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ExplorationsABOUT THE AUTHORRalph Renick, author of the following column,was the first news director of Florida's first TV station,is the father of six children, and a member ofSt. James parish, North MiamiA graduate of the University of Miami, where hetaught television journalism for six years, he hasreceived more local and national awards in hisposition as vice president in charge of the news atWTVJ, Ch. 4 than any other TV station newsman.He is a member of the board of directors atBoystown of South Florida, of the CYO and amember of the Diocese of Miami Radio and TelevisionCommission.By RALPH RENICKJust a year ago, there was very little publicconcern or knowledge about crime or corruptionin Florida. So it's difficult now to realize that withinthat short space of time this subject is the majorconcern of the Governor, is occupyingthe prime attention of the Legislature,and is a constant fear of mostcitizens.Just a few months ago, outside ofthe actual victims, most peoplethought the shocking violence of rob-! bery, holdups and beatings wereconfinedto their evening television programming.So it was that ayear ago,I the news media in general, had fallen= Ralph Renick asleep. Sure, the crime rate wasspiraling, the streets were becomingmore unsafe but beyond reporting these obviousfacts, the media hadn't looked beneath the surfacetodiscover some of the reasons why this was happening.Dade County had become a "dreamland haven"for thieves. What we discovered, upon investigation,was unbelievable. The picture that took form wasoneof totallyinept or compromised law-enforcementand bought-off and timid public officials. The FBIwas so distrustful of the Dade County Sheriff's Departmentthat it had ceased full cooperation.Indeed the-top officials of the Sheriffs Departmentwere friends of known hoodlums and oftenseen in their company. Aside from suspicions, thefacts were that very few criminals were being apprehendedand brought to justice.* * *WHEN WE decided to do something about thesituation, I am embarrassed to recall that some fellowjournalists, particularly in broadcasting,laughed at us. They called our efforts "irresponsible"and ridiculed nearly everything we tried to do.When we put a man on the air who had admittedto being a bagman, and who was an expert witnesson the insidious nature of the corruption, we reapedthe scorn of most of the other members of the press.But who could bettertell what was really going on?The MIAMI HERALD was nearly aloneinstickihgwith us and that newspaper deserves credit forits efforts in bringing to the public an awareness ofthe situation.But all of this was a year ago. Today, the storyis differentIt's now very popular to be a "crime fighter." Itis to the credit of the public that the revelationswere taken to heart and that demands for actioncame from the citizen level.* * . * •THE CRIME issue became a matter of controversyin the gubernatorial campaign. ClaudeKirk chose to take a stand on it and his opponentdid not. After Kirk's election, he decided to put theWackenhut organization to work to ferret our informationon curruption which would be fed to stateattorneys and grand juries for evaluation and poslibleaction.George Wackenhut told the joint meeting of theHouse and Senate Anti-Crime Committee of theLegislature, last week, that 515 investigative caseshave been opened and 442 are still under actualinvestigation. To date the investigation of the "Wack- §encops" have been responsible for26 arrests involv- =ing 23 persons on 71 separate criminal counts: =breaking and entering, attempted armed robbery, |bribery, conspiracy to commit bribery, conversion Eof official funds, malfeasance, grand larceny, the |sale and possessions of narcotics, perjury, prosti- =tution, the possession and sale of pornographic |film and the illegal practice of medicine. IToday it is refreshing that at last somebody =is doing something! =The Governor is using the powers of his office 5to ferret out facts on illicit operations, the legis- ilature is giving serious attention to new laws to =aid in battling (he criminal and currupt official, =grand juries have at least been talking to the right =witnesses and indictments are being returned, there =has been a morale boost in police circles because =honest and qualified leaders have replaced those §who have put departments in disgrace and distrust |Finally, with everybody jumping aboard the = | and Catholic scholars alike"anti-crime" bandwagon, the public may at last 1 as a remarkably scholarlyreap the benefits of an all out honest effort to match | achievement He happens tothe power of organized crime which has for too 1 be a Catholic.long oper ated unabated in Florida." His coming suggests theWoman Democrat To Off«r'Compromise'School Aid Bill Debate SlatedBy JOHN R. SULLIVANWASHINGTON —(NC)— The much debated andstill-threatened school aidbill backed by President LyndonB. Johnson's administrationhas been scheduledfor House debate on Monday,May 22 — and with itwill come consideration oftwo alternative measuresproposed by House Republicansand a Democrat.The scheduling of theschool bill debate ended amonth-long delay whichstarted when House Republicansannounced they wouldoffer a substitute bill, sponsoredby Rep. Albert Quie ofMinnesota.But it did not end the backstagemaneuvering by bothRepublicans and Democratsto woo the all-importantvotes of Southern Democratsangered at the administration'shard-line attitude towardschool desegregation.The maneuvers surfacedwhen Rep. Edith Green ofOregon, the second-rankingmember of the House Educationand Labor Committeeannounced that she wouldoffer a third education bill,apparently designed to appeaseSoutherners and someDemocrats who favor theGOP bill's block-grant approachto federal aid.The administration billwould extend the ESEA fortwo moreyears and continueits commitment to categoricalaid — grants for specifictypes of programs. The GOPmeasure would replace categoricalaid with block grantsto states which, while somewhatlimited by formulasand restrictions, would placeprimary responsibility forspending the money in thehands of state school superintendents.FORMER TEACHERThose alternatives placedMrs. Green — and the Democrats— in a dilemma. '.;••Mrs. Green, a formerteacher and a long-time studentof school policy, favorsthe block-grant approach ofthe Quie bill. But as a Democratshe is not about to antagonizethep arty leadershipby backing theGOPmeasurewhich, if successful, wouldgive the Republicans considerableleverage in the1968 elections.The Democrats admit thatthe jQuiebill has strongbacking.Southern Democrats arelikely to back Quie simply tochastise the administrationfor its strong school integrationpolicy. And in spite ofannounced support for theadministration bill, manypublic school officials privatelyfavor the block-grantapproach offered by Quie.Mrs. Green's compromisewould satisfy a large numberof school administrators— private and public — andwould help retain those allimportanfSouthern Democraticvotes for the Democrats.While she would retainthe present categorical aidprovisions, Mrs. Greenwould offer two importantchanges:—A weakening of thepowerof the Office of Educationto enforce integration guidelines— a repeat of last year'sunsuccessful attempt.—A strengthening of thepolicy-planning authority ofstate school officials, who arenow bypassed by ESEA.The first provision obviouslywould appeal toSouthern Congressmen,whose constituents have beenangered not only by the U. S.Office of Education's strongwilledattitude toward desegregation,but also by recentcourt decisions which havebacked the office's policy.The second provision,whose specifics have hot yetbeen spelled out, might getbroad support in the House.The administration — bothHouse Democrats and U.S.Education CommissionerHarold Howe—has repeatedlysaid it is not opposed toblock grants.- But Howe saysthe states are not ready tohandle them.Mrs. Green's compromisewould introduce state controlgradually and, intheeventofa showdown over that issue,administration leaders mightbe forced to accept it or sulfera severe credibility setback.JBut the Democratic maneuvefingdid not stop withMrs. Green's proposals. Thepowerful House AppropriationsCommittee is also reportedto be preparing amoney bill which would barthe use of federal funds inachieving percentage deseg-Father Brown AppointedBy Protestant SeminaryFather Raymond E.Brown, S.S., a New Testamentscholar, who frequentlyvisits SouthFlorida, hasbeen namedvisiting professorin NewTestament atUnion TheologicalSemijnary, New| York, forj the 1967-68Spring se-= Father Brown pmester.A nativeof New York Ciry, FatherBrown, a son of R. H. Brownof St Rose of Lima parish,Miami Shores, was ordainedto the priesthood in 1953 inSt Rose of Lima Church.In announcing the appointment,Dr. John C. Bennett,president of Union, saidthat in inviting FatherBrown to teach the seminaryhad "moved far beyond theidea of looking for a RomanCatholic scholar to make usbetter informed about Catholicteaching."Father Brown was chosen,he said, as "the author of abook on the Gospel of Johnwhich is hailed by Protestantkind of free movement betweenCatholic and Protestantscholars which is a stagebeyond 'dialogue'."ApostleshipOf Sea DaySet SundaySunday, May 21, hasbeen designated by BishopColeman F. Carroll asApostleship of the Sea Sundayin the Diocese of Miami.In a letter to the priestsof South Florida, the Bishopemphasized that in additionto the physical dangers facedby maritime workers,"crews of ships are facedwith spiritual dangers: quiteoften these men are on thehigh seas for weeks at atime; on other occasions theyare confined on board becauseof duties in port, renderingassistance at Massand reception of the Sacramentsdifficult for long periodsof time."An important pastoralprogram known as the"Apostleship of the Sea' wasestablished many years agoto attempt to meet fhe spiritual,and very often, materialneeds of crewmen and passengersas well," the Bishopexplained.regation goals.Under those goals, set bythe Office of Education,school systems which are8%or 9% desegregated this yearare expected to double thefigure next year. Those witha lower figure are expectedto make "proportionallygreater" gains.Eliminating such demandsfrom school aid programswould at least insurethat Southern states wouldreceive the federal aid —something that Alabamaand others cannot be sure ofnowEducators OpposeRepublicans' BillWASHINGTON (NC)- The influential NationalEducation Association has moved from a noncommittalposition to take a strong stand againstRepublican efforts to radically revisethe Elementaryand Secondary Education Act.The NE A, which firstWoMsaid it would back thebill of President LyndonB. Johnson's administrationbut would notoppose the GOP measure,has now told localNEA affiliates to opposethe Republicans'bill, which is sponsoredby Rep. Albert Quieof Minnesota."Each attemptto improvethe bill moves theQuie bill closer to the categorical aid he opposes,"the NEA said in a bulletin to legislative leaders.Quie's bill would also "present school districts witha new set of problems that could easily be worsethan those we have experienced before," it added.Meanwhile, the National Congress of Parent-Teachers Associations announced its opposition tothe Quie bill, and the American Council on Education,while not taking a stand on the merits of eitherbill, criticized Quie for introducing his measure withoutholding hearings.Seven of the nine directors of the Association ofChief State School Officers - which represents stateschool superintendents - have announced their supportfor the Quie bill, however.SchoobMONTREAL (RNS) - Non-denominationalschools will be opened and operated next Fall bythis city's Catholic School Commission.Chairman Andre Gagnon announced that bySeptember at least two such schools will be in operation,one English and one French-speaking.He said no decision has been made yet on whetherthey will be elementary or secondary schools. Thiswill depend on the reaction of parents and religiouscommunities.The schools will offer secular programs, plusregular periods of religious instruction for the faithgroup represented, and classes in civics for atheists.Gagnon said the new approach is based on theprinciple that "all religions have value, whateverthat religion may be." If the pilot project is successful,similar schools will be added.GUATEMALA CITY (NC) - Deep concern overthe recent wave of organized terrorism in this CentralAmerican nation was expressed in a pastoralletter written by Guatemala's Catholic bishops.The bishops met under Archbishop Mario Casariego,C.R.'S., of Guatemala City, and issued thenletter,saying:"We cannot remain indifferent while entire villages,especially in the northeast section of our country,are decimated. One glance at the country sufficesto make one realize that something abnormalis happening to our civic life."Every day more widows and orphans are innocentvictims of mysterious struggles and vendettas.Men are torn violently from their homes byunidentified kidnappers, or they are brutally murdered,their bodies appearing later with signs of tortureand mutilation."The Guatemalan hierarchy feels the deepestconcern and anxiety in the face of growing insecuritythat only worsens the grave social, moral and economicproblems of our country."The bishops offered to mediate between opposinggroups.Since April 1, rightist para-military groups haveassassinated some 35 persons. Several well-knownprofessional men have fled the country after attemptson their lives, or after they had receiveddeath threats. Bulletins issued by various rightistgroups have threatened death to approximately 50trade union leaders, professional men, students andothers, some of whom are leftists.Study Of Affifscfes UnmmiNEW YORK (RNS)- The Ford Foundation has.announced a $100,000 grant to finance study of tKeattitudes of Catholics in Chicago toward racial integration.The grant to the University of Chicago, accordingto the foundation, will help support research atthe school on the nature, amount, and causes ofchanges in opinions and attitudes of whites towardNegroes.Moy 19, 1967 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 3


NEW PRESIDENT of the Diocese of Miami Guidance Council is BROTHER PATRICKMCNUITY, F.M.S., Christopher Columbus High School, shown center with SISTERCATHERINE SEAN, O. S.F., Bishop Verot High School, Fort Myers, new secretary;during recent meeting at Marymount College.Bishop Will Ordain FiveTo Priesthood Tomorrow(Continued from Page 1)Cormick, 'yVilliam Ramirezand Stephen Staudenmeyer,will become deacons for theDiocese of Miami; and JamesCottrel and Candido Alvaradofor Puerto Rico.As deacons they will assistthe priest at the HolySacrifice, distribute! HolyCommunion, read the Gospeland preach.A son of Mr. and Mrs.Clarence J. Engbers, theRev. Mr. Engbers is anativeMay 21 in the Sacred Heartof Evansville, Ind., whoChurch, Lake Worth, wherestudied at St. Meinrad Seminary,St Meinrad, Ind., Stmusic will be provided bythe Ro sari an AcademyThomas Seminary, Bloom-Choir. Reception will followin the parish hall where theField, Conn., St Mary Seminary,Baltimore; andordained will give his firstreceiveda M. Ed. degree thisyear at. Loyola College,Baltimore.He will be the principalconcelebrant of a ConcelebratedMass at 12:30 p.m.,Sunday, May 21 in St. GregoryChurch, Plantation, withFather Laurence Conway,pastor, St. Gregory parish;Father Michael Keller, pastor,Si. Gregory parish;Msgr. John J. O'Looney,pastor, St. Anthony parish;Father Lamar J. Genovar,pastor, St. Sebastian parish;Father Wiiliam J. Engbers,pastor, St Paul parish, Guilford,Ind., his cousin; andFather Donald J. Ireland.The Rev. Mr. John Me-Cormick will be deacon;Donald Gale, lector and EdHanlon, Jr., commentator.Seminarians from the MajorSeminary of St Vincent dePaul will sing.The Rev. Mr. Hevia wasborn in Havana, Cuba, andis the son of the late Mr. andMrs. Emilio Hevia.He was studying at StDominic Savio Major Seminaryin Cuba when the seminarywas seized by the Castroregime. After coming tothe United States he continuedhis studies at St. BernardSeminary, Rochester,MY.His first ConcelebratedMass will be Sunday, May21 at Immaculate ConceptionChurch, Hialeah, wherehe served last summer as adeacon. Msgr. John J. Fitzpatrick,pastor, CorpusChrist! parish, will preach.Msgr. Dom Barry, pastor,will be the archpriest.Bom in Santurce, Puerto ,Diocese of MiamiWeekly PublicationSecond-class postage paid atMiami, Florida. Subscriptionrates: $5.00 a year; Foreign,$7-50 n year; single copy 15cents. Published every FridayatS2Ql BiscayueBt«ct., Miami,Fla. 33138.Rico, the Rev. Mr. Romerois a son of Mr. and Mrs.William Romero who servedin the U.S. Army for threeyears.He attended St AndrewSeminary, Rochester, N.Y.,St John Seminary, Brighton,Mass., and completedhis theology studies at StMary Seminary, BaltimoreFollowing ordination hewill sing his first SolemnMass at 11:30 a.m., Sunday,priestly blessing.The son of the late Mr.and Mrs. Alfred M. Smith ofLUBRICATED YOURWINDOWS LATELY?The proven easy way 1° hive Clean, ListingVelvety Smooth operating Windows & DoorsLocks, Fishing Tackle, Guns, Tools, Zippers.Folding Furniture, Machinery • other articlesAT MOST HARDWARE. PAJNT& BUILDER SUPPLY STORESHlrd. by Eugene Dsrnlsli a. SonPompano Beach.Fta. since 1952JOHN DAMICHSt. Rose of Lima ParishSouth Africa, the Rev. Mr.Smith began his studies forthe priesthood at St JohnVianney Seminary, Pretoria,South Africa, and recentlycompleted studies at St. BernardSeminary, Rochester,MY.He will sing his first SolemnMass during which he Simone, R.S.H.M., St. LawrenceSchool, North Miamiwill preach at 12:30 p.m.,Sunday, May 21 in St. BrendanChurch where he served vice president; Father Mi-Beach, elementary executivelast summer as a deacon. chael Farten, C.M., St JohnThe Rev. Mr. Staudenmeyer Vianney Seminary, treasurer;.And Sister Catherinewill be the deacon.The Rev. Mr. Walk is the Sean, O.S.F., Bishop Verotson of Mrs. Sylvia M. Walk High School, Fort Myers,YOUand the late Edward F. Walk, secretary,who was born in Jersey City,N.JḢe studied at St CharlesCollege, St Mary Seminary,Baltimore and since lastSeptember has been stationedwhile a deacon atMaryland State Penitentiary.He first ConcelebratedMass will be at Little FlowerChurch, Hollywood, Sunday,May 21. Father MichaelSullivan, assistantpastor,St. Patrick pariah, MiamiBeach, will preach. Men to be held in Rome, OctOn Sunday, May 28, the8-10.newly ordained priest will be It is expected that therethe principal concelebrant of will be other appointments ofa Concelebrated Mass in laymen from the U.S. to theEpiphany Church, Venice, world assembly which is be-of which his mother is a member.Msgr. George W. Cummings,pastor, will preach.GCORGE HtffImrnacutate ConcepHonSALES AND SERVICELincoln Continental - MercuryMercury Comet - Englisli Ford LinePeiiLGABLESLINCOLN-MERCURY4001 Ponce de Leon Blvd., Coral Gables Ph. 445-7711IN WEST HOLLYWOOD ..MerhberST/ STEPHEN'S 6 VQQ Hotly Wood Blvcir PARfSH Phone YUkon 30857Diocese Guidance CouncilChartered by AssociationBOCA RATON — TheDiocese of Miami GuidanceCouncil is the first diocesanorganization to be granteda charter from'the AmericanPersonnel and Guidance Association.Joseph. G. Birch, presidentof the Florida Personneland Guidance Association,made the presentation toBrother Gordian Rogers,F. S. C, a member of the facultyat La Salle High Schooland founding president of theMiami Guidance Councilduring luncheon last Saturdayat Marymount College.Brother PatrickMcNulry,F.M.S., a teacher at ChristopherColumbus HighSchool, was elected new presidentof the Council organizedin the Fall of 1965 underthe direction of BrotherGordian and Sister M. Marcella,O. P. Formal approvalfor joining the nationalorganization was granted inJanuary, 1966.Other officers are SisterMarcella, St Thomas AquinasHigh School, Fort Lauderdale,vice president; Sisterv Catholic SVletiPick DelegatesWASHINGTON (NC) —The National Council ofCatholic Men has announcedthe appointment ofN. A. Giambalvo of Chicago,president of NCCM, andFerd Niehaus of Cincinnati,secretary of NCCM, as officialdelegate to the worldassembly of the InternationalFederation of Catholicing held in conjunction withthe Third World Congress ofthe Lay Apostolate.DELUXEFAUCETS & BASINSBeooty and simplicity of design


Background For Change In Liturgy(The Archbishop of Atlanta,author of the followingarticle, is chairman of theUnited States Bishops'Committeeon the Liturgy andMetropolitan oftheProuinceof Atlanta of which the Dioceseof Miami is a suffragansee.)By ARCHBISHOP PAULJ. HALLINANATLANTA, Ga. — Thestrong sentiments of a majorityof American priestsand laymen are the background.Overwhelmingvotes by the American bishopsare the instrumentswhich have bolstered thecause of the vernacular. Andthis week the action of theHoly See has answered thes of a truly revitalizedPUii rpv for our Americanparishes.The surprise announcement— granting permissionfor thevernacular in the Canonof the Mass — was nosurprise to the teams of bishops,priests and lay specialistswho have been workingon the liturgy.In November, 1966, theUnited States hierarchyasked for this permissionalong with seven otherpoints. The others weregranted almost immediately.But ihe Canon request wasneither approved nor disapproved.Correspondencewhich I had with GiacomoCardinal Lercaro of Bologna,head of the Vatican commissionto implement VaticanCouncil IPs Constitutionon the Liturgy, and otherRoman officials, as well asthe visit of Archbishop JohnF. Dearden of Detroit toRome earlier this year, indicateda general step forwardwas being considered. Itwasclearly understood that theinitiative of the large Americanhierarchy had spearheadedthe vernacular program.STEADY MARCHWith the Church movingso steadily toward the liturgicalrenewal, it is not surrprising that the emphasis ofthe new instruction issuedMay 4 by the Vatican liturgycommission, called theConsilium, is on concerted,authorized actions ratherthan individual innovations.The Dutch bishops hadsubmitted a request with aDutch text, and the Caribbeanbishops had acted asthe Americans. Although theFrench bishops have beenconsidering the move, it isunderstood that no actionhad been taken to get thepermission.Since October, 1962,when the Second VaticanCouncil began, the Americanrole in liturgy has been dynamic.Among the expertswho prepared the draft forthe council were Father FrederickMcManus of the Cath-• K : University of Americaid Father Godfrey Diekmann,O.S.B., of SaintJohn's University in Collegeville,Minn.Council Fathers from theUnited States spoke on bothsides of the vernacular question,but as the debate andpreliminary voting continuedduring the first andsecond sessions, the Americansentiment began to congeal.Two weeks before thefinal dramatic vote on theliturgy (the first of VaticanII's documents), the UnitedStates bishops met in Romeand voted to extend the Englishin the Mass "as far aspossible." In April, 1964,this vote was made formaland confirmed by Rome."Part-English Masses" beganin American churchesthe first Sunday of Advent,1964. Later the three keyorations of the Mass (thecollect, the prayer over theofferings, and the post-Communion)were included.Frantic efforts were evidentin the preparation ofsuitable texts. In the interestsof haste and experimentation,the 1964 version wasmade up of existing missaltexts with scriptural readingsfrom the Confraternity translation.There was considerabledissatisfaction, some ofwhich was quite useful, muchof it however was linked tothat resistance to changewhich is so evident amongmany people.Meanwhile one of themost far-reaching movementswas well under way.Ten English-speaking hierarchiesauthorized the longrangepreparation of an internationalEnglish text in1963. Theologically andscripturally authentic, thistranslation has the additionalcontributions of literaryand dramatic stylists, andmusicians. Samples havetwice been sent out to thousandsof interested people,and then- comments and criticismscarefully considered.Then the bishops tookhome to "study this mineographedtext along with threeother existing missal versions.There is much polishingstill to be done on thetext before its final approvalby the National Conferenceof Catholic Bishops and theVatican's Consilium.I£ is probable "that thevernacular Canon will beready the first Sunday of Advent1967. The other changes(violet vestments forrequiem Masses, no maniple,changes in rubrics, etc.)will be effective June 29.The use of the vernacularhas become for the proponentsof the liturgy somewhatof a touchstone. It is certainthat some Catholics, whohave never read or receivedinstructions on the meaningof worship, see the use ofEnglish simply as a modernization,or an easier way,almost a gimmick. But actually,the vernacular wasintroduced by Vatican II asa dynamic instrument toward"the full, conscious andactive participation of thepeople" (par. 14).Pastors are directed in theConstitution on the Liturgy,to see that "the faithful takepart (in Mass) knowingly,actively and fruitfully" (par.11). The rites must be "withinthe people's powers ofcomprehension" (34), andboth texts and rites must "expressmore clearly the holythings which they signify"(21).The vernacular was approvedfirst for the scripturalreadings, and then someprayers and chants. Laterother parts were permitted inthe mother-tongue, and nowthe Canon will be clearlyexpressed •Get your heads together on home improvements(then get together with us]A new roof ? A larger patio? More landscaping? Remodeled kitchen ? Added room ? Modernizedbathroom?Which home improvements are at the topof your lists?Put your heads together. And then ? Discussyour loan needs with the banking groupwith the improved home improvement loans,improved?Well.. .you can start it all by phone. Callthe installment loan department. Tell us howmuch you need. Answer a few pertinent questions.Call back the next day and arrange topick up the approved loan. Only you and yourbanker need discuss your needs.Or, if it's more convenient, drop in for achat with people who understand your needs.Let's all get together.United Banking Group'sImproved Home Improvement LoansTHE MIAMI'BEACH'FIRST NATIONALAlton Roadi at Lincoln Mall • Miami Beach • 531-0711UNITED NATIONAL80 Biscayne Boulevard • Downtown Miami • 377-8731CORAL GABLES FIRST NATIONAL100 Miracle Mile. • Coral Gables • 445-1961Member: Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationMay 19, 1967 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 5


Abortion SabotagesGod's Plan Of LifeIt seems passing strange in the heated debate over thecurrent attempt to liberalize abortion that many of those infavor of lucid laws are also the very ones that have beendeploring the breakdown in morality. At regular intervalswe read editorials in our daily papers about the trenddownwards in morality; and depressing statistics are recitedabout juvenile delinquency, dope addicts, graft, brokenhomes, sex crimes and so on.Likewise many clergymen who have delivered powerfulsermons on the public indifference to moral standardsseemingly contradicted themselves in not heeding the factthat laxer abortion laws would do nothing but contributemore to he overall deterioration of morality.In this sense the abortion amendment would truly beone more step down the path of morality, and wouldindicate more clearly than most other crimes how farthe press, religion and public opinion have combinedto bring about a lowered standard—in this case, to bringabout the death of an innocent child and to label it agood thing.By contrast, a news report from Japan, where abortionhas been legalized nearly 20 years, describes again theresentment of the people over thier ever-growing spiritof materialism. A new religion in Japan, commonly knownas Seicho no Ie (House of the Growing) has gathered2 1/2 million signatures on a petition urging the revisionof the law. It is part of a Movement to Treat Life Respectfully.The founder of this movement said he regretted the spiritof materialism had invaded Japan and he felt ashamed thatJapan is known abroad as an "abortion paradise". Hesaid: "It is hardly possible to draw from materialismthe conclusion that life must be respected."Abortion is part of the plan of man's blueprint toignore God's laws and to substitute his own. If we lamentdelinquency, broken homes, drug addiction, sex crimes,dishonesty in government and business, must we not belogical and lament the trend to take an innocent life andthus to ignore God's right to rule as the author of. life?Call CommunicationsGreater Than BombBy J. J. GILBERTWASHINGTON — Thiscentury's "breakthrough incommunications" has hadgreater impact on humanbehavior and world affairsthan the atom bomb. Itrankswith the great forces whichhave shaped mankind'sprogress through history.These findings by a congressionalcommittee help toexplain why we've heard somuch about communicationsmedia in recent days.The committee was concernedchiefly with how U.S.foreign policy has reacted to"the new requirements andopportunities" presented byrecent advances in communications,and reports thatour government's responseto the challenge has beenMotherhood Or MurderCalif. Sidetracks Abortion Bill(Continued from Page 1)followed a six-hour hearingbefore the state's Senate JudiciaryCommittee where anoverflow crowd heard testimonyfrom members of thehierarchy, clergy, physiciansand lawyers.Bishop Alden J. Bell ofSacramento, representing allthe Catholic Bishops of California,told the hearing that"no one can or shouldescape the implications of hisown moral convictions. In aquote phrases and sentences""frequently undistinguished."But it is in theunderstanding and in-but failed "to grasp the spir-the opportunities for mis-from Vatican II documents"major findings" ofthecommitteethat one is made trying to resolve internationtemporarytheology out ofcreased the pressure on those it" and "the attitude of con-familiar with the phenomena,which the committee The "emergence of public of the Council."al crises."which blossomed theinsightssays have produced an "upheaval.iningfactors in the pattern ed that there are "limitlessopinion as one of the determ-Cardinal Cushing stress-OLD CUSTOMS RENT of relations between nations,"is another "note-potential" for the Catholicpossibilities" infhe"roleandThe report says that infour decades "modern communicationstechnology hasworthy consequence of the women of the Conciliar Eracommunications age," it is as mother in the home andchanged the way of life of stated.action leaders in the socialthe developed societies, rent "We should always remember,of course," the re-community.centuries-old customs andtraditions in the developing port says at another point,ones, and substantially "that advances in communicationsmay come to servealtered the relationships betweenthe two."not only the cause of humanVOICEAnd while "our restless, enlightenment and freedompragmatic society has managedto take all of these iveness of totalitarian con-but also improve the effect-changes in stride," the impact"on the rest of theworld experimentation in this fieldtrol systems. Active Soviet— particularly on the developingcountries — has beenwarns us to be on guard."quite different" Forty years Communionago, it says, the averageRt Rev Msgr. James J.WalshIndian farmer never expectedto see in his lifetime any-Given By Nun Father David G. Russellone born more than 20 milesaway from his village WithEditorthe help of radio, televisionAnthony R.Chorakand modern newspapers, theBusiness Managerreport continues, "the Indianfarmer, the African tribesman,and the Latin Americanbarrio dweller becameaware of each other.""New images and ideasbegan to challenge habits ofthought long shaped by localtraditions," it is stated. "Thesense of mankind's interdependenceand proximity beganto spread with disruptiveconsequences for the existingorder." The stage wasset for the economic, socialand political revolutions ofour age.""Since World War II developmentsin communicationshave altered the substanceand form in internationaldiplomacy. "Therapidly expanding networkof international organizationsand programs whichfacilitate international cooperation,both on the privateand governmental levels,would not have beendeveloped without moderncommunications," the committeesays. It adds, however,that communicationsdevelopment has"multipliedPORTEZUELO, Chile -(RNS) — Parishioners at aMaryknoll parish here recentlyreceived Communionfor the first time from a nun.She was Sister Mary Grace,a member of the Baptistinesof White Plains, N.Y., headof the convent here.Sister Mary Grace said shereceived permission to distributethe Eucharist from thelocal bishop whenever therewas a prolonged absence ofparish priests.pluralistic society, it is clearthat no one may urge hisown religions faith as a legislativemotive. Nevertheless,no one should be required tocheck his conscience at thedoor when he enters thepublicforum."It is basic tenet of allGod-centered religions thatevery man possesses his rightto life from God-not fromman or from society. Thereis, therefore," Bishop Belldeclared, "no man, nohuman authority, no sciencethat can justify the deliberatefind direct destruction of innocenthuman life. Beyondthis, if the State serves anyuseful purpose, which it does,the most basic is the protectionof the life of its citizens."No til ing that statutesagainst abortion have existedfrom the earliest of time,and are included even in theHammurable Code of morethan 5,000 years ago, BishopBell emphasized thaf'ineach instance, the thrust ofthe lawhasbeen an emphasisof life even in a situationin which two such lives areendangered."Bishop Bell added that"We must be sympatheticand boldly helpful in doingall we can to assist themotherand her child who findsherself or believes herself tobe the victim of injust acts.I submit, however, "theupon ^the protection and prelate declared, "that a liberalizedabortion practice isvalue of human life Eventhe present statutes, of 42not the way to be chosen bystates, including California, civilized people who pridewhich permit abortion only themselves on preservingto preserve the life of theand respecting the dignity ofmother, do so in an agonizingattempt to stress the valueman as an individual person."U.S. Bishops Urge Broader RenewalWASHINGTON — (NC)— A call for .broader anddeeper liturgical renewal anda brief criticism of unauthorizedliturgical innovationshighlighted the PastoralStatement on Liturgical Renewalissued (May 15) bythe National Conference ofCatholic Bishops.Distribution at the discretionof individual bishops toall priests in the UnitedStates, the statement praisesliturgical reforms alreadycarried out and encouragesGrasp Spirit Of Council/Cardinal Gushing AsksBOSTON (RNS) - RichardCardinal Cushing, Archbishopof Boston, said hereit would be "tragic" if Catholicsdeveloped a facility "to"Not a tiay passes intohistory which does not provideyou with an opportunityto bring the leaven ofthe Gospel into the social,political and economic realitiesof the hour," CardinalCushing said.But he warned that if the"spirit of service" of VaticanII "is to be more than piousphrases, it will demand themost and best from all of us."He urged women"whohave the time, health, andthetalent" to join with "All peopleof goodwill" in buildinga new society according tothe spirit of the Council.^lillilUlllllinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU.The Diocese oi Miami §Weekly Publication =Embracing Florida'] 16 Southern z.Counties: Broward, Cbariotte, Col- ~,Her. Dade, OeSolo, Glades, Hardee, =Lee. Marfin. Munroe, Okeecbobee, ZHendrjr Hiehlanrli. Indian River, r: Palm Beack, SI. Lucie. =Editorial, PLaza 8-0543Advertisings Classified, PL4-26S1; Circulation, PL 4-2651The Most Rev. Coleman F. CarrollBishop of Miami •President, The Voice Publishing Co., Inc.George H. Monahaneditorial ConsultantBishop's RepresentativeFred C. BrinkAdvertising DirectorJohn J.Ward, Contributing EditorFoundsriq Editor, 1959-66EDITORiAL:Marjorie L. Fillyaw, feature & women's editorAllen Brent, copy editor; Tony Garnet, photography;Maria JacomeSPANISH:Gustavo Pena Monte, news editorManolo Reyes, associate editorADVERTISING: John Stachura, Kurt Kgrschat, Clyde Carter,Y/.Woodrow Wilson, Dick Porferfield, Linda Lawrence,Betty Slee, Kay SquiresCIRCULATION: Fred Priebis, supervisor; Maria Alvarezresponsible leadership forfurther development It alsocriticizes those who innovatewithout authorization, butsaves its severest criticismfor those who have neglectedreforms.The statement says: "Agrave fault, however, lieswith those who have resistedor neglected the liturgicalprogram of the council, thosewho have accepted it onlyinternally, those who havesimply refused to embracethe renewal. There is no excusefor indifference amongthe pastors of the flock, and,if we must reprove the innovators,we must even morestrongly and positively urgepriests — pastors and assistants,secular and religious,old and young — to fulfillour common hopes of renewal."BENEFITS OF REFORMThis positive and progressivenote runs like athread through the wholestatement The nine-page letteropens with an appraisalof the benefits of reform,enumerating the good effectsof a widened use of the vernacular,the use of homilies,and the celebration of Massfacing the people.It continues with encouragementfor the use of alternatereadings at weekdayMasses, praise for the practiceof saying the Canonaloud, and hope for the useof a vernacular Canon.The central part of thebishops' statement calls forwidened liturgical educationand a growing involvementof all the People of God inliturgical celebrations. Then,speaking of experimentation,fhestatementpointsout:"What may not be so evidentis that a very wide field ofdiverse liturgical practice isnow open, within the limitsset by the present disciplineand regulations. . ."Parish differs from parish,occasions and circumstancesdiffer,, and no single,rigid pattern of liturgicalcelebration is now possibleor desirable Almost everypriest knows the limits ofsuch diversity and flexibility;not all priests appreciatehowwide the opportunities areforplanning lively and intelligiblecelebration."MORE HOMILIESURGEDOutlines for the ministryof preaching also call for involvementof all preachingin the mystery of Christ'sdeath and resurrection andman's place in the history ofsalvation. Calling forwidened use of weekdayhomilies, the bishops emphasizethat liturgical preachingflows from the proclamationof the Scriptures in the assembly.It is not, they warn,an explanation of liturgicalforms and rites.Criticism of unauthorizedliturgical innovations pointsout that these are genuineexperiments, and adds:" Th ey_ , are diversionary.They turn us away from thetasks already mentioned.They divert us from the educationalwork of renewal amfrom realizing the full potentialof the present liturgy.""Furthermore," the statementsays, "this kind of unauthorizedinitiative is divisiveof the Christian community.It can create fragmentarycommunities which areclosed and narrow, ultimatelyout of communion withtheir brethren."Then, following censureof those who impede reform,the bishops call for renewedreform and a wider involvementin theliturgy, "thecommonwork of the Christiancommunity.''The statement, accompaniedby a covering letterfrom Archbishop John F.Dearden of Detroit, presidentof the bishops' conference,urges priests and bishops tocooperate closely for liturgicalrenewal. It points out tli atthe statement was approvedby the nation's bishops at theChicago meeting of the NationalConference of CathollicBishops in April.Page 6 THE VOICE Miami, Florida May 19, 1967


Total Celibacy,Called Noble jCommitment IBy JOSEPH A. BREIGConcerning priestly celibacy,I • would like to addsome observations of myown to those of AuxiliaryBishop Alfred Ancel of Lyons,France, which I reportedin previous columns.As Bishop Ancel noted,celibacy is a way in whichthe priest gives himself profoundlyto Christ, in orderto be more perfectly, Christ'sservant in the work of savingmankind.I feel, though" that unlessthis truth is applied to ourown lives many of us willcomprehend it only superficiallyif at all.point to which I would^p to draw attention is this:every good Christian life isto a large extent a celibatelife.Before marriage, thecommitted to perfect chastityand total celibacy — and thisbecause he wishes to loveand obey God, and" to walkarm-in-arm with Christ •The arrival of marriagedoes not mean the departureof celibacy, but merely amodificationof it Normally,marriage means children inaddition to in-laws and relativesand neighbors and ahouse to keep up; and sex;strong though it is, soonenough finds the competitionvery tough. Ask any husband.The fact is, then, thatpriestlycelibacy is total celibacy,and married celibacy issomething short of total celibacy.But any religious husbandand wife who liyemarriagein accordance with thewill of God will tell you thatmarried people are celibatemuch of the time.TOTAL FIDELITYHow could it be otherwise,seeing that God commandsmonogamy and totalfidelity to one's spouse?And what does Godrequire this of us?Why, when we wed, do wepromise to forsake all others,and in God's sight utter thegreat vow, "I take tb.ee forbetter or for worse, for richeror for poorer, in sicknessand in health, until death dous part?"What is the meaning of allthis?The answer is that thepurpose of sex, like the purposeof all God's creation,is the sanctifying of persons-the making of saints - thepreparing of His people fora sharing in His own divinelife forever.We grow spiritually, webecome fuEy and perfectlyhuman, only insofar as wegive ourselves to God andour fellowmen in unselfishlove.Priestly celibacy is a saccrificialschool of sanctity.'tfHferied celibacy also is abSlrificial school of sanciry."Greater love no manhaththan that he lay down hislife for his friends," saidJesus.The priest, embracing celibacy,is laying down his lifefor his friends — for Christand all mankind, becauseChrist died for all. This profoundcommitment anchorsa man's heart and will inChrist, and puts his foot onthe path of spiritualprogressthrough service to fellowmen.The husband andwiielaydown their lives for each other,for their children, and forthe stability of home life andof civilization. By theirsacrificial commitment, theycontribute to the consecrationof the world - to whichmagnificent work Pius XIIsummoned the laity.Unselfish, chastity, then,is spiritually priceless. It profoundlyillumines and sanctifiesthe soul. Total priestlycelibacy is among the noblestcommitments on earth.Farewell To A Theologian,Loved Even By His Critics jBy MSGR. JAMES J. WALSHHe was a short, Jean man, with wispygrey hair and the direct, guileless look ofan altar boy who knew his latin. Even inhis 80th year, hehad a quick stepand an even quickermind, and stillfound his greatestdelight in sittingwith a group ofpriests, fieldingtheir questions onMSGR. WALSHtheology. He wasFather FrancisConn ell, a Redemptorist.Whenhis death was an-nounced,afewdaysago, the news musthave brought back a flood of memoriesto priests and tojournalistsinmany countries.Father Connell was the mildest of men,but because of him people lost their tempersand quickly divided into two camps— those who accepted everything he taughtalmost without questioning— and a growingarmy of those who felt his theologicalexplanations were long out-dated.A generation ago, Father Connell waswidely known and respected as a moraltheologian, and priests and seminariansfound his writings on a wide variety ofsubjects in moral theology clear, concise,quotable and authoritative. Withthepassingof the years, however, his influencewaned, as new schools of theologicalthought became better known.When Vatican II began he was invitedto the Council as an expert He became apermanent member of the U.S. Bishops'Press Panel, which met with newsmen dailyto give background information on theCouncil. Father Connellwas widely knownas the most likely to give theeonservativeviewpointWithin a short time, it becameobviousthat the thrust of the Council was progressive,not conservative. It was more concernedwith the present and future thanwith the past. The formulas and terminologydear to the heart of Father Connelland his legion of students 30 yearsago were under attack. His contributionon the presspanelforfouryears, however,was still noteworthy because his clear,traditional doctrine helped to balancesome of the "way-out", still immaturethinking of some of the morevocalliberalspeakers.Father Connell, like many deeply weddedto the Church's^way of thinking andacting in the past, admitted that somecurrent attitudes of theologians distressedhim. The last conversation I had with himwas after the clergy conference in Miamilast January when he and Father JohnCourteneyMurray and several other expertsdiscussed the Council. He lamentedthe "broad views" «f >>>« rnnf reres andfelt they were going to hurt the cause ofthe Church greatly.Only time will be able to assess thevalidity of his fears.Meanwhile, the great thing about FatherConnell is the fact that even his roughestcritics always were able to look uponhim with the highest regard.Father Connell, the priest, the friend,the servant of the Church, was beloved byall, even when his views brought forth agroan from the panel. Proof of this can befound in his very last appearance at theRome press panel. He was leaving a daybefore the Council ended to catch a boathome, and he stood up to thank newsmenfor their courtesy and kindness to him (althoughmany of them admitted to badgeringhim for four years). And he ended,"Let's hope we all are together for theThird Vatican Council." He brought thehouse down with applause when he accompaniedhis words with the gesture ofhis finger pointing up to heaven.* * *Television's marvelous powers neverseem more impressive than when a religiousevent of universal interest is beingviewed. The coverage of tlie Holy Father'svisit to Fatima, made possible by telestar,forcibly reminded us of fulfilledpropheciesand the unbelievable changes in the worldsince Our Lady appeared to thethreechildren50 years ago.Wars and rumors of wars followed;suffering and atrocities of all kinds; Russia'sconquest of a third of the world; theundreamed of progress in travel — jetplanes, manned rockets into space, tripsplanned to the moon; communicationsmedia now making it possible for thewhole world to be linked in instant contact;new philosophies "— God is dead;religious sponsoring lower moral standards:abortion, contraception, sterilization,divorce.All this in 50 years. It also occurredto us in reviewing these marvels that apparentlya greater one happened on October13, 1917, and no one seems to bequestioning it That is "the miracle of thesun." Last Sunday's New York Times,for instance, carried this paragraph insummarizing the happenings at Fatimain 1917:" Then, according to numerous witnesses,including non-believers, the rainstopped abruptly, the clouds vanished andthe sun appeared, a pale and luminousdisc, trembling with violent movementsand spinning. . .the phenomenon lastedabout 10 minutes and then the sun appearedto drop toward the earth."The fact that unbelievers in that crowdof 70,00a in 1917 witnessed this eventgives it an authority usually missing whenexcited crowdshavetheiremotionsstirred.The news media last Saturday gave areverent and objective account of the historyand message of Fatima.Board Of Laymen To PassOn Fitness Of SeminarianROCHESTER, N.Y. —(NC) — An eight-memberReview Board of the Laityto pass upon the fitness ofseminarians scheduled to beordained to the priesthoodwill be established by BishopFulton J. Sheen for theRochester diocese.The new program of disciplinewill be inauguratedat St. Bernard Major Seminaryhere, where seminarianscomplete their theologicalstudies for the diocesanpriesthood.The bishop said the laityboard will be composed ofmen and women. He said theboard was devised so that itwill "not be solely the prerogativeof the seminaryfaculty to determine theworth of the candidates."In explanation of themove, Bishop Sheen stated:"The change has beenprompted by the ordinationceremony, in which the bishopturns to the congregationand asks if the people knowof any reason why the candidatesshould not be advancedto the priesthood.Thus the laity arerecognizedas judges of the worthinessof their future priests."But it is almost too lateto ask the laity at the momentof ordination; theyshould be able to make sucha judgment at any momentas they follow the studentsthrough their careers." Since the priests are theservants of the laity, and notthe laity the servants of thepriests, the people of Godshould have some choiceabout their servants. In thebusiness world, it is the customerwho is to be pleased;in the Church, it is the peopleof God" The Review Board ofthe Laity will be composedof both men and women, notexceeding eight in number.They will fill up the missinglink in seminary disciplinewhich, up to this point, hasbeen largely academic andprofessional. The new dimensionto be added, will beconformity to the high idealsof the priesthood as underrstood by the laity.HEROES OF CHRISTPIERBE T0US8ATNT1766-/853BORN A MEGRO SLAVE/MftAfTI, P/&&E TOOSSA/NTBECAME A A/O7ED CAWOL/CLAYMAN WMEW YVRK C/TY.NO8/LJTYOPCHARACTER *MDER/EA/D"This new order of thingsis a return to the practice ofthe early Church (Acts 1/15and Acts 6/5). As St Cypriansaid: ' The laity know forcertain that the men electedto the priesthood are of thewhole people the most eminent'St Chrysostom remindsus that Moses, whohad talked with God, consultedwith Jethro, who recommendedpeopJc of Godwith whom he might consult.A profound spiritualadvance in the quality of thepriesthood will take placewhen the bishop is not thesole judge of the worthinessof the- candidate, but ratherthe people of God, who invariablydemand one qualityin a priesl which the allholy God demands — holi-//EC0AJ-THEOR-PHANED NE6RO CH/WREN.0U&/M& YEUOW F£VER EP/-D£M/QS, HE BRAVELY CAREDFDR 7HES/CMAA/O OYMG-HE WAS LOVED AMD/?£SP£CFED THROO6MOUT THE C/7T,AND BECAME A l£GEA/0 /A/H/S L/FET/ME.Attacks in CongressAgainst Free SpeechBy FATHER JOHN B. SHEERINWhich is worse, the knave or the fool? This used tobe a favorite topic for academic debate. Our Congresshas been putting this question to the test in recent days.Sen. Russell Long ofLouisiana three weeks agoresponded to criticism of Sen.Thomas Dodd by declaringthat "half of the Senate"could not emerge unscathedfrom the kind of investigationMr. Dodd went through.Long later retracted thissweeping charge of Senateknavery, thus giving the impressionthat he had spokennot only intemperately butalso foolishly.Congressional hanky -panky smudges the goodname of Congress but Congressionalfoolishness isprobably more destructiveof public trust On May 5Rep. Edward Hebert ofLouisiana made one of themost outrageous remarks inthe history of the halls ofCongress.In a hearing before theHouse Armed Services Committee,the point under discussionwas the First Amendmentright of free speech asit applied to those who urge,young men to defy the draftlaw. Rep. Hebert loudly proclaimed:"Let's forget theFirst Amendment" The dismalfact is that no one on thecommittee took issue withhim.In fact, the head of thecommittee, Rep. MendelRivers of South Carolina,matched this foolish remarkwith one of his own. To a;witness testifying in favor ofvoluntary military service,the committee head said:"There are only twoideologies in the world. Oneis represented by Jesus Christand the other by the hammerand sickle." Where doesthis leave the Jews - or forthat matter, the Buddhistsand Hindus and Muslims?Free speech is basic in theAmerican way of life but weelect men to Congress expectingthem to show some exemplarywisdom as well as toexercise their freedom ofspeech. For the country isplaqued atpresentby agreatamount of inane andirrational activity, much ofit on college campuses.Consider the irresponsiblebehavior of the hecklers atDartmouth College who engenderedsympathy for formerGov. George Wallace bypreventing him from speakingand then attacked theautomobile in wheh he wasriding, rocking it and dentingits roof. Or consider thestudent hecklers at City Collegein New York City whodrowned out pro-war speakerswith their chanting andthen hurled eggs at the rationalstudents who wanted tolisten to the speeches.Almost as irrational aresome persons who are claimingthat anti-war dissentshould be silenced today becausesuch dissent only prolongsthe war and costsAmerican lives. I was happyto see Secretary Robert Mc-Namara's response to thiskind of approach to freespeech: "This is a nationin which the freedom of dissentis absolutely fundamental."He expressed hisown view that extremist protestgives comfort to Hanoibut he also stated that wmust be perfectly clear aboutour national principles andpriorities. Free speech is afundamental principle of ourpolitical system.Moreover, it seems to methat the charge that anti-wardissent prolongs the war andcosts American lives is ridiculous.One can reasonablyargue that dissenters arewrong in their anti-war standand that the Administrationis right I don't agree withthis position but certainly astrong case can be made foritBut I don't see how anyonecan reasonably assertthat dissentprolongsthewar.One who tries to bring thewar to an end through negotiationsis certainly notprolonging it, much as onemight disagree with his endeavors.On the basis of present information,what is prolongingthe war is the escalationof it by increasedbombing of North Vietnam.It has hardened the moraleof Ho Chi Minh and theViet Cong and has threatenedto widen the war bybringing Red China and theSoviets closer together.There can be a reasonabledifference of opinionover our goals in Vietnam.Some say we will, if successful,liberate South Vietnamfrom a foreign invaderand preserve the freedom ofthe people: others say thatwe will only strengthen a dictatorialregime, that ofMarshal Ky, if we win.But there can be noreasonable difference . ofopinion about the need ofpreserving freedom athome,and the keystone of thatarch is free speech.May 19, 1967 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 7


Text Of New Instruction On Liturgythe M ass of the day's Office other kisses of the altar are above. At the end of the one nocturn suffices for Mat-of class I and II liturgi-may be said or the Mass of omitted.prayers, he returns to theinsthe commemoration which 9. At the Offertory, after altar, genuflects and con-catinues Mass as usual.days which have three VI.is made at Lauds. For this offering the bread and wine,latter the color of the day's the celebrant places on the 18. When Mass is offeredOffice may be used, in accordancewith art. 323 ofthe host and the chalice, omit-corporal the paten with thecode of rubrics.ting the signs of the cross2. Once permission for with the paten and the chalice.The paten with the use oftheweekdaylectionaryhostFollowing is a translationof the second instructio n concerningthe implementationof the Second Vatican Council'sConstitution on the SacredLiturgy, released by theSacred Congregation ofRites (May 4).Three years ago, in theinstruction "Inter Oecumenici"published by this sacredcongregation on Sept. 26,1964, a series of adaptations •was established to be introducedinto the sacred rites asa first part of the liturgical-reform provided for by theconciliar constitution. Thesebecame effective on March7, 1965.That abundant fruit is alreadybeing gathered fromthese first steps is attested toby numerous reports fromthe bishops, who also confirmthat participation of thefaithful in the sacred liturgyand particularly in the holysacrifice of the Mass has increasedeverywhere and hasbecome more consciouslyaware and more active.OTHER ADAPTATIONSIn order to favor this participationfurther, particularlyin the Mass, and to makethe sacred rites clearer andmore intelligible, thebishopsthemselves have suggestedother adaptations, which afterbeing submitted ! to theConsilium for the implementationof the Constitution onSacred Liturgy, have beenattentively examined anddiscussed by the Consiliumitself and by this sacred congregation.|Not everything suggestedcould be realized, at least forthe time being, but it seemedfitting to implement some ofthe proposals which are recommendedby their pastoralaspects and which are notcontrary to the generalguidelines of the forthcomingdefinitive reform. Theyalso serve to introduce thereform progressively andcan be implemented by simplerubrical arrangements,leaving the present liturgicalbooks unchanged.It seems necessary, however,to recall in this circumstancethat fundamentalprinciple of the discipline ofthe Church, clearly reconfirmedby the Constitutionon the Sacred Liturgy whichspecifies that: "Regulationofthe sacred liturgy dependssolely on the authority of theChurch, . .therefore no otherperson, even if he be a priest,may add, remove or changeanything in the liturgy onhis own authority."Let the ordinaries, whetherdiocesan or religious, bearin mind their grave duty beforethe Lord to exercise vigilanceregarding the observanceof this norm, so importantfor the life and structureof the Church. And let thesacred ministers and all thefaithful comply with it ingood will.Both the edification andthe spiritual good of individualsdemand it, as wellas the spiritual harmony inthe Lord and mutual goodexample which must existamong the faithful of a localcommunity and the duty incumbenton every local communityto cooperate in thegood of the entire Church —particularly today when thegood and evil done in individualcommunities has immediaterepercussions on theentire community of the familyof God.Let everyone thereforebear in mind the admonishmentof the Apostle Paul:"God is a God of peace, notof disorder."The following adaptationsand variations are orderedso that the liturgicalreform may be brought intopractice in a more measuredway and by progressivestages.L CHOICE OF THEFORMULARY OF MASS. 1. On class II liturgicaldays, aside from Lent, eitherat Masses in which the faithfultake part has been obtainedfrom the episcopalconference of one's own nation,lessons for the weekdaysmay be used also forMasses in which the faithfuldo not take part. In this casethe lessons may be read inthe vernacular.This ordo of weekday lessonsis used on certain classII liturgical days as expresslyindicated inthelectionary,and in all Masses of theclassIII and IV, whether of thetemp oral or sanctoral cycles,or votive Masses, which donot have their own speciallessons (lessons in whichthere is mention of the mysteryor the person being celebrated).3. On weekdays throughoutthe year, when the Massof the preceding Sunday issaid, either one of the orationsfor special circumstancesas listed in the missal,or the orations from oneof thevotiveMassesforvariousoccasions, also in themissal, may be substitutedfor the orations of the Sunday.II THE MASS ORATIONS4. Only one oration is tobe said at Mass." Nevertheless,under a single conclusionwith the oration of theMass, there may be addedin accordance with the rubrics:a) a ritual oration:— the oration from an impededvotive Mass on theoccasion of the profession ofa man or woman religious;— the oration from thevotive Mass for spouseswhen impeded;b) theorationmthevotiveMass of thanksgiving;— the oration for the anniversaryof the SupremePontiff or the bishop;— the oration on the occasionof one's own priestlyordination.5. Should there be morethan one oration that couldbe added to the principal,only one should be used —the one which is more inkeeping with the celebrationat hand.6. In place of the "oratioimperata" the bishop mayhave one or more intentionsfor special local needs insertedin the prayer of thefaithful Likewise, by decreeof the competent territorialauthority, intentions may beinserted in the prayer of thefaithful. These may be mademandatory in different ways,according to circumstances,for the benefit of civil rulersin various areas. Or theremay be special intentionsconcerned with the needs ofthe entire nation or region.III. VARIANTS IN THEORDO OF THE MASS7. The celebrant genuflectsonly:a) when he arrives at orleaves the altar, if there is atabernacle there containingthe Blessed Sacrament;b) after the elevation ofthe host and after the elevationof the chalice;c) at the end of the Canon,after the doxology;d) after the Communion,prior to saying "Panem caelestemaccipiam";e) after the Communionof the faithful, when the remaininghosts have beenputback in the tabernacle.All other genuflections areomitted.8. The celebrant kissesthe altar only at the beginningof Mass while he saysthe prayer "Oremuste, Domine,"or when he arrives atthe altar if the prayers at thefoot of the altar are omitted;and at the end of Mass beforegiving (he blessing anddismissing the faithful. Allon it is left on the corporalbefore as well as after theconsecration.10. In the Masses attendedby the faithful, eventhough they are not concelebratedMasses, it is permissiblefor the priest to recitethe Canon aloud (intellegibilivoce) when this is consideredopportune. In sungMasses, it is lawful to singthose parts of the Canonwhich may be sung accordingto the rite for the concelebrationof Mass.11. During the recitationof the Canon the celebrant:a) begins the "Te igitur"standing erect and withhands extended;b) makes only one'signof the cross over the offerings,atthewords"benedicasand haec dona, haec munera,haec sancta sacrificia illibata"in the prayer "Teigitur".All other signs of the crossover the offerings are omitted.12. After the Consecrationthe celebrant may omitkeepinghis thumbs and indexfingers together: shouldsome fragment of the hoststick to his fingers, he shouldpurify his fingers over thepaten.13. The rite of Communionfor priest and faithful isto take place as follows: aftersaying "Panem caelestemaccipiam," the celebranttakes the host and turningtoward the people elevates itand says:" Behold the Lambof- God," then three times togetherwith the faithful "GodI am not worthy." He thenreceives Communion himself,both the host and thecontents of the chalice, omittingthe signs of the cross;immediately afterwards hedistributes Communion tothe faithful as usual.14. The faithful who receiveCommunion on MaundyThursday during theMass ofthe Chrism may receiveCommunion againduring the evening Mass ofthe same day.15. In a Mass which thefaithful participate, beforethe postcomrnunion, theremay be a period of sacredsilence, if convenient, or thesinging or recitation of apsalm of praise — as for instancePsalm 33 "I will blessyou, Lord," Psalm 150"Praise the Lord in Hissanctuary" or the canticles"Bless the Lord" or "Youare blessed."16. At the and of Mass,the blessing of the people isgiven immediately before thedismissal. It is suggested thatthe "placeat" prayer be recitedin secret by the priestas he leaves the altar.The blessing is given evenin Masses for the dead andthe people are dismissed withthe usual formula " TheMass is ended. Goinpeace,"unless the absolution followsimmediately; in which casethe priest says: "Let us blessthe Lord," omits the blessingand proceeds to the absolution.IV. SPECIALCIRCUMSTANCES17. In nuptial Masses, thecelebrant says the prayers"Propitiare" and "Deus, quipotentate" not between the"Our Father" and its embolism,but after breakingthe host and dropping theparticle into the chalice, immediatelybefore the "AgnusDei." ,If Mass is offered at analtar facing the people, afterdropping the particle into thechalice the celebrant (if opportune)genuflects and goesto the spouses where he recitesthe prayers mentionedby a priest whose sight isfailing or one who is infirm,if he has an indult to offer avotive Mass, this order maybe followed:a) the priest says the orationsand the preface of thevotive Mass;b) another priest, a deacon,a lector or some otherserver reads the lessons fromthe day's Mass or from theweekday Lectionary. If he isonly a lector or server, hemay still read the Gospel,but without the prayers"Munda cor meum," " Jube,domne, benedicere" and"Dominus sit in cordemeo."The celebrant precedes thereading of the Gospel withthe "Dominus vobiscum"and at the end kisses thebook.c) the choir or people oreven the lector may read theantiphons at the Introit, atthe Offertory and atthe Communionand the verses betweenthe lessons.V. VARIANTS IN THEDIVINE OFFICE19. Until the general reformof the divine office iscompleted, the recitation ofnocturns.The "Te Deum" is recitedafter the third reading, accordingto the rubrics. Duringthe sacred Triduum, thespecial rubrics of the Romanbreviary are to be retained.20. In individual recitation,the absolution andblessing before the readingsand the conclusion "Tu autem"at their end are omitted.21. At Lauds and Vespersat which the faithful are present,instead of the chapter alonger reading from SacredScripture may be used, taken,for instance, from Matinsor Mass ofthe day, orfrom the weekday Lectionary.If convenient, a briefhomily may be added. B'eforethe oration, the prayerof the faithful may also berecited unless Mass followsimmediately.When these elements areemployed, only threepsalmsneed be said, according to thefollowing pattern,; at Lauds,one of the first three psalmsis said, followed by the canticleand the last psalm; atVespers, -any three of the fivepsalms may be chosen.22. The Sunday psalmsmay always be used whenn your childCompline is recited with theparticipation of the faithful.MODIFICATIONS INOFFICES FOR THEDEAD23. Violet may be used inoffices and Masses for thedead. Episcopal conferences,however, may adopt someother liturgical color whichis more in accord with thementality of the people providedit does not offendagainst human sorrow, andprovided it demonstratesChristian hope illumined bythe paschal mystery.24. In the absolution atthe coffin or the grave, theresponsory " Libera me, Domine"may be replaced byother responsories takenfrom Matins for the dead.Xamely, "Credo quod Redemptormeus vivit"; "QuiLazarum resuscitasti"; "Mementomei, Deus"; "Libers'me,Domine, de viis infemi-'VVIL SACREDVESTMENTS25. The maniple neednever be worn.26. The sprinkling withholy water before SundayMass, the blessing and distributionof ashes at the beginningof Lent and the absolutionat the coffin may bedone wearing the chasuble.27. All concelebrants(Continued on Page 10)would you oot give somelMngIf your child is worth more than anythingto you, think of this boy in thephoto. He has yaws; a widespread tropicaldisease which causes severe disfigurement,crippled bones, blindness andeventual death. But the most startlingfact about yaws is how little it takes tocure it—$10. A child like this has onlyyou to turn to. In Mission lands millionslike him are without care. Dear Monsignor:I care enough to help by sending$NAME:ADDRESS:.THE MISSIONSNEED YOUR HELP]RT. REV. EDWARD T. O MEARA. NATIONAL DIRECTOR. THE SOCIETYFOR THE PROPAGATION OFTHE FAITH. 366 5TH AVE.. N.Y.. N.Y. tOOOlIN MIAMI YOUR DIRECTOR IS REV. JOHN G.BUOCK «01 B1SCAVNE BLVD.Page 8 THE VOICE Miami, Florida May 19, 1967


South Floridav ; i.'.-'SWIMMING POOLS are now being installed at Miami's Marian Center for ExceptionalChildren through donations of the faithful to the 1967 Diocesan Development Fundcampaign. The pools will be ready for use in time for the new summer program.'Qualify School' RatingGiven To Aquinas HighFORT LAUDERDALE-St Thomas Aquinas HighSchool has been cited as aquality school and onewhich provides real meaningfor the term accredited atMarymountGraduates95 SundayBOCA RATON - Ninetyfivestudents will be graduatedfrom Marymount Collegeduring commencement exercisesat 4 p.m., Sunday,May 21, in Founder's Hallauditorium.Msgr. Jeremiah P. 0' Mahoney,P.A., pastor, St Edwardparish, Palm Beach,and a member of the collegeboard of trustees, will conferdegrees and present honorsduring the ceremonies wherethe largest class in the fouryearhistory of the collegewill be graduated.Commmencement speakerwill be Dr. Gerard MauriceDoyon, chairman of the ArtDepartment of Florida AtlanticUniversity and fatherof a member of this year'scollege.Baccalaureate Mass willbe celebrated at 11 a.m. Suntdayby Father Jack Totty,college chaplain. A brunchfor graduates and parentswill follow at noon.During a recent awardsbanquet several young womenfrom South Florida werehonored for academic a-chievement. Included wereRiane d'Aulan, Boca Raton;and Patricia Cosier, FortLauderdale, sophomores;and Carolyn Walker, BocaRaton; and Victoria Kingand Patricia LeStrange, bothof Pompano Beach; whowere inducted into Phi ThetaKappa, national scholastichonorary society.Leadership awards werepresented to Holly C. Bartonand Linda Beard, Boca Raton;and to Ann Speicher,Delray Beach, for collegechoir and chorus; to KathrynMulroy, Boca Raton, studentactivities; to DeborahL. Horan, Fort Lauderdale,Boca Raton Fiesta; and toSusan P. Swartzbaugh, FortLauderdale, resident housingleadership.the conclusion of a fiveyearstudy just completedby Dr. Vincent McGuire,chairman "of the FloridaCommittee of the SouthernAssn. of Colleges and SecondarySchools, and Dr.John Jenkins, principal,Miami Springs Senior High.Summer carnival is planned inLast month the twoSt. John Bosco parish, July 29educators visited the high and 30. volunteers areurgently needed.school staffed by AdrianDominican Sisters for thepurpose of observing the advancesmade since the 1961 Ladv of Florida RetreatHousefromNORTH PALM BEACH - A retreatfor barbers will be held at Ourevaluation report The administrationand faculty selfendconferences from Friday, JuneMay 27 to May 29. Men bf'StClare parish will participateinweekstudywas read, students were 2 to Sunday, June 4. \interviewed, classes were observedand discussions wereheld with faculty members.The evaluators consideredthe self-study "indicativeof the high level of scholarshipand steadfastness of purposeof the staff of Aquinas.The report is thorough,honest, and very professionalin all respects," they said.In addition the evaluatorsfound the administration"Hard-working and competentin every way" andpointed out that the teachersexhibit a "lively interest" intheir work and the activitiesof the students and that studentsdemonstrate a "refreshingoutlook" of enthusiasmand good will which speakswell for the school program.v \1•/..V.CalendarOf EventsFORT LAUDERDALE - Meetingto organize a new troop of BoyScouts are held at 7:30 p.m. eachTuesday at the K. of C. HaH, 3571N. Andrews Ave. Minimum age formembership is 11 years.Holy NameUnits ElectElection of officers highlightactivities inparish HolyName Societies throughoutSouth Florida.• BELLE GLADE-VernonL.Dexteris the new president of St PhilipBenizi society.Other officers are Ernest Amedee,vice president; Charles Modecki, secretary;Joseph L. Murphy, treasurer;and Terry Miller, marshal!.Andy Styer has been installed aspresident of SS. Peter and PaulHolyName Society.Also installed were Robert Nagy,vice president; Lou ftevost, treasurer;James Burch, secretary; andRalph Vernon, marshall.When you wish to make your WillYou should see your -lawyer, stillThere is much that we cart doWith advice and guidance tooIn our Trust Department pleasantOfficer* are tttways presentAnd prepared, they are indeedWith suggestions as you needLITTLE RIVER BANK^ AND TRUST COMPANY ^>x'4r 8017 N. E. SECOND AVENUE ^rlii'MIAMI, FLORIDAMEM81R: FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM • FEDERAL OEPO! DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIONPRE-CANASESSIONSSCHEDULEDWEST PALM BEACH —Pre-Cana Conferences arebeing conducted this montrrat Cardinal Newman HighSchool under the direcuonofthe Family Life Bureau ofthe Diocese of Miami.Father Leslie Cann, su-II, Dr. Ardnt is chairman ofpervising principal at thethe United Church of Christhigh school, is in charge ofthe programs, which featurelectures by priests, physiciansand qualified laymen."Sex and Marriage" and"Aspects of Marriage- Communicatingin Marriage"will be the topics discussedat 8 p.m. Monday, May 22.On May 25 subjects will be"A Doctor Discusses Marriage"and "Two DoctorsAnswer Questions AboutMarriage."Two SummerCourses InTheology SetBOCA RATON - Twotheology courses will be offeredduring the summer sessionbeginning at MarymountCollege on July 3 andcontinuing through August12.Designed primarily forreligious and interested laity,the courses are "LiturgicalTheology" and "ReligiousIn An Age of Decision AfterVatican II."The first course will emphasizea search for relevantexpressions ofliturgical worshipin the light of the historicaldevelopment of fheliturgy and contemporarysociological trends. The secondcourse will explore thefuture role of the religiouswoman in the AmericanChurch.Both courses may betakenfor college credit and registration.Further informationmay be obtained by contactingSister Regis at the collegeWATCHREPAIRCLEANED &ADJUSTEDBy Expertstrained atLongines. 1 Yr.WrittenGuarantee6•Chronographs, Calendars, andAutomatics slightly higher,GIFTS & HANDBAGSNORTHEAST79th ST. & BISCAYNESHOPPING PLAZANext to Wolgreen'a LiquorWe Buy Antiquesand OW Jewelrycmpltte Jewelry RepairsOPEN • A.M, to 9 PJM._Ph)Ml PI 9-3317 __Florida's Greatest CondominiumApartment Value!A1A—«W INorm Irem IhoIwart ofL»uderd»l«-by-the-St*K-C State CouncilTo Meet May 20-23South Florida Knights ofColumbus will participate insessions of the 63rd annualmeeting of the Florida StateCouncil of the K. of C, May20 through May 23 at theRobert Meyer Motor Inn,Orlando.Registration for the threedaymeeting will begin at 10a.m. Saturday.Dr. Elmer J. F. Ardnt,professor of theology atEden Theological Seminary,St Louis, will be the principalspeaker during Sundaymorning breakfast An officialobserver at the secondsession of Vatican CouncilTheological Commission.On Sunday evening ArchbishopJoseph P. Hurley,Bishop of St Augustine, willbe the principal speaker duringthe closing banquet ofthe convention being hostedby Our Lady of the LakesK. of C. Council, Orlando.* * *HOLLYWOOD—The annualpicnic of Father MonahanCouncil 4851 will beheld Sunday, May 28 at thePBA Park, S. 21st Ave. andPlunkett StA variety of refreshmentswill be served and athleticgames for adults and childrenwill be sponsored bythe Hollywood RecreationDeptTickets may be obtainedby calling George Lunney at989-4526 or Leonard Mancinelliat 989-8997.PLANTATION—^, of C.Council No. 5971 was institutedas a Council during recentceremonies at the FortLauderdale Council Hall.Anthony J. Amoroso waselected grand knight;Thomas H. Harber, deputygrand knight; John Montgomery,Chancellor; FloydA. Preston, Jr., warden;George Quinn, financial secretary;Roland Schwinnen,recording secretary; JosephHanley, treasurer; James J.Ward, Jr., Thomas Quinn,Robert Kearns, trustees;John F. Spellacy, advocate;Vincent Masterson, BrunoStanislawski, Joseph A.Nassisi and Albert E. Smith,guards and Richard Quinn,lecturer.Laymen WillHelp To SetCollege PolicyFor the first time in its25-year history Barry Collegehas elected two Miamilaymen to its Board of Trusteesto assist in policy-settingwith the Adrian DominicanSisters who conduct the college.Michael O'Neil, chairmanof the college's Lay AdvisoryBoard and George F. Meister,Miami attorney and layadvifeory board member, willparticipate in the annualmeeting on May 19 whichwill be attended by MotherMary Genevieve,O.P., PrioressGeneral of the AdrianDominican Sisters and chairmanof the Board of Trustees,Sister Jane Marie, O.P., andSister Cyril Edwin, O. P.,both trustees from Adrian,Mich..Also attending will beSister Mary William, O. P.,prioress at Barry CollegeSister Mary Arnold, O.P.,academic dean; Sister M.Christopher, O.P., treasurer;and Sister Mary Dorothy,O.P., Barry's president.A SPECIAL PURCHASEENABLES VICTOR TO OFFERA New 1st LINE 88 NOTESPINET PIANOHAND RUBBEDWALNUT, EBONYOR MAHOGANYFOR399INCLUDES MUSIC KIT,HEAT ROD, FREE TUNING * DELIVERY$25 DOWN - $10 MONTHLY BENCH OPTIONALVICTORPIANOSORGANSOPEN DAILY & SUN. 9 lo 9CORNER N.W. 54th ST. AND 3rd AVE., MIAMI PL 1-7502AND 2010 BISCAYNE BLVD. FR 7-0401CALL FREE FROM BBOWABD ik 2-5131FT. LAUDERDALE; 1103 E. LAS OLAS BLVD. JA 5-3716188T S. OCMR IN.Psrapiiw leuli143-3210By The SeaAPARTMENTSfrom 12,500. . . includes executive golf courseand sil-wathar elimstizad pee).Walking distance to theVillage Shopping Center and Ocean.ADJACENT TO ASSUMPTION CHURCHMay 19, 1967 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Poge9


46,864,910 Catholics In U.S.NEW YORK (NC) — are also fewer Sisters, lower shrink — down 118 to 14,- of 118,010 in parish elemen-There are more Catholics, schools, fewer students, fewerconverts and fewer babies felt by diocesan and parish148' with the great lossesmore priests and more Catholicschool teachers in the baptized than in the previousyear.parish elementary schoolshigh schools (37 fewer) andUnited States this year thanlast year.The total Catholic popu-between Jan. 1, 1966, There were 305 colleges(22 fewer).But, according to thelation1967 edition of the Official and New Years Day, 1967. and universities (four fewer);Catholic Directory, publishedby P. J. Kenedy andServing them are 6991,469 diocesan and parishSons of New York, thereText Of NewInstructionOn Liturgy(Continued from Page 8)must wear the sacred vestmentsprescribed for individualcelebration. Nevertheless,for a grave reason, asfor instance in the case of alarge number of concelebrantsand a shortage ofsacred vestments, the concelebrants,always with theexception of the principalcelebrant, need not wear thechasuble. They must neveromit the alb and the stole,however.VII USE OF THE (Continued from Page 1)VERNACULAR year to reach the total of28. The competent territorialauthority, while ob-priests of the diocese were348. Most of these futureserving the prescriptions of enrolled in the St. John VianneyMinor Seminary,art. 36, paragraphs 3 and 4of the Constitution on. the built and first opened inSacred Liturgy, may decree 1959, and in the St. Vincentthat in liturgicalcelebrations de Paul Major Seminary atin which the people participate,the vernacular lan-Boynton Beach, opened bythe Vincentian Fathers inguage may be used even:a) in the Canon of theMass;b) throughout the entirerite of sacred ordinations;c) in the lessons of theDivine Office even when recited"in choro."His Holiness Pope PaulVI during an audience grantedon April 13, 1967, to theundersigned Arcadio CardinalLarraona, Prefect of theSacred Congregation ofRites, approved the presentinstruction in all its individualparts and confirmed itwith his authority, orderingthat it be published and observedby all those concerned,beginning June 29,1967.Rome, May 4, 1967, thefeast of the Ascension of theLord, Jesus Christ.more priests — now 59,892,an all-time high — 12,532Brothers — an increase of284 — and 176,671 Sisters.That figure represents a dropof 4,750 Sisters in the U.S.,according to the directory.TRENDS REVEALEDThe statistics, compiledfrom reports to diocesan andreligious order officialsthroughout the country, revealedseveral continuingtrends, particularly in education.The number of educationalinstitutions continued tohigh schools; 872 privatehigh schools (10 fewer); 10,-528 parish elementaryschools; 399 private elementaryschools (13 fewer) and118 protective institutions(seven fewer).For the 14th straightyear, the number of collegestudents increased — 17,809more for a total of 431,070.That represents a 66% enrollmentrise in 10 years.But the number of studentsin Catholic elementaryand secondary schoolsdropped by 93,674. A dropDiocese PopulationGains To 439,5941963. Others are attendingseminaries in other parts ofthe United States and in Europe.The record of the diocesein the field of education hasbeen notable. The number ofelementary schools, parochialand institutional, in 1958was 51, with 22,009 pupils.Now they total 63, with 29,-941 pupils. There alsoare three private elementary'schools with 470 pupils.There are now 17 highschools, diocesan and parochial,with 6,621 pupils, ascompared with 11 with anenrollment of 2,294 in 1958.There are four Catholiccolleges in the Diocese. Theyare Barry College for Women,Biscayne College forMen, Marymount JuniorCollege for Women, and St.Taste the sweet fresh flavorin every pound ofLand O' Lakessweet creamButterBUY SOMETODAYiggfiepspsGet relief quickly with Miracle Rest ComfortPad, natural wool and leather product speciallytreated to prevent decubitus ulcers andfpressure sores. Resilient, soft springy Iamb'swool breathes, lets cool air circulate underpatient. Suede leather side grips sheet,prevents wrinkling. Washable. Get MiracleRest in full comfort size now at TANDYLEATHER COMPANY2757 W. FEngler, Miami.B^BIQ-Ycar


'jjiiiuniiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiinttiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiitiiiiiinitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiitiwiiiiiiintsON THEMOVESUNNY GOINGS ONJune Near, BridalShow Is PlannedSPRING SOCIALS. . .Fourth annual chicken barbecue'^jPur Lady's Guild of St Vincent parish, Margate, sched-^S lor Sunday, May 21 on the parish grounds at noon.. . .Bridal Show is planned on Sunday, June 4 by CourtSt Mary Star of the Sea, CDA, in Key West . .Tahiti Beachwill be the scene of Little Flower Junior Women's ClubLuau, Saturday, May 27. ,.Holy Spirit Council of CatholicWomen has slated a rummage sale, June 2-3 in thechurch meeting room. A "Pool Party" sponsored bySt Timothy Christian Mothers will begin at 7 p.m., Saturday,May 20, Tropical Estates Pool.AROUND THE DIOCESE . . Third annual Mother andDaughter Communion breakfast of St Vincent de PaulAltar and Rosary Society. Sunday, May 21, Biscayne Cafeteria.. ."Sacred Liturgical Vessels" will be discussed duringMay 23 meeting of Holy Spirit Council of Catholic Women,Lantana. . .Barry College graduate alumni chapter plansSpring dinner meeting, 6 p.m., Sunday, May 21 in ThompsonHall on campus. . . Catholic Alumni Club will host adance, 9 p.m., Friday, May 25 at Doral Hotel, MiamiBeach. . .A rummage sale sponsored by St Matthew Rosaryand School Society, June 2, 3, 5 at Hallandale Women'sClub. . Our Lady of Perpetual Help Mother and DaughterBreakfast, Sunday, May 21 after8:30a,m.Mass.. .AnnualCommunion Breakfast of St Jerome Woman's Club set forSunday, May 28, after 8:30 a.m. Mass, atthe Hotel Sheraton.New Officers TakeOver Club DutiesNew officers are assumingtheir duties in MiamiDCCW affiliations beforeCatholic women's clubs adjournfor the summer.LEHIGH ACRES — Mrs. BarbaraZytowski is the new presidentof St Raphael Council of CatholicWomen.O&ers officers recenfly installedincluded Mrs. Shirley Host, vicepresident;Mrs. Margaret Sparks, secretary;and Mrs. Louise Wood, treasurer.* * **FORT LAUDERDALE — Mrs.Arthur W. Nomina has been installedas president of St Anthony CatholicWoman's Club.Other new officers are Mis. GeneZoratti and Mrs. Ray H. Sullivan,vice president; Mrs. Joseph Vezendy,secretary; and Mrs. Edward Goggin,treasurer.* * **HOLLYWOOD —Mis. BarneyCrowley will be installed as presidentof Chaminade Mothers Club,Thursday, May 25 in the high schoolauditorium.Mis- Euguene Sullivan is vicepresident Mrs. Albert Furman, recordingsecretary; Mrs. Robert Kane,treasurer; Mrs. Raymond MoLe, correspondingsecretary; and Mrs.Charles Nelson, financial secretary.* * **SURFSIDE—Mrs. HelmutBomwas installed Monday as residentof St Joseph Catholic Women'sClub., Other officers who assumed theirild installs1st OfficersMrs. Anthony Battagliaof St Monica parish will beinstalled as first presidentof Msgr. Pace High SchoolMothers Guild at8p.m. Sunday,May 21 at the highschool.Other founding officerswho will assume their dutiesin the newly organized clubare Mrs. John Bean, StLawrence parish, N. MiamiaBeach, vice president;Mrs. E. L. Sweet, Holy Familyparish, recording secretary;Mrs. Joseph Rimkus,Immaculate Conceptionparish, corresponding see;,retary; Mrs. John White;Visitation parish, treasurer;and Mrs. Richard Keller,Immaculate Conceptionparish, historian and parliamentarian.Father William Hennessy,supervising principal ofthe high school, is the Guildmoderator.duties are Mrs. CamUleDevDoonen,Mrs. Edward J. McKenny, Mrs.David Byrne, vice president MissBetty Dougherty, treasurer; Mrs.Andrew Connors, recording secretary.* * * *CORAL GABLES —Mrs. PatrickKiel will be installed as president ofthe Little Flower Junior Women'sClub, Monday, May 22.Other officers who will also bewelcomed are Mrs. Robert Naegele,vice president; Mrs. George Peabody,recording secretary; Mrs. JohnSudd, corresponding secretary; Mrs.George Ferguson, treasurer, andMrs. Edward Bureh, historian.* * • •Ken Bush has been installed aspresident of St Michael Home andSchool Assn.Also installed were Mrs. LouisaRodriguez and Mrs. Anne Hickey,vice presidents; Mrs. MarySchauseU, secretary; Mike Yesbeck,treasurer; Bob Bartell, auditor; andMrs. Jean French, historian.* * * *COCONUT GROVE — Mrs.Howard Doolin will be installed aspresident of St Hugh Guild on Sunday,May 21.Mrs. John Bosworth and-Mrs.Joan Knight are vice presidents;Mrs. Ahnee Burd, recording secretary;Mrs. Earl j. Reardon, correspondingsecretary: Mrs. BettySchmit, treasurer; and Mrs. L. Mc-Laughen, historian.KEY WEST — Mrs. RudolphWylk has been elected grand regentof Court 634, Catholic Daughtersof America.Other officers named are Mrs.Peter Simpson, vice grand regent;Mrs. Daniel Sullivan, prophetess;Josephine A. Scurachio, financialsecretary; Mrs. Roy Watson, historian;Mrs. Gene Fredette, treasurer;Mrs. G. A. Henrique:, monitor;Mrs. William Gilson, sentinel;Mrs. John Rivas, lecturer and Mrs.Fred Haas, Mrs. Car Weekley, Mrs.Manuel Boa, Mrs. Flora Vargasand Miss Anne Manker, trustees.* • *Mrs. Elizabeth Manninghasbeeninstalled as president of St DominicLadies Society.Other officers are Mrs. JeanneFrench and Miss Matilda Brockhoff,vice presidents; Miss EmmaDalorso, recording secretary; Mrs.Mary Bair.correspondingsecretary;and Mrs. Florence Stefl, treasurer.* * * •Mrs. Mary Mattoy was installedWednesday as president of St.Kevin Guild.Also installed were Mrs. CarolBrooks, vice president; Mrs. PatAsbury. treasurer; Mrs. Rita Moeller,recording secretary; and Mrs.Tilli Ricchini, corresponding sec-MIAMI SPRINGS - Mrs. MaryRouch is the new installed presidentof Blessed Trinity Rosary-Altar SocietyȦlso named officers were Mrs.Rita Spefcer, vice president; Mrs.Alice Kondy, recording secretary;Mrs. Frances Brewster, correspondingsecretary; and Mrs. Mary Harmon,parliamentarian.S>CCW MessrsArt iivifid ?§Cenacle litres!LANTANA - Membersof the M iami Diocesan Councilof Catholic Women havebeen invited to participate inweekend retreat conferencesat the Cenacle Retreat Housefrom Friday, May 26 to Sunday,May 28.Father David G. Russell,Bishop's Representative toThe Voice, will conduct theconferences sponsored by theEast Coast Deanery of theCouncil beginning at 6 p.m.Friday and concluding withBenediction of the BlessedSacrament at 3:30 p.m. Sunday.Reservations maybe madeby calling the Cenacle RetreatHouse at 582-2534 orby writing to Sister MableBishop, R. C. Cenacle RetreatDirectress at 1400 aDixie Hghway.Chairmen Of New DCCW Commissions NamedMrs. Robert D'Amore, Mrs. Dan McCarthy, Mrs Francisco Montana, Mrs. James Cronin, |iiiiiiiniimmiiiniiiiiiimimiiiii«iiiiiiiigMrs. Stuart Godwin | ServiceDiocesan Women Get In StepWith National Federation PlanAs an affiliate of the NationalCouncil of CatholicWomen, the Miami DCCWhas established five commissionsto promote, coordinateand unify the work r>f ihenational federation apostolatein accordance with thedirectives of Vatican CouncilII.Diocesan chairmen,selected for their ability andexperience in the specifiedarea, will serve as liaisonbetween the national chairmanand deanery chairmanfor each of the five commissions.Named as diocesan chairmenin South Florida areMrs. Stuart Godwin, Jr.,North Dade Deanery, OrganizationServices Commission;Mrs. FranciscoMontana, South Dade Deanery,International AffairsCommission; Mrs. JamesCronin, Broward Deanery,Community Affairs Commission;Mrs. Robert D'-Amore, East Coast Deanery,-Family Affairs Commission;and Mrs. Dan McCarthy,Southwest Coast Deanery,Church Communities Commission.EXPERTS TO AH)One or more experts in thespecified fields will serve asvolunteer consultants oneach commission and will becalled upon as needed. Deaneryand affiliation commissionswill be organized inmuch the same way as thediocesan committees.The Organization ServicesCommission will act asa service bureau giving supportto the other commissions.Included in the serviceswill be organizationdevelopment, field services,public relations, legislativeinformation service, andpublications. This Commissionwill work in conjunctionof the other commissions'programs providing organization,programming techniques,materials and publicity.A program of study andaction in the areas of peace,education for internationalunderstanding, internationalrelief and development,hospitality to foreign studentsand visitors, and par--ticipation in meetings of aninternationalnature will bethe work on the InternationalAffairs Commission,which has as its aim theawakening of all Christiansto their responsibility for theinternational society and tocreate a brotherhood of allpeoples.Says Miniskirts TurnWomen InfoMonkeysVATICAN CITY—(RNS)— Modern fashion designersare making monkeys out ofwomen, according to one ofthe Vatican's leading moralists.Women in mini shirts"profess a pseudo-nonconformity,"he said, but "actuallyresemble monkeyswith their capricious extravagance."The aping of currentstyles was criticized by Msgr.Ferdinando Lambruschini,a member of several Vaticancongregations and commissionsand a popular writeron moral questions in L'Osservatoredella Domenica, aweekly newspaper publishedhere. He wrote in answer toa.flood of letters which arrivedafter actress ClaudiaCardinale appeared at apapal audience in a miniskirt.The Church must "makeclear the permanent value ofChristian fashions," Msgr.Lambruschini wrote. "Itcannot approve the minishirt"He said that there is agroup of people today which"has managed to imposevery short dresses and to exposethe female body to theutmost, apparently in orderto exalt its beauty."" The Church's attitude isnot rooted in sourness orpedantry," he said, "but inthe moral principle thatfashionsshould not be designedto create scandal or to exciteanimal instincts. The Churchisconcerned that freedomshould not become license.""The first to pay" forthese excesses " are women,"he said, "unfortunately notonly the brainless ones whoprofess a pseudo-non-coniormiryand actually resemblemonkeys with their capriciousextravagance, butalso women of faithful modestyand courage."| 'Day Off Fun' f| Scheduled I"Day of Fun" is plannedby members of the MiamiCatholic Single Club onSunday, May 21, at TropicanaCountry Club, 5151NW. 79 Ave.Swimming and sports activitieswill begin at 2 p.m.and the day will include apicnic followed by dancing.The Community AffairsCommission has as its goalthe involving of the membersof the National Council ofCatholic Women and all peopleto answer the needs oftheir individual communitiesİts program will focus onhousing, urban development,rural life agriculture,safety, health and welfare,transportation, economicpolicies, education and governmentand any and all ofthe areas that affect the lifeand. well-being of all peoplein the United States.The aim of the Family AffairsCommission is to assistfamilies in achieving a trulyChristian life and to preserveChristian principles inthose areas that pertain tothe welfare of all families.Its program will be concernedwith child and parenteducation, preservationof family unity, sex education,fbrmation.for marriageand parenthood, care for theaged, and religion in thefamfly-The Church CommunitiesCommission will provide aprogram of study and actionthat will create a communityof God's people that is educatedand dynamic. It willpromote an understandingof the scripture, the liturgyand ecumenism and the programwill be determined bythe needs of the Church andof the people of God in thecommunity.3614 Coral Woy .? . MiamiMissals & ChristogramsEngagement, Shower & Wedding"Everything but the Gownand Groom"Marian Freefield, ConsultantCLOSED THURSDAYS| Given Woman |I FORT LAUDERDALE I= — An award foroutstand- =5 ing service was recently 1| presented to Mrs. J. S. i§ Nader of Our Lady Queen || of Martyrs parish, from |= the Broward County =§ Chapter of the March of |I Dimes. §= Mrs. John L. Cody, S= Jr., executive director ot || the chapter, made the pre- || sentation to Mrs. Nader, I= who is a member of the f= National Foundation ex- I= ecu Hve board. ICollegiansIn e Who's Who 9Five collegians fromSouth Florida are among11 Barry College juniorsnominated to Who's Whoin American Universities andColleges for 1967-68.Included are Noreen Bevilacqua,daughter of Dr.and Mrs. Michael Bevilacqua;Elizabeth Anne Dowdall,daughter of Mrs. AliceVirginia Dowdall; and Mrs.Selma U. Levy, all of Miami;Nancy Jane Fraser,daughter of i Mr. and Mrs.George E. Fraser, WestHollywood; and MaryCatherine Ungar, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Ernest G.Ungar, Fort LauderdaleHEARING AIDSREPAIREDONE DAY SERVICEPick Up and Delivery jHEARING AID LOANwhile yours is beingrepairedCALL LOU HEITDADE HEARING SERVICE J2425 SW24 Avenue, Miami j448-0881ALL THE SMARTEST FURSARE COMING TO US FURSTORAGEEXPERT CLEANINGRESTYLING-REMODELINGGROVEFURRIERS3130 Commodore Plaza, Coconut GrovePhones 446-2536 - 446-0334Solid StateOrgan si Church orTheatre• OrganKits• CustomOrgans20th Century Successor To The Pipe OrgansARTISAN ORGANS OF SOUTH FLORIDAJohn M. Morel Michael F. Stance1465 N.W. 10th St. 8300 Abbott Ave.Dania 922-8545 Miami Beach 865-3114May 19, 1967 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 11


»i I 1 iiff«f °f" i n 1 Husband InterfaceShould Wife Take Back Who Deserted? AdoptionsTOAfter abo ut eight or nine years of marriage my husbandleft me for other women. He lived with one for along time and she uses his name Sometimes he wouldcome home. He is now in his sixties and has comehome permanently He says he never married thiswoman or divorced me. He lies so much I don't knowwhat to believe. I don't know whether lam marriedor not If so why shouldn't I get a divorce?By JOHN J. KANEYou have certainly waited a long time, Martha, toconsider taking action in a problem of such longstanding. If you have tolerated the kind of husbandand the type of behavior you describe in your letterfor over 30 years, the most important question is mymind is: why do anything about it now?Your husband, in effect, deserted you about 30years ago. At that time it would have made a greatdeal of sense to see one of the parish priests anddiscuss the matter thoroughly. Currently I don't knowwhether to admire or pity the patience that you haveextended to him. From time to time you permitted himto return and I presume to take up married life again.Yet again and again he left you. Did it not occur toyou that there was something seriously wrong withyour husband?My sympathy goes out to you in the dilema youpresent You simply do not know whether you arestill legally married to this man or not. Since yourefuse to believe what he says, then you must haverecourse to an attorney who will attempt to discoverthe truth for you. I realize this will cost money and itmay be that you are not in a position to pay it. Ifthis is the case, I would go to the Catholic Social Serviceand see if some kind of legal assistance is notav ailable to you at either a minimum fee or free ofcharge. Before you can make any decision aboutwhatyou are going (to do, you have a right to know whatyour present status is.©tiureii PositionIt is unfortunate that many Catholics do not reallyunderstand the Church's position on such a matter.In the eyes of the Church a man and woman marryfor life. There is no such thing as absolute divorce,that is, divorce with permission for one or both toremarry. But the Church's position is neither so harshnor cruel as some people tend to believe. The Churchwisely makes provisionfor separation. Thismeansthatyou may be separated from bed and board but it isnot a divorce and does not permit remarriage.Admittedly, this is a very difficult sort of situationespecially for young people. But this is what Our Lordtaught and one of the best aspects of it is that if peoplerealize it, they would make their marital choices moreslowly and more carefully. Obviously, all marriagesare not going to work put well, But the record amongCatholics is a very low rate of divorce. I would tracethis primarily, not only to the teaching of the Church,but to the fact that each party in a Catholic marriageis usually wiling to make more than the usual sacrificesfor the sake of maintaining the bond.Your rather belated question of whether or not todivorce your husband is probably prompted by theyears of frustration that you have undergone. Butsince he is in his sixties and you probably are too, itraises a whole host of questions.I am not going to attempt to resolve the basic oneand by that I mean the Church's attitude toward adivorce at this time because this is something one ofyour parish priests can discuss better than I. But Iam curious about many aspectsthatyou have failed tomention in your letter. Has your husband contributedto your support during all theseyears?Ishe contributingto your support at present? If he is not doing so,are you able to take care of yourself?I think that the financial aspect is rather importanthere and while what I tell you may be too late to domuch good, your husband did have and has an obligationto support you financially both in the moraland legal codes. If you failed to insist on it, that wasyour fault. I must also hasten to add, however, that invery many cases even though one takes the'necessarysteps to obtain support, it is very difficult to find somedeserters and make them pay.Why Oid Mm Pteflurn?There is another aspect to the matter. Are youwilling to takeyour husband I back? In view of whatyou must have suffered over these many years, it isasking you to be heroic. Since you have so little faithin what he says, I wonder if it can possibly work outat all? It would also be interesting to know why hehas bothered to return home at this rather late date.In conclusion, I again urge that you try to seek theassistance of an attorney in order to determine whatyour real status is. Are you his wife, or has he divorcedyou? Has he married another woman? Then I wouldalso discuss the matter with one of the parish priestsin order to get some kind of perspective on it for theviewpoint of the Church.happy homes me delicious, healthful. . . it's extra-fresh because it's homeprodbced!Get the Home Milk habit now!: ; ; U Miomi: 2451 :-*N'.W.'.7th *-Ave., FB.4-7M&Ft. lauderdoie: Jfl 3-2449 - West Palm Bench: OV 3-1944Homeiteod: Cl 7-3235 - Key West: CY 6-9631You don't pay riiore VAII #±ET MAD Elat FOOD FAIR!... 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Fr Connell Dies,Noted TheologianWASHINGTON —(NC)—Solemn Pontifical RequiemMass for Father Francis J.Connell, C.SS.R., 79, foryears one of this nation'sbest known moral theologians,was offered in the NationalShrine of the ImmaculateConception here.Archbishop Patrick A. O'-Boyle of Washington officiatedat the Mass. Burial wasin the Redemptoristcemeteryin Annapolis, Md.Father Connell died inProvidence Hospital hereHe had been a patient for amonth and had several heartattacks.Since his retirement fromthe Catholic University ofAmerica here, where hefor 17 years, Fatherp ( had resided at HolyRedeemer College, 'the Redemptoristmajor seminaryclose by the university. Heissurvived by a sister and severalnephews and nieces.BOSTON NATIVEFather Connell was bornin Boston, Jan. 31, 1888,and attended Boston LatinSchool and Boston College,from which he was graduatedin 1907. After graduation,he joined the Congregationof the Most Holy Redeemer(Redemptorists) andstudied at the community'smajor seminary, Mount StAlphonsus, Escopus, N.Y.He was ordained in 1913.then made postgraduatestudies in Rome, receiving adoctorate in sacred theologyfrom the Angelicum (PontificalUniversity of St ThomasAquinas). He was professorof dogmatic theology at theRedemptorist seminary inEsopus from 1924 to 1940,when he became associateprofessor of moral theologyat the Catholic University.In 1949, he was nameddean of the school of sacredtheology at the university —a post he held until his retirementin 1957. At thattime, he became dean for religiouscommunities at theuniversity.Widely recognized as anauthoritative moral theologian,he was honored byPope Pius XII in 1954 withthe Pro Ecclesia et Pontificemedal. He was a president ofthe Catholic Theological Societyof America 1946-47,and the society honored himwith its Cardinal SpellmanAward for theological excellencein 1947.Father Connell served asa peritus (expert) at the foursessions of the Second VaticanCouncil and as a memberof the briefing panel forEnglish-speaking reporters.In 1956, he began service asa consultor to the Congregationof Seminaries andUniversities.Father Connell was theauthor of a number of books,including "Moralsin Politicsand Professions," "Outlinesof Moral Theology," "FatherConnell Answers MoralQuestions," and "Spiritualand Pastoral Conferences toPriests." He has also writtenfor many Catholic periodicals.He was a frequent lecturerand radio speaker.Father Connell was associatedwith the NationalCatholic Educational Association,serving as presidentof the seminary departmentfor several years and as amember of the executiveboard of that association.MARYLAND CRABCAMS1619 N.E. 4th AVENUEFT. LAUDERDALEPHONE JA 4-8922o COCKTAIL. LOUNGEIndependent Catholic Press UrgedTORONTO (NC) —Therole of the Catholic press inthe post-conciliar Church is"incompatible with a pressemanating from the chanceryoffice," a leading CanadianCatholic journalist toldthe Catholic Press Association.But Douglas Roche,editor of the Western CatholicReporter in Edmonton,Alta., saidthisdoesnotmeanthat the diocesan press mustbreak away from thebishops.Roche delivered the keynoteaddress at the CatholicPress Association's 57th annualconvention here at theKing Edward SheratonGiovanni'sHotel. •"I want to de-officializethe press not to divide butto unify," he said. "It mustbe made clear that we are notasking for a press that isindependent of the authorityof the bishops, whose duty itis to see that the definedteaching of the CatholicChurch . . . is preserved."But the press must be independentin providing reportsand: forum for discussionof current issues. If itdoes not achieve this operationalindependence, theprocess of maturation willbechoked off," he said.Roche then proposed anumber of ways in which theITALIAN-AMERICAN RESTAURANTCocktail LoungeChicken Cacciatore a Lasagna a PizzaManicotti » Steaks a Chops a Seafood• Frog Legs—Plenty Free Parking1005 N.W. 79th Street 751-6243 758-93161OPEN 7 DAYS 11:30 A.M. TO 1 A.M.Eating Out Is Always A Pleasure AtHOLLEMAN'S- FRIDAY SPECIAL -GOWEN FRffDJUMBO SHRIMPTartar Sauce-2 VegetablesSATURDAY DELMONICO CLUB STEAK—French FriedMay 20 Onion's, Baked Potato, Chef's Salad BowlSUNDAYMay 21MONDAYMay 221POT ROAST—Choice of 2 Vegetablesor ROAST YOUNG TURKEY-Dresslng,Cranberries, Choice of 2 Vegetables, Chef's $107Salad Bowl, and Hot Rolls & Butter "BONELESS CLUB STEAK-with Mushroom $107Sauce, Baked Potato, Chef's Salad BoSgt. ITUESDAY ROAST YOUNG TURKEY-Dressing, Cran- •» 07May 23 berries, Choice of 2 Vegetables, Chef's *| u /Salad Bowl, and Hot Bolls & ButterWEDNESDAY CORNED BEEF & CABBAGE-Boiled $|07May 24 Potato, one Vegetable •THURSD A i BAKED CHICKEN & DRESSING—Cran- $|"'May 2S berry Sauce and 2 VegetablesIHOT ROLL AND BUTTER SERVED WITHALL DAILY SPECIALSHOLLEMAN'S RESTAURANTN.W. 79th Street at 7th AvenuePL 9-2892AIR CONDITIONED - FREE PARKINGServing Breakfast, Luncheon and Dinner .Catholic press can achievethe necessary independencewithout cutting its ties withthe bishops:—"A board of directorson every diocesan paper...appointed by the bishop andgiven the responsibility tosupervise fhe content and operationof the paper and tovote confidence or non-confidencein the editor."Such a board, he said,would "help fhe paper discardfhe stamp of the chanceryoffice while protectingdoctrinal orthodoxy" would"protect the integrity of thepaper against any impressionsin the public mind thatthose in authority desire tocontrol the flow of news" and.would "reflect the postconciliarfact that here isa paper of the people ofGod."Such a move would alsoprevent the paper from becoming"a personal vehiclefor the bishop or fheeditor."—Plan "more aggressiveways of attracting brightyoung men into the Catholicpress, for we face a shortageof trained Catholic editors."—"We should come togrips with fhe organizationof an association of professionalCatholic editors."Look for the Signof theHAPPY ROOSTERRESTAURANTFAMILY N1TE-TUES., from 4 p.m.CHICKEN DINNER 99* Children 49*TREAT YOURSELF TO A DELICIOUSROUMANIAN STEAK DINNER 1.69Open Sundays 2 to 8 p.m.380 ANDALUSIA, CORAL GABLES"(1 block south of Miracle Mile) _„. _ AAonwn-J US to£fLeJeuneRd.(42ndAve.) PHONE 448-9239!K ANGUSCHAR-BPOILED DSSIRLOINSteak Dinner1* BIG APPETITE SPECIALChar-Broiled Plank Steak DinnerkBndaliMjami Beach:DAILY LUNCHSPECIALS-ll A.M.e FISH• SHRIMP* CHICKEN$f49e Burgers o Bar-B-Q'sMILE LONG HOT DOGSfcw kidsPKUISOpen Sundays it 2 p.m.12155 Bisrsyne Blvd..ft 4-2431 — MiamFRIDAYSEA FEISTBOFFET$1145AH You /Can Eat «•St COURSESFeaturing Fla. 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Post Mortems VaryIn Sad Demise OfWorld-Jou rnal-TrsbBy MSGR. GEORGE G. HIGGINS! «The demise of the New York World Journal Tribune (WJT)on May 6 was bad news for everybody concerned — its publishers,employes, subscribers, as well as for-the general publicAs an avid newspaper reader, I feel a personalsense of loss at the passing of the "Widget,"even though I read it only when I happenedto be in New York City. Somehow orother, I hate to see the number of daily newspapersdeclining so rapidly in our major cities.To be sure, there are still three metropolitandailies in Manhattan, but, a generation ago,there were 12. And the way things are going,there may be only two a year from now.To make matters worse, the same situation. prevails in almost every major city inthe UnitedMsgr. H igg i ns states For a varie(y of reasonS) me number ofindependently-owned newspapers is constantly on the declineacross the board.Not everyone will agree that this phenomenon is due to "avariety of causes." On the contrary, alaxgesegment of the generalpress seems determined to explain it almost exclusivelyin terms of the allegedly excessive demands being made by theseveral unions with which the publishers are compelled to bargain.This oversimplified explanation has been applied repeatedlyin recent days in the particular case of the New York WorldJournal Telegram.i.MANY OTHER REASONSOn the other hand, more sophisticated observers are preparedto admit that there were many other reasons for the collapseof WJT. Even the New York Tunes, which, in recent years, hasbeen relentless in its criticism of the newspaper unions, franklyadmits that labor problems were notthesolecause of the "Widget's"demise.In fact, says the Times, "few observers felt it was evendestined to make a profound mark in metropolitan journalism.Its chief defect was that the pooling in a single paper of editorialstyles as divergent as those that characterized the Whitney,Hearst and Scripps-Howard communications empires wasbound to result in a lowest common denominator, devoid ofeither sparkle or crusading vigor. It was a paper that neitherinspired nor offended, long or columns and short on news, butessentially characterless."Time magazine, Newsweek, and other periodicals havemade substantially the same point in their obituary noticeson the passing of WJT. They agree, in other words that therewas no one single cause of the patient's death, or, to put itanother way, that labor and management must share theblame for its collapseWhatever of that, it is rather discouraging to learn that thePresident of one of the major newspaper unions is reported tohave said, in demanding a 21% wage increase over three yearsthat WJT could either "pay or shut down." If this is an accuratestatement, the man who made it will undoubtedly live toeat his words. And even through he and the members of hisparticularunion may think that they can afford to be so cocky, v-the labor movement as a whole might have to pay a heavyprice for their intransigence.What about the 2,800 employes of the Widget? I wonder howthey feel aboutitsbeing"shutdown." Someof them (principallythose who belong to the particular union referred to above) canprobably find comparable employment in other industries.Many of the others, however, will have to leave the professionfor which they have been trained and will have to scroungaround, as best they can, for any old kind of employment intotally unrelated industries.I feel very sorry for them. They will not starve to death, ofcourse, but no man (and least of all a professional newspaperman) can live by bread alone.Pope Says Honor Holy SpiritBy Venerating The MadonnaVATICAN CITY — (NC) — On the feast of Pentecost, PopePaul VI urged thousands gathered in St Peter's Square to honorthe Holy Spirit by venerating Mary.The day after the Pope returned from Fatima, he appearedat a window above St. Peter's Square at Sunday noon to blessthe assembled crowds. To them he said:"Having returned from Fatima, we bring you the blessingsof the Madonna, blessings which seem to us to consist principallyof good inspirations which must guide each of us and allof society towards the good paths of peace and justice."The good inspirations which we feel come to us, in the ultimateanalysis, in many ways from the Holy Spirit, whose greatfeast we celebrate today, the feast of Pentecost. And for this reasonwe invite you to honortheHoly Spirit through the Madonna,who was filled by the Holy Spirit and from whom comesthe divine motherhood. We honor the Holy Spirit in the individualpersons who have received Him and in your personswho have been elevated by Him to the Christian life."The evening before, the Pope appeared at his window afterhis return from Fatima to bless the crowd of thousands whohad gathered to welcome him back to Rome. Some of the crowdcarried torches and St. Peter's Square was lit with brilliant televisionlights.The Pope told the cheering crowd that had greeted his arrivalin the square enrouteto theVaticaf Palace that "we askedOur Lady about the roads to peace. And it was as if she hadreplied that peace was an attainable goal/'Commenting on the pilgrimage, the Pope said thatit was "amarvelous day. These hours wiH remain with us always."For see, the winter is past,the rains are over and gone. Thetime of priming the vines hascome, and\the song of the doveis heard in our land."Canticle, Verses 11, 12Avant Garde Of Yesterday Mere'Squares 5 In Church Of TodayBy JOHN COGLEVTbe man with fresh ideas,challenging old patterns of.thought and ways of acting,should not await bouquets. Evenafter the ideas are widely acceptedand the changes he originallyput forth are adopted, he shouldnot expect favorable notices fromformer critics. For if he keeps onthinking, they will still be thereyipping at his heels. -^In every society, not least ofall the Church, yesterday's revolutionarythought is today's clicheand tomorrow's sacredheritage.By the tune the conformistgets around to accepting them,he forgets that he once foughtthem tooth and nail and turnshis energy against the next developmentWithin American Catholicism,an example is supplied bythe history oftheliturgicalmovementNot many years ago, theBenedictines of Collegeville andpriests like Father H. A. Reinholdwere dismissed as crackpotsfor putting forth ideas lateradopted by the Church Universal.Anyone who suggesteda decade ago that the Fridayabstinence should be abolishedwould feel the fuE weight of amassive counterattack. Nor doesone have to be ancient to recallthe days when participation inthe ecumenical movement wasdeemed worthy of full censureIn the early 1950's the Catholicsof Chicago were forbiddenby edict to have anything to dowith the World Council ofChurches meeting in suburbanEvanston.And how long ago is it sincethe now-courted Father JohnCourtney Murray, the nation'sleading Catholic theologian, wasunder a massive cloud becauseof his writings on religious liberty— dn idea later canonizedby an ecumenical council?The attacks against the ideamenand innovators in the pastwere usually based on one ormore of three charges.The first was that they werePage 14 THE VOICE Miami, FloridaJOHM COGLEYnot "thinking with the Church",that is, the first Vatican Councilor Trent Taken in a certainsense, the claim was true. Buttime has shown that they werethinking for the Church. Nowthe : Church is thinking with them.The second charge was thatthough they may not have beenguilty of formal heresy, theirteachings smacked of aless-thanadmirableconcern for tradition.The same charge has nowbeen turned around. Father De-Pauw and his unreconstructedTraditionalists are now on thereceiving end for not falling inline. Father DePauw and his followers,alas, keep having thosepre-conciliar thoughts in thesepost-conciliar days, as certainothers once kept having postconciliarthoughts in pre-conciliardays.The third ancient charge wasthat the innovators were overtheir heads; they did not realizethe implications of what theywere saying and writing."Pseudo-intellectuals," "selfappointedtheologians," and"modernists" were commonterms of reproach. The Catholiclistening to voices outside theChurch was accused of toadyingto Protestants, secularists, agnosticseven atheists, and usuallya bad motive was thrown in:he was seeking fame, fortune, orfinancial gain.Today, students of the Councilare ready to acknowledge theChurch's debt to Protestant theologicalthinkers. The Fathers ofthe Council put their seal of approvalon religious liberty hundredsof years after it was adoptedby secular liberals. The keyword of the historic meeting wasaggiornamento, which meantmat the Church set out to catchup with the long-denounced"times" that were shaped not byCatholics but by the "others."CAN'T STOP THINKINGThinking is still going on inithe Church. You just can't stopit, innovations will continue tobe suggested. Shocking newideas will continue to be putforth The thinkers can expectthe same old reactions, but theIdiom of denunciation haschangedThe original idea is stillthreatening. The forerunners ofVatican III are not charged withfailing to "think with theChurch" thesedays. Rather, thare "going too far" by exploing uncharted territories. ^They are not accused of courtingheresy at a time whenyesterday's"orthodoxy" is in suchdisrepute Rather, they lack balanceand a sense of honor; theytake themselves too seriously.Finally, they arenofpseudointellectuals"any more. No, intellectualsare "in". But they justdo not have the facts, m'am. Ifeven non-pseudo-intellectuals expectto be taken seriously, whereare their tables, charts, percentiles— what proof do theyhave? Do you want to know'about clerical celibacy, Catholicintellectual life, the impact of theChurch on the world and of theworld on the Church? Feed thecomputer, baby, it's all thereAnd what would the computerhave turned up before the SecondVatican Council? The nearest attemptto using it was made by amanagement consultant firm.They learned that the CatholicChurch, along with StandardOil, was a model of efficiency. Ifanyone took that seriously therewould have been no VaticanCouncil.Mcy 19, 1967


As Protestant Leader Sees It1 iBy THE REV. LUTHER C. PIERCEHow does a Protestant leader view theecumenical scene in South Florida? To get ananswer to this question The Voice asked the Rev.Luther C. Pierce, Executive Secretary of theGreater Miami Council of Chuches, to sharehis thoughts with us on the subjectLast month, my annual report to the Governing Body (the Delegatesappointed by the member churches) of the Greater Miami Council ofChurches contained this statement: "Progress is evident in our ecumenicalgrowth. It is slow, but better slow and sure than fast and uncertain. Elementsof our program for the year ahead will aid us along this path ofChristian unity, and we should look forward to them. Certainly, the divissioncreated by our human frailities that are so rampant in oiir midstbring sorrow to the heart of our Lord. Guided by the truths of the Scripturesand the Holy Spirit, we must move to overcome them, to learn totruly love one another.""An extension of these thoughts, which must eventually be faced, concernsour future relationships with the Roman Catholic Church. In manyareas of our nation, Catholic dioceses and congregations are moving intocouncil of churches membership. Ido not see it as an immediate possibilityhere, because we are not ready for them. However, there are more andmore areas in which we do work cooperatively, and this is the laying ofthe proper foundation."Our Greater Miami Council of Churches has been too much of a Protestantorganization, to the point where even Episcopalians have not alwaysfelt comfortable with it. Thefactthatnobodyhas challenged this portion ofmy report may be indicative of a changing attitude, so that the day whenthe Council can be true to its stated goal of being the means whereby thechurches of our area may "seek to make manifest their spiritual unity inJesus Christ" may be closer than my words would indicate, (to quote ourBy-Laws) There are many scandals of disunity which the present membershipof the Council must overcome, and, hopefully, those reforms may befurther along than I think. This is not a proposal that Catholic churchesapply for membership, for I do not believe we are ready, with a few exceptions,I also do not think that Catholic churches are ready to applyeither.A recognition of these realities is no reason for leaving the situation inits status quo. Instead, it might well be a challenge to make some movesforward at this time. Currently, most of the cooperative works of the Catholicand Protestant communities are between clergy, with the organizationalstructures involved remote from the congregations — the Council andthe Diocese.Now it is past time when neighborhood congregations begin to worktogether, to get to know ont another, to find areas of common concern inwhich they can jointly become creative. Above alL Catholics and Protestants— the laity — must learn to know each other, to discover the fact ofa common loyalty to Jesus Christ as living Saviour and Lord, to understandhow each other thinks, and why.So far to a great extent, Christians have left their Christianity out ofdaily life. A sharing of the institutional facts of life can lead to great understandings,nmtual respect, a strengthening of faith, and more ability to putinto practice the Christian concepts taught by the Church. The communityis so large that I cannot keep up with everything going on within it However,Ihaveheardofveryfewinstanceswhere Catholic and Protestant congregationsdo more than admit the other exists. There are many more reportsof church and synagogue exchange programs. Thelatter are fine andnecessary, and by their very happening throw shame on us for ignoringthese explorations within our own Christian circles.There is oneprogramwhichisworthnoting, and I speak of it from considerablepersonal knowledge The Senior Centers of Dade County, Inc., isa United Fund Agency which also receives tax support. It operates fivesplendid Centers and has what is called a Central Center program at theMetropolitan Senior Center, 1407 N.W. 7th Street Members from all fivecenters are eligible to participate.Religion has been left out because of church-stateproblems, even thoughindividual congregations showed interest. For the past several months,however, we have had a religious program, presenting each Thursday eveninga personalized Man-To-Man program of religious dialogue. The pro-May 19, 1967By BETTY CRONINSister Mary Aquinas stoodbefore the 350 women assembledin Palm Beach County for the1966 MDCCW Convention and,in a soft voice, appealed to thewomen of the Council for helpfor the children in the migrantcamps along the range line.Many women from (he BrowardDeanery heard this appeal andtook her message back to theirvarious parishes, where thegroups responded in many differentways.Outstanding in their responseto the need of these migrant childrenwere the members of NativityParish in Hollywood Underthe guidance of Jean Pazekas,Catholic Charities Chairman ofNativity Guild, members collectedover 60,000 pieces of clothingwhich they washed and ironedand mended before deliveringthem to Sister Aquinas. This initself would seem to be a wonderfulshowing for a parishguild, but this was only an initialeffortHaving visited migrantcamps and having been facedwith the facts at first hand thatbabies were wrapp*ed ^in newspapers;families slept fin floors— eight and teh" to a room; onecan of beans could mean a dinnerto five people; and everywheremen, women and childrenwere without clothes and shoesand blankets, Jean came backand redoubled her efforts to producepositive results and theseare the results.COMMUNITY PROJECTRealizing that it would bevirtually impossible for oneparishto undertake a project of this _magnitude alone, it was turned'into a community project — areal demonstration that ecumenismcan and will work.Enlisting the support of B'naiB'rith, Civitans, Knights of Columbus,McArthur Tri Hi-Y andanyone else who would standstill long enough to listen to herstory, Jean proceeded to collectover six and a half tons of clothing,including hundreds of pairsof shoes.These have all been sent tothe various camps in this area,with over a ton flown to Im-Mokulee by Jim Montgomeryand Steve Fazekas. Some 50complete beds, 25 baby cribsand numerous other items offurniture were delivered to andset up in the migrant huts. Over12,000 cans of food were collectedfor these forgotten peoplewith the help of such organizationssuch as Oakridge School,B'nai B'rith, and the Pennsylvaniaand New Jersey Clubs ofHollywood.Most of us consider ourselvesfortunate to get through the normalfestivities of the Christmasseason. Not so with the ladies ofNativity — ever filled with ambitionand the willingness to pitchin and work — they undertookthe project of having a parry for1,000 migrant children to beheld at Marymount CollegeHowever, what started as a"small" party mushroomed intoa party for 3,500 children.Through the generosity of manyHollywood merchants and organizations,each child receivedfrom Santa Claus a new toy,fruit and candy. One little girlwas discovered crying her eyesout because her lovely new dollymanaged to lose her head at theCANTHECHURCHESWORKTOGETHERAn AdventureIn Ecumenismgram has now evolved to the point where a sponsoring committee has beenorganized to guide the dialogue and create new programs. The Thursdayevening panelists have been mostly laymen, and they have done a splendidjob. The committee is made up of lay persons enlisted from neighborhoodcongregations, including synagogues, for this particular program must beinter-faith as well. Catholic churches involved are St. John Bosco, St. Michaelthe Archangel, and Sts. Peter and Paul. Protestant churches involvedinclude Flagler Street and Riverside Baptist, St. Peter's Lutheran, AllapattahMethodist and New Covenant'Presbyterian.Two Jewish congregations are working hi the committee— Beth El andBeth David. The idea is to work toward involvement in depth as thesecongregations meet the exciting challenge of working with senior citizensthrough their centers. I predict that this project will one day become amodel for duplication in other areas of ministry and that those who arepioneering it will find their lives enriched beyond measure.The most famous of all joint'efforts hi the field of religion is the Man-To-Man television program, seen on Channel 2 each Tuesday evening at9*30. I assume that its format is so familiar that I will not attempt to describeft-fastfaer. Unique andimportantisthethree-way sponsorship of thisprogram, wrffi the Diocese, the Council and the Rabbinical Association allequally involved. It has been this way from the beginning and has workedvery well. Each group namesTwo persons to the advisory committee, whichmeets monthly to set program subjects and talk over production ideas.Regular participants areparry — but another dolly wasfound for her and tears turnedinto smiles.Even after such outstandingaccomplishments as these, onemore glaring need was still evident,and so Jean Fazekasturned her attention to the problemof how to secure a chapelfor the Pompano Labor Camps— a chapel with an English-Spanish speaking priest to servethese neglected people in our affluentstateBUILDING DONATEDAttempt after attempt failed,and then a Hollywood residentdonated a fliree-unitframe apartmentbuilding to Jean for use asa chapel and she arranged witha Hollywood house-moving firmto transport it to thelabor camp.However, the house is toolarge to be used as a chapel, soit has been turned over to theBroward County Migrant Counciland will be used for the JerryKimball Memorial HalfwayHouse So, the labor camps arestill without their chapel — butthey do have Jean working ontheir behalf and she is still seekinga means of securing a chapel.As of now, she has some concreteblocks donated for thisbuilding —but not nearlyenough — but then she's notnearly finished.Have you ever wonderedwhere the left-over chocolatebunniesgo after Easter? This yearElizabeth Hand of St Anthony'sWoman's Club, an employe ofBritt's, arranged for the unsoldEaster candy and baskets to be(Continued on Page 25)assigned by the three sponsors,with the advistory committeenaming guests as thesituation may warrant Thesuccess of the program canonly be described as fantasticCan you imagine a programof religious conversationbeing one of the mostpopular programs on anytelevision station in thisarea?ECUMENICAL HUNGERWhen it was initiated, nobodydreamed of this kindof response That we have itis indicative of the high caliberof people living in GreaterMiami and South Florida,and the hunger that is withinthem for a truly ecumenicalexperience Here we see demonstratedthe great longingfor love and understandingthat exists in fhehumanheart— spiritual unity in its finestexpression.I cannot leave the subjectwithout a word of tribute toFather Donald F. X. Connolly.His brilliancehas addedto its quality beyondmeasureInterama is the most excitingthing ever to come toGreater Miami. Most of usare still only dimly aware ofits potential, and are veryvague as to what it is allabout We are all in forsome very pleasantsurprisesin the months immediatelyahead. One of these surpriseswill be in the religious participation.Religious leadershave long been aware of this"sleeping giant" and are preparingto be present on open-(Continued on Page 25)THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 15


BOOKS FOR BROTHERHOODThis list" includes booksof general interest in thefieldof intergroup relations. Theywere selected on the basis oftheir contribution to thesearch for-community in thepluralistic society, and fortheir concern with interreligious,interracial, ethnic, economicand political challengesto achieve a healthy publicorder. The list was compiledunder the auspices ofthe National Conference ofChristians and Jews.Adult List Selected byArthur Hertzberg, Eabbi,Temple Emanuel, Englewood,N.J.; John Leo, AssociateEditor, Commonweal;Elizabeth D. Morris,Librarian, YWCA, NewYork" City; A. Alan Steinbach,Editor, Jewish BookAnnual; Doris Viacava, Librarian,Iona College, NewRochelle, New York; MargaretB. Young, Board memberof Child Study Associationand National Committeefor the Day Care ofChildren.The Barrios of Manta, byRhoda and Earle Brooks.New American Library,1965. $5.95.Challenged and inspiredby its ideals, ayoung Illinoiscouple joined the PeaceCorps in 1962, and workedfor two years on a communitydevelopment projectin Manta, a small fishingvillage in Ecuador. Togetherthey relate both their richand frustrating experiencesduring the memorable periodof service.Call Me Neighbor, CallMe Friend: The Case Historyof the Integration of aNeighborhood on Chicago'sSouth Side, by Phillip AJohnson. Doubleday, 1965.$4.50.This first-person accountby the Lutheran minister ofSalem Church in Chicagowill serve as a guide tochurches and individualsworking to maintain an integratedneighborhood.Children of the Uprooted,Edited by Oscar Handlin.Braziller, 1966. $&5'0.A collection of essays andexcerpts from books publishedbetween 1887 and1964, by Americans testifyingat first-hand about theimmigrant experience. Excerptsalso provide an excellentanthology of fiction andnon-fiction, prose and a bitof poetry.The Documents of VaticanII, Edited by Walter M.Abbott. Herder & Herder,1966. $10. Paperback editionpublished by GuildPress, Association Press,America Press. 95$.The first English translationof all the declarationsand decrees of the SecondVatican Council of the RomanCatholic Church. Especiallyhelpful are analysesof each document by wellknownCatholic, Protestantand Orthodox scholars.Jews in America: A ShortHistory, by Ruth Gay. BasicBooks, 1966. $4.95.An excellent popular accountof the American Jewishexperience. Includes detailedportraits of the three"waves" of Jewish immigrantsto the shores ofAmerica and sharply contraststhe European past withthe life style of the Jews inAmerica.Louis Marshall, Defenderof Jewish Rights, by MortonRosenstock. Wayne StateUniversity Press, 1965. $8.-95.In his well-documentedhistory of Jewish affairs du r-ing the first two decades ofthis century, Dr. Rosenstockshows how Louis Marshall,second President of the AmericanJewish Committee, fulfilledhis role as defender-atlargefor the Jewish people— his intervention in the LeoFrank case, his work againstpost-war Bolshevist charges,and his fight for the abolitionof immigration restrictionsand discriminatory collegeadmissions.Manchild in thePromisedLand, by Claude Brown.Macmillan, 1965. $6.95.A raw portrayal of a boygrowing to manhood in thestreets and alleys of Harlem.The author talks about the"experience of a misplacedgeneration, of a misplacedpeople in an extremely complex,confused society."No Greater Love: TheJames i eeb Story, by DuncanHewlett Harper & Row,1966. $4.95.The story of a white Bostonminister who respondedto the call of Dr. Martin LutherKing and went to Selmato make a stand for civilrights. Within a few days ofhis arrival he was killed.This factual biography revealsa man whose personallife had been the epitome ofthe ideals of the civil rightsmovementOutsider in the Vatican,by Frederick Frank. Macmillan,1965. $7.50.Here is an unusual accountof the Vatican Councilby an artist and writer who,though not a Catholic, wasdrawn to Rome by PopeJohn's spirit of hope andfaith. Theresultisapexsonaland sympathetic — thoughnot uncritical — view of thesehistoric religious proceedings.Illustrations by the author.Racism and the ChristianUnderstanding of.Man, byGeorge D. Kelsey, Scribners,1965. $4.50. Also availablein paperback at $2.95.By making a faith of racism,Christians have managedto practice two religionsat the same time. The authorexplains how this conflict developedand suggests that thesolution to the Christian'sidolatrous worship of racismlies in his own Christianfaith.The Revolution of Color.by Thomas Patrick Melady.Hawthorn, 1966. $5.95.Viewing the problem ofrace relations in globalrather than domestic terms,the author discussed themeaning of the virtual endof the white man's colonialdomination of the man ofcolor.The Shame of a Nation,by Philip M. Stern andGeorge de Vincent. Obolensky,1965. $5.00.The photographs ofGeorge de Vincent combinewith the commentary, producea shocking portrayalof Americans who live farbelow the minimum subsistencelevel. The authorstraveled some 27,000 milesinto neglected and forgottenareas, both rural and urban,to compile this documentationon the hopelessness,frustration and resignationwhich face the poor of ournation.The Slaves We Rent, byTurman Moore RandomHouse, 1965. $4.95.A penetrating analysis oftwo million migrant farmworkers in affluent America.One of the best books on thesubjectThe Star and the Cross,Edited by Katherine Har-Best SellersFICTIONTitle and ClassificationThe Arrangement (lib)Secret of Santa Vittoria (III)Capable of Honor (Ha)The Captain (Ila)The Birds Fall Down (Ila)All in the Family (Ha)Valley of the Dolls (lib)The Eighth Day (Ila)The Mask of Apollo (lib)NON FICTIONMadame Sarah (I)Everything but MoneyThe Jury Returns (Ha)The Sleeping Prophet (Ha)Inside South America (I)Division Street: America (Ha)The Arrogance of Power (I)Disraeli (Ila)AuthorKazanCrichtonDruryde HartogWestO'ConnorSusanWilderRenaultSkinnerLev ens onNizerStearnGuntherTerkelFulb rightBlakeNote: After the reference to the book reviewed there is givena numerical symbol indicating themoral classification of the book.These are the groups to which the symbols refer:I. Suitable for General Reading.II. Suitable for Adults Only Because of:a. Content and Style Too Advanced for Adolescents.b. immoral Language or Incidents Which Do Not Invalidatethe Book as a Whole.III. Unsuitable for General Reading not Permissible for DiscriminatingAdults.IV. Not Recommended for Any Class of Reader.(Furnished by the University of Soranton, Scranton, Pa.)•Turn IIIIIIII iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmu iiiuiiiu IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII irgrove, R.S.C.J. Bruce, 1966.$6.75.A significant contributionto the current and growingJewish-Christian dialogue.This carefully editedcollection of essays pairs offthe views of distinguishedwriters from both persuasionson such questions asanti-Semitism, Christianapathy during the Nazi eraand the Vatican Council'sstatement on the Jews.The Strange Career ofJim Crow, by C. Van Woodward.(Second Revised Edition)Oxford UniversityPress, 1966. $4.50. Alsoavailable in paperback at$1.50.An updating of the wellknown1955 book which hasbecome a classic account ofracial segregation in America.New expanded editioncovers the revolutionarychanges that have takenplace in the past ten years.They Call Us Dead Men,by Daniel Berrigan, S.J.Macmillan, 1966. $4.95.A collection of remarkableessays by a Jesuitpriest-poet who is deeply concernedwith the role of theChurch in the modern world.Essays discuss poverty,marriage, technology andnew forms of faith from aEncyclopediasTo ProtestantsPHILADELPHIA (NC)-Archbishop John J. Krolpresented eight sets of theNew Catholic Encyclopediato Protestant seminaries atthe annual meeting of theGreater Philadelphia Councilof Churches.The presentation foil owedArchbishop Krol's addresson the church-related schoolin an ecumenical perspective.The occasion marked thefirst time a Roman Catholicprelate has spoken at a meetingof the Protestant group.ecumenical per-Christianspective.To Do Justice: The HeroicStruggle for HumanRights, by the photographersand editors of "BlackSjar." Black Star PublishingCompany, 1965. $1.00.A pictorial essay, usingmany now-famous photographs,dramatically recountsthe civil rights revolution.The readable text,which includes Martin LutherKing's "Letter from aBirmingham Jail" and his"I have a dream" speech,traces the outstanding eventsof the struggle, making thisa useful book for almost anyage group. Copies may beobtained from the InternationalUnion, UAW EducationDepartment, 8000 JeffersonAve., Detroit 14,Michigan.To the Peace Corps WithLove, by Arnold Zeitlin.Doubleday, 1965. $4.95.A delightful account of aJoint BibleEfforts LaudedLONDON —(RNS)—The"growing cooperation" betweenProtestant and RomanCatholic Churches in Bibleproduction was lauded hereby the Rev. John Watson,general secretary of theBritish and Foreign BibleSociety."Let me add that cooperationwith Roman Catholicsis not something we haveonly now begun to thinkabout, "Mr. Watson said."Already in 17 languagesacross the world RomanCatholics are using, with thepermission of their bishops,translations produced by theBible Societies. Moreover,there are some 20 other translationprojects of the BibleSocieties in which RomanCatholic scholars are at themoment working with Protestants."YOU CAN HELP THESociety of St. Vincent de PaulBy Donating Your Usable Discarded Furniture,Rugs, Appliances, Bedding, Clothing, Shoes andMiscellaneous Items. ,Please Contact The St. Vincent De Paul Store in your Area* Ft, Lauderdale-524-0716 * Miami-373-3856513 W-Broward Blvd. 801 N.Miami Avenue* Hollywood-989-9548 * West Polm Beach-832-00141090 S.W. 56th Avenue 2032 No. Dixie HighwayPompano-94 2-22422323 No. Dixie HighwayAny article ysu moy wi»h to donate will be ilodly n»fcfced up.two-year teaching stint withthe Peace Corps in ruralGhana, by a journalist wfi'6is both warmly observantand gently critical.Yes I Can, by SammyDavis, Jr. Farrar, Straus &Giroux, 1965. $6.95.A self-portrait of one ofthe most versatile and extraordinaryentertainers of ourtime, who became a controversialfigure by_living hislife not only as a Negro butas a man.OF MORE SCHOLARLYINTERESTThe following books arerecommended for furtherstudy or reference to personsx wishing to investigate thedeeper implications of present-dayintergroup relations.The American Negro ReferenceBook, Edited by JohnP. Davis. Prentice-Hall,1966. $19.95.A one-volume resourcebook on virtually every aspectof American Negro life.Volume includes special articles,tables andcharts; topicsare current yet historicallymeaningful.The History of Anti-Semiism.Volume One, by LeonPoliakov. Vanguard, 1965.$7.50.This volume, the first offour in a large-scale historyof anti-Semitism, covers theperiod from thetimeof Christto the Middle Ages. The authortries to understand whyanti-Semitism has persistedfor so long, flourishing insome countries and not inothers. A survivor of Nazicamps, Mr. Poliakov is awell-known historian of theNazi era.The Petitioners, by LorenMiller. Pantheon, 1966. $8.-95.A full chronicle of the SupremeCourt decisions in respectto the rights of Negroes,slave and free between 1789and 1965. A picture of ourchanging society as seenfrom the viewpoint of thosewho were systematically ex- /eluded from it, and who had \to become petitioners tochange its course.Torah and Gospel: Jewishand Catholic Theologyin Dialogue, Edited by PhilipScharper. Sheed & Ward,1966. $6.00.An important collection ofpapers that were read at aJewish-Catholic symposiumin Pennsylvania. Scholarlyrabbis and priests explore indepth a number of crucialtheological and historicalquestions involved in the relationshipbetween Jews andCatholics.•"YOUR CATHOLIC BOOK SHOP":MISSALS-New LiturgySt.-Joseph's - St. Andrews - MaryknollReligious Gifts for Confirmations,1st Communions and other occasionsROSARIES - STATUES - CRUCIFIXESSpecial attention to discussion groupsMember: American Booksellers Association1930 PONCI DC UON 81VD. - COBAl ,«&»«», HA. 444.6744"Our Eleventh Year of service to the community".Opi-rated & Maintained by K of C Council #3274 «PARTICIPATE FULLY at Masswith a New ...St. Joseph MissalEasy-to-hold, Pocket or Purse-size Editions0 OFFICIAL TEXTS—as authorized by the U.S. Bishops'Commission on the Liturgical Apostolate.ft PARTICIPATION FORMAT—parts recited by the peoplein bold type for easy communal recitation.• ST. JOSEPH HYMNAL — same popular selection ofHymns with identical Hymn Numbers.These important Features enablethe people to participatefully at the same Mass usingany one of the various editionsin this new Series.SAINT JOSEPHDAILY MISSALand HYMNALComplete Masses for every day ofthe year with all Epistles and Gospels.Illustrations. Large type, 1440pages.No. 810/22—Black cloth, orange edges, bookmarks • . .$4.25No. 810/00— Black cloth, round corners, bookmarks . . . 5.00No. 810/02B-Simulated leather, gold edges, bookmarks . 7.50No. 810/13—Genuine leather, gold edges, bookmarks . . . 9.00SAINT JOSEPHSUNDAY MISSALand HYMNALComplete with official texts for allSundays and Hqiyday Masses. Extralarge type. Printed in red and black.528 pages.No. 820/67-Brown, hard cover l^T. . . $1.50No. 820/00—Black cloth.red edges, gold stamping . . . . 2.75No. 820/02-B—Black simulated leather, gold edges. . . . 3.50No. 820/13—EUack leather, red and gold stamped cover . 4.50SAINT JOSEPHSUNDAY MISSALand HYMNALMost simplified continuous arrangementof each Sunday Mass. No crossreferences from one part of book toanother part. 1340 pages.No. 720/22—Black cloth, orange edges, bookmarks .... $4.25No. 720/00—Black cloth, round corners, bookmarks .... 5.00No. 720/02-B-Simulated leather, gold edges, bookmarks. 7.50No, 720/13-Genuine leather, gold edges, bookmarks ... 9.00Wherever Catholic Books Are Sold16 THE VOICE Miami, Florida May 19, 1967


Jesus Was Also A ManBy FATHERDAVID RUSSELLIf you asked Catholicswho is Jesus Christ, no doubtmany would quickly respond,"He is God." Whocould argue with such ananswer?Yet the fact is that thiswould only be half an answer,or half the truth. JesusChrist is not simply God,but He is also man. In ourday there may be a need torecapture the sense of thefullhumanity of Jesus Christ.Much of the religious artwe have grown up with hasbeen little help to us in appreciatingthe humanity ofJesus. Some of it gives theidea that Christ is a beardedlady; figures of Christ areoften sentimental and feminineThe full reality of Hishuman nature all too oftenlacks impactThe fact is that Jesus gottired, He got angry, He experiencedjoy. He was asmuch and more a man asany person reading this.Look atyourself,yourbody,your thoughts, your temptations,and then look atChrist Because He was GodHe was no less man, no lesshuman. Everything that ishuman, except sin, belongsto Jesus Christ Everything!We must say this unless wewant to say that Jesus washalf a man.But just as welook at ourselvesto understand how Jesuswas a man, so we mustlook at Jesus to understandhow we should be man. ForHis humanity is themeasureof our own humanity, sinceHe is the perfect man.TURN TO CHRISTThis is important in ourday, which is seeking after atrue humanism and desiresthe perfection of mankind.The Christian should tell theworld to look at Christ if itwants to understand the goalof its own humanism. Theworld must look at JesusChrist if it wants to understandwhat it means to beman.MISSAL'OUIDBMay 21-Mass of TrinitySunday, 1st Sunday afterPentecost, Gloria, Creed, Prefaceof the Trinity.May 22-Mass of the 1stSunday after Pentecost; noGloria or Creed, CommonPreface.May 23 - Mass as of yesterday.May 24 — Mass as onMonday.M ay 25 - Mass of CorpusChristi; Gloria, Se-Mother OfPriest DiesPHILADELPHIA - SolemnRequiem Mass was sungin Good Shepherd Churchhere by Father John J. Donnelly,pastor, St Monicaparish, Opa Locka, Fla.,forhis mother, Mrs. Marie Donnelly,who died suddenly lastaturday after a heart attack.Father James Kelly, assistantpastor, Good Shepherdparish, was deacon; andFather Hugh Flynn, pastor,St Helenparish,Vero Beach,was subdeacon of the Massfor Mrs. Donnelly, who wasa natrvo of this city andi66years of age at the time ofher death.In addition to Father Donnelly,she is survived by anotherson, James; and fourdaughters: Mrs. Charles Tully,Mrs. Charles Crooks,Mrs. Gene Casey and Mrs.Joseph Bertolino, all of thiscityḂurial was in Holy CrossCemetery.Patriarch LaudsThe EncyclicalVatican city (NC)— OrthodoxEcumenical PatriarchAthenagoras I of Constantinople,(Istanbul) hassent personal congratulationsto Pope Paul VI for hisnew encyclical, Developmentof Peoples.God became man. Eversince God became man, manhas become the measure ofall things. That mr^n is JesusChristChristians are expected tofollow the Master, to imitatetheir Lord. That means thatthey must imitate His humanityby perfecting theirquence, Creed, Preface of theBlessed SacramentMay 26 - Mass of StPhilip Neri, Confessor; Gloria,2nd Collect of St. Eleutherius,Pope, martyr, CommonPrefaceMay 27 - Mass of StBede, Confessor, Doctor;Gloria, 2nd Collect of StJohn I, Pope, martyr, CommonPreface.May 28 - Mass of theSecond Sunday after Pentecost;Gloria, Creed, Prefaceof the Trinity.THE VOICEown. To the degree that anyman is Jess a man, to thatdegree he fails to imitate JesusChrist, and thus fails tobe fully Christian.There is no such thing asa Christian angel. To ourknowledge God never becamean angel. Since Goddid not become an angel, insome way it is a greater thingto be a man than it is to beangel. Angels have no bodies,no human nature, butGod does have a human natureand that nature with thedivine is called Jesus ChristIt would be a great mistakefor us, then, to try to beChristiaBS by being angels.Rather our task is to rejoicein our own humanity, becauseGod has so intimatelywedded himself to humanitythat this day God says, "Iam a man."The resurrection of Jesusin no way destroyed His humanity.Resurrection led Hishumanity to His ultimategoal of union with God HisFather. Just as Christ washuman when He ate and sleptand walked and talked inPalestine, He is human today.It is no wonder th at Godour Father has such amercyon mankind since His ownSon this day is human.Jesus ever intercedes withHis heavenly Father for eachman. Jesus knows what itmeans to be manbecauseHeis man. He understands usbecause He understandsHimself. He knows what itmeans to be weak, to betempted, to be ignorant Hetells us He was tempted. Hetold His disciples He did notknow certain things.Jesus loves man. Hemust, since He is a man, oneof us. It is no wonder thatHe told us, " I am the way,"to the Father.Forty HoursDevoHonWeek Of May 21Assumption, PompanoBeach.St Hugh, Coconut GroveSt Monica, Carol CityWeek of May 28St Ann Mission, Naranja.St Anthony, Fort Lauderdale.I RETREAT?NEVER!. . . until I want tolive a rea' Chrinian life.OUR LADY OF FLORIDAMONASTERY, RETKEATFor MenFOR RESERVATIONS WRITE OR PHONEREV. RETREAT DIRECTOR, C.P.1300 U.S. Highway No. 1 PVione 844-7750 North Palm BeachSuppose We Send Y0U_A Check for a Change?• We'll do it every year of your life if you establishan Extension Annuity.® -Sample returns on Extension Annuities:Man 53 receives 5.1%Man 60 receives 6 %Man 65 receives 7 %Man 70 receives 8.3%Man 75 receives 10%® Designed especially for "Senior Citizens"• The ideal way to ensure life income aRd to helpthe home missions besides.» ' : " ; ". 1The Catholic Church Extension Society— VM1307 South Wabash Aye., Chicago, Illinois 60605Dear Fathers:Please send your free booklet on Extension Annuities. Whatreturn could you offer me on an investment of $..... •.. ?My birth date is... ... •-» sex - • • • • • • • • • •I understand that this inquiry is in strictest, confidence and wjllentail no obligation whatever.Name ".... - • • > • • • • •City....... ZVM, StatePrayer Of The FaithfulTrinity'Sunday'.CELEBRANT: The Lord be with you.PEOPLE: And with your spiritCELEBRANT: Let us pray. Trusting in the guidanceof the Holy Spirit we petition the Father for ourneeds and the needs of all men.LECTOR (1): For Pope Paul, ourBishop, ColemanF, Carroll, our Pastor, N., and all priests and religious,we pray to the Lord.PEOPLE: Lord, have mercy.LECTOR (2): .For the leaders of nations, that theymay actively seek ajust solution to the war in Vietnam,we pray to the Lord.PEOPLE: Lord, have mercy.LECTOR (3): For our President and Congress, thatthey may promote greater justice with regard to thefinancial burdens of private schools, we pray to theLord.PEOPLE: Lord, have mercy.LECTOR (4): For our Governor and State Legislature,that they may respect our American traditionwhich makes it a crime to take an innocent life, evenof a person not yet born, we pray to the Lord.PEOPLE: Lord, have mercy.LECTOR (5): For the region of South Florida, thatit may soon receive an abundance of rain, we pray tothe Lord.PEOPLE: Lord, have mercy.LECTOR (6): For all of us in this assembly of thePeople of God, that under the guidance of the HolySpirit we may seek to promote peace and social justicewithin our community, we pray to the Lord.PEOPLE: Lord, have mercy.CELEBRANT: Oh God, who sent the Holy Spiritto your Apostles, answer the prayer of your people.Just as you have given us faith, bestow peace upon us.Through Jesus Christ, your Son, Our Lord, who livesand reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,God, forever and ever.PEOPLE: Amen.GET THEMTHE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCHA "Our food is gone and we are hungry," he toldSIMPLE Monsignor Nolan in Jerusalem. "I've lookedWAY everywhere for a job." ... Seventeen years old,TO a Palestine refugee, he had come to our officeWIN for one week's food ($2.50) for his mother andTHE younger sisters. His mother, a widow, is blind ...WAR "if I had a job, we could keep the family to-ON gether," he said. "Without a job, what will 1WANT do?" . . . Meanwhile in Bethlehem, 30 minutesaway, eight young refugees on Pontifical Missionscholarships ($275 each) were completing theirtraining as carpenters, electricians, tailors andmechanics in the famed Salesian Fathers'school. They now have jobs, and they'll neverneed our help again. . . . For only $275 altogether($23 a month) you can give a deservingyoung man the self-help craft he needs to takecare of himself for life. V^e'll select him carefuiiy,ask him to write to you, and you maymeet him if someday you go to the Holy Land.Training him can be your way of winning thewar on poverty overseas, as the Holy Fatherurges.... Our goal this year is 100 new scholarships($27,500). Will you give one, or more thanone? Name the scholarship(s) for someone youlove, or in memory!WATCH Remember the Palestine refugees? They're theFOR people (they now number 1.3 million) who lostTHIS their farms and jobs in Palestine as a result ofWEEK'S the Arab-Israeli war 19 years ago. For those stillLETTER cooped up in UN camps, the Pontifical Mission'this week by mail tells about them, the childrenin particular, asking .your help in the HolyFather's name.O $1,500 puts new equipment in Father Roberts'home for deaf-mute youngsters in Lebanon.• $125 buys the sewing-machine a young girlneeds to support herself.Q $120 feeds a needy family all year. $10 isfood for a month.n $2 gives baby a warm blanket.REVISING Say it is for our "corporate purposes" if youYOUR want your bequest used where the Holy FatherWILL? says it's needed most. Our legal title: CATHOLICNEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION.DearMonsignor Notan:Pleasereturn couponwith yourofferingENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $_FORNAME.STREET.CITY_ ZIP CODE_THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATIONMiami, FloridaCYNEAR EASTMISSIONS'FRANCfS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, PresidentMSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National SecretaryWrite: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOC.330 Madison Avenue-New York, N.Y. 10017Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840


Are Teeners GettingAway From God?By FATHER DONALDF. X. CONNOLLYI am pretty sick and tiredof adults' accusing teenagersof everything that is wrong.If you believe some olderpeople, there's not a decentteenager in all the country.Maybe five per cent of theteenagers get into troublethat is serious, and the restmay get into a little bit of difficultyonce in awhile But sofar as I am concerned^ not a, single teenager is gettingaway from God. The reasonis that God won'tletthem go.He loves them too much.This is not to say thatevery teenager prays enoughevery day or goes to Churchas often as he or she should.And it is not to say thatteenagersknow all they shouldabout religion. Some of themmay leave a lot to be desiredso far as their conductis concerned, too.But I blame a great dealof this on the fact that manyteenagers do not have-Godexplained to them properly.They are not aware of thetremendous intellectualproofs that solid religiousconvictions have; they havenot been exposed sufficientlyto what the greatest mindsof civilization have to sayabout religious values.GIVE THE REASONToo many adults just orderteenagers around withoutexplaining why feeorders are really for the teenager'sown good. The socalled"rebellion" in teenagersis really their resentmentin not being respectedas persons who have amindand are able to think. Give ateenager the reason you wantsomething done and you willhave the most generous,dedicated, and willing workeryou could wantThe main reason I do notthink that teenagers are gettingaway from God is thatYouth Helping YouthIn Educational PlanYouth is serving youthat St. Patrick School, MiamiBeach, where seven seniorhigh boys are participating'in a experimental educationalprogram to assistfirstgrade boys in overcomingreading difficulties.Under the direction of SisterJames Robert, O.P., firstgrade teacher and senior Englishclass instructor, SisterDonald Patrice, O.P., Michaeldel Percio, Mario Cambo,Felipe de la Hoz, Terry Nugent,Patrick Sullivan, JosephRothenberg and RichardTheriault hope to be instrumentalin fulfilling the projectedaid of "improvementunder male influence," atopic discussed at the recentconvention of the NationalCatholic Education Ass'n.Prior to the beginning ofthe reading program, researchpapers were developedto provide a concentratedbackground on the psychologyof learning, the developmentof the child, therole of the teacEer and theimportance of environmentalfactors. Teachers and studentsmeet periodically toevaluate the program and itis at this time that necessaryguidance is gven.Program ForDeaf ChildrenA special group andprivatetherapeutic program forchildren who are deaf andhard of hearing will beginMonday, June 19, at theHearing and Speech Centerof Florida, a United Fundagency.Pre-school and nurserychildren between the ages ofthree and six years willbe acceptedin the new classesi which will aid in preparingthem for schooLThe Center is located at1540 W. Flager StStudent teachers have alreadyindicated a desire tocontinue the program, makingsuch observations as" Inmy opinion this reading programfor the first grade hasbeen anoticeablesuccessthusfar. My studenthas definitelyescalated his level of reading.".. ."One thing I noticeclearly every day is that theselittle youngsters need plentyof attention. . ." "There is agreat satisfaction in teachingthese little children. . .""Onething I've learned is thatwhen I am a father, I'll havea better understanding of theyoung child and be able tohelp him more"SCIMHIIAdvance and ReviewHIGH SCHOOLCtlDIT COURSESCOLLEGE SKILLSEnglish, VocabularyReading ComprehensionMATHEMATICSALL LEVELSABC ShorthandTyping, Term PapersPREPARATION FORCOLLEGE BOARDSCIVIL SERVICEG.R. EXAMSTUTORINGElementary, High SchoolCollege, BusinessACCELERATEDSECRETARIAL andBUSINESS COURSESGREGG in 30 DAYSIBM KEY PUNCHannt-ICFFPIMG PBX.slc.Correspondence Courses, toeAsk for Free BookletADELPHIApproved for Foreign Students12390 W.Dixie Hwy.North Miomi 33161Phone 757-7623Camp San PedroCATHOLIC YOUTH CAMPOn Beautiful Lake Howell, Just North of OrlandoSwimming® Skiing® Handicraft© Canoeing©Riflery« FishingBoys and GirlsAges 7 to 14Opens June 11s Hiking« Sailing9 Campfires« Campouts» Archery• MoviesPr. Lawrence RedmondCamp San PedroBox 1232Maitland, Floridathey still have, as they alwaysdid, the ability to loveAnd they want to be lovedand respected by others inreturn.The Bible says that Godis love. So, teenagers arewellequipped to be friends withGod, if God is only explainedto them intelligently.QUESTIONSQ. — Isn't God "too big"to really care about us individually?A. — No. The biggestproblem I see with teenagersand God is that teenagersoften become too discouragedabout themselves asthey work towards maturity.I wish feey'd relax a-littlemore about themselves.They would, too, if they realizedthat God loves themvery, very much. He will bewith them so long as theylive; and he will be hopingall along that they will takethe time to study and learnabout Him, so that they canlove Him as fully as they arecapable of doing.God doesn't bother toread sports pages nor reportcards. All He wants to knowis if you love Him with allyour heart If you do, Hecan fulfill His own everlastingdream about you: thatHe can greet you one day atthe gates of heaven,whenboth of you will be wearinggreat, big smiles.OUR LADY OF THE HILLSHEHDERS0NV1LLE.N.C.rY CstHpHe Recreational Campfor boys and girls ages 7 to IS.200 acres, 37 buildings in theBlue Rioge Mountains. Largemodern pool, mountain lake, withall camping activities guided bytrained counselors. Camp providespick-up service to or (romnearest rail, air, bus terminal. A £camp for youngsters to grow . . . •"spiritually, healthfully. For literature,write:OFF-SEASON ADDRESS:Our Lady of the Hills CampQ. — If we have committeda sin and are really sorryfor it, why do we have togo to confession?A. — If it were not for confession,you could have acreeping doubt about whetheror not God had actuallyforgiven you. Past sinswould come nagging back,and an accumulated guiltfeeling would prevent youfrom enjoying life fully. OurLord knew this about ourpsychological makeup, soHe instituted an external wayin which we could have objectiveknowledge that Hehad truly forgiven our pastsins. He told the apostles,and the priests who are theirsuccessors, that whateversins they forgave would bereally forgiven. They cannotbe judges like that withouthearing the case; that is whyyou state your sins andpromise of amendment in theconfessionalQ. — Will it ever be possibleto fulfill the SundayMass obligation on Saturdayinstead?A. — The American Bishopsjust recently decided thatany individual bishop couldask Rome for this very dispensation,if he thought itwould be helpful for the peoplein his diocesa Why don'tyou let your views beknownto your local bishop? Hewould be happy to hear fromyou, I am sure€*ut SckmU,c/o Astaille Catholic High School285 Victoria Rd - P.O. Box 5693Ashtvilfe, N.C. 26803Telephone Area Code 704 253-0866MAKE SUMMER PLANS NOWFINAL PRE-REGISTRATfON DATE-MONDAY, JUNE 5fhBARRY COLLEGESUMMER SESSION(JUNE 16 - JULY 28)Choose from 140 Daytime/Evening ClassesUNDERGRADUATE COURSES:Art, biology, business, chemistry, education, English,"istpry, home & family life, foreign" languages, journalism,Latin, library science, mathematics, music, philosophy,social studies, sociology, speech & drama,theology.GRADUATE COURSES:Education, English, history, Latin.Telephone for schedule.- 758-4411— or write:Summer ScheduleBarry CollegeMiami, Florida 33161Youth Named Merit ScholarFORT LAUDERDALE-Paul F. Gehl, a senior atSt Thomas Aquinas HighSchool, has been named amerit scholar among 14,000finalists whoranked in thetop one-halfper cent ofstudents whotook the NationalMeritScholarshipQualifyingTestThe sonof Mr. and pAUL GEHLMrs. FrankH. Gehl attained scores toplace him in the top 2400scholars of the nation. Heplans to attend John CarrollUniversity, Cleveland,O., where he will study fora bachelor arts degree inYvonne Marie Crane, aBarry College senior, hasbeen selected as the winnerof the Judeq-Christian AmericanJewish Committee InterfaithEssay ContestThe daughter of Mr. andMrs. Robert H. Crane ofBalboa, Panama CanalZone, will receive a $250award during an HonorsDay ceremony at the collegeon Wednesday, May 24when Herbert L. Sobel,donor, will make the presentationwith representativesof the AmericanJewis Committee. ,A member of the Dean'sConference and Lambda SigmaHonor Society, Missclassical studies.Desiring a career in educationon ihe secondary level,Paul will major in historywith special emphasis onLatin and Latin Literature.He has also been named aJohn Carroll Merit Scholarand has received a scholarshipfrom the university.His older brother Stephen,who was a National Meritfinalist while attendingAquinas High, is a sophomoreat the University ofNotre Dame. Earlier thisyear he was awarded anInternational Nickle Co.scholarship.Paul is a member of theNational Honor Society,Junior Exchange and is copyeditor of the St. ThomasAquinas High yearbook.Collegian Wins Essay ContestCrane is an English majorwho has been appointed agraduate assistant in the Departmentof English at theUniversity of Dayton.Meeting SetA special meeting of allofficers and parish presidentsof the South DadeDeanery of Holy Name Societieswill be held at 8:30p.m., Monday, May 22 atEpiphany parish auditorium,8235 Red Rd. SouthMiami.Plans will be discussed for •the South Dade Deanery Rallyand the diocesan HolyName Convention scheduledto be held in October.ELECTRONICSTRAININGThe School With International Recognition111 I] III II «..111 II II il II if*If • I IIII 111! I •MM HIM I MlSINCE1935COMPUTERS « RADAR • COMMUNICATIONSElectronic Drafting • Radio « T.V. Servicing • F.C.C. License Prep.ALL COURSES VA APPROVED:INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS"THE KEY TO AUTOMATION"Rema'm fully Employed a\ Attend Day, Evenings (or Saturday Morningiin Our Modern Local Laboratories for This Practicol TrainingProgram • No Experience Neededrets 371-1438ELECTRONICS SCHOOLOME N.E. 19th ST., MIAMI, FLA."World's Largest Resident Electronic Training Organization"Tambien Closes Especioles En Esparto!Mary Help of ChristiansAGES 8 TO upat Tampa, FloridaSTAFFED EXCLUSIVELY BY THE SALESIANS OF DON BOSCOLocated on beautiful East Lake, at the outskirts of Tampa. Usesall facilities of Mary Help of Christians School for boys.Open—Sunday, June 18, thru Sunday, August 6FEE: $30.00 WEEKLY FOR ANY NUMBER OF WEEKSALL ACTIVITIES ARE FREE. THEY INCLUDEFISHING - BOATING - SWIMMING - GYM - BASEBAUPONIES • MOVIES • CRAFTS - HIKES - CAMPFIRES, ETC.WRITE TO:Mary Help of Christians CampP.O. Box H, Tampq, Florida 33605ALSO AN IDEAL BOARDING SCHOOL:Mary Help of Christians School for BoysA "home away from home" for boys aged 10 to 15, grades 5 thru 9.Staffed exclusively by the Salesians of Don Bosco. Has 140 acre campus,excellent facilities. All major sports, plut award winning bandand choir, and dramatics. Shops for boys in higher gradesWrit. to-. MARX HEIP OF CHRISTIANS SCHOOLP:O. Box H, Tampa, Florida 33605Page 18 THEVOICE Miami, Florida May 19, 1967


TH1JACK HOUOHTBUNOSports Bdttor5-8 Athlete WinsPlace In Glory HallJimmy Nester, Chaminade High's amazing little athlete,completed his high school career in a blaze of glory.Only five feet, eight inches tall and weighing just 165unds, Nester had been a standout for the Lions in foot-^ basketball and baseball. This year he added track tois list of accomplishments and wound up his performancesby winning the state's Class A long jump championshiplast week.Nester, already headed for the University of Rhode Islandon a football-basketball scholarship, won the championshipat the University of Florida with a leap of 21 feet,nine inches.Just two weeks before, he was still playing baseball ashe pitched the Lions to the semifinals of the Class A Group8 tournamentWhile Nester was savoring the glory of being Chaminade'sfirst state track champion, other diocese athletes were,finding the going tough.Jim Jones, Archbishop Curley's highly regarded prospectin the Class AA competition, could salvage only athird in the 440-yard dash after also qualifying for thestate finals in the 100 and 220.Jones came in third in the440witha 49.3 clocking afterfailing to make the finals in the other two events. In themorning prelims, he ran the 100 in 10.2 and the 220 in22.5, both well off bis best times during the season.Christopher Columbus High's sophomore distance ace,Mike Sweeney, also failed to score in the two-mile run.• • •In the Class A meet, German Fuentes of Miami LaSallewas the only, other scorer, taking second in the high jumpwith a leap of 5-11. Fuentes has just missed tying for thetitle at 6-2 as he clipped the bar off as he went down afterfirst clearing.In the state's two swimming meets, Columbus was theonly school to score in Class AA as John Kaay finishedsixth in the finals of the 200-yard free-style and the Explorersfinished sixth in the 400-yard free-stylerelay.In the Class A meet, Cardinal Newman of West PalmBeach received fourth place finishes from Downey in the200-yard medley relay in the boys competition while theNewman girls finished third in the team standings, ihanksto a third place in the 200 medley and 400 free-style byClark, afifthmthelOObreaststrokebyCleary and a fourthin the 200 medley relay.Cardinal Gibbons of Fort Lauderdale also scored in theClass A girls swim meet as Brennan took third in the 100free-style and- a fifth in the 60 freeThe swim and track championships wound up the sportsyear for the diocese teams, a year that saw ArchbishopCurley High and Chaminade reach the state semi-finals inthe Class AA and Class A championships, respectively,while Cardinal Gibbons High won the Class B group baseballcrown.Summer SchoolJUNE 19thTHROUGHJULY 28thREMEDIAL AND ENRICHMENTPROGRAMS« MODERN MATHEMATICS* ENGLISH© SPANISH© CUBAN AND LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY• Homogeneous grouping at Junior High School level.• Small classes.• Registration begins May 22nd.824 S.W. 7th AVENUE379-7903 MJAMJ 373-3780FUTURE PRIESTS studying at the Major Seminary of St. Vincent de Paul, BoyntonBeach, (assist Sisters of St. Joseph of St. Augustine, in conducting religion classes formigrant children at Our Lady Queen of Peace Chapel, Delray Beach.Atademy, Founded 114 Yrs. Ago, To CloseSANTA FE, N.M-(NC)-Historic Loretto Academyhere will close its doors atthe end of the 1968-69 schooly ear. The academy, founded114 years ago, is said to bethe first'girls' school in thefar West.Sister Mary Florence,provincial of the Sisters ofLoretto, who staff theacademy, saidthedecisiontoclose was made "with greatreluctance." The academy'sfuture has been doubtful forseveral years because of seriousfinancial problems, includingannual losses averaging$12,000.For nineteen years Good Counsel Carop has combined agroup of trained and experienced counsellors, a well plannedand supervised program of activity and a naturalsetting of exceptional beauty in a recipe for real CatholicCamp Life.The Camp is located in the hills of west central Floridaalong the shores of Lake Tsalo Apopka and within thearea of great springs, rivers, forests and unspoiled nature,We do not try to run a hotel. Yet every thought andconsideration is given to the health and safety of thecamper. But real true camping experience is the dominatingtheme. We believe that such experience con providequalities of self-reliance and obedience that other phasesof education cannot provide."Our 20th YearThe fate of the so-called"miraculous staircase, "partof the academy's chapel andconsidered by experts to beone of the finest examplesof Gothic church architecturein the country, will apparentlybe left to the buyer of theproperty.CampersRegisteringRegistration is being acceptedfor the third annualSummer Day Camp and anew kindercamp in SS. Peterand Paul parish.Boys and girls betweenthe ages of eight and 14 areeligible to enroll in the daycamp, which will beconductedbetween 8:30 a.m. and4:30 p.m. Mondays throughFridays from June 14 toAug. 18.Children between the agesof five and eight will be enrolledin the kindevcampunder the direction of theDominican Sisters who staffthe parochail school kindergarten.The day camp programwill include arts and crafts,sports, and swimming. Ahotlunch, mid morning andafternoon snacks and healthand accident insurance areincluded in the fee. There isa 50 per cent reduction foreach child in the family afterthe first one is registered.Kindercamp classes willbe conducted from 8:30 a.m.to noon on weekdays.Children for both programsmay be registered atthe parish rectory, 900 SW26th Rd.- In the Woods andMills and hakes and ,-^^Rivers of Florida b|£xSWIMMING * OVERNIGHT TRIPSBOATING * (AMPFIRE * HANDICRAFTFISHING * HIKING * RIFLERYMEMBERGood Counsel Camp is a veritable little city consisting of some 30 buildings — campers'cabins, dining holl, chapel, recreation pavilion, handicraft lodge, rifle! range, infirmary,shower buildings, canteen, laundry, etc. All buildings are constructed iof concrete blockand brick, heart cypress and pine.In addition to the 'regulars' such as swimming {we have a pool, lake, river and springfor.this) riflery,' handicraft, archery, Good Counsel Camp offers special training inboating and canoeing. Long trips up to 20 to 50 miles are offered to the advancedboater. Special 'safaris' via jeep through the great forests and game preserves —exploration trips on the mysterious Withlacoochee River — overnight trips to Tomahawklodge on Rainbow Springs are a few of the 'Specials'.GOOD COUNSEL CAMP PROVIDES TWO SEPARATE SESSIONS EACH SUMMERWOODCRAFT SESSION —; This session consists of four weeks of ireal outdoor lifewith the special emphasis placed on woodcraft, water sports, riflery, handicrafts,hiking and nature study. This session is open only to boys between the oges of 8-15*CATECHETICAL SESSION — This session consists of two weeks of\ wonderful camplife with the special emphasis placed on catechetical instruction. The program includesthree classes eoch morning conducted by the Sisters. The afternoons are devoted towater sports, handicrafts, hiking and games. This session is open to both boys and girlsbetween the ages of 8 and 15.CAMP DATES & RATB-1%7SUMMER SESSION" WOODCRAFT SESSION: Sunday, JuneFriday, July 7.* CATECHETICAL SESSION: South Florida Sec- j 3ck Ro||; ns B Ation Sunday, July 9, to Friday, July 21. North vVilliam DumasFlorida Section Sunday, July 23 to Friday, ^| s anc| iezAugust 4. „««.• AnnMarie CramerCAMP RATESRonald HorselyWOODCRAFT SESSION: Four weeks $200. ($25 discount if James Bellingerapplication is received and accepted before 'une 1st. Rosina ScialdoSpecial rates also apply if more than one from a Leslie Apathyfamily attends camp.) fiood Counsel Camp follows the Franz Hoovmanspractice of using an All Inclusive rate. That is to say,tne above sum includes EVERYTHING — laundrf, candyand ice cream allowance, stamps, letters, completehealth and accident insurance, awards, badges, ammunitionand fishing equipment. No other spendingmoney is accessary, nor are there any additional fees.CATECHETICAL SESSIOK: Two week period $75. ($10 dis-- count tf application is received and accepted beforeJune 1st. Special rates also apply if more than onefrom a family attends.) The above rates include healthand accident insurance, candy and ice cream allowance,stamps and letters. No additional money required.For Information Clip This Coupon and Send it to:Rt. Rev. Msgr. George W. Cummings - P.O. Box 551, Venice, Fio.For information call Venice, Florida Phone 488-2711•WoodcraftCatecheticalIllustratedApplication • Application L BrochureNAMEADDRESSfCITY ZONE STATECAMP STAFFRf. Rev. Msgr. Geo. W. Cummings, M.Sc., M.A.(.amp DirectorGail M. Osterhout, M.D --.Camp PhysicianCecile Berky, R.N .. Camp Nurse11, to F rancis Meyer ._.. ___ -- ---Camp DietitianBernard Schnejder, B,A. Robert Traupman, 8.A.Jaime Santos, B.A.David BanksFred RamirezJames Bauer(Catherine WelshBridget McCarthyLinda SurenkampTherese KinggM Mary DDeminnNate-. Camp mayb e reached by*way of the SunshineState Parkway,Turn off at the Wildwoodexit. Camp isonly 20 miles west ofWildwood. The SeaboardRailroad train "The SilverMeteor" comes through allsoutheast towns and stops ofWildwaod. We will arrangepickup and transportation toall campers coming by train.ftORALtlTYMay. 19, 1967,- THE VOICE Miami, Florida 1?,


Sweden's Ingmar Bergman;Theology For The MoviesCatholic Press FeaturesNEW YORK — Rapidlytaking a place alongside theworks of Harvey Cox, Teilhardde "Chardin, DietrichBonhoeffer, Karl Rahnerand other theologians arethe works of a man whohas done his theologicalprobing with a movieearner a,"The Theology of IngmarBerman," a set of sixfilms by the famed Swedishdirector, is receiving widecirculation on college campusesand with churchgroups, according to thefilms 1 American distributor,Janus Films, Inc.The six pictures in thisanthology — all dealing withman's quest for God — are"Through a Glass Darkly,""Winter Light," "The Silence,""TheVirgin Spring,""Wild Strawberries" and,perhaps Bergman's mostpopular film; "The SeventhSeal."SOMBER IDEALAs the son of a strictEvangelical Lutheran clergyman,Bergman grew upwith a somber idea of God— an upbringing that is reflectedin his films, alongwith a murky, seemingly obscureuse of symbols to tellhis story."Explanations" of Bergman'sfilms are frequent, thelatest one by the Rev. Mr.Richard Blake, S.J., ascholastic who is teachingfilm and religion at ArchbishopKeough High Schoolin Baltimore.In the latest issue of"Drama Critique" publishedby the National CatholicTheatre Conference. Mr.Blake observes that in mostof Bergman's "theological"films, the principal charactersare on a journey of onekind or other and that thisplot device is a common onein the religious literature."From the days of Moses,religious thinkers have . . .turned to the journey as aperfect description of man'stransitory state in thisworld," Mr. Blake wrote"Followers of YahwehmadeThisWeefc'sFollowing are the titles offilms reviewed this week bythe National Catholic Officefor Motion Pictures.CLASS A, SECTION IFamilyThe Gnome-MobileCLASS A, SECTION IIAdults, Adol.The Flim-Flam ManCLASS A, SECTION IIIMorally Unobjectionablefor AdultsKing of HeartsCLASS A, SECTION IVMorally Unobjectionablefor Adults with ReservationsThe Family WayCLASS BMorally Objectionable InPart For Alltheir exodus, a journey to anunknown place for an unknownreason, and by thiswandering the nation ofMoses realized its identityas the chosen people of God.St John of the Cross describedman's quest for Godin terms of an 'Ascent ofMount Carmel.' "Mr. Blake gave most ofhis analysis to "TheSeventhSeal," the film with a medievalsetting. A knight (playedby Max von Sydow, wholater portrayed Christ in"The Greatest Story EverTold") returns from the Crusadesto find his native Denmarkscarred by the blackplague He meets Death inhuman form and engageshim in a running game ofchess in order to stall fortime while he searches forthe meaning of his life andponders the existence of God.Through the course of thefilm, the knight carries on anintellectual discussion withhis squire, who is certainthere is no God. The knightseeks to become just as certainthat there is a God. Theplague requires them to performvarious acts of compassion— but it is thesquirewho acts, while the knight istoo busy contemplating philosophicalmysteries.He deviates from this onlyto share a meal of strawberrries and milk with ahusbandand wife and their child, andbecomes so taken with theirsimplicity that he tries tohide them from the sight ofDeath Yet, this proves to bethe key to Bergman's mes-GAME OF CHESS is played with Death by a knight, MAX VON SYDOW, to stall fttime to seek the meaning of his life in "The Seventh Seal."sage.In an earlier issue, the"Drama Critique" featureda commentary on Bergman's"trilogy"—" Througha Glass Darkly," "WinterLight" and "The Silence"—by Prof. Hugh Harter ofLoyola University in Chicago.In the first two films ofthe trilogy, the main characters"are obsessed with theirsearch for God," Prof. Harterwrote.,"In the first two films ofthe trilogy," Prof. Harterobserved,"Bergmanposes andreiterates the question ofGod's existence and Hisways to man, if any. He alsocarefully explores man's relationto his fellow man, theindividual's loneliness,"Is 'The Silence,' as thethird film of this trilogy, ananswer to the problemsraised in the previous films?Perhaps. More possibly wecan consider it as a further,and more brutal, commentaryon man's condition,man's contemporary bleak,oppressive hell on earth —displaced man, alienatedman who cannot communicatewith God or man, whofeels futile and lost, withdrawninto himself."LAWSONINSURANCE AGENCY, INC.Complete Insurance facilitiesTHE NATIONAL CATHOLIC OFFICE FOR MOTION PICTURESRatings Of Movies On TVThis WeekFRIDAY, MAY 198:30 a.m. (12)-Florent!ne Dagger (NoClassification)9 a,m. |4)-Pleaso Bellflve Me (Adults,Adol.)4:30 p.m. (4)—Gun5moketnTucson(Adults,Adol:)7 p.m. [10)—They Came to Cordura (MorallyUnobfectionable For Adults)9 p.m. (4)-Because They're Young (Adults,Adol.)11.15 p.m. (Il)-Bordertown (Adults,Adol.)TELEVISION(Sunday)9 A.M.TELAMIGO - Chr. 7 WCKT - Spanishlanguage Inspiration discourse.THE CHRISTOPHERS- Ch,5, WPTV (WestPalm Boachl11 AM.THE CHURCH AND WORID TODAY-Ln./,"Problem of God" speaker will beVery Rev. Msgr. Joseph O'Shea.i 1:30 A.M.CATHOLIC HOUR- Ch. 7 WCKF -"TheStruggle". . .a four-part seriesofvignetteon the question: "Can Human Life be regardedas meaningful?" Today-part-two"An Abundance of Perspectives," dealingwith man's difficulty in finding thetrue meaning of his life. Eugune Roche,host. Actors are: Frederick Rolf, MartinSheen, Eleanor Phelps ancTCorolyCoates.11:30 AM.MASS FOR SHUT-INS- Ch. 10, WLBW-TV12 NoonPANEl DISCUSSION- Ch. 5. WEAT-TV-Local priests, rabbis and ministers discuss"The Fruit of Ihe Grape-Sweet orSour."(Tuesday)9:30 P.M.MAN-TO-MAN-WTHS, Ch. 2- Interfailh discussionwith a prfesls, o minister and arabbi. Moderator,LutherC Pierce, memberof Ch. 2 program committee.RADIO(Sunday)6 A.M.THI CHBISTO0HERS - WGMA 1320 KcIHoilywood)IHE SACRCD HEART PROGRAM - WGBS710 Kc. 96.3 FM.AM A.M.•HE SACRED HEART PROGRAM - WHEW1600 Kc. (Riviera Beacbl6:30 AM.THE CHURCH AND THE WORID TODAY(KPIA1) - WGBS, 710 Kc. - Rebroadcastof TV program.SATURDAY,MAY 201 p.m. (7)—The Human Factor (No Classification)1:30 p.m. (1ll-Dive Bomber(Fomily)2 p.m. i4)-lnvasion U.S.A. (Morally ObjectionableIn Part For All)REASON-Suggeiiive sequence.2:30 p.m. |10)-Wogons Roll at Night(Adults, Adol.)2:30 p.m. (12)-Whiplash (Morally ObleclionableIn Part For All)REASON—Suggestive sequences; tendsto present divorce as desirable.7 AJ».THE HOUR OF THE CRUCIFIED - WIRK1290 Kc. (West-Palm Beach)7:05 A.M.NBC RADIO CATHOLIC HOURS -WIOD, 610 Kc. 73 FM-"Conflrmatlon -The Sacrament of Christian Witness"A look at the sacrament which preparesthe young Christian to be a witnessfar Christ ,n the world.7:30 AJVt.THE SACRED HEART PROGRAM - WFLM-FM, 105.9 Me. (Fort Lauderdale).8:30 A.M.THE SACRED HEART PROGRAM - WCCF,1580 Kc. -Punlo Gorda).8:30 A.M.UN DOMINGO FELE (Spanish) WFAB,990 Kc.BA5 A.M.THE HOUR OF ST. FRANCIS - WJCM(Sebring). Some as B:45 p.m.9 A.M.THE CHURCH AND THE WORLD TODAY(FM REPEAT) - WFLM-FM 105.9 FM(Fort Lauderdale). FM rebroadcasf ofTV program.THE SACRED HEART PROGRAM - WGMA(Hollywood)THE'HOUR OF THE CRUCIFIED - WZ72.1515 Kc. (Boynlon Beach)9:05 A.M.CATHOLIC NEWS - WIRK, 1290 (WestPalm Beach)9:30 AM.THE HOUR OF THE CRUCIFIED - WIRA,140 Kc. FM 95.5 Mg. (Fort Pierce).10:15 A.M.THE HOUR OF ST. FRANCIS - WNOG(Naples). Same as &:45 p.m.10:30 AM.THE HOUR OF THE CRUCIFIED - WWIL,1580 Kc, (FartLauderdale).5:05 P.M.CATHOLIC NEWS -WNOG, 1270 Kc. -(Naples), (See.Next Listing).4:05 PJM.CATHOLIC NEWS - WGBS, 710 Kc. -96,3 FM - Summary of InternationalColhollc News from NCWC CatholicNews from The Voice.8 p.m.MAN-TO-MAN-WGBS, 719 Kc- 96. 3FM- Rebroadcast of TV program.8:45 P.M.THE HOUR OF ST, FRANCIS - WKAT,1350 Kc. "Angel in the House."6 p.m. (101-FoJijOW. The Fleet (Family)9 p.m. (2-5-7)-The Joker is Wild (MorallyOb| ectionable In Part For All)REASON — Suggestive costuming andsons; light treafenenfof marriogo.11 p.m. (10)-Air Force (Adults, Adol.)11:30 p.m. (12)-Colorado Territory |M rurallyObjectionable In Part For All)REASON—This film lands to condoneand olorrty criminal character; suggestivecostuming and situations.1 a.m. (10) - Mummy's Curse (Adults,AdolJ2:35 a.m.. (lOj-The Keyhole (No Classification)Strange Affair (Adults, Adol.)Mystery of Ihe White Room (Adults,'Adol.lSUNDAY, MAY2110:30 a.m. |2)-Magic Fire (No Classification)12 Noon (4)-Conquest of Mycene (NoClassification)12 Noon (7)—Tyrants of lydia AgainstIhe Sons of Hercules (Part II) (No Classification)2 p.m. (5)-The Truth About Women (NoClassification)2 p.m. (7)-R!o Grande (Family)2 p.m. (lO)-SantaFe Trail (Familyl :2 p.m. [12)—Confidential Agent (Morally _Objectionable In Part For All)REASON—Tends to condone the hero'staking the law into his own hands.3:30 p.m. (7)-Alt!la (Adults, Adol.)I 1:00 p.m. (10)~TheMan With The GoldenArm (Morally Objectionable In Part ForAll)REASON—This film is of low moral tonethroughout because it tends tominimixethe moral obligations of all the principalcharacters. H treats in terms of< morbid sensationalism with narcotic addktion,in so doing fails .to avoid theharmful implications relative to thismoral and sociological problem. It alsocontains suggestive costuming, dialogueand situations.1 1:15 p.m. (7)-l Died a Thousand Times(Adults, Adol.)I 1:35 p.m. (I2)-Possessed (Adults, Adol.)MONDAY, MAY 228:30 a.m. (I2)-It's Great Feeling (Adults,Adol.)9 a.m. |7)-The Raw Edge (Morally Ob-{ectionable In Part For Alii—REASON— Suggestive sequences; excessivebrutality.4:30 p.m. (4)-IOO Men and a Girl (NoClassification)6 p.m. (10)—This Woman is Mine (Adults,Adoi.) ;7:30 p.m. (7)-The Next Voice You Hear(Family)11:15 p.m. (1 I)-Underground (MorallyObi eclionable In Part For All)REASON — Tendency to present thesuicide as justifiable; excessive brutalityand gruesomeness.TUESDAY, MAY 238(30 a.m. (12)—British Agent (No Classification)9 a.m. (7)-Tulsa (Family)-4:30 p.m. (4)—Beyond a Reasonable Doubt(Adults, Adol.)6 p.m.(10)—BetroyalFramtheEast(Aduits,Adol.)8 p.m. (41-Dunklrk (Family).'9 p.m. (7)—For Lbveior Money (MorallyOb|eclionab:ls.In Port For All)REASON-The vision of life which isimplicit in this contrived comedy is thatpromiscuity and premarital sexual experienceare normal.11:15 p.m. (I ij-Whiplosh (Morally ObjectionableIn Part For All)REASON—Suggestive sequences; tendsto present divorce as desirable..,, WEDNESDAY, MAY 248:30 a.m. (12)-The Irish in us (NoClassificotion)9 o.m. (7)-World In My Corner (Family)4:30 p.m. (4)-Paula (Adults, Adol.)6 p.m. (10)—Guns of Fort Petticoat (Famllv)9 p.m. (IO)-Mr. Hobbs Takes a VacationIFamily)11:15 p.m. (Il)-Wingsof IheNavyjFamily)THURSDAY, MAY 258:30 a.m. (12)-Fashions (Na Classification)9 o.m. (7|-The Citadel (Port l| ( Adults,;Adol.)4:30 p.m. (4)—California Conquest (Family)6 p.m. (lO)-Pearl of the South Pacific(Adults, Adol.)9 p.m. (4)-Sa!l A Crooked Ship (MorallyUnobjectionable For Adults)11:15 p.m. (I I)—April Showers (Adults,Adol.)FRIDAY, MAY 268:30 a.m. (12)—Gambling Lady (MoraltyObjectionable In Part For All)REASON— light treatment of marriage.9 a.m. (7)-The Citadel (Part II) (Adults,Adol.)4:30 p.m. |4)-Keep 'Em Flying (Adults,Adol.)7 p.m. (lO)-Jolson Story (Family)9 p.m. (4)—Five Finger Exercise (Adults,Adol.)II 15 p m Ml -Borderlawn(Adulls Adol Ifm ^ 4PHONE FR 1-36912121 BISCAYNE BLVD.MIAMI, FLA.1967 NORDIC AUTOAIR CONDITIONERSThe BiscayneNew instant cooling evaporator reaches maximum coldnessfaster than any competitive unit on the market. Leavesample leg-room. This universal under-dash unit can easilybe transferred when you change models. Its functional designis compact. Its performance is trouble-free.NQROIC INSTALLED 219952 YEARS OR 24,000 MILE WARRANTYA Miami Institution Since 1938HAROLD FRIEDMANINf7726 N.E. 2&d AYE. Plenty Free Parking^N.ai Connected With Any Other Retail StorePhone 754.4644 Open Doily 8-6, Fri. 8-9Established . . . 1927SANATORIUM &NEUROLOGY INSTITUTEFor Nervous and Mental Disorders,Alcoholism and Drug Habituation84 private rooms • 84 private bathsFlo. Chamber of Commerce,Miami Chamber of Commerce79th ST. at MIAMI COURT — Ph. PL 7-1924 u PL 4-5354Page 20 THE VOICE Miami}. Florida May 19, 1967


FATHER TOM CAREY goes over a script with Blackfriars'players. (NC Photos).Preaching .Power Of The StageBy Doris Revere Peters(NC News Service)NEW YORK—A pair ofpreaching friars concludedthe stage could be more effectivethan thepulpitin guidingsociety. It took somedaring and some years to dosomething about it—but theydid.Father Thomas Carey,O.P., and the late FatherUrban Nagle, O.P. in 1931obtained permission to foundthe Blackfriars' guild inWashington, D. C. Six yearslater Father Carey began theBlackfriars' Institute of DramaticArts at the CatholicUniversity of America —which now is theuniversity'swidely acclaimed speech anddrama department.In 1940 bothpriestscamehere to the heart of the theatricalworld, bent on establishingwhat now is consideredto be the only Catholicexperimental theater inthe world.In the ensuing 27 yearsmore than 60 original playshave been produced by theguild. The Blackfriars' stageat 320 West 57th St. is opento the efforts of any playwrightwhose work can meetthe guild's artistic andspiritual specifications. In the27 years there have beendiversified presentationsranging from farce throughcomedy, tragedy, musicalsand documentaries.The present attraction is"The Happy Faculty", acomedy and first play ofJoan and Phil Norse. Mrs.Norse is a theater critic whosesyndicated column appearsin a number of Catholicpapers.Although the Blackfriarsis devoted to producingoriginal plays of artisticmerit which reflect theHaunting Dream About'Persona'By JAMES W. ARNOLDAfter exposure to IngmarBergman's latest movie,"Persona," I tried to sleep,but I was haunted by a recurringdream in the shapeof a film:Black screen: Sound ofweeping, waves dashingagainst a shore.Out of focus: Little boy,bouncing a ball.Suddenly in focus: Helooks at the camera. (Theball rolls off, but we canhear it bouncing.) He reachesfor the lens as if to caressitFrom behind boy: We seehe is actually reaching for aSnickers bar, but on thepackage is a picture of hismother. She looks awful.Suddenly her lips begin tomove. She is saying somethingmelancholy in Swedish.The titles translate:"Meaningless. Nothing."Over and over. Cameramoves in on her lips.Screen goes white: Voicesays, "Ingmar is a fake."Second voice says, "Ingmaris searching." Third voicesays, "Who cares?" Allvoices together: "That's exactlywhat's wrong."Main titles: Interruptedoccasionally by quick cutsto a spider, a boy bouncinga ball, napalm victims inVietnam, a rape scene, aSnickers bar.Voice behind: "Last yearI was at Marienbad. Thisyear I am not certain."Closeup of first girl:"What was that you said?"Closeup of second girl:She smiles.Ten minutes closeup offirst girl: Tells story of herfirst affair. It was meaninglessṠecond girl: "We areverymuch alike."Their faces merge: In fact,we can't tell them apartQuickie Film ReviewClass A, FamilyTHROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE - The RoaringTwenties are spoofed camp-style in Ross Hunter'slatest and most lavish color production, Julie Andrewsand Mary Tyler Moore seek, careers andromance in New York with the help of handsomeJohn Gavin and debonair James Fox. The antics ofCarol Charming as a rich ex-chorus girl, and BeaLillie as a wacky white slaver keep the film moving.A dozen songs, old and new, help characterize theoutlandish period. George Roy Hill's direction freelycombines comic styles, often to good effect. An irreverentlark — with definitely something for everybody.Class A, Adults, Adol.TO SIR WITH LOVE - Sentimental dramaabout would-be engineer from British Guineaby wayof California who winds up teaching difficult "mods"in a London Cockney slum school; based on littleknownbut distinguished diary-novel by E. R. Braithwaite.As "Sir," Sidney Poitier dominates classroomand film itself with his extraordinary presence. Somepat solutions for real problems, and student transformationsseem over-swift, but fine supporting cast(with Suzy Kendall) show life, love and teenagersmuch the same in a British "blackboard jungle." Incolor, Directed by James Clavell.Class A, Morally unobjectionable for Adults.THE WAR GAME - Short (47 minutes) blackand white documentary feature designed to showeffect of nuclear warfare on the population of a countryand to encourage discussion of this chilling possibility.Features non-professionals in realisticallysimulated scenes, effectively photographed by-handheldcameras at British evacuation centers. Makesuse of TV techniques of interviews, narration andtitles. Written, produced and directed by young PeterWatkins for the British Broadcasting Corporationand British Film Institute. Theatrical showing alsoresult of public demand. NCOMP sanctions purposefulviewing by students and teachers as groups.Class B, Morally Objectionable In Part For All.AFRICA ADDIO - Cruelty, violence, blood, goreand human indignity in a two-and-a-half hour colordocumentary that claims to enlighten viewers concerningthe "birth pangs" of emerging African nations.One-sided theme features wholesale slaughterof human beings and animals. Offensive, revolting.Man with pipe: "Thetrouble is I already have themessage. How many wayscan you say life is miserable?It's not that miserable,even in Sweden." His pipebegins to blow soap bubbles.Night scene: First girlgoes to bed. Turns off light;screen is dark for five minutes.She switches on lightand phonograph with brokenrecord: "Forgive me but. . .Forgive me but . ." Shelooks tenderly at faded photograph,then turns to camera.Slowly, for fiveminutes,the screen goes dark. Wehear the sound of weeping.Scene, the seashore: Thetwo women are knitting andhumming.Voice behind: "Doris Daywears false freckles. . .1 goto the hills for the Sound ofMoney."Closeups: The women exchangeglances and grasphands, tightly. Camerapansover the random rocks andwaste of the shoreScene, night, interior:Women are drinking. Secondgirl smiles. First girlsays, "At last I've foundsomeone who listens to me"Later, bedroom, filledwith fog: Girls stand together,looking in mirror.Outside, ifs raining. Theonly sound is the drip-dripof a downspoutCloseup, man with cigar:"But will they like it in Topeka?"Scene in car, first girlalone, driving: A letter is onthe seat After five minutes,she stops car and begins toread. It says: "What do youknow about mercy?"On the radio, a song: "Mycup runneth over. . .withlove"Screen begins to split: Imageof spider, Christ's passion,slapstick comedy, Nazimassacre of Jewish children^Snickers bar.Forms out of focus, inslow motion: Gradually takethe shape of the two womenrunning along beach.First girl, desperately:"Talk to me; say something,anything."Second girl: Pacing, lightscigaret. (It is too long forher cigaret case) "I was,"she says, "a lousy mother."Night interior, girls attable: Ten minute closeup onsecond girl as first girl tellsher why she is cold, loveless,guilty. Scene is repeated withten minute closeup on firstgirl.Voice behind: "Now tellme which is the nurse, whichthe patient"First girl: "I'm not you!I'm me!" She takes a bushome On the beach, camerapans decaying statues, randomdesolate rocks.Scene, hospital room,girls in silhouette: "Repeatafter me," says first girl."Nothing." Second girl repeats,"Nothing." Screenfades to white, with drip-dripof faucet in background.Closeup, matron at PTAmeeting: "It's the sick sexthat brings them in."Voice behind: "Better tosearch with Ingmar than togo Boy Scout camping withDisney. I think."Far behind: Julie Andrewssings "A Spoonful ofSugar."Gloseup: First girl staresat camera and smiles.Boy is seen: With bouncingball. He lies down onwhat looks like a slab in amorgue Camera dollies into pick out, on the floor, thecrumpled wrapper of aSnickers bar.Sudden cut to black.National Shrine of theImmaculate ConceptionOur Nation's Tribute to MtsfWashington 17, D. Cautoeuropey y^Bli^^)® autotravel guide to1 § ^^%?# Europe in full colorall about motoring abroad, free extras & discounts' Write, visit or orione. .„ ^ „_AUTO EUROPE - 864-SJ5S69553 Harding Ave., Surfside, Fla. 33154spiritual nature of man andto find andtrainplaywrightswho can write with feelingand insight, it also affordsactors, directors and techniciansan opportunity topractice their artIn recent years, however,it has become much moredifficult to finance such anoperation as theguild. WhenBlackfriars started in NewYork in 1940, there wereonly ahalfdozen"offBroadway"theaters. Today, mereare more than 100 suchventures—all looking for atheater to call home. Thishas put a premium on littletheaters in the city. Buthardworkingand intense FatherCarey has held on to hisdream these 27 years despitemany obstacles.In an area when experimentaltheater isn't exactlyprospering he has managedto not only keep it goingbut to keep it one of thebuisest in New York— ableonly to present about 5%of its applicants.The modest priests whohas started many a star onhis way to the top, shiesaway from credit, bestowingit on his co-workers. WithFor Your ...FORMAL BALLSSPRING PROMSRECEPTIONSMEETINGSACCOMMODATIONSUP TO 1000"Fort Lauderdale'smost experienced host'for reservations callMrs. Gertrude Davis522-1441the exception of a small productionstaff, all work atBlackfriars is on avolunteerbasis."And wecouldn'tpossiblyget along without thesewonderful people who havedevoted countless hours ofhard work over manyyears," Father Carey said.Interviewed backstageFather Carey said: "Of themany contemporary forcesaffecting the minds andhearts of men none is morepowerful than the field ofentertainment. This includesmovies and television butabove all the theater whichis the parent of all the dramaticforms. Blackfriarsseeks to restore to the theaterthe spiritual perspectiveswhich are necessary to thehealth and vigor of a greatpopular art."SPECIALFor Voice Readers3 DAYS 2 JSIGHTSof FUN & FROLICAWAY FROM HOME at the"Social Center of the Keys"Arrive Any Evening . . .Leave 3 Days Later. Priceincludes 2 Breakfasts, 2Dinners and Green Fees perperson.""""'5 per dbl.person occ.MAKE RESERVATIONS NOWCall 373-7608 MiamiMarathon 743-5521 CollectThomas Hayes, Managing Director• Charter Boats « Tennis Courts• Rental Skiffs •> Shuffleboard• Ping Pong » Dockage Fa-• Cocktail cililiesLounge • Air Conditioning• Two Pools (Fresh and Salt Water)• Par 3 Golf Course and GolfPrivileges at nearby Country Club^ T GO-GO HAWAIIAN inJVIIAMI BEACH!!Hat the NEW\e RESORTMOTEL.OCEANFRONTAT 176 ST.Friendly - Casual - Informal 'J POOLS • OVER 500 OF PRIVATE BEACH SPECIAL RATESDANCING AND ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLYTO OURFREE COCKTAIL PARTIES • BLACK (Ah'TILbSUPERVISED CHILDREN'S ACTIVITIES FLORIDA FRIENDSKITCHENETTES AND SUITES AVAILABLE PHONE 949^2511fREE REFRIGERATOR IN ALL ROOMSjack Tweedle, M§s\FREE PARKING, TV.j St. Gregory ParishWrite for FREE Color Brochure & Rolts.OBLATE ASSOCIATES1967 PilgrimageEUROPEAN TOURJuly 20 f® August 6Tour under the Auspices of Colpitts Travel Agency %Personal Leadership ofRev. Francis G. Curley, O.M.I.Cardinal Newman High SchoolSEE, ItHlfill with stops atDUIUN,GALWAY, CORK, ATHLONE,ICiLLARNEY, MUL^HEY,mmw®m, WEXFORD, LOHTON,ROME (Papal Audience) L1SB01f lys- ®xpO67 .MONTREAL!PRICE from MSAMIonly $928.Included in price-air travel throughout Europe, motorcoach through cities, hotel rooms, most meals, entertainmentand some excursions.Please write or phone Rev. Frank G. Curley, O.M.I.512 Spencer Drive, W. Palm Beach 683-6280For Reservations or Brochureay 19, 1967 THE VOICE Miami, Florida Page 21


Cubanos Observamrdn 2O d« Mayo OrandaManana: Misa en la Explanada del Monumento a la CaridadSuplemento en Esponol deEN LA CONSTRUCCION de la capiHa provisional parael manvmenio a la Virgen de la Caridad, el PADRE LUISPEREZ orgonizodor del acto de mahana, revisa los pianosque le muestra el contratisia ARMANDO ALEJAN-DRE, en presencia del capataz de la obra, HIPOLITOMOREJON.Mlsas Dojuiftiealesen EspaHo§ST. TIMOTHr, 5400 S.W. 102Ave. 12:30 P.M.ST. DOMINIC, N.W. 7 St.59 Ave. 1 P.M., 7:30 P.M.rST.BRENDAK, 67 Ave.y 32St. S.W. o-.45 P.M.ST. AGNES, Key Biscayne.10 A.M.LITTLE FLOWER, 1270Anastasia, Coral Gables.9:15 A.M. y 12 M.CATEDRAL DE MIAMI, 2Ave. y 75 St. N.W. 7 P.M.CORPUS CHR1STI, 3230 N/W.7 Ave. 10:30, 1 and 5:30, MelroseSchool, 11:30.ST. PETER and PAUL, 900S.W. 26 Rd. 8:30 A.M., 1 P.M., 7 y 8 P.M.ASSUMPTION ACADEMY,1517 Brickell Ave. 12 P.M.ST. JOHN BOSCO, 1301Flagier St. 7, 10 A.M., 1, 6y 7:30 P.M.GESU, 118 N.E. 2 St. 5:30P.M.ST. MICHAEL, 2933 W. Flaglet.10:45 A.M.ST. HUGH, Royal Rd.y MainHwy., Coconut Grove 12:15P.M.ST. FRANCIS DE SALES,600 Lenox Ave., Miami Beach6 p.m.ST. JOHN THE APOSTLE,451 E.4 Ave.,HUleah. 6:30P.M.INMACULADA CONCEP-CION, 68 W.42 PL.Hialeah.12:45 y 7:30 P.M.Ml LAM SCHOOL, W. 16 Ave.y 60 St.,Hialeah. 10 a.m.ST. PHILIP BENIZI, BelieGlade. 12 M.ST. MARY, Pahokee. o:30P.M.CAMB1E PARA MAS FRESCURA,COFFEEONE POUND NETSPECIAL FOR DEMI-TASSECAF€AROMA Y SABORBUSTELOUN MUNDOSABROSURARAUL MARTINEZ MALOPROPigTARIOLull® Ameri€@nAnt® Ssrvies4770 N.W.'lT.AVf.TiLEFONOSHS3-9171634-5331%® un® a I® femiilSa cubana «&t®20 do M«y


PAZ EN LA IGLESIA; PAZ EN EL MUNDOClamor del Papa por la Paz enMAYO 13PideObispoAyudaPara Obra MisionalEl proximo domingo, dia 21, se efectuara en todaslas iglesias una colecta especial a beneficiode las obrasmisionales dentro dela Diocesis, comosonporejemplo,el apostoado entre los trabaj adores migratorios y otroscentros de mision en zonas urbanas y rurales. Con esemotivo, el Obispo Coleman F. Carroll ha emitido unacarta que dice textualmente:Mis muy amados en Cristo:Nuestro Seftor Jesucristo ha comisionado solemnementea su Iglesia a salir a ensenar. La Iglesia rieneque llenar esta mision en la Diocesis de Miami, Hevandola palabra de Dios a todos, vivan ya en laciudad o en los campos agricolas, sea el color de supiel bianco o negro. La Iglesia—es decir, ustedes yyo—tiene que poclamar las buenas nuevas de Cristo,para que todos puedan gozar de la fe que nosotrosposeemos.Los fieles de la Diocesis pueden ayudar a la Iglesiaen su mision aqui en su territorio, contribuyendoa la colecta para la obra misional dentro dje la Diocesis.Esta contribucion ayuda a proveer los mediosmateriales necesarios para llevar a cabo el apostoladoespiritualExhorto a todo catolico a prestar asistencia economica,como signo de su fey desu deseo de compartirel Evangelio.Pidiendo a Dios recompensa paravuestro amor ala mision de la Iglesia, quedo,Sinceramente vuestro en Cristo,V> Obispo de Miamiewe© NUEVQS SACEROTESFATIMA, Portugal. — Temas paralelos, la paz en laIglesia y la paz en el mundo, fueron enfatizados por elPapa Paulo VI en su sermon en el Santuario de NuestraSenora de Fatima.El Papa urgio a sus oyentes a orar por la paz en laIglesia y en el mundo. Sin paz, advirtio, las consceuenciasen cada caso seran graves.El Santo Padre predico en la misa que ofrecio el 13de mayo para marcar el cincuenta aniversario de laaparicion de la Santisima Virgen de Fatimay el vigesimoquinto aniversario de la consagracion del mundo al InmaculadoCorazon de Maria. Sus palabras fueron escuchadaspor una inmensa multitud aqui y por una audienciainternacional que siguio sus palabras atravesde la television y la radio. ~El Papa advirtio sobre la amenaza a la paz en unmundo que "no ha progresado tanto en lo moral comolo ha hecho en lo cientifico y lo tecnico" y donde "granparte de la humanidad padece todaviia un estado de necesidadyhambre"Con referenda a la Iglesia, el Papa encomio el espiritude renovacion despertado entre los catolicos por elOoncilio Ecumenico pero advirtio encarecidamente contra"interpretaciones arbitrarias" que podrian reemplazaf ensenanzastradicionales con "nuevas y peculiares ideologias."sAl comienzo de su sermon, el papa dijo que queriainduir a todos en su recordatorio espiritual, la rnisaaniversario que estaba ofreciendo. Menciono especificamentea la jerarquia, sacerdotes y religiosos, familiascristianas, seglares, jovenes, enfermos y sufrientes. "Recordamos tambien a todos los critianos, no catolicospero hermanos en el bautismo—agrego—por cuyo mementoes esta oration de esperanza por la perfecta comunionen la unidad deseada por Cristo.""Y lo extendemos hasta induir a todo el mundo, paraque nuestra caridad no tenga limites. Y en este momentolo extendemos a todala humanidad y todos los gobiernosy pueblos de la tierra."Refiriendose a las dos intenciones especiales de estePaulo VS Ora Por La Pazperegrinaje, el Papa hablo primero de la Iglesia—"la I-glesia, Una, Santa, Catolicay Apostoliea.""Queremos orar por su paz interna" . . . "El ConcilioEcumenico—dijo— ha revitalizado el corazon de laIglesia, ha abierto nuevos horizontes en el campo doctrinal,ha llamado a todos sus hijos a una mayor preocupadon,a una mas intima colaboracion, a un mas ferviente apostolado.Anhelamos que esto se preserve y se extienda.Pei'o, continuo, )anazada por excesos.Los trabajadores migratorios de la Mision Nuestra Seflora Reina de la Paz, DelrayBeach, ofrecieron un homenaje a la Virgen con motivo del mes de mayo, a ellaconsagrado. En la grafica los ninos en procesion, y la jovencifa Norma Vazquez,colocando una corona a la imagen.con ella, Sylvia Salinas, Yolanda Delgado, Myrnay Carmen Martiz. El actofue seguido por una misa, oficiada por el Padre Jose LuisPaniagua, director de la mision.Un Cubano y un Puertorriqueho Seran Ordenados'^^Fn joven cubano y otro ordenacibn se efectua en unen Santurce. Santurce, Puerto Rico yv He de Santo Dnminso Domingo Sabioel Obispo Carroll confer!) conferirapuertorriqueno seran ordenadossacerdotes nan* an a como cubano, ya que coin-dia de honda significationsab ado 20 de Mayo, a las cide con el aniversario de la11 a. m. en la Catedral de Declaration de Independenciade Cuba, pais del queMiami por el Obispo ColemanF. Carroll.vino como exiliado.Para Orestes Hevia, la William J. Romero,nacioiiiiiiiHiliiniiiiiiiridiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiciiiiriiiiiriiiiitiiimiiiriiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiFestival Juvenil de PrimaveraUn festival bail able depri- amenizado por ia orquestamavera"Le Printemps'67" Cubaney. El precio del cu-esta siendo organizado por bierto y el baile esde $4;a Juventud Catolica Hispanade San Juan Bosco y de San Juan Bosco y de $5para los miembos del CYOtendra lugarel sabado, 27 para los invitados. Las entradaspueden adquirirse ade mayo, a las 8 p.m. enel Salon Banyan del Hotel traves de los jovenes delEverglades.CYQ de San Juan Bosco.El festival consfste en una Mas informacidn llamandocena de gala a las 8 p.m. al Hermano Antonio Fernandez,DLS., al seguida del baile que estara691-8899.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiHiiiiiit 1OeConna Ice CreamFLORIDA'S KEY TO TASTE TREATManufacturers and Distrtbutan ofICE CREAM and ICE CREAM SPECIALTIES3292 N.W. 38th St., Miami PH. 635-2421Key West Branch Phone 294-2420sirvio durante tres anos en elejercito de Estados Unidos.Perteneciente a la parroquiade Sacred Heart, LakeWorth,donde viven sus padres, Romerotermino sus estudiosde Teologia en el St MarySeminary, Baltimore y dirasu prim era misa el domingo,dia 21, a las 11:30 a.m.en la parroquia de SacredHeart, Lake Worth, seguidade una recepcion en el salonparroquial en la queelmisacantanoimpartira su primerabendicion sacerdotal.Hcvia nacio enlafiabanay estaba estudiando para elsacerdocio en el Seminariocuando el regimen comunistaincauto el seminario. Vioseforzado a venir al exilio,donde continuo sus estudiosen el St. Bernard (SeminaryRochester, N. Y.Su primeramisaseraconcelebradael domingo, 21,a las 12:45 del dia en laiglesia de la Inmaculadaconception, Hialeah, dondesirvio como diacono cl pasadoverano. Mons. JohnJ. Fitzpatrick, parroco deCorpus Christi predicara enla misa; Mons. Dominic Barry,parroco dc la Inmaculada,sera d arcipreste.En la misma ceremoniaMURRAY ROOF-COATING. CO.Hhe Coating you can trust 9PHONE 758-3807el sacramento del Orden Sagradoa otros tres nuevossacerdotes: Thomas J. Engbers,de la parroquia StGeorge, Fort Lauderdale;Trevor Smith, de Port Elizabeth,Africa del Sur y DonaldJ. Walk, de la parx-oquiaEpiphany, Venice, Florida.paz interna de la Iglesia esia ame-Y dijo:"Que" dano seria el queuna interpretation arbitrariay no autorizada por el magisteriode la iglesia, hiciesede este despertar una inquietuddisolvente de su trabazontradicional y constitucional,poniendo, enlugardela teologia delosverdaderosy grandes maestros, unasideologias nuevas y particularesencaminadas a quitarde las normas de la fetodo aquello que el pensamientomoderno.carentemuchasveces de laluz racional,no comprende o no le agrada;transformando el ansiapostolica de la caridad redentoraen la conformidadcon las normas negativasde la mentalidad prof anay del modo de ser moderno."Que desilusion seria paranuestro esfuerzo de aproximacionuniversal, si nopudieramosofrecer a los hermanoscristianos, todaviadivididosdfe nosotros, y a lahumanidjad falta de nuestrafe en su] clara autenticidady en su 'original belleza, elpatrimonio de verdad y decaridad, del que la iglesia esdepositaria y dispensadora!"Nos queremos pedir aMaria una iglesia viva, unaiglesia verdadera, una iglesiaunida, una iglesia santa."PhoneFR 4-3862,DINNERtol0:30p.mCLOSED,MONDAYMfXICfVNDINNER SPECIALSMexican CombinationPLATTERS from $1.95TACOS $1.85NOW SERVING LUNCHPI otters from 95< 12to2p.m.TUESDAY thru FRIDAY136 N.E.20th St., Miami^""~ Just Off N.W. 2nd Avc.FOR SERVICE or SALES-NEW or USEDDANIEL I. HORVATHGeneral ManagerLittle FlowerCoral Gablespeople imbusiness ?MICHAEL I. BOYLENew Car Sales Mgr.St. ThomasSouth MiamiMay 19. 1967 THE VOICE Miami, FloridaPage 23


IMiPiden Sugerencias ConciliatesSugerencias, preguntas y recomendaciones estansiendo pedidas a los sacerdotes de la Diocesis deMiami por la recientemente establecida oficina delVicario Episcopal para Asuntos Conciliares. En cartaal clero, Mons. John J. Pitzpatrick, Vicario Episcopal,enfatizo que la nueva oficina "puede provocaruna gran diferencia en las vidas de todos nosotros,sacerdotes y seglares".si la etica y la fe cristianasrecobran de nuevo su valor."El catolico, al contrario,vive de la Fe, conforme a a-quello de San Juan: "Nuestravictoria esta en la Fe".La incredulidad se acercoal pesebre del nino de Beleny no vio nada, y se aver-consigo la perdida del sentidodel misterio y de la Dios. Alaverdad, quepoco'isclnas Para ©I Marian Gmntmrgonzo de aceptarlo como suPiscinas de natation estan siendo instaladas enel Marian Center para ninos retardados, gracias alas donaciones hechas durante la ultima campanadel Fondo de Desarrollo de la Diocesis ("DDF").Las piscinas estaran listas para el comienzo de latemporada veraniega.Vsmit® m SS Msr IYa esta abierta la matricula para el Programade Verano y el "'kindercamp" de la parroquia deSS Peter and Paul. Ninos y nifias entre 8 y 14 anospueden matricularse en el campamenki de vecanoque funcionara dt limes a vicrnes, de 8:30 a.m.a 4:30 p.m. desde el 14 de junio hasta el 18 deagosto: El programa iiicluyo deportes, natacion, artesmanuales, almuerzos, meriendas, asi como un scgurode salud y accidentes induido on la matri-. cula. Hay un descuenfo del cincuenta por cientopara familias con mas de un hijo matriculado.Los ninos entre cinco y 8 aiios podran participaren el kindercamp bajo la direction de religiosasdominicas, las clases seran de 8:30 a.m. a12 m. Para ambos programas la matricula puedellenarse en la rectoria parroquiiil, 900 S\V 26Road. . _Program® Para Ninos SordoaUn programa terapeutico para ninos sordos ocon dificultades auditivas comenzara el lunes 19de junio en el Hearing and Speech Center of Florrida,una agenda del United Fund. Ninos en edadpreescolar, entre 3 y 6 anos, seran aceptados en lasnueyas clases que los prepararan para el colegio.El centro esta en el 1540 W. Flagler St.Alegria de Solteros"Dia de Alegria" sera el domingo, 21 para losmiembros del Catholic Singles Club (Club de Solterosy Solteras) en el Tropicana Country Club, 5151 NW79 Ave. El programa que comienza a las 2 p.m. incluyedeportes, natacion, almuerzo y baile....d 0\kMstribiirn Gratis la iicklki @i HnEl gobierno peruano editara y distribuira gratuitamentela enciclica 'Populorum Progressio' delPapa Paulo VI, segun resolution promulgada por elministerio de Justicia y Culto. "Tiene por objeto lapublication, dijo el ministro Javier de Belaunde,"extender el llamado que hace al mundo la IglesiaCatcilica a favor del desarrollo solidario de la humanidad,la realization integral de todos los hombresy el cumplimiento de los deberes y responsabilidadesde los Estados, regiones y personas que hay an alcanzadola prosperidad."hstiMo CooperativoCon el apoyo de la jerarquia eclesiastica y ladonation de un terreno de 1.5 hectareas de partede 8 familias panamenas, establecera su sede permanenteen Ciudad Panama el Instituto CooperativoInteramericano, que dirige el Padre Pablo Steele,propulsor y organizador del movimiento cooperativistaen Latinoamerica El ICI fue fundado en Chicagoen 1963. Su fin es la formaci6n de lideres inspiradosen la filosofia del movimiento socio-economicode Antigonish, Canada, uno de los mas grandese inspirados centros de cooperativismo en el mundo.r« SsmanarioEl semanario Catolico Orientation ha sido encomendadoa un equipo de seglares, presidido porAntonio Diaz. Anteriormente estaba dirigido por sacerdotesdiocesanos. Todos pertenecientes a la AccionCatolica. El semanario esta teniendo gran aceptacion.PARAUSTED;UN DOMINGO FELIZ"UN PROGRAMMA DISTINTQWFABLa FABULOSA de MIAMIDOMINGO, 8:30 A.M.El mundo occidental desdelos comienzos del siglo18 ha padecido una profundacrisis de l'e. Sus origenesremotos estan en laepoca del Renacimiento yde la escisidn religiosa dela Reforma de Lutero, y losprdximos enelmodernocientifismo.Crisis dele, que partede un proceso continuo dedesmitologization y rationalizationdel mundo y lleva•••••••^••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii4lilillillllllllllllllllltlllllIIII||l|lll|ll|||(|||||||f|||l|l|tI|||||ll|I|f||||I||||I||I||||MISTERIO DE FEtrascendencia, y con ello deuna vision del' mundo quegire en torno de un centrosupramundano. Por algunsupramundano. Por algo seha caracterizadolamodernaincredulidad como "perdidadel centro", (L. W. Kahn).Pero el hombre moderno,habiendo perdido su Centro,se encuentra solo en un vacioimpresionante, sin poderdar respuesta a sus angustiasy sin poder encontrarla paz, pensando de nuevoen que "el mundo descritianizados


5 PersonalsRELIABLE CATHOLIC MOTH-ER WILL GIVE EXCELLENTCARE TO YOUR CHILDREN INMY HOME. ST. ROSE OF LIMAPARISH. CALL 754-2165.8 Vocation & CampsJunior Olympic VillageSUMMER CAMPFOR BOYS& GIRLS, ages 5 to16.2 to 8 week sessions, from $125 to$450. For brochure call 866-3719,or write the camp at P.O. Box 1015Dade City, Fla.70 LoonsWE buy old Gold and DiamondsLE MONDE JEWELERS8499 Cora) Way12 InstructionsTUTORING all subjects by certifiedteachers. Summer School ApplicationsAccepted Now. The School ofTutoring, 16240 N.E. 13 Ave, 945-4842.EMPLOYMENT:NOTICE TO JOB APPLICANTSTHE VOICE DOES NOT KNOW-INGLY ACCEPT HELP-WANT-ED ADS FROM EMPLOYERSCOVERED BY THE FAIR LABORSTANDARDS ACT, WHICH AP-PLIES TO EMPLOYMENT ININTERSTATE COMMERCE, IFTHEY OFFER LESS THAN THELEGAL MINIMUM WAGE (51.40AN HOUR FOR NEWLY COV-ERED EMPLOYEES) ORFAILTOPAY THE APPLICABLE OVER-TIME. CONTACT THE UNITEDSTATES LABOR DEPART-MENT'S LOCAL OFFICE FOR77 Help Yt anted FemaleSTKNOS, typists, key punch. Temporarywork, lofityourschcdule, day,week, month, more. Kelly Girls, 306Roper Hldg., Kr 3-54 li.POSITION'S open for two full timeteachers holding Florida State Certification.Grades 3 and 6. Smallclasses of 35 only. 1 part-time certifiedteacher in Home Economicsneeded for 2 classes daily. Ideal positionfor married woman wantingpart-time job. Call St Patrick School531-3839 during schoolhours-After4:00 PM 531-3819.Do You Need An ExtraPair Of Hands?In Your business? - In Your 1'Ianl?In Your Institution?In Your Office?In Your Home?--In Your Agency''if SO-Call 754-2651 and place your adto find reliable and competenthelp.HAVE SPARE TIME? FILