patricia Cochara ofCaldwell, who commented: "Iwas glad to find that so manypeople my own age have such

a deep love and understand-ing of their theater."

Some indicated a less allout endorsement of the firsteffort, like Maybeth Fuchs ofLacordaire, who thought therewas "too much tension atfirst—not enough free discus-sion."

BUT, MOST who went alongwith Maybeth agreed this was

only because it was a first ef-fort and all expected rapidprogress as the seminars con-

tinue "This seminar was

thoroughly enjoyable eventhough the students were a

little nervous.” said Kathyllealy of Lacordaire "How-ever. I think this will be rrm

edied "

Bob Lahita of St. Benedict'shad a brief but enthusiasticreply to a question of how heliked the seminar "Magnifi-cent.” Equally terse werr twoCaldwell students. ChrisAdams ("Fabulous") ansiSteve Papaleo ("Excellent" i.

Marelia de Audrade of Caklwell, an exchange student fromBran!, found it "interesting,educational, fabulous "

SOME OF THE other com-ments w ere:

Steve Martin. St. Benedict s—"t think that this type ofseminar is good because itgives us a broad outlook on

the teacher through the learn-ing of the feelings of studentsof other schools "

Ellen McDermott. Caldwell—"lt gave me an opportunityto meet students from otherhigh schools and to hear whattheir views are on high schooldramatics "

Sandy Walton. Caldwell—"lthought It was a very valuableexperience and should certain-ly be continued Through thesediscussions, we all have be-come more acquainted withvarious aspects of the theaterThis is extremely important

"

Sandy Haug. Lacordaire—-“l thoroughly enjoyed thisseminar and 1 am looking for-ward to the next. This after-noon spent with students fromdifferent schools was an ex-

cellent way of breaking theice. so to speak, in theaterparticipation I think it achiev-ed a great deal "

Schools Form

New ConferenceJERSEY CITY - Three lo-

cal schools and St. Cecilia’s(K) have formed anew lea-gue, the Hudson County Cath-olic Conference, which will be-gin operations with the com-ing baseball season. St.Mary’s, St. Micbael's and St.Anthony's, all members of thenow-defunct North Jersey-Catholic Conference completethe quartet.

t-cague members will alsocompete on a home-and-homebasis in basketball. The new

group will also conduct theannual basketball tournamentwhich has been held for sev-

eral years by the NJCC.

For Secondary Schools

Archdiocese Plans Science FairNEWARK About 600 proj-

ects In five subject areas are

expected to be entered In thethird annual Newark Archdlo-cesan science fair for secon-

dary schools March 16-17 hereat Essex Catholic High School.

Four half-tuition scholar-

ships and a five-day Navy Sci-ence Cruise Award for a boy

will he the top prizes beingsought by the students fromschools in Bergen, Essex,Hudson and Union counties.

THE FOUR NORTH JerseyCatholic colleges Caldwell,St. Elizabeth, St. Peter's andSeton Hall are offering thescholarship*. Five days aboard

a Navy vessel this summerwill J>e the honor given to oneboy winner.

Other prizes will Includewatches, scientific equipment,books and periodicals. Cate-gories will include biology,chemistry, physics, generalscience and mathematics.

Judging will be held March16 from 1 to 4 p.m. by a panelof judges from colleges, pro-fessional fields and industry.They will evaluate on thebasis of creative ability, sci-entific thought, thoroughness,skill, clarity and dramaticvalue. Award* will be madeat 5 p.m. March 17.

The public Is invited to viewthe exhibits from 4 to 6 p.m.March 16 and 1:30 to S pm.March 17.

Vocation Notes

EverybodyShares Job

By MSGR. WILLIAM F. FURLONG

He was a soldier; came in contact with sinful compan-ions in the army, and gave up the practice of his religion.He later tried his hand at being a shepherd, then a servant,next a pedlar, and finally ventured out as a book salesman.Nothing was farther from his mind than becoming religious.But strange things can happen.

He was A3 when he heard a sermon preached by the ex-tremely popular 16th century preacher, Blessed John of Avila.So completely overwhelmed was the book salesman that hesold everything be had, gave it to the poor, and started downa road that saw him become a religious, the founder of a

hospital for the poor and friendless sick, the founder of a

new religious order the Hospitaller Brothers —andfinallyhis being canonized a saint in 1690 He is St. John of Godwhose feast is observed on March 8.

• • •

AND IT ALL STARTED WITH A SERMON he heard' Ac

cording to the programs approved by Archbishop Boland andBishop McNulty a talk on vocations is given in each Catholicschool of the Newark Archdiocese and the Paterson Diocesein the fall semester by archdiocesan priests, and in the springsemester by religious priests and Brothers

At least 333 talks are given each semester How wonder-ful It would be if each of those talks had the same effectthat Blessed John of Avtia's sermon had on St John of GodIt would mean that each school year at least 333 boys woulddecide to become priests or Brothers, and 333 girls woulddecide to become Sisters.

• • •

DURING THE LAST SCHOOL TERM, 101 diocesan priestsspoke on vocations and presently we have 6T priests and Brothers speaking on Die same topic. Why couldn't each of thembe as effective as Blessed John of Avila" Did you ever stopto think that you can help them to be as effective" You ran

and should pray pray fervently far those whom Godhas sent to preach With our prayers wre should storm heaven,asking God to make our priests and Brothers as effective at

Blessed John• • •

I READ RECENTLY THAT. FOR THE CURE OF ARS, on

at least one occasion, "one sentence was sufficient lo convert

a soul, but it was God Who said that sentence through him "

Ask God lo fill the souls of our voealloc preachers with Christthat Christ Who could say to Peter Andrew. James and

John "Follow Me." and have them do so "immediately'“(Mark 1 16-20)

If <mr laird could do it then, should sir not have faith

enough to believe that He will do it over and over again

through the men whom He has sent lo preach if we pray"• • •

Apostolate tor VocationsNewark Archdiocese: Msgr. William F Furlong, St

Mary's. Elltabeth. NJ Telephone EL 2 3154

Paterson Diocese Rev. John P McHugh. DePaul HighSchool, Wayne, X J Telephone OX 45750.

Holy Family Bolsters EdgeNEWARK - Holy Family

Academy strengthened its holdon first place in the NorthJersey Catholic Girls’ Basketball I-cague last week, but it

had to share the spotlight with

Gail Paxton of St DominicAcademy, who broke into the

I,ooopoint club with It pointsagainst St laikr s

A victory against St Mi

chad's <UC) left Holy Familytwo games in front of St. Mi-

chael’s. Our Lady of the Val-

ley and Queen of Peace, whicharc involved in a three-waydeadlock fur second place

Holy Family will take on St

Mary’s (E) March * m its

next outing St Mar) s, which

is just behind the three learnslied for second, holds the only-other decision again*! St Mi-chael's

St. Bonaventure

CheersBestCLIFTON St. Bonaven-

turc won the high school divi-sion in the Paterson DiocesanCYO cheerleading contest hereat St. Philip's Feb 23. St.

Philip's look the junior crownami St. Virgil's (MorrisPlains) was the intermediatewinner.

In the high school division.St. John's and St. Mary'sfinished second and third, re-

spectively. Behind St. Philip *

in the juniors were SL An-thony's (Hawthorne), St.George (Paterson) and St.Agnes (Paterson).

St. John's was runner-up inthe intermediates, ImmaculateHeart of Mary (Wayne) thirdand St. Joseph's (Paterson)fourth.

Youth

Calendar

FRIDAY. MARCH *

Kvvex Catholic High School• Newark) Armed ForresDay program.

SATI RDAY. MARCH A

Seton Hall University i SouthOrange) ~ Newspsper career

symposium for North Jerseyhigh school students.

SUNDAY, MARCH IS

Archhi>h«ip Walsh HighSchool (Irvington) Essex

County CWV oratorical contest

on topic "The Peace Corps:Its Value to Our Nation." g 30

P m.

SAT! RDAY. MARCH 16

St. Benedict's I’rrp (New-ark) Pre-registration in-

trance examination, 9 a m.

News CareersTake Spotlight

SOUTH ORANGE - A sym-posium entitled “NewspaperCareer Dsy. Meet the WorkingPress” is expected lo attractmore than 300 high school stu-dents from five North Jerseycounties March 9 here at SetonHall University.

Eighteen New York City-newspapermen will participatein the program which is jointly sponsored by the universityand Schenng Corp. of Bloomfield, it was announced byLouis Relden. professor ofcommunication arts

BKLDEN INVITED interested faculty advisors and stu-dents to contact the ad-missions office to attend theprogram which will run from9 30 a m until 4pm

" The symposium is a pionee ring effort by the univer-

sity and its School of Commu-nication Am," Prof Reldensaid, "to point up the importsnee of maintaining the estab-lished high standards of sccurate newspaper reporting in

today's fast moving, complexsociety ”

Joseph W Katz press sec

retary to Governor RichardHughes, will deliver the keynote address Al the morningsession, two three man panelswill discuss newspaper techmques and practices In theafternoon, the six journalistswill be joined by 12 others forsmaller workshop sessions

St. John's Sets

Cage TournamentBERGENEtELD _ Eight

Bergen County CYO basketballtiams will compete for thefirst St Johns InvitationalTournament championshiphere during the week beginnmg March l»

A R Hough, tournament dlrector, announced that teams

will he accept rtf on a firstcome, firs! served basis It is

limited to junior squads

In 'Peg O' My Heart'

Lacordaire Features FirstsUPPER MONTCLAIR - A

full length dramatic productionin itself a milestone -- will

feature a number of firsts herea* lacordaire High School

March 7, 8 and 9It is the first dramatic pro

durtton on the schools new

stage, the first time that boyswill appear m a play at theall girl school the f rvt timesets have been built and thefirst time two dogs will sharethe spotlight

THE PRODUCTION. Peg O

M) Heart "

will frature No-reen Connolly of Monlclair. a

senior in the title role Thelast will also include threeother Lacordaire girls and students from St Benedict'sPrep St Peler s College, Se(on Hall University. BloomfieldHigh School and KairleighDickinson University

Sets have been designed by(he studenu under the direr

(ion of Stvter Mary Suso, O Ptechnical director

Two seniors. Mary Di-Donato producer and KathyFoulkrod director, head a

student executive commute*Sister Mary Edna OP. is

production manager and JuneDwvrr director

Curtain time Is * 30 p m

with a vpectal performance for

religious a! 2 p m March 9

A REAL PEG - Noreen Connolly, leoding Lady in Lacor-daire's "Peg O' My Heart" slated for performancesMarch 7-9 in the new auditorium, literally helped tobuild the house she will live in for the school's first pro-duction. A senior, Miss Connolly is editor of the schoolpaper and of a literary magazine which will make itsfirst appearonce in the spring. All sets were constructed

by the students.

Grammar TourneyAccepts Entries

JERSEY cfTY Knlne.

irr being accepted Inr thefourth annual S; A lot tun

Or* miner School ItaiketballToura*mont which will be heldhere M*rch 50 - April 6 The

deadline it March 25Our I.*d> of Sorrow* i South

Orangei u defending rhampk*n

The other pretiout w-.n

her* were Si Thomai (Rk»mfiekl i to I960 and Ml Carmel(Jersey City I in 1962

Semi-FinalsSet March 9

In PatersonPATERSON - Four semi-

final games in the PatersonDiocesan CYO BasketballTournament are on tap March9 at Pope Pius High School.Two will be opening games forgirls and two will bit secondoutings for boys.

St. Thomas (Ogdensburg)will meet St. John’* (Pater-son) in the junior girls divisionin the opener at 1:30 p.m. Inthe other girl* game. St.Thomas will face St. Joseph's(Echo Lake) at 4 p.m. to open

competition for the intermedi-ate title.

IN JUNIOR boys. St Vir-gil's (Morris Plains) will takeon St. Philip's (Clifton) at 2:45

pm. St. Virgil’s gained thisround with a 34-14 triumphagainst St. Anthony's (Pater-son) and St. Philip's made it

by beating Holy Spirit < Pc-quannock), 37-16.

St. John Kanty (Clifton) andSt. Joseph's (Paterson) willclash in the intermediate boysgroup at 5:15 p.m. St John'stopped St Mary's (PomptonLakes), 47 40, and St Joseph'sbeat St Virgil's, 5143

In two other boys games last

week. St Thomas moved into

the junior final with a 29-20

win against St Mary 's <Dcn-

ville) and Sacred Heart (Dov-er) gained the intermediate

championship round with a

<745 win against Our Lady ofthe Lake (Sparta)

Girls finals will be held at 3

p m March 10 at DePaul HighSchool and boys March 15 at

(10 pm at Central HighSchool. Paterson

14 THE ADVOCATE March 7, 1963

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challenge—-•n etploding continent to bo won nr•“••for Chuat in the nut IS year*.

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•toy far information about the.

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THE SOFT SELL - Tom Heinsohn, former St. Michael's (UC)a11-stater, sells the first ticket to Bishop Bernard J. Flana-gan of Worcester, Mass., for a two-day testimonial pro-gram honoring retiring basketball star Bob Cousy, a team-mate of Heinsohn on the Boston Celtics. Three little fans

watch transaction.

Seton Hall Eyes IcingOn Successful Season

SOUTH ORANGE — Thebest season in three under

Coach Richie Regan has al

ready been assured Seton HailUniversity's cagers and now

they would like to ariil some

Icing to an already attractivecake with a closing victoryagainst Iona here March 9

The I’lrates. who we e

scheduled to entertain Yillanova March 6, finished theirroad campaign with a satisfying, 78-76 triumph againstGeorgetown March 3. The vic-

tory. couple t with a 71 60 v l:i

against SC Francis at Rrooklyn last wcck. enabled SetonHall to break even away fromhome with 5 5. The loc is we tinto the Villanova game witn

a perfect. 110 home st .n lardfor a 1(75 overall record Ineach of Regan s first l-o .e

sons, they had 15-9.

SATISFACTION was also

the keynote at St Peter'st'o lege sv the Peacocks closedwith a 75 66 win against SienaMarch 2. A loss would hivesent St. Peter's to its 'irstsub- s<io season under CoachDon Kennedy, but the Pea-cocks prevailed with a 12 U

markEarlier last week St

Peter's had halted a longRider victory streak with a

8978 triumph and it gave Vil-lanova a struggle before bormg. 72 59. at Madison SquareG ..’dcti

BESIDES ROOTING for theI'irHo,' ,>c»t ir-o. t since t ic

1955 56 season when they were

.-1 S-toi -II f ns will -e

coming here to watrh NickWorkman put the finishingtouches on his hot scoring bat-

ik R il' v Kr-tner of NYUand Sunny Sunkett add to his

! 1.1 tat to; .Workman went into the

ViO'nova game with a 30 5

average after sconng 2*

joint- against GeorgetownKramer had hit 35 againstInr Ih m the previous after

noon to hike his standard to.9... will have some

post season opportunities to

pass \Ver»man since the Vio-let* are in the NCAA tourna-mmt

Racking up 11 more assists.S a ett hooste-l hts season

total to 161. passing a mark of176 set by Regan in the 1952-

53 season

Paterson Seton Hall had its

best season marred somewhatas it dropped a 71 41 verdict to

Marist of Poughkeepsie, in the

final game for the Pirates

They had a 12-7 record :odh id won three in a row befo; e

the Marist setback, which leftthem with a 4-4 mark in theCentral Atlantic Conference

Pony Pirate Wins

Wrestling CrownSOUTH ORANGE - Fred

Buechcl brought Seton H «M

Prep a state championshipMarch 2 as he captured the139-pound wrestling title in CheNew Jersey State Inters:!mlotic Athletic Association finalsat New Brunswick

Lid Lifted, Pot Ready to Boil in NJSIAA Cage TournamentBy ED WOODWARD

NEWARK - They’ve liftedthe ltd In the New JerseyState Interscholaatlc AthleticAssociation's annual basketballtournament, but the pot willnot start boiling until March

7 and 8 when the pace will

pick up considerably.Attention will be tocuaed

upon Holy Family's efforts toretain its state Parochial Ccrown and defense of theNorth Jersey Parochial Alaurel by St. Peter’s Prep. Im-maculate Conception, theNo.dh Jersey Parochial B ti-tlist in 1963, launched defenseof that honor against EasternChristian March 5.

lIOI.Y FAMILY, which isThe Advocate choice to win

in North Jersey, will face a

stiff test in its opener March8 with St Anthony's st Wee-hawken The Blue Bishops,who are led by their all-ststecandidate Tom Greeley, holda couple of decisions againstthe Jersey City school, but theFriars' Mike Modoski can

score in bunches enough to

make hi* team dangerous

A possible upset awaits StPeter * in it* first tournament

game also The Petreans willmeet Esses Catholic March 9at Upsala in the second halfof *n attractive Parochial \

doubleheader which list* SetonHall and Bergen Catholic inthe opener Esse* Catholic hasshow.i flashes of upset poten-

tial and it is coached by Jo*Garvey who guided Immacu-late Conception to the statefin-I to ni.prtae the expertslast year

St Peter'a will bring the

best record m North Jersey,202, the longest winningstreak. 11 games, ami the 11-ad

*on C<v ity rhiropionship intothe state tournament Thesefveto'*. plu- a till, well bat.

anefd club make the Petreanspre-tournament favorites

TWO OTHER A teams, DobBosco and Roselle Catholic, al-

most brought county title* intoth-- tosrnament The lFva«.who will open with St Jo-seph's tWNYi March 9 at

Tejiafly. bowed to Paramus in

the Bergen County J imho- re

final after poittng two over-

time triumph* in the earlyrounds.

Roselle C.-thobc stunned St

Mary'a (E) tn the semifinalsof the Union County Tournament but couldn't cope witha big Westfield team ami lostin the final The Lions andMarist wl'l meet in the A in-

augural March 8 at Hillside

The remaining selection bythis department for a Nor*h

Jersey crown, St. Mary'» <E)In Parochial B, will play atHillside March 9 against thesurvivor of the Immaculate

Conception-Eastern Christian

game. The victor In that con-

test will meet the St. Aloysltu-St. Mary's (JC) winner.

IN OTHER B group battle*.

Our Lady of the Valley will

try to drop Phillipsburg Paro-

chial (19-0) from the unbeatenranks March 7 at West Mur-rU Regional in Chester andDePaul will take on St. Mi-chael’s (JC) March 8 at Tens-fly.

Two C semi-finalists will be

decided March 7 at Hillside ina twln-biil which matches St.Cecilia's vs. Holy Trinity and

Archbishop Walsh vs. St. Pat-rick's. The winners will meeton the same court March 12.Our Lady of the Lake and St.

Mary's (P) will collide March8 at Boonton for the right totake on the Holy Famlly-StAnthony's winner March 13 atFair Lawn.

Two teams which are notmember* of the NJSIAA split

even in tournament finals lastweek. St. Benedict's Prepclosed its season with an Vd-7record after a defeat by Cen-tral in the Essex County Tour-nament final.

Delbarton captured the NewJersey Independent SchoolsAthletic Association Group 3

crown with a 76T4 win againstPennington. The Green Waveended its campaign with fivestraight wins and a 13-7

record.

The Top TenSt. Peter's Prep 20-2St. Mary's (E) 18-3

St. Aloysiu* 19-4

St. Benedict's Prep 18-7Seton llall 13-4

Bergen Catholic 12-7Roselle Catholic 16-4

Don Bosco 18-4

Essex Catholic 14-7

DePaul 19-3

BasketballCalendar

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COLLIOIteh*r4oy, March f

lona al Baton llall

Corsetto HoldsSlimmest Edge

NEWARK — The slimmestof margins still separates thetwo leaders in the North Jer-sey Catholic schoolboy indi-vidual basketball scoring race

with Rich Corsetto (27.1) ofSt Bonaventure's leading JoeCamillery (27 0) of St Mary’s(JC). Both had games sched-uled March 5 which arenot included in these totals.

Camillery played one game,scoring 29 points, during thepast week, but couldn't regainthe lead from Corsetto. whowas idle However, Camilleryaccomplished another impor-tant goal as he became thefirst St Mary's player to hit1.000 points Dennis Richard-son of St Aloysius also

climbed into that exclusiveclub during the past week.

ths leaoirsllnrluSn tun Mura <1

O PH A vs(orartu,. SI non*, talar* 21 STS 27 1Ct/mlWry. »

i IJC) 23 S9T 27 #Mrvntwt. SV<«1 H*ll 11 IH 31(iravltj HW y F»miO I* 441 24 JM~y«4u. w Anthosr'i 11 M a)

S4 J«r|4 1 (W» || ni 22 5tlurKj. SI JoAat 14 221 W 7V IU Svn 14 «S1 20 s"TUlo*. O 1- 1-akr 17 M7 » 4KlrAartlPM. SI. A1‘4 22 427 IS 0Wieu. C illnilr IS 22S 17 tW 1 . Svra CtlSoOr 22 272 I' 3

For NJCTC Meet

Championship Struggle Narrows to Bergen Catholic, CBABy ED GRANT

JERSEY CITY -Whit sUrtc<l out as * wide open battlefor the *i*th annual New Jet*ey Catholic Trac* Conferenceindoor championships has nar

rowed to a two-team light be-tween Bergen Catholic andChristian Brothers Academyafter th* March 3 field «vnuat Esse* Catholic High School

The seven event running pro-gum begins at 7 p m tr the

Jersey Cjty Armory March *

ami there is little chance tint

either St Benedict's, the de-fending champ, or Seton il*ll.the other perennial contender,will be able to ratrh the ~'rusadrrs or the Colts

CBA lIAS 14 points sodBergen 10 at they enter El.day's competition Which one

wins will depend largely oo

the results of three event*the mile run ami the mil* and

two mile relaysBergen shoutd quickly equal

iie things with a victory b\

state champ Bill Madden Inthe yard da*h and may atso

pick up vital points in the 440and SR), though possibly at

the expense of its relay teams.

Gus Zilincar of the Coll*

opened the record-breakingwith his toss of 55 feet. 4inches in the shot put Satur-day This broke the mark of53 feet. 12 inches set two yearsagr by John Emher of SV

Peter's <NB) Trailing Guswere two Bergen Juniors. BobHiggins and Tom Obrotka. so

that Bergen actually gained a

point in the event

Another CBA athlete tn de-fend his title was Ed Mulvi-hill. who took the high jumpat 5 feet. 10 3/4 inches He

had been expected to act a

new mark, but missed at 6

feet, 1 inch. Hi* co-defender,Paul Drew of St. Benedict'*,let! to a tic for fourth placeand the Colta scored heavilya* Bill Scrobognu, sophchamp, placed second. Mike

CilUuly of Bergen was third

BERGEN HAS RUN aheadof CBA in both the mile anltwo-mile relays this winter,so its big question mark ii

the condition of cross countryc.i mp Dave Eihcrty in themile, where CBA grabbed a

! 4 „t the »tjte meet amt stilltraded the Crusaders tn th*

le.m battle Eaherty lookedpretty good at the recentNYU meet, but Tim Sheehanand Johnny Eager, th* Colt*’great sophonuwr pair, ar* al-so in prime condition

There It a question whetherVadim Schaldrnko of SetonHall. Ihc NJSIAA I.OOP-yardchamp, may not enter IS*mile ir. place of the **B to

help the Pirates’ falteringteam chances He would no

doubt take all the marble* inthe longer race off his 4 IS

anchor leg at the NJCTC re-

lay championships

The WO field h*» »lre»dybeen weakened by the Y>rob-able removal of Phi! Hmvsbek of St Peter's (NB). run-ner-up In the NJSIAA race,

due to an operation, and EdRrbenack of Essex CathoU:.fourth in the state 1.000, as t.n

after effect of a car accidentlast week

Rebenark wasn't badlyhurt, but one leg was bruisedand be may not be ready so

soon

STEVE AS HURST of Ourljdy of the Valley ami GerryMurphy of SI Benedict s

should both go under the ttO-yard record of 53 I. held EyFrank Koch of St PetersPrep The Jersey City strip ‘s

faster th»n »t Newark, thank*to * long straightaway. andAshurst hat already brokenKoch's NJCTC indoor record

with hi* 50 2 race at the na

tiooals in Madisoa SquareGarden

Our Lady of the Valleyplaced second at the NewYork K. of C. meeting, run-

ning 3 28 9 with Ashurstclocked officially at 492 on

the anchor V alley should stillbe able to win the mile relay

Friday with F.d MeConnon.Terry Cunningham and RonPlum stead available for threeof the legs. MeConnon hit 52 0

and Plumstrad 52 3 tn theNew York race

Drew is picked to carry hisaching Umhs over the hurdiM

ahead of Don Orth and Jim

Hoif of Seton Hall, and thusjoin Zitmear and Mulvihill ?s

a successful defender. EssexCatholic should shade Seton

HaU for the two-mile relaycrown and may shave its rec-

ord of 8 23J.

ESSEX CATHOLIC and CBAwalked off with team honorsin the conference freshman-sophomore championshipsFeb 26-28 at the Sussex Ave.

Armory, Newark.The Eagles took the frosh

title. 22 1 221 1 2. from CBAwithout winning a single indi-vidual event The Shore schoolhad two »timers in the sopho-more competition as it de-feated Roselle Catholic. 24-:7.

Form ChartM Madden, BC440 Asbnnt, OLV880 Sehaldenko, SllMile Foherty, BC•0 illl Drew, SRMR O. L. ValleyZMR Essex Catholic

In IC4-A Meet

Setonia Seeks Final Relay HonorNEW YORK - Ih* indoor

track and field season comes

to its end at Msditon SquareGarden March 9 with the42nd running of the indoorIC4-A championships and Seton Hal! University hopes to

end It In style with anothertwo mile relay victory in rec-

ord time

The Pirate quartet of KevinHennessey. Ed Wyrach, TornTuthmgham *nd George Ger-mann will get its competitionfrom Holy Cross and Manliattan. with both Eordhamand Georgetown weakeningtheir squads to allow theirstar* to run in individualevents.

SETON HALL TOOK a weekoff from the two-mite choreMarch I at the K. of C. meet.

Wyrsch placed third in a met-

ropolitan intercollegiate 690-

yard run in 1:53 8 and theother three joined Frank Gov-ernafe in a winning 3:21 7 ef-

fort in the mile relay

Chances of a world recordthis week are dimmed by the 4necessity of running heats andfinals, as at the AAU meet,and also by the absence ofthe first-string Fordham andGeorgetown outfits. The meet

record of 7:40, set seven yean

ago by Pittsburgh, t* a cinchto fall, however.

Seton Hall ha* little chanceo( scoring in any other eventduring the long day of com-

petition. Mansell Gordon andBob Dowd will compete in thebroad jump, but will have to

go a foot over their best markstr, date to qualify for the fi-nals

The mile relay team ofGovemale. Dowd Jim Fischer and Bob Deldin. will alsohave to improve considerablyto place in a field where eighttrams have beaten 3:20

A HANDFUL of former NewJersey Catholic Track Confer-ence stars, now attendingother colleges, will be on handfor the meet Georgetown willhave the 'argest contingent,with Steve Berctk and EamonO'Reilly of St Benedict's run-

ning on a favored distancemedley freshman relay team.Ed Schmitt of Don Bosco run-ning with the two-mile teamand John Übhaus and PaulJotdan of Sl Peter * on theone-mile quartet

Tim Harrington of St. Bene-dict's has a good chance toscot* in the pole vault with a

top mark of 14 feet. 6 inchesthis winter for St John's,where he is only a sopho-more. Another former GrayBee. Gerry O’Connor, is inthe hurdles and broad jumpfor Notre Dame.

Running in the 800-yardevent in the colors of BostonCollege will be Bob Gilvey.sophomore from St, Peter’s

Prep, who clocked 48.8 in a

relay stmt at the K. of Cmeet

THERE HILL BC a one-

mile relay for New Jerseyschools during the afternoonprogram and Our Lady of theValley and Essex Catholicwill be among the entries

Valley came within two-tenthsof a second of the indoorNJCTC record at the K of C

meet with a 3.28 9 mark and

this is its last chance to breakthe record.

St. Peter's College athleteswill use the AAU handicapevents during the afternoonto tune up for next week'sCollegiate Trick Conference

championships. The Peacockswill have Richie Manno inthe three-quarter mile run,Jim Kearney in the ehot putand Alan Hughes and DirkHarvey in the 600.

Gray Bees DropNJISAA Title

LAWRENCEVILLE- The

St Benedict's Prep track andfield team followed the patternof the Gray Bee wrestlers as

it won four titles, but still lostthe New Jersey IndependentSchools Athletic Associationtitle to UawTenceville hereFeb 27

The Gray Bees were badlyoutsrored in two events, theshot put and mile run, as theydropped a 35 26 decision to theLames, with whom they hadshared the title in 1962

Gerry Murphy and PaulDrew were the top performersfor coach F'ran Murphy, each

winning two gold medals. DickKenath provided a surprisevictory in the 880-year run in201 8. Murphy retained hiswon the 60-yard high hurdlesin 7 7 after tying the meetrecord of 7 6 in a heat

Sl Benedict's set a schoolrecord in the eight-lap relayss Joe Picataggio, JoeJamison. Drew and Murphywere clocked at 2:40.9.

March 1, 1963 THE ADVOCATE 15

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I*o*4* (ran Lackawanna (Halloa)

Foreign MissionedAid Leprosy Victims

Leprosy claims more vic-tims in the world than canceror tuberculosis. About 10

million people suffer fromleprosy, many of them caredfor by 1,250 priests. Brothersand Sisters in foreign lands.

Victims of leprosy rot in theflesh, not in egotism. So oftenthey say: “Touch my hands,"so ardently do they long forhuman compassion. Perhaps,too, they recall that Our Lord,when He met a leper, "heldout His hand and touched himand the leprosy left him." Hetouched Peter’s mother-in-lawand the fever left her; Hetouched a dead child's fore-head and life was restored.

All of these touches were thetouches of God through Hishuman nature; now that Hehas ascended into heaven Hetouches the sick and the lep-prous through human natures

which are united to Him byfaith and by grace.

Just $3 a month will helparrest leprosy through modemdrugs. What a beautifulchance there is for a sacrificeto make up for the leprosyof sin in our souls by healingthe leprosy in their bodies.Therefore, do not merely sendmoney: but touch the leper as

did Our Lord with your out-

going love and sympathy, ifnot his wounds at least hissoul.

Send your sympathetic rep-aration for sin to the HolyFather through his Society forthe Propagation of the Faith.

Maltese CapuchinsIn Mete Mission

The Maltese Capuchins have

spared no effort to carry outcommitments at home andin hospitals and parishchurches; abroad in theirmissions in Jhansi. India.

Recently they were en-trusted with anew mission inAddis Abeba, Ethiopia. Twoof their members have beenworking there already forsome years, another is joiningthem, ami others are makingfinal preparations for depar-ture.

These missionaries look foryour help in prayers and alms.

Medical Mission

Popular in JapanMedical work has proven a

“wonderful way to becomefriendly with the Japanese,”writes a missionary. “Our ex-

perience is that the wholefamily begs for the injectionwhen we give an injection to

the baby. At first we were

apprehensive about pouringthe baptismal waters in frontof the non-Christian parents ofa baby who was obviously dy-ing. but experience has shownthat the parents are greatlyconsoled.

“They are very gratefulwhen we are able to tell themafterwards about the effect ofBaptism on the soul and thatthey now have a little ’angel’in heaven. Ominesan. who

lost two newly baptised sons

to the Church Triumphant,was so inspired by thinkingabout her two boys withMariasama’ that she herselfasked to take instructions and

was baptized ’Natale’ lastChristmas Eve.

"Please help our medicalmission work by equipping us

with the tools of our trade, as

by your generous prayersfor our success."

Plea for AssistanceFrom theFar Morth

From the polar circle cometa letter saying: “I am writingthis in pencil because in thisEskimo camp we are luckyto have even that. Our mis-

sion is on an island 390 miles

north of the polar circle andextends 250.000 miles with 500Eskimos, 200 of whom areCatholic.

“In 1955 I began to con-struct a church here. It is tobe of stone all over, but Ihave not been able to com-

plete it for want of funds.Could you send something tohelp finish our church? Thetemperature is between 50 and

60 degrees below sero. We alsoneed a portable organ, be-cause the Eskimos like tosing."

Mete Guinea Station

Isolated From IFor IdAssigned to start a mater-

nity hospital and infant andmaternal welfare clinics at

Terapo on Papua, NewGuinea. Sister Joseph Marysends an urgent appeal forhelp to care for tome 10,000people of the area.

"Terapo is 120 miles wealof Port Moseby." the wntrs.“There was in airstrip hereduring the war, but it is never

used now. not even in an em-

ergency. The boats call once

* week No local boat can

cross the bar or della at themouth of the river, to we are

truly isolated“My assignment calls for

general nursing services Thenearest doctor it at Kerrma.60 miles away An IMootlaunch it being built for me

to use as a mobile clinic andambulance, as all travel is

done on She rivers and the

creek*. There are no roads,electricity, phones or postmen

"Medical services are prac-tically ml. Some villages havea Native Aid Station, but arealmost always out of drugsand dressings. Until now therewere no infant and maternalwelfare services, so by instal-lation of these clinics w# hopeto bring an improvement in

medical care for the peopleand at the same time to intro-duce them to the love of the

Sacred Heart"We urgently need your help

that we may care for our dearPapuans ”

Bishop to Visit

O. L. of LiberaBishop Stanton will make

an appeal on behalf of theSociety for the Propagationof the Faith on March 10 atOur Lady of Libera. WestNew York, Rev. EugeneA Kanelli, pastor.

Bishop Stanton thanksFather Fanelli and otherpastors of the archdiocesefor making thesa appealspossible.

Society for the Propagationof the Faith

Archdiocese of Newark:Most Rev. Martin W. Stanton, S.T.D.Very Rev. Msgr. John F. Davis31 Mulberry St., Newark 2, N. J. Phone 623-I3M.Hours: Daily, I a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, t a.m. to 12.

Diocese of Paterson:Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F. Louis24 DeGratsc St., Paterson 1, N. J. Phone ARmory t-MNHours: Dally, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m,; Saturday, • a.m. to 12.

Donations to ibt Society for the Propagation ot theFaith are income tax deductible.

Official UpholdsUhang Sentence

SEOUL. Korea (NC) - CmChong-O Kim, Korean Armychief of staff, hai confirmedIhe three-year suspended failjentence given to former Premier John M Chant, leadingKorean Catholic layman.

The sentence wa» handeddown earlier In February bya military court of appealshere. Chang intends to appealthe court'* verdict and thechief of staff* approval to a

higher court.

Chang, head of the govern-ment ousted in May, 1*61. bythe military junta now inpower, wai retried by the

military appeal* court on a

charge of aiding a plot to over-throw the junta.

At his fint trial last September he was convicted andsentenced to a 10-year prisonterm He wa* pardoned shortlyafterward. Chang instiled onhis innocence, however, andrefused the pardon. The re-trial followed hi* demand thathe be acquitted of any part inthe alleged plot.

CONFERENCE IN CHILE - Raoul Cardinal Silva of Santiago confers with mission-tourgroup which includes Rev. Vincent J. Prestera, superior of the Honduras mission of theNewark Archdiocese, (at Cardinal's left). The group currently traveling through LatinAmerica to assess Church needs, includes, from left. Rev. Alphonsus Kirchgassner,founder of the Oratorians in Germany; Rev. Hermengild Charbonneau, execu-

tive secretary of the Canadian Conference of Religious; Rev. Renato Pableti, S.J., advis-ory coordinator for religious congregations working in Latin America; Rev. JamesDarby, S.M., president of the Conference of Major Superiors of the U.S., and Rev. Peter

Miller, S.C.J., of the Major Religious Superiors' Latin America committee.

Sudanese Continue Expulsions;Unfair Court Trials Reported

VERONA, Italy (NO)Five more Catholic mission-aries are being expelled fromthe Sudan, according to infor-mation received by the VeronaFather* here The actionraised the number of mission-aries expelled from the Mos-lem nation to 9S

A Sudanese police official in-formed one Verona Father andfour Verona Missionary Sis-ters that they had to leave theSudan within six weeks They.Uke the 93 Catholic mission-aries expelled before them,have been working in thesouthern part of the Sudanwhere the predominanity Ne-gro population has been subjected to a step-by-step pro-gram of Ulamuabon by theSudan's Arabic-speaking Moslem matters from the North.

A VEROVA Father hat been

released on ball from prisonin the Sudan after threemonth* without having been

brought to trial Rev GiovanniTmetla, FSC J . 37. was ac-

cused of telling two catrehivtathat "the (Sudanese* governmen! is evil

"

He was re

leased on ball only after the

Italian Foreign Ministry in-

terceded in hit behalfFather Trivella had been put

In solitary confinementwithout either shirt or »hoet.and wa* forced to sleep no

lha earth floor despite the

fact that he is an arthriticThe earlier request of an at-

torney for his release on bailhad brought the reply thatFather Trivella'* crime* were

"100 serious" to allow sucha release.

REPORTS REACHINGNairobi, Kenya, indicated thatthe Sudan government it mis-using the courts In its anti-

mission crackdown.Account* charge that Mos-

lem judge* from the north-

presiding over courts in thesouth ignore testimony favor-able to missionary defendants,help the prosecution and show

prejudice against all Christians brought before them Thereports also allege that of

Goals have tried to bribe wit

nesses to testify against mis-

sterner*

Observer* also noted that

the government ha* issuedtwo different explanations forthe ouster of missioners

A statement issued Feb 11by Minister of Interior Mo-hamed Ahmed Irwa declaredthat since the Sudan won in-dependence in 19.V6 it hassought to bring the school* un-

der state control and “put an

end to the missionarysocieties’ control over educa-tion ."

This policy, he said, entailedthe appointment of Sudaneseteachers tp replace mission-

aries. who "have become re-

dundant "

Pope Asks Canada

For Mission HelpOTTAWA, Ont. (NC) Pope

John expressed his thanks tothe Church in Canada for aid-

ing in the missionary work ofLatin America —and addedthat more help is needed.

The Pope wrote: “Without

doubt, there is no diocese inyour country which could notat a beginning assign to thisend at least one or two min-isters of God."

A LETTER from the Popeaddressed to the Bishops ofCanada was made public bythe Apostolic Delegation here.It asked the Canadian hier-

archy to be "the interpretersand the messengers" of thePope "among the worthy com-

munities of religious men andwomen in your country." Itadded: “As we are well

aware, they are intimatelyand amply collaborating withyou in coming to the aid ofLatin America."

The Pope said "a remark-able number” of priests, re-

ligious and laymen alreadyare at work in Latin America.He added that the Joy resultingfrom *uch generous zeal i*tempered by concern "each

time we, who arc as fatherand shepherd to all people,turn our attention toward thevast regions of Latin Americawhere lives almost one-third ofthe entire Catholic family.”

“ft is true,” the Pope said,“that the very zealouashepherds of these dio-ceses arc applying themselveswith all their energies to an-swer to the exigencies of their

heavy pastoral charge by tak-ing measures which will bestprepare for the future,

“But the recruits who are

presently at their dispositionare in number absolutely in-

adequate to answer the pres-ent demands,” he added.

WHEN THE Bishops of Lit-'in America were in Rome forthe Vatican Council, they w-cre

“the spokesmen of this desper-ate situation,” Pope John said.

"For this reason we are

writing to you, dear son* andvenerable brothers, to exhortyou to spare no effort but tostrive with still greater ardorto realize that especially whichis so close to our heart, thesending of priest* into thesecountries .”

16 THE ADVOCATE March 7, 1963

As Long |+ -

As You LiveEB>*xdxb3T*» a «good in com uTOO tarot /oar ila■ • la infc& A *" crnf

• OhSuTui

want roc nta iMKMMAnoMi

SOCIETY OFTHE DIVINE WORD

Aaaaity Dept GIRARD. PA.

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WRITE or PHONE - UNion 5-2325

VERONICA'S VEIL THEATRE1309 Control Avenue, Union City N.J.

Help Students to Become Priests$l.OO WILL MAINTAIN A STUDENT FOR ONE DAY

WILL YOU HELP HIM ALONG?

In our Divina Word Seminaries In Indio, Philippineand Japan, we have a number of students preparingfor thepriesthood. MANY ARE VERY POOR and needfinancial help to continue their studies.ns -*< .

m

I

TIAR OFF

wear raintri

Enclosed find $ for sponsoring s studentto the priesthood for days. .

CITT— TOW STATS..

HELP HIM TO REACH HIS GOAL

MAH TO

REV. FATHER RALPH, nah.dir.S.V.D. Catholic Universities

316 N. MICHIGAN CHICAGO 1

WEEK END RETREATSFOR THE LAITY

in NO A Ml UMNO WITH GOO

For: MEN, WOMEN,HUSBAND and WIFE

C»mKHN4I k» *v# •#V* --» Ford • AW4«t

oo 'rWf.H H

OltfCTO* 01 KirtfATl

Q»**> •< Fm« H»#««

It FW. AfcW, N*«4m N J

INDIA: HARVEST IN MARCHTHE FLOODED RICE FIELD** of southern lodi. kn, her.

The Ull-staadtag heads with their 'low p*,hrd »eed»•" fathered la . . . After threshm*“>» grains. still eneased la theiibma halt*, hit (sited padd, Eaeh>»" at this liar (hr alar (era u»len(raai ST. JOSEPH * HOME FOE THEABANDONED appear far (hr kinola» ARTPOOKKARA. la (he dlrxrar•* CHANGANACUERRT . . . They

** Sri paddy far mot im•TPSaam. aged. hsndarspped and 111aadrr (heir rarr. Whatever (hr,rrla* aaa atux lax far Or wholerear: . . . SISTER CARMEL* leiU aaaa4D Oal man* aba arrk admittance

« “*• Jusirio marl br mrned away. She rsnnot meet mortal-

ia« debts aad lark af apsee make* Or aork daakly hard . . .Tfca Slatrra harr aaly one raaaa far IkrmaeUm another —n

raraar far a ehaprl. Tkry nred a real ebaprl. a koaar for theSlakara. aa wall aa aa Infirmary where Uinr cwmlai In wlOeaalailoai diorama caa he laalaled

... A itfl af »1 PM willretire* Oj atraia aa Oaar raliaal women. Hill yaa. for ST.JOSEPH’S FEAST Ob month, help a houae drdlealrd lo hunt

SPRINGTIME IN GALILEEBee ante Hr waa a man a» wail aa He waa God

Ha loved Hu own goat-nibblcd hllU. HU crumblingJrwUh rod

Hr bowed lo Roman rule and dared none lo rebel!Bui ob iba windflower? out of Naim.We know He loved them well!” —Eileen Duggan

Rlfht now ihoae “hUU of Galilee" where He »o often walkedira ablate with color-red. blue, while. The narciiaua C Ro**of Sharon"! ahlne* la the sunlight Whole hUUidea arecovered with wild anemonea i"LUy of the Field"! and withpink flax, crowfoot. Iri*. broomrape and borage And here ona day not lone before the Crucifixion. Peter. In anxwer to OurLord'a question uttered hit Immortal reply “Thou are theChrtat'”

la appreciation for the MASS STIPENDS and other glftayoui send in. we would like to give you a .mall memento—acard with flower* from the Holy Ijnd Or well gladly aendone te the friend or relative In whose name your offering umade, if you with.-

<2jajkftTL HJf Uw) Mmm /W

/vbfWcbd

“EGG MONEY*~I«« money" traditionally ioe» to the farmer’i wife fee her

ate. Recently a woman wrote aa that for yean her egg moneywan riven far the education of a seminarian . . At times shewandered If the sacrifice were worth while. Then rame wordth« 4 the young man b no. ordained

. . Chlldleaa themaelv*eauple have been given greet happiness by their

Yaa also can help educate a seminarian or Sbter In one afoar mboloa lands. 11 a week for alx yean pays for a aemtna-

f ** * w ** h ,#r ,wo Fe«ra prepare! a girl for-l It lons life

... Or you eau Join a DOLLAR. A-MONTII CLUB:CHRYSOSTOM CLUB for aemlnartansMARY’S BANK for Sisters.

Kindly remember ua In your will. Official title:THB CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

DEAR MONSIGtfOR RYAN:

Enclosed please And

Name

Zone...

Street

City State

MANCII CAdDINAt SPILLMAN, Pre.Wen.Mort. Joseph Y. Ryan. Mari !*•>

CMNEAR (AST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

4<o Uxlnofon Avt, of 46Hi It. New York 17, N. Y.

ALBERT H. HOPPER, Inc.MONUMENTS • MAUSOLEUMS WY 1-2266-67579441 R»dg* Rood 'Oppoiil* Holy Cron) No Arlington

BUY DIRECT FROM THE MANUFACTURER

SAVE UP TO 30%4 too ion* wfcy Alb*n H. Hoppor •« tKo lorgott

of Momo’toltMl Now Jortoy

• W# pott an fa »«r tviHmtn «

MvMf vp »• >O% by

»• »S« ywrtKtMf.• All w«ik r« by U<ol

cwtHn 4 (•>»•»»h*r« at *«r

pl»w». auunaf y»wimmai*

• Yo w <•« tboK#r# et work progr*tt»t

* Wo Hevo o* ovr plont e largon*:k of row mot«>val enablingvt to complete jrovr choree on

*hert nottco

In Time of Seed

Consult Your Catholic Funeral Director

W bote careful and understanding service is in accord u ith

the traditions of Holy Mother Church

BERGEN COUNTY

THOMAS J. DIFFILY

41 AMES AVENUE

RUTHERFORD. N. J.WEbster 9-0098

HENNESSEY

FUNERAL HOME232 KIPP AVENUE

HASBROUCK HEIGHTS. N. J.ATIos 8 1362

TRINKA FUNERAL SERVICE

MAYWOOD BOGOTA

LITTLE FERIY

HUbbord 7 3050

VOLK FUNERAL HOMESTEANECK TE 6 0202

BOGOTA: HU 9 2202

JOHN J. FEENEY A SONS232 FRANKLIN AVENUE

RIDGEWOOD N J

Gilbert 4-7650

GORMLIY FUNERAL HOME335 UNION STREET

HACKENSACK. N.J.HUbbord 7-1010

CLIFFORD H. PEINECKE

1321 TEANECK ROADWEST ENGLEWOOD. N. J.

FRANCIS X. FAHEY,ManagerTE 7-2332

ESSEX COUNTY

PETER J. QUINN

Funeral Director320 BELLEVILLE AVENUE

BLOOMFIELD. N. J.

Pilgrim 8-1260

CORNY A GORNY

MORTUARY399 HOOVER AVE.

BLOOMFIELD. N. J.

Pilgrim 3-8400

FLOOD FUNERAL HOME

Andrew W Flood, Mgr.112 So. Munn Ave.

East Orange, N. J.

ORonge 4-4445

MArket 2 2530

CODEY'S FUNERAL SERVICE69 HIGH STREET

ORANGE. N. J.

ORonge 4-7554

HUELSENBECK

MEMORIAL HOME1108 So. Orange Ave.

Newark 6, N. J.Karl W Huelsenbeck

DirectorESsex 2-1600

CODEY'S FUNERAL SERVICE77 PARK STREET

MONTCLAIR, N. J.

Pilgrim 4-0005

DECAPUA FUNERAL HOME269 MT. PROSPECT AVE.

NEWARK, N. J.HUmboldt 2-3333

iEORGE AHR A SON700 NYE AVENUE

IRVINGTON. N. J.ESsex 3-1020

mi

m:

REZEM FUNERAL HOME

579 Grove Street

Irvington, N J.ESiex 2-8700

STANTON FUNERAL HOME

661 FRANKLIN AVENUENUTLEY, N. J.

NOrth 7-3131

MURPHY MEMORIAL HOME102 FLEMING AVENUE

NEWARK. N J.

MArket 3 0514

JOHN F. MURPHY480 SANFORD AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

ESiex 3 6053

JOHN J. QUINNFUNERAL HOME

323-329 PARK AVENUEORANGE. N. J

ORonge ? 0348

KIERNAN FUNERAL HOME101 UNION AVENUE

BELLEVILLE. N. J.

Plymouth 9-3503

FRANK McGEE525 SUMMER AVENUE

NEWARK. N. J.HUmboldt 2-2222

MURRAYFUNERAL SERVICE

MICHAEL J. MURRAY.

Director206 BELLEVILLE AVENUE

BLOOMFIELD. N.J.PI 3-2527

MURPHY FUNERAL HOME

DIRECTORSGRACE MURPHY

WILLIAM T. NEELY301 ROSEVILLE AVENUE

NEWARK. N. J.HUmboldt 3 2600

GORNY « GORNY

MORTUARY

303 MAIN STREETEAST ORANGE. N J.

ORonge 2-2414

l. V. MUHIN l SON976 BROAD STREET

NEWARK, N. J.

MArket 3-0660

HUDSON COUNTY

EARL F. BOSWORTH311 WILLOW AVENUE

HOBOKEN, N. J.

Oldfield 9-1455Oldfield 9-1456

BUNNELL FUNERAL HOME

41 Highland Ava.

Jersey City, N. J.Charles A. Stevens,

ManagerDElaware 3-6446

LAWRENCE G. QUINNFUNERAL HOMS

298 ACADEMY ST.(at Bergen Square)JERSEY CITY, N. J.

SW 8-8114

RIEMAN FUNERAL HOME1914 NEW YORK AVENUE

UNION CITY. N J.

UNion 7 6767

LEBER FUNERAL HOME20th ST & HUDSON BLVD.

UNION CITY, N. J.UNion 3-1100

HOWARD J. BRENNAN6414 BERGENUNE AVE.WEST NEW YORK. N. J.

UNion 7 0373

WILLIAM SCHIEMM INC.

2200 HUDSON BIVD.UNION CITY. N J.

WILL lAM SCHIEMM.

MANAGERUNion 7 1000

JAMES A. McLAUGHLIN

591 JERSEY AVENUE

JERSEY CITY, N. J.Oldfield 3 2266

WILLIAM SCHLEMM, INC.

539 BERGEN AVE.JERSEY CITY. N. J.

JOHN J CARTY,MANAGER

HEnderson 4-0411

MORRIS COUNTY

SCANLANFUNERAL HOMES

781 Newark Pompton Tpk.Pompton Plains, N. J.

TE 5-4156SH 2 6433

PASSAIC COUNTY

HENNESSEY FUNERAL HOME171 WASHINGTON PLACE

PASSAIC, N. J.PRescott 7-0141

GORNY ft GORNYMORTUARY

519 MARSHALL STREET

PATERSON. N. J.

MUlberry 4 5400

GORMLEY FUNERAL HOME154 WASHINGTON PLACE

PASSAIC, N. J.PRescott 9-3183

QUINLAN FUNERAL HOME27-29 HARDING AVENUE

CLIFTON, N. J,PRescott 7-3002

UNION COUNTY

MILLER-BANNWORTHFUNERAL HOME

1055 EAST JERSEY ST.ELIZABETH. N. J.

Elizabeth 2-6664

GORNY ft GORNYMORTUARY

330 ELIZABETH AVENUEELIZABETH, N. J.

Elizabeth 2-1415

» lW», H.b ~H«. «.» Th. AdW . W . MArht «, M

Noon, Evening Masses Listed

Following M « lining at pamheawhich him aotllM Tha Advocate theywill have noon or avanlng Mattel onweekday* daring Uni.

■ LOOMFIILDSacred Haart. Bread A Liberty su.,j£l® p.m. dally. S:JO pjn. iKacapt

fit. Thomoa tha ApooUe. do Byrd Ava..0 p.ny i Except Sat.)

CUSTOMSt. Philip tha Apoatla. 707 Vnllay M.,11:10 a.m. IB*. Sat.)

■ASJ ORANOIHoly Name. 104 Midland Av*., II a m.ST Jnaaph'a. Trrmont Ava. * Tatiord

HolyS-A&Ava . »,«

a.m. (Karapt Sat.) and S:JO p.m■ LliatlTH

J2 Smith SI.. 1:00 p.m.

•urriNSSRoSt John Nrpomuernr. 7001 I’olh St..

11:30 a.m.

JKRIIY CITY0. 1. Sorrow*. M Cloth St., 13:03 pm.dally.'3:3o p.m. IBaiapt Sat.)

St. Aadan'a, Rargen \va. a MercerSt., 13:H) p.m,

St. Jaaaph'a. Baldwin * Pavanl* A»t».,U:00 p.m.

St. Polar'*, lit Grand St.. 13:00 p.m.MIDLANO PARK

NaU'lty. Prwapcct St. 13 mamMONTCLAIR

Immaculate Conception. 30 N. FullertonAv*.. 13:10 pm. .

NSWARK■hue* at Angela. «t Belmont A*e.4:3* p.m. IRaccpt Sat.)

St. Anton lout. JJt S Orange Ava.. 3 Hip.m I Cacopt Sol when uioro will he

a Maaa at noon*

St. Charter Borremeo. S4 Cuoter Av*.,

I o?.*’ 4 A**.. 13:10 pm. A3:11 p.m.

SJ Philip NerL U Court Haue* PI..«:It pm, IK*. Rati

t m"*' 4 Humboldt

nuHiyHoly Family. SI BrookUiw Av#., I X

p-m.

Holy SwrH. •asm. ..1.. p.».O X. Ml Carmel. |oa A Center SC.3:30 p.m.

O. I- Valley. Valley A Naaaau su.0:30 pm.

PARAMUSa L Vlattatlon. no Fatrvtew Ate,

11:13 p.m.PASSAIC

ML Carmel. I* Me lean at., n jn am.IK* Sal.)

m. NlrOalaa. 131 Waahingtea PI. IInaoa IKa. Sol.l

- PATSROOMO. L. Victorina, 100 Pair fit. II noon

St, Michael ‘a, Croon St . 13 anon

St Thareae. 9P 13th At*., 11:13 amiRv. Satl

RIVSR I DBSfit Pater the Apnatle. Hi ruth Ate..

II a m.

TOTOWA3t Jame*. tie Totewt Rd. 11:1* am

WIIT NSW YORK

a 1. Liter a. I*o* Hudtoe Bit*. 1,

fit. jroepn a' (he Palioedet. o*ol Pol..ude At*. I.Jo pm IB* Set:

Pray for Them

Lithuanian Refugee Priest, Stationed in Paterson, DiesPATERSON-Rev. Vytsutss

Dcmlkis. 56, sn assistant pas-tor at St. Casimlr’a Churchhere since 1950. died suddenlyMarch 3. while returning froma concert in Brooklyn.

Father Demikis, a refugesfrom Llthusnis, was dis-covered slumped over in hiscar. He had attended s con-cert given in Brooklyn by thechords of St. Anthony’s HighSchool, Kennebunkport, Me.,which is run by Franciscansfrom Lithuania.

Born In Liepaiotai. Lithu-ania, Father Demikis receivedhis theological training atViikavtskis and was ordainedJune 17, 1934.

during world war u,hla pariah was occupied byGerman force* ' and he wastransferred to Mindaugas. Hishealth broke down about thistime and he was moved ioValakbudis near the Germanborder.

As the Russian armies sweptback through Lithuania, hefled to Germany and settledin Blomberg. where he was

chaplain to a Lithuanian dis-

placed persons camp He con-

tinued this work at othercamp* in Goettingen andDtepholr before coming to theU. S tn 1950

After Lather Demikis hadspent a month wtth relative*

in Brooklyn, be was Invited byArchbishop Boland, then Bish-op of Paterson, to serve as anassistant to Rev. John J. Hin-ts at St. Casimir'a. In his new

parish were about 80 familieswho had also fled before theoppressors of their homeland.He celebrated the 25th anni-versary of hia ordination herein 1959.

BISHOP McNULTY will of-fer the Solemn Requiem Maaaat St. Caaimir's March 7. Thesermon will be preached byRev. Peter TotoraiUs of HolyTrinity. Newark.

ilsgr. John Baikunas. pastorof the church of the transfigur-ation, Maspeth, L.L, will be

archpriest Rev. Vytautai Pik-terns of St. Mary's of the An

gels, Brooklyn, and Rev. CirtorDabris, 0.F.M., of St. FrancisMonastery, Brooklyn, will bedeacon and subdcacon.

Survivor* include a brother.Dr. Joseph Demikis, ami a

sister, Birute Demikis, both ofLithuania.

Sr. Ocilia Franci*UNION CITY - Sister

Cccitu Francis Mullaiy,05.F., a teacher at Holy

mily Hi»j! School, Union

City, died March 3 at St>Dry's Hospital. Hoboken,alter a short illness

Born in Weal Hoboken (now

part of Union City), SisterCecilia Francis had been atHoly Family for nine yesrsand sepved one thrcc-yasrterm as principal.

Survivors include fourbrothers, Msgr. William J..Mullaiy of Daytona, Fla., An-drew. Michael and Joseph,and two sisters, Mrs. WinifredCorkc and Mrs. Rose Monlap.

A Solemn Requiem Masswas offered March 6 at HolyFamily Church.

Other Deaths . ..

Sister Mary Pius, R.S.M.,dietician at Georgian CourtCollege since 1925, dim! March4 at Lakewood

Aloyslu* J. Thomas, 72, ofNewark, father of Joseph AThomas, managing editor ofThe Advocate, died Feb. 28 at

St Michael's HospitalMr*. William A. Allrn,

104. of Orange, aunt of RevW (Jordon Byrne, pastor ofOur Lady of Perpetual Help.Oakland, died March 1 at

Montclair Nursing Home,Montclair

Mrs. James J. Bowie*, RO, ofWood-Uldge. mother of Sister

Kevin, OSB, of the Benedic-tion Mothcrhouse. Elizabeth,amt Sister Doris Ann. OP .of St Mary's. Rutherford. d:edFeb 25 »t home

Brolhrr Andrew John

Brcevy, F.8.C., 18. of WestNew York, a novice of theBrothers of the ChristianSchools, died Feb. 23 at theChristian Brothers Novitiate,Barrytown, N. Y

James T. Cavanaugh of EastOrange, brother of Sister JohnBerchmanns, C.R.S.M , w,Sister Mary Clementine,C R.S.M., died Feb 25.

James R. Ryall of South Or-ange. brother of SisterAloysius Gonzaga, S.S.J., ofConscohocken, Pa , died Feb25.

Joseph F. Smith, 65. of Jer-sey City, brother of SisterMary Barbara, OP, of Ala-bama, died March t in JerseyCity

John J. Ilailigan, 61. ofNorth Bergen, father of Rev.Mr Damian Ilailigan. S J., ofSt Peter's Prep, died March1 at home

Stephen Duguay, brother ofSister Francis Eugenie of HolyTrinity. Hackensack, and Sis-ter Frances Elizabeth of St.Josephs Hospital. Paterson,diet! in Florida recently.

In your prjyen aho rt mem-

ber ihete, your deteaied

pnetli:

\euurk ...Rev Daniel P X Hart. SJ.,

March 9 1960

Rev Era-mu* Ansion, March10. 1909

Rev John J Preston March12. 1938

Rev Ferdinand E. Bogncr,March 13. 1341

Rev Josepn F Mcndl. March14 1907

ft! Rev Msgr Charles F.Shaw March 14 1958

Rev Jo-eph J Hasel. MarchIS. 1908

Rev Owen I-eary. Ol' M.,March IS 1958

Rev Owen McCormack,OF M March IS 196!

Paterson . . .

Rev Ro> It Ay cock. March9 1956

FATHER DEMIKIS

March 7, 1983 THE ADVOCATE 17-Kfetob—-*«««» «MICE

• >Y 1-WAY RADIO *

• INDUSTRIAL• RESIDENTIAL• COMMERCIAL

WIRING »

alterations our specialty

FINANCING AVAILABLE

LICENSED, SONDED, UNIFORMEDPERSONNEL

Bigelow 3-4110

WHEN YOU WANTFLOWERS CALL:

HANOVER FLORAL CO.Comploto Cemetery Service

41 Rldtedei# Henover

TUcktr roios

Your NeighborhoodPharmacist

HE'S THE MAN YOURDOCTOR DEPENDS UPON

Vow doctor know* ho coo roly on•Ho trok»Ji»f ethtct end knew howI# the pharmacist who mis hitproscription for yev.

NEWARKtom 4 Oeorfo Merterena. hr opt.

Lift PHARMACYFatabli*hed o\or 30 year*

four Rpfikterrd PharmacuUFroo Dell very Open E>e»y Day

From t a m to il pm7H M». Protpect Aeewve. cor.

Montclair AvenueHU MW Newark, H J

JERSEY CITYVALSMTPf PHARMACY

JOSiPM VALINTI. Rot. Phor.PreompOone Baby Needs

Photo Dope. Free Pehsery713 West IMo Ave - 000 Polnrtow

Jersey City. N. J.PHOWIt PI HB4

WESTFIELDCINTRAL PHARMACY

Michool J. Cor mote. Rof. Phor.Prescript K*tu» Carefully

DruisSick Room Supohea

04 Contra! Aw , WaOHoti M

NUTLEYBAY DROOt CO.

James Rkcio. fee Phar.

MOrth 7-JOOf

WROUGHT IRON

RAILINGS

CAU

!C«

mt

[IT! V ATI

INSTAUEO - NO EXTRAS

NO OBLIGATION

JUST CALLPASS.-BESG. I NWK. AREAAR 1-7650 I ES Mloo

246 Vrteland Av«.

Palenon, N.J.

DAILY TRIPS

TO FLORIDA

AND CALIFORNIACOAST TO COAST MOVERS

INCEL

s„Cf(o»»

***** .

f ! <7 iooAfotf

?**•■tigMa-

m ****>* V

*O*C

'*»*»s'^

*1

U

Joseph F. Browne

frrpTr1191 C '* J »i. r>A» 1443

InstitutionalCleaning Supplies

• AS* CANS » Nil! • SO A A

• AOtliH • lIOOMS • ItUSHtS

• WAT • SAOWGJS • AAIU

• tout! AAa<«

• MO»AING (OCM'XINT

AAAH • AAAti tOwKS • CUAJ

278 Wayne Street

Jersey City, N. J.NMmm Mi’l

MICHAEL J. HARRISINC.

HIGH LEVELROOFING EXPERTS

SHEET METALCONSTRUCTION

TO* CMU»CMIS SCHOOU

AND INSTITUTIONSmciAum in

• Residential Roofing• Loaders & Gutters• Siding

EL 3-1700Ml Nl W rOINT IOAO

lUZAUTH NJ.

«STAStISM{& ISIS

FAMILY MONUMINTI

john fa McGovern

MEMORIALSa LTttoaizED nrjLLun

NOKTH AKLIN6TON N J

MYmm IXM DlK«<r« 10)1

•*» TH# !•*»«» N* Ari>rf)en Af««

TO SEU YOUR HOME FAST

///A //,XI ll# Pit# Afi.«f**«

WYmon 1-4822<>P*Q *»•

ADVOCATE CLASSIFIED MARKET PLACE IKo’ot \AOc

p*'- 4 ml#rt*or,

2ft p«' !•«# 2

O«o'l‘-n« Morvjlcy 4 PA*

*o TV« Ad«cxo**

31 c Lr»»©o v . K»»o*i. N J

or p*©.*o MArl,. 4 0700. !.• 22

HELP WANTED FEMALE

; WE HAVE OPENINGS TOEFEMAIESTENO

TYPIST

r SECRETARYMALE - SALES

ENGINEERSEXECUTIVE

•MANY OTHERS"

BURNSEMPLOYMENT AGENCY

Broad 4 Hart* HA B-TIOB_» %cw4iui

* DOMESTIC HELPVAMIb Cool for factory. Mujl ba««hisb racositaradaUcßA. Gaud aaiarp.•wo room aod bath.

Wtiu €/• l*.o Boa mu Borhaoay. H J

HELP WANTED - MALE

men to Bf>nM bo 7* at CaUmtxHomo located la WalaiMlptlU - r««fround paattaui Dutxo conalat la aiuh’U

erar and carta* lor taraada bait Cut tarall out o< arhool acltttuaa. Salary poaroom, board and lauudry Muat lira lartta day wrak layanaarr helpful butnot orraaalrr Giro compJata detain latint latter. Ita« 77t7. Philadelphia 1.

SITUATION WANTED

TEACHER desires potthw foe remainderef year. Alt. felly certified. 7th to 12Utrades RatUsh. Rapertcneed.

Phone PL 4 30*0

COMPANION, full hr part time, eiperteaeed mature woman. wtlluut to rare farolder person or yovagstars. free to travel.Phone RE I*3*s

BOARDING

WANTED, mom and board for refined

elderly woman, preferably tn the Orangea.Reply to Boa IC.

The Advocate. 31 Clinton fit.ja Newark 2. N. J.

FOR SALE

FURNITURE

A REAL STEAL

A J Room Horn* of

QUALITY FURNITUREgoing (or « armi.

V coodmon, excellent,

v* Undern Bedroom. Dinette.

*e Living Room and Better.

f£ ecceaeorke. e\er>thingfiat.

> pay U off ©. W*kly.

*£ («•• Barney * Kamoua 121Modern liomea In Modern

Contemporary. Provincial.Early American: CHOICE

•«

Bed. Spring k Mattreae ©9

Hid* a Way CONVERTIBLE tM

:* Renewed Refrigerator*. TV

t Hi n. Waahera. Dryer*, etc.

v at Lew Warehouae Price*,

j Park on our Premiere

vp Tree Deiivery Anywhere

,1BARNEY'S SUPERMARKET

1 DISCOUNT FURNITURE

I WAREHOUSEI ’ ;

M 2 rr.Uaihu>Ma Ava.

Oil Rout* 21 NEWARK

Opan Mon . Wtda.. Krt Nta.

BUSINESS DIRECTORY

AUTO DEALERS- NEW CARS-

BUICKNorth Eimx Buick Cos., Inc.

Aulhorlud Bujck forvlcoIn Bloomfl.id at 401 Btoomliald At*.

PI XMOOIn Montclair at 10 Lackawanna Plata

PI MTOO

AUTO DEALERS • NEW CARS

BUICK • MERCEDES-BENZAiaimn Mm * lanni

MARIE BUICK INC.

(MfM* lM w IHIMM mH rfi

Phon* SO 2-7500HT W *, Ointl An . to <>.«*., N. J.

CADILLAC - OIDSMOBILE-LAINC MOTOR CAR CO

AtttaruM n»*lM

Mm A bon

CmuM l M 4 Can

PIlit • m r. kk ft * J.

BRgGAN CADILIAC-OIDSNtw Jtmpi t.ark• «1 CftddUc

Distributor

Authorlird (A DILI-AC OUM

SAUDI A 9MVICZTW P»***lr At* Clifiao N J

(>•*• »:>«n n*» to • P H. !»»«»' VS*d <GR J 2AOO

CADILLACSALES * SERVICE

CENTRAL CADILLAC INC.Ku»* Stlirllon oi L »nj (.art

I*o C«atrat Ava Savarft

r'hone MA 4-2255

CHEVROLETShave m \nit»3>s

Oiooaa Irom a 'area aaforti'w «

AH ModeU - DuMm at.) fU4uc*«i

i & s

CHEVROLET"OCR RKPVTATIOS

I* YOU* PRtiTBCTIO.S"ZITI Morrifl At* , La If MV' * Mr*

CHEVROLET

SARGENT MOTORS INC.

Author laod

RALES A .SERVICE

M Rids* Rd. WV I *ooo. N. Athnaion

CHEVROLETTh* Onlr AuthnrUod Dealer

ta l.ind*B

WALLACE CHEVROLETSALES - SERVICE - PARTS

Sort In* Th* Automohtlo PublicSine* l#l»

OK USED CARS

U. S. Hifhwiy No. 1. *1 Wlnciu Avo,Undo*

HUnter 6-4900

CHEVROLET

CORVAIR CORVETTE

•CONNER CHEVROLET"On# ol Amortca'i Lariool

Chav ratal Ooalora"4T3 Bloomfltld Ato Caldwall

CA 6-6666

DEMARTINI CHEVROLETAuthortlad Saloa Rorvirv

CHEVROLET _ CHEVY IICORVAIR - CORVETTE

Complala Uaa tf Good Umf Can

WM MtMM And*non Avo.. CHlfatda Park

AUGUSTINE MOTORS INC.WERTfIELDAuthorised *

• CHRYSLER • IMPERIAL• PLYHOUTII • VALIANT

AO MOM *7* North Avo.. E.

Visit WESTFIELD DODGE INC.Knr DODGE - DART

os North Avo, E. AD tool

CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH . VAUANT

TOWNE MOTORS INC.Diroct factory Doalar

Ralaa Parts RorrlcoUaad Can Body Shop

Phon* HUnttr 6-1400IR Rt. Gooraa Avo.. W. Linden. N. 1.

AUTO P«AUK> . MW CAM

FORD

NAPPA FORD

u 4 mm hkMh rwi n»MMf4a iM inKki

(U !•*««» AM . DlaM. N J

El 4-8030

FORDTKIXOS Till NUUIIIIi

roan trvx-*sGuallllM l «M Itn

FOREST MOTORS INC.tit !«■<;«! A*• Ohah. N J

OR 3-2917

FORD

SHERIDAN FORD. Inc

AAIJCS - IUVICI _ PART*KIRK CARR AM TRItXH

l*» RRIORnVB OR. RtLAR.NY

WY 1 5060rd i'.r l>.»i 444 Hum Ai«

S lICCARDI MOTORS4a4An>UM >4iu A bun

| LINCOLN . NERCLRV

• COURT . MCTtOR

lit N. «ru4 An« Blutn

D. 4414*

FLETCHER

LINCOLN - MEXCVRY CORP

• (Mill Mill • Mrrruri .(iM

N»Jm A Write* Pim A Intmifi

.«</• Rur 14M C4M

V IRAN KLIN PL. ILMMrr ,N. J

CR 7-0940

Far Tba KrK Otil \n

OIDSMOBIIE•*« JOYi'f nuwMoiiu

• Aut Honied fUlaa 4 *ar>» ca

• Gginntrtd Load Car*

PI 4-7500I»1 Gian Ridda A*# Monition

PLYMOUTH • CHRYSLER

VALIANT . IMPERIAL

murphy HRO* Mourn kalxsRAI.ER ft IttVK't

100'♦ OuiHiHd Uasd Coro

ELiioboth 5-5600MS N. Hraod * 13 Uobsth, H. J,

PLYMOUTH • VALIANT

FULLER MOTOR CO.’Authorised Das lor

PLYMOUTH ft VALIANTRALKft ft SCavlCt

«0« Hudson Bird Union City. N. J

UNion 6-6300

1963 PONTIAC - TEMPESTSAU Modals and Colors AvoßoMo

Par Immodlslo DoUvsrr«rjrr deal in btatb

MAXON PONTIACM 77 N. Blood M. HIUMdo

Phono: WA 3-6900

FRANK'S SAPIO'SRAMBLER INC.

•*lu • Baniea • I'arta(]«uuUW llMd Cart

HUbbord 9-71701M I'MHk m . Hukuurl

PONTIACNtw Car Sato* - Sarvlca • Parti

Guarantaad Uaad CaraPtaaat Body Work * By paly karvlca

TROPHY PONTIAC•M ■'•ay. Car. UUi «. Bayanna, N.J.

HE 7-4900

AUTO DEALERS - NEW CARS

PONTIAC - VEMPESTRAMBLER

MROZEK AUTO SALES

»*» H C*ws« A.* rU«4«« *( I 111 »till

Wrrtc* tV»« V 1 M.Ml tIU

PARK SERVICE INC.

AiTi*o«Lirrs*■*:*« trrnw r*5U

P» 8-0600it.

RAMBLER;»r r » *4«c«r«

IT

ELM AUTO SALESHALES MDUt PAJUTH

K.atnt As* EtIW. N J

WYmon 8 73U

voi SwaGEN% • *(Wr?

AAJI‘

*V*v»«t p A ||TS

/ «rt?C C

t*»* ‘ '

t*4 v

Automotive Corp.» «*;!••« D**l4r~

WuUi Oubii

PHort SO 3-4567

VOLKSWAGENTUlilH *l<TTO* UIJ3 INC.

tnk»iM r

“Ua. auivue . leamvi . r*m*

Phan# 489 . 1300»» * I'umit ft . M4)«e»d

BKHGU-N COUNTY

ALTERATIONS • REPAIRS

ALUMINUM SIDINGC»rT\t*aaUoa aladawa and tea Alcoa aadKaixri UIMW porck parkMuroa. baa*■w«H* limcSad. uU »«ak. all Irpaa la*•■mar pnraa I'raa optimal*. iw Uiiw

Beautiful Home* - HU 4-9090

AUTO SERVICE l REPAIRS

G. M. Transmission ServiceKlamoutfc. laid. Lheaiolat. Buick. utdamoMi* Cadillac, any maka aula. •*Will malall a labuili iraaomiaalon (uaraataod • month*. 1 price auotad noup* tl larma. Ui> urttn. Ml Hal

SI . Newark Sor prtraa caU MlSUM I. « 1. I r M

BUILDING MATERIAL

VIOLA BROS. INC.Mum ft Lumber Matt

COMPLETE LINK OK BUILDINGMATERIALS ft SUPPLIESPar Prompt Delivery Call

NOrth 7-7000US Wuhlnitm Are. NtiUry. N. J

CARPENTRY * MASONARY

J? D. CONSTRUCTION CO?”Complete carpenter end rum work.Swimming pool*, petioe. dumneye. lire-

plecre. rev hornee. dor mere, garagee. etc

N» mb 100 Urge or 100 amtll. Eetlmateerhm'ull) glrea.

FULTON 8-7298

Will OtUOH.~ BURNERS

JOHN DUFFY FUEL^O“Making ft Serving trlende

Mince IaSU -Oil Burnere Inetelled ft Serviced

Metered Dellvorlee - 14 Hour Service

Dials Ml 2-2727ISS-151 Adame St. Newark. NJ.

PETRO"Since ISOS"

so veare ol Leederahlp In Oil HeallnsriNEST QUALITY PIIKL 08.

Oil BURNER MEHVICEPetroleum Heat and Power Company*»* Broad St.. Newark Ml 35130

FLOOR COVERING

DUFFY S••rrtM CXMtr ft BUM mmA

*•» <»•« *0 (<»<

M

t.'.'J iimJ ' »>< h J«mf i kit

r»14) I 444* A<«

Phon* HE 5 6600

MOHAWK FACTORY OUTLETIIju»u» (««■> (•«•* lit a. ■ fitmm u a hMMJ t>« . M> Iffttl

rmu v, u, *1 low

HOftlST

I* u«4«« It •

PLAZA FLORISTn*trw 4 MiUy (» CiMtMMtL r<>(4

***«»*» Hmil AfTtt4**«M«

Ih l**l»

m> v*n> %«r Wm(«

nM«t Hi • •err•*» ii »<* hi itm

U» u A*• * S J

JONES The FLORIST. INC.*WI*» • OtfHl »WOH - r»1 I4X

c«u i • y*ji Sfttft

NOnh 7 102?Morv «n*l QrMliliewM

*44 r*u*K« A««. NuUf S. J

HARDWARE . PAINTS

THOMPSONSHARD*ARK VTORR

• < •** A Duma • Fmifewr#* Nrii• R-ta*«i A b«ui • luaky H«rd«<i*

»t«« OaUmi rh«r,« Fl 4AUO

Hue* l'y*«l*r n«im FARR AT l FFKR Mrt.NTIT.AIR

INSURANCE

*•*«**• Yk Ik) •* H*«r«

•krl *«R It *• t*t*T

AUTO INSURANCE*u«i »** r»> id Ettins

• «.iki r. r»> iw r,.4*n^ amtjujnc AGBUCY tst

Ul Uuttatt \t« . \r«trt

Bl 2-2777<>»*•« • I* I M. TWI U> I M IM l» I

MOVING t STORAGE

HENRY P. TOWNSENDMOVING - KTORAGR - FAt'KIMJ

At Yw Front (4 Wok*

r«l TIM linn

CH 5-2483 • MU 8-4465PL 5-1881 • AD 2-4464

MI Sartk A>. W n. J.

MARK E. DALY & SONMOVING - KTORAOK

M< Umg IHx.m*

w* In OMYMDUND VAN LINKSC*II CNwi I I«|

«KM phoM I.Wv l JifflUM Kifindwld An. Intnftoa. N J

KHKK ECTIMATES - KtvtT RATESKILKENNY MOVING VANEAST - SATE - Et ONOMICAI.

Loc*l ft Imi I>Muc<

Phone Plymouth 1-2020IWIH.IUf, N J

JOS. RAASERMatins ft Harm* Warshouams

""g* and opsraisd tar Rafaart DuklnAll 4vno* matins, shbratns. porklns

CTMInS Em. ErtlnSSrfi.'oESmUohCnJI PI, HSU or If no us. TUckrr 7 I4MWnrohouMi 4M Cortland! It. Ballot ill*

Rsatdanc* n CnfloM ltd . Hanot rr. N J

MUSIC SCHOOLS

GILIO SCHOOL OP MUSIC?• "■*. Mil. rmolr maalanl tantrum*, ti.kaortquortar* and diatributor* of actor

•an*. fuUara. dram*, hand liutiunwnU.Piano#, or star

Private Jswoas. rsrliflsd isathsra. that

=o,iwr; » p>rt

NURSING HOMIS

I.AIIHEIHOME (<.

MANOR - A CSRTIPIEI)iME lor rldarbr m«n and woman,

rlnaa alUnllon and earsi rats* raatonalttoi K.l.tnwnr.rt saioa. P O Boa IM.Bprlns Vallvjr Nat* York.

NURSING HOMES

c «a>r<>«£> Moot lodge ixtmve lIOMB

*•»« A **mmn Ndiftfiuit. (««v>“«•*>- w* «!»*»- U« R« BUM w• A«>*« •< »« UaM A Mbubi

GUAOVa RUU.Y. * «»«19 OAUIABO rr LAAMOR!)

• Alin AMI

In Newark. N.J.ABBEY NURSING HOME

KiAPUtI BRA VK AM*l ctl*4M«U| U 1

86 VAN NESS PLACE•Off I '-mima A«« •

Bigelow 3 0303

PAINTING A DECORATING

HAAIBMA Mi. BmmbaMarUVriNAi BMi OIA iXIATtNC

rent r*u. ami Iv r..■ —r ».»MMtA lwi(« f> Mill m CO l ':«4

PLUMBING A HEATING

AMERICAN HEATING

CONSULTANTS CO.• (MRMfHAJ

Hour*• H* Kir

Coll American First CA 8-1 366a<* Caiambi.

MK'HAKI. T HALLE AMA.NNI«1 WILLIAM AT VB'AABK J. N.

market nvn

REST HOME

BENEDICT MANOR

HEATING-AIR CONDITIONING

CONVERT TO GAS NOW► ro* ten*; Eatimal*

AITHOIUZED PRETKRREDBUY ANT DEALER

hf*« lAluus* ta MataUatMa WG« t«U«M UK< tU7

M MM KB UXIUNC,

ALEX KURMES

ORonge 4 0302

TRAVEL AGENCIES

JOS. M. BYRNE CO.tba vel srjt vick

Nkiju lb* public bine* lulMurnibl* & Air Rmmtiotti

rout. - Cryu*. r Hmwtooi Trip*Broad St. Nmrk MA S-1740

VACUUM CUANERSMU3 SKBVICr -"itirua

Mlthuriia'l

ELECTROLUX*IRbetary Bruch)

Call PI 3-8731**C"C* Within M Hour*

B*U*»Ul* Av*. Bloom! i« Id

REAi ESTATE AGENTS

ESSEX COUNTY

HARRY J. STEVENS. INC.realtors

so Y*ur« bt Sam* LocationHalaa a Appralula . ManaaamentN*narh • Icvtnaton • Th* Oranaea

Own Mon. A Wrd. Eva*47» Caniral A*n., Nowark MA 1-3 SM410 Main St.. Orana* OR 7-1471

BLOOMFIELD

THE JR'a or REAL ESTATEror Rapid, rallabla r**ulla call

R. MARASHILAN & CO.IT* Broad 81. Bloomlicld, N.J. PI MUT

JAYNAP REALTY CO.R*al Ratal* Inauranc*

Salt* Monsaft* AppralaalaJO*. NAPOUTANO. PRES.

U rraaklln SI. BloomllaltL N.

Phon«i PI 3-7525BUDD LAKE

Ur^aJSST'i_

JAMES P. McKEON. BrokerRl*. 4*. Budd Lak*. K 1. Dial M 7

CHATHAM

T* Rtf? •» M to < fcasAacaM**»e« *a« »V»Ua Put

r«l

MIUICENT M UNDERWOOD

Mr** to* M«X*to Vfik«'•» Mu* U .

Mr vim

GlfN RIDGE

NATHAN BUSSCII. INC&£rtr« [M

*r_.u tvratk - iNsvKAvc*ZI7 v< Os R«2««. N >

P! 3-5600

HIIISIDE

UV* HhT M||

>♦« 2 tftM&j. S 4 C. I r«3 WfY/r.l.2 c~*r |H»i« M W«| (arparau****'• f«n try bMtmrsi. nv*V?« ktuhn

!»lw« UtswucMto* » aLuu Cwm (W Kmc iW«4 »--i St«mo4

iTRSUtnrtKW! • TrrmiCaJ 4ui.*arr 44*-«WM U kM^ct

KEYPORT

« lW<drto«r.t L»J»4 rtwi. CtA>4 rmr.

i*rt» Uukw. my arifn, rk«) (rtn!ar*d ftanrd 1.1 >»

CASEYS AGENCY. INC.ll; «*r

l(4k*t; -1)H iiX. S#« Jn My

LYNDHURST

la Sarrrd M«*m I’tnih it ■

UVA ■ TUZZIO INC.K«*l »At»:» Uwiar«

Men be- rmutlpto hmLxwix •*/> *r«

PV»W Mi: SOMOt RIOCC RD . LVXDHVmST. N J

MONTCLAIR

fcALtS - K l-S TA LSM*NAGL>U-NT

Compu'r Inaura&ca Soiy .r•

JOS A. KEUEHER, JR.lUtliofi

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HONORARY 'CHIEF' - To the question, "What'll we give Father Wallace on his 40th an-niversary at a priest?" Cub Scoots of Blotted Virgin parish, Independence, Mo., an.swered, "We'll make him our honorary chief." Father Wallace, pastpr emerotus of theparish and Cub chaplain, accepted by donning Indian headress the boys gave him.

North Jersey CalendarFRIDAY, MARCH •

St. John - * family Life Apo*.tolate, Rrrgrnlield _ Eveningof recollection in the churchhall.

SUNDAY. MARCH 1#

Holy Name Society. St.Vincent de Paul, BayeaneCommunion breakfast follow-ing 9 a m Mass Msgr. Thom-a* Gilhoolcy, dean of SetnnHall University College inPaterson, and Rev. EdwardF Wojtyeha. moderator,speakers,

St. Thomas the V pottle.Old Bridge Debate betweenSI. Peter * College and SetonHall University on federal aidto parochial institutions in St.Thom a* Hall. 8 IS p m

Holy Name Society. St Mirhael’t, Patertoo Commun-ion breakfatt m *cboot hallfollowing Bam Mass Magis-trate Charles J Alfano.speaker Tom Ruto and Au-

tie Deßliek. chairmen.

Thomas More Coaecll.K. of C.. Westwood Thirddegree at E (I. AlberqueCouncil. Ridgefield Park. 130P m.

Holy Name Society. St.Catherine's. Hillside _ Communiofl breakfatt at the King-ston Restaurant, following 8

a m Mats

Holy Name Society, StJohn N'rpomurene. Gottenberg—Father ami son Com-munion breakfast at parishhall following 7 30 a m MatsAl l-aborski, chairman.

Holy Name Society, St.Theretc'*, Paterson

_ Com-munion breakfast AndrewTecta, speaker

Archangel Guild. Engle*wod Irish Open House atSt Michael's Novitiate. 4 9p m George Manning, chair-man

Holy Name Society, HolyName. East Orange - Fatherand ton Communion break-fast at Crystal I-akc Casino,West Orange. Rev AlexanderSoktdich of Seton Hal! Uni-versity. speaker. John Jack-son. chairman

Holy Name Society. St. Jo-seph-*. East Rutherford Fa-ther and son Communionbreakfast in school hall Rev.Christopher McElroy. O,Carm, of Carmel RetreatHouse. Oakland, speaker

Holy Name Society. St. Ag-nes. (lark Communionbreakfast at Columbian Club.Rahway, following 8 am

Mats at dohnson RegionalHigh School Msgr John Cas-tel* of Immaculate Concep-tion Seminary, speaker Mi-chael Ford and James Whal-en. chairmen.

MONDAY. M \R(If it

Star of the Sea (ourii. K.of C., Bayonne—Theater party to see musical play. •Ol-iver”

THURSDAY. MARCH 14

Calbolie Lawyer* Guild ofEssex County Dinner meet-ing at Thom ms Restaurant,Newark Dr IJoyd W Mc-Corfcle, director of N.J. insti-tution* and agencies, speak-er Judge Ferdinard D M*sucti, chairman

Friendly Sons of St. Patrick°f Hodsou 4 ouaty _ Annualdinner at Union Club. Koboken Presentation to MsgrJames A. Hamilton, pastor ofSt Patrick's Church. RevCharle* F.X. Dolan. SJ. ofSt Peter's College and Dr.Maurice Leahy of FordhamUniversity, speakers. HaroldJ. Ruvoidt, chairman

Bishop McNultyTo AllendDinner

MORRISTOWN BishopMcNulty will attend the testi-monial dinner in honorof Msgr. John J. Sheenn. vicargeneral of the Paterson Dio-cese. to be held March 34 atthe Mardabrook Farms in

ParsippanyThe dinner is being given

by the George WashingtonCouncil. K of C . and is al-ready a sellout with over 800tickets purchased Msgr.Sheenn is also pastor of St.Margaret -* Church her*.

Students Obey‘Steady’ Ban

JERSEY CITY - Rev.James A. Carey, pastor of St.Michael’s Church and directorof St. Michael’s High School,has reported “full co-

operation” during the firstweek of the school’s banagainst steady dating by itsstudents.

At a First Friday Mass (orthe student body March 1, Fa-ther Carey said that about 20students had come to him andpromised that they hsd brokenoff with their "steady." March1 had been the deadline set inhis announcement last weekthat expulsion would followcontinuance of the practice.

St. Michael's, Union City,also announced last weekthrough its director, Rev. God-frey Kasper, C.P., that stu-dents going steady would bebarred from school honors.Union City students were al-ready barred from school ac-tivities for this reason.

Father Carey reported thathe has received letters from

many states and from peopleof all faiths favoring his actionwhich, be said, was simply anapplication of Church teachingwhich bans steady company-keeping unless the couple can

plan on being married in thenear future.

Pariah PlansArts Festival

EAST ORANGE - The

Family Life Apostolate ofHoly Name parish will sponsorits second annual Lenten ArtsFestival, opening March 10

with a showing of the film,"Diary of a Country Priest. '

On the same evening, Rob-ert Gerringer, stage and TVactor, will speak on the re-

lationship of the performingarts and Christian life

The March 24 program willfeature a/Choral exhibition ofliturgical music, featuringselections from the Masschanted in English. Commen-tary on the role of music in

the warship of God will b«made by Rev. Francis J.Funrheon.

The series will concludeApril 7 with a dramatic pre-sentation of the Passion bymembers of the parish, under

the direction of Gilbert 1Rathbun of Seton Hall Uni-

versity.

Peacocks HostTo Drill Meet

JERSEY CITY - The St

Peter's College Pershing Rifleinvitational drill meet will be

held March * m the JerseyCity Armory , starting at S JO

a m.

The infantry drill regulationcompetition will be held in themorning, followed by the trickdrill competition in the after-noon Among the competitorsin the Utter event will beNorth Carotins and T. sec

ood-place winner at the national trick drill meet last year

After the competition, therewill be a military review ofail uniU. at which awards willbe presented by Rev Leo Mc-

Laughlin. S.J., acting presi-dent of St. Peter's.

St. Perter's Retains

Debating TrophyNEW YORK - SI 'Peter s

College retained the ArthurGribbin Memorial Trophy as

it won the third annual de-bate tournament sponsored bythe St. John’a University So-cial Science Fraternity.

William Uakowski aodDaniel Greene led the Pea-cocks to victory over 21 rivalschools, with Liskowski takingthird place individual honors.

St. Peter's GleemenTo Defend Title

NEW YORK - St Peter s

College will defend its titleto the fifth annual Catholic In-tercollegiate Glee Club Festi-val at St. John's UniversityMarch 30-31.

Also in the nine-college fieldwill be Seton Hall University.There will be a concert March36 at I p.m. and the competi-tion will be held March 31 at2 p.m., following a High Maasin Alumni Hall, at which all800 glee club members will

sing.

Magazine Article

Features St. Mary'sDOWNERS GROVE, 111. —

The current issue of Sword

Magazine, published here,contains an article on St.Mary's parish. Closter, writtenby Rev. Stephen McDonald,0 Carm.

The article traces the historyof St. Mary's, which celebrat-ed its 50th anniversary in 1961.Sword U a quarterly publishedfor English-speaking Carmel-ites throughout the world.

Boonton Man NamedTo St. Clare's Post

DENV1LLE — Sister MarySigismunda, S.S.M., admin-istrator of St. Clare'a Hospital,has announced the appoint-ment of John C. Rauner ofBoonton aa asaistant admin-istrator.

Rauner la a graduate of St.John'e University and has beenassociated in the past withRivertide Hospital and OrangaMemorial Hospital.

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'A Post of Hard Work'

Masterofthe Palace

In Unpublicized RoleBy LUCIANO CASIMIRRIVATICAN CITY (NC) He

leaves the stamp of his learn-

ing on many papal documents.His opinion is so important

to the Holy See that ho mustlive within easy call of thePope.

If he spends a few hoursoutside the Vatican he leavesa phone number for immedi-

ate consultation.He is the Master of the

Sacred Palace. By this officehe is confidential theologian tothe Pope and to the PapalSecretariat of State. He holdsa number of other importantposts as well.

Yet he is virtually unknownoutside the Vatican. He is seen

rarely in the halls and alongthe paths of Vatican City, andthere Is even confusion aboutwhat place he should take incertain processions.

But the post has led often topositions that are more prom-inent if not more important.Ot the 85 Masters of the Sac-red Palace known to history,five became master general ofthe Dominican Order (theMaster of the Sacred Palaceis always a Dominican) and 18became Cardinals.

DURING THE centuries hisfunctions have varied. In some

periods his power was vast.

Early in the 15th century hewas given the role of teachingtheology in the curia, the HolySee's central administrativebody. At various periods hewas responsible for admittingcandidates to the degree ofdoctor of theology, for placingbooks on a list of prohibitedreading, and for giving per-mission to publish books inRome or to import them

Today he is a consultor ofthe Supreme Sacred Congre-gation of the Holy Office, anofficial of the Sacred Congre-gation of Rites and a memberof the Biblical Commission.These arc not merely hon-orary titles but jobs requiringwork.

The Present Master ofthe Sacred Palace is Rev.Luigi Ciappi, O P His asceticappearance. his courteous

manner and the discretion ofhis speech make him a modelof the cultured priest.

FOR CONVENTION - Charles W. Gardner of Boonton, left, state deputy of the Knightsof Columbus, presents a donation of $1,OOO to defray costs of the Notional Council ofCatholic Men convention In Atlantic City, April 24-28, to Msgr. Thomas F. Mulvaney,moderator of the Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Men, and Daniel L. MeCormack of

Newark, convention chairman.

Rapidly-Growing 'Cursillo'Offers Spiritual Motivation

By DORIS BARLETTA

NCI f’C Sent Serine

Tb* author of lb* follou mt srlitU it s lUlt mrmbrr ofthe Record, urutpjprr of the Lomtiillr, K>., Artbdiaitir,uhere the curtUJo nmi rmril hes been grnuiog rjptJly.

"It s the same feeling the

Apostles must have experi-enced when they received the

Holy Spirit on Pentecost Sun-day."

This statement by a laymansummed up his response to the

curstlto, anew lay apostolicmovement which has beengrowing in the U. S

The original name of th»movement i* Cursillo de Cm-tiamlad. which means "LittleCourse in Christianity.” It hasgradually become known sim-ply as the cursillo (pronounced"cur see vo") It was intro

duced into this country from

Spain in 1957

WHAT IS A cursillo’ Nomatter how graphic the description of what occurs at a

euiMilo. it cannot be adequate-ly defined It is an intensethree day course in the prac-tical living of the Life' ofGrace. It uses the elements ofa retreat (while not attempt

mg to substitute fur retreats)plus those of a study courseami free discussion, and thewhole program is conductedwith an informal atmospherewhich includes time for song,griety am) good fellowship

The cursillo program in-

volves intense prayer andstudy about the basic truthsof the Catholic Kailh whichs«-cm to "come alive" to the

curxllllslat Grace and theMystical Body become more

than theological concepts,

THE THREEDAY (Thuraday night lo Sunday night!cursillo. however, does not af-fect a!! men in the same way

Some feel its results duringthe three day program whileothers are like one man whoadmitted I didn't get a thingout of n then, but a week la-ter si hit me like a thunder-bolt."

The cursillo is not an or-

gsnuatioo It is a movementof Cathode action. Its unique

program is designed for thegoal of Christian renewal, and,according to cursillo veterans,the goal is being achieved

It is strictly'' a laymen’sgroup and is primarily con-

ducted by laymen for laymen,slthough there is a priest director Laymen give most ofthe talks The movement is

primarily for men. althoughone area In Ohio has heldcursiilos for women.

THE MOVEMENT alms atrcachtng Calbolie men in the25-15 age bracket and from allwalks of life laboring amiprofessional classes, faintiymen and bachelors The mam

characteristics evident in rich

cursillo are prayer, study,and sacrifice a tense of teamwork with each other amt ih*

hierarch) and a complete de

penitence upon God's graceNo cursillo is undertaken

without prayei and sacrifice

CursilUstAs thiougbout the

world pray and sacrifice for

the movement s success andcursilUstas in the area where

anew cfass ts being held keepa constant vigil in church forits success

The cur silks* have • twofoldobjective the sanctification ofthe individual and through himthe sanctification of hit en-

vironment home. work,community ami parish

AT THE CLOSE of eacatraining course, each man

gives his impressions of thethree days, and most draw upa plan or rule of life to fulfillthe curaiUo a twofold purposeOften these resolutions con-

cern basic spiritual practicessuch as a few minutes' medi-tation each day. daily com-

munion. etc.

But the rursillo itself is onlytha beginning The men whoattend say the day after itends ts the fourth day and thatday lasts the rest of a minilife.

A follow up program beginswith the apostolic commitmentof the cursillutas at the cur-

sillo closing and continues withperiodic meetings held in theirown areas.

TIIE CI’RSII.I.O movementIs only' 1* years old but Its

growth has been dynamicThe first cursillo was held on

the island of Majorca, Spam,in mr.

From there the cursillospread to most of the diocesesof Spam, then to Portugal,Austria, Germany and France.Spanish speaking people car

ried It to the V. S , as w ellas to Colombia. Bolivia, Peru,Mexico and Cuba.

There, is unanimous agree-ment among cursllllstai thatthe Holy Spirit is in this move-

ment. The very heart of thecursillo program is a study ofDivine Grace, its necessity andits power

And only grace can explitnthe phenomenal success of thisnewr (ay movement. But whocan describe the working ofthe Holy Spirit who works inas msny different wsys as

there are souls in the world?

No mstter now msny wordsare printed, the best answerto ‘What Is the cursillo?* isChrist’s answer to Nathaniel:"Come and see.”

In Latin America

Stern Warning From CardinalBUENOS AIRES (RNS) -

Argentina's social, politicaland economic difficulties are

aggravated by a moral ertaiswhich la actually "the causeof all our Ilia,” Antonio Car-dinal Caggiano of BuenosAires declared in a Lentenpastoral letter which stressedthe need for the “acceptanceof loyal sacrifice for the com-mon good.”

“We are witnesses,” he said,"of the tremendous conse-

quences ci the denitl in theoryor practice of moral values.

..

It looks aa if there are no

lunger any barrier* againstcheating, thieving, holdupsand shady business deals. Sen-sualism, lasciviousness andlust need to be re-strained. Why is there so muchlack of leaped and k>v« forone's neighbor, for justice,law and institutions?

“DISTRUST HAS undermined peace in our homesand in social, economic andpolitical relations. Despiteeconomic difficulties and low 1incomes, gambling continues to

devour what could be the sav

mgs of modest homes.He said the people of Argen-

tina must unite m order tofind a solution tint will allowa constitutional government toopen the doors to a normalway of life.

The country today hasneither tranquility nor peace,although "immensely weal-

thy." he declared. Itscurrency becomes devaluedevery day and tn spite otloans, the government l* un

able regularly to pay it* em-

ployees or pensioners.'Amid this somber pano

rama," he said, "hatred can

Ue glimpsed through threatso( sabotage and the violencecf demand* Sources of em-

ployment decrease through theclosing of lactones, layoffs or

li'vnussal of workers "

Cardinal Caggiano, oftenbailee! as "a pastor and peacemaker." concluded by sayingthat "there must be a returnto God and His command

menu This ts a time lor re

pentane* and penance TheChurch Hands aloof fromparty politics, and I am com

plying with my sacred duty at

a pastor of souls in IssuingUut pastoral letter "

COMMENTING on the pas•oral, the Bueno* Air** Herald,a British daily aaitf:

"The Ordinal chose stingingwords to try and bnng us allback to our senses There was

almost a ring of the (»andTestamerit and forebodings at doom

in his warnings.”However, the paper com-

mented, "there wss a hardcore of reality in hia prayersfor the recovery of the countrythrough sacrifice and unity.”

The Herald said it agreedthat the Church could not en-

ter the political field.

“BUT,” IT ADDED, “politi-cal parties can embrace the

tepching oi the Church —andthis is not a denominational

matter. The problems facingArgentina are the result ofimmorality and amoralityfrom tho ‘squandermania’ ofgamblers to the violence ofthe labor movement. If some

heed be paid to the primate’swords, the whole country can

work for the common good.This means unity without deveption. honesty, and, aboveall, sacrifice."

The Herald said Cardinal

Caggiano had "never spokenin this manner before,” and"if it does not shock the_pcopleof this country, it is becauseeveryone knows that Ar-

gentina if going through i

moral crisis. The question stillremains what are we goingto do about it? During Lem,a time of sacrifice, we should

all be trying to find the an-

swers ”

Chapel A HarkedSANTO DOMINGO, Domini

can Republic (N'C) Threetimes within a week ant; re

bgious fanatics desecrated theChspel of the Finding of theMost Holy Cross here, the lasttime despite the presence of

seven police guardsIn their first attempt the

vandals tried unsuccessfully to

set the chapel on fire The next

day they returned, broke intothe tabernacle, scattered the

Hosts on the floor and damaged sacred vessels

Seven guards were then sentto protect the chapel, but thevandals again succeeded in

breaking in In their final at-tack they destroyed the organand altar linens

Praties S.S. HopeTRUJILLO, Peru (NC)

The Archbishop of Trujillocalled the staff of the S.S. Hopethe 20th century's Good Sa-maritans as they wound up a

nine-month health mission InPeru.

Archbishop Federico PerezSilva, C.M., spoke before morethan 20,000 who gathered hereto say goodbye to the ship'spersonnel. The S.S. Hope fin-ished its second health missionand left Peru Feb.2B. The shipis scheduled to dock in NewYork March 11.

Project HOPE is an activityof the People to People Foun-dation directed by Dr. WiliiamB. Walsh of Georgetown Uni-versity Hospital

Schools in DannerBUENOS AIRES (RNS) -

Two hundred and fifty-eightCatholic and other private pri-mary schools in Cordoba prov-incc announced they would not

reopen March 11 after thesummer recess unless theprovincial government dis-tributes fund* it owes as astate contribution towardteacher*' salaries

A total of 2.5.14 teachers are

employed in the school*, attended by more than 48.000children

Camp ProfiramSANTIAGO. Chile (NC)

Chile* Catholic chanties or-

ganization is sponsonng sum-

mer camp* for more than 100-MO of the country's needychildren

Council Press

Group MeetsVATICAN CITY (NC) - The

\ atican Council's Commissionfor the 1-ay \ postulate. Pressand Entertainment met herelo examine revisions of pro)eets concerning the Church s

relation to mass communlca-twms and the activities of thelaity

The schedule called for twodays of work on anew draftof the council project on mass

communications, to be fol-lowed by four days of confer-ences polishing a final drafton the lay apostolat*.

The Theology Commission(on faitli and morals) is con-

tinuing its meetings, which be-gan late in February.

Plan Variety ShowMONTCLAIR - St Vin-

cent's Hospital will present a

variety show, "Visiting Hours»r* Over," May 24 23 at Hill-side School here, with Dr.Sylvester L. Casta serving asdirector.

March 7, 1963 THE ADVOCATE 19

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ELEGANCEA elaaalc collection e< Ah komra lanew M| turn amldat the MoietySummit A wmto Hcta Chooee Mmft«ra SUMMIT CARDEN'S < matntll-M MSe nodcla and custom chenoe>• Hitt jroor taate Alt bomee noWall** lota AU include J or 4 bed™#m». (lolabed recrejitoo room. styMtb. 1 cor gartree end dnreni aIlaxortsae teotucet that must be aeonto be truly appreciated. All In theboon at Hackensack suburban prVracy PI.L'S ctty convenience.

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Decency Unit Asks

President to ActNEW YORK - A telegram

to President Kennedy from the“Operation Yorkvllle" commit-tee has asked that he issue a

nation-wide call for moral fit-ness to match his earlier callfor physical fitness.

The telegram was sent fol-lowing a March 4 meeting ofthe committee, which repre-sents all three major faiths inthe residential area of Man-hattan bounded by 59th and96th Sts., sth Ave. and theEast River. The committeewas formed last October aftera meeting of community lead-ers called by Very Rev. Wil-liam T. Wood, S.J., pastor ofSt. Ignatius Loyola Church.

Several incidents involvingthe v circillation of objectionableliterature among children ofSt. Ignatius School hadbrought home the problem toFather Wood and the otherJesuits of the Loyola com-

munity.

AFTER THE initial meet-ing, a scries of conferenceswas held in the homes ofprominent citizens of theneighborhood. The problemwas explained, evidence of thetype of material available tochildren in stores was pre-sented and the differentgroups were asked to reach

their own conclusions.When representatives of »he

groups met March 4, theyfound that their conclusionswere strikingly similar andtwo actions were taken: 1) thetelegram was sent to thePresident asking not only fora proclamation but also forlegislation that would helpstem the flow of objectionableliterature; 2) a committee was

set up to plot out a practicalprogram on the local level.

Father Wood and Rev. Mor-ton Hill, S.J., are the St.Ignatius representatives on

the committee. Other leadersInclude Rabbi Julius G. Neu-mann and the Rev. Robert F,.Wiltenburg. Mr. Wiltenburgdisclosed at the March 4 meet-ing that the committee hasbeen under attack as wantingto set itself up as a group ofcensors and vigilantes.

"This is not so," he ex-

plained. "We are fighting forthe right of our children togrow up in a society In whichthey can move without thethreat of an assault upon theirmorals."

FATHER WOOD said that a

survey had shown that alltypes of objectionable litera-ture, from the slick girliemagazines to hard core porno-griphy, was available atstores within two blocks of hisschool. He mentioned that aft-er a recent conviction of threepublisher* In Chicago, thoseconvicted bad said they wouldmore their operation to NewYork, where they would notbe bothered.

On Feb. 28. a group fromthe YorkvilTPcommittee met

with Department of Justice

representatives In Washingtonand also conferred with Rep.Glenn Cunningham of Nebras-ka, who is sponsoring legisla-tion aimed at the smut racket

Holy TrinityWins Tourney

HACKENSACK — The hostparish. Holy Trinity, capturedthe first annual Tri-CountyBasketball Tournament for in-termediate boy's CYO teamshere March 3 with a 51-48 tri-umph against St. Paul of theCross (Jersey City) in the fin-al.

Rich Jordan and Tom Bicberpaced the winners, but BillHoffman took game scoringhonors for St. Paul with 21points. St. Paul had gained thefinal with a 5»49 victoryagainst St. John's (JerseyCity) the previous evening.Holy Trinity ousted Queen ofPeace (Maywood), 51-45, in itssemi final

The Msgr. Joseph H. Mur-phy Trophy was presented to

Holy Trinity and the Holy Trin-ity K. of C. Trophy went to St.Paul. St. John's trimmedQueen of Peace, 69 45, in theconsolation game.

National Talks Set

On Urban AffairsWASHINGTON (NO -

Catholics active in urban re-newal and other city problemswill hold a national conferenceon urban affairs Aug. 22-25 inDayton. Ohio, it was an-nounced here.

Twenty-two specialists in thefield, meeting under the titleof Washington Conference on

Urban Renewal, said the ses-

sion will be held in conjunc-tion with the annual con-vention of the National Cath-olic Social Action Conference.

Mission Census

Begun in BurmaRANGOON (RNS) -

Burma's Revolutionary Gov-ernment has begun the com-

piling of a census of foreignmissionaries in the country.

Each missionary body hasbeen asked to furnish a his-tory of its organization inBurma and list Its foreign per-sonnel (past and present). Thequestionnaire also asks an out-line of areas of activity, na-

ture of work programs. In-come both foreign and

domestic, savings, and remit-tances.

Church groups are alsoasked to list missionaries,their qualifications, trades or

skills, incomes and areas ofwork.

Joint Council PrayerPARIS (NC) Catholic and

Protestant chaplains of theFrench armed forces mot hereto pray together for the suc-cess of the ecumenical coun-cil.

SIGN LANGUAGE BLESSING - Rev. Thomas J. Trapasso, director of the Paterson Cath-olic Deaf Society, translates Bishop McNulty's blessing at the group annual Communionbreakfast March 3 at Blessed Sacrament, Paterson, (Father Trapasso is making the signfor "God.") The Bishop invited the group to Buffalo, his new diocese, where the Cath-

olic Deaf Convention will be held in July.

Vocation SocietyTo Hold Retreat

PATERSON - The St. Johnthe Baptist Delayed VocationSociety will make Its annualretreat March 22-24 at theDivine Word Seminary In Bor-dentown

Rev. William Kane, S.V.D,

of Massachusetts, will conductthe retreat. There will also bea discussion of the purposes ofthe society and iu programfor the spring. Anyone wishingto attend may write to the aoclety at the Paterson ChanceryOffice

Interfaith Hospitality MoreDORTMUND. Germany

(RNS) Catholic authoritieshere have urged parishionersto help accommodate thethousands of out-of-town Prot-estants expected at the Ger-man Evangelical Church Day(DF.KT) Congress here July24-27.

This type of assistance has

become traditional betweenthe DKKT and its Catholiccounterpart, the German Cath-olic Day (Kathohkentag) Con-gress,

Protestant and Catholicleaders have hailed theoperation as a "genuine signof Protestant-Catholic brotherhood in Christ"

Prosecutor Announces DriveOn Obscenity in Union County

ELIZABETH - A renewrddrive against obscene litera-ture In Union County has bct-iipromised by Prosecutor H.'Douglas Stine, following therecent decision of the Appel-! te Division of Superior Courtwhich hseked a Hudson Coun-ty verdict against a distribut-ing company.

Three times since 1960 UnionCounty grand juries have fail-ed to return indictments on

evidence presented to Uiem ofthe distribution of magazinessimilar or identical lo thosewhich brought the HudsonCounty conviction. Stine saidth t his investigators willcheck stores and newsstandsIn the county and also askedfor individuals to send hims inples of what they considerobscene literature for sale inthe county.

PROSECUTOR STINE helda meeting in his office <F*b27) to which nine leading citi-zens of the county were invitedto discuss the recent court de-cisions. Amon&thosc who at-

tended was M«gv William C.Hrimbueh, pastor of St. Gene-vieve's, Elizabeth, and Depu-ty Surrogate Raymond D O'-Brien, president of the Union

County Catholic LawyersGuild

Present at the meeting wasEssex County Deputy SheriffArthur Magnusson, who de-scribed the fight against inde-cent literature in hi* county.The Essex Campaign had suf-

fered a setback last year whenJudge Robert A. Matthews sc-

quited the Hudson CountyNews Cos. on charges similarlo those for which the same

company was convicted inHudson County, but the Appel-late Division’s ruling last weekrejected that decision as itconfirmed the Hudson County-ruling.

Others who attended themeeting in Stine's office wereUnion County Sheriff RalphOriscello; former AssistantProsecutor Myles J. Gilsenanof Elizabeth; Anthony J. Ryanof Roselle, a former grandjuror; Dr. Matthew C. McCue,chairman of the Citizens Co-operative for Decent Litera-ture. and Mrs Paul R Schutzof Summit. Also invited, butunable to attend, were Assem-blywoman Mildred B Hughesand Freeholder Mary C. Kanane.

THE KEYSTONE of the Ap-pellate Division’* ruling, aawritten by Judge Mark J. Sul-livan Jr., was that the domi-nant theme of the magazineswas "an appeal to prurientinterests” and that they were

"utterly without redeeming so-

cial importance. ’’ Up to now,prosecutors of many countiesin the state had found it diffi-cult to obtain indictments or

convictions for lack of a firmruling on what constituted ob-scene literature.

The Matthews ruling hadlimited obscenity to the "hard-core" type, but Judge Sullivansaid that this was merely one

type of obscenity and that NewJersey has not so strictly lim-ited its definition of the w-ord,which follows the U. S. Su-

preme Court ruling in the Rothcase of several years ago:“that which, as a whole, of-fend* community standards."

20 THE ADVOCATE March 7, 1963

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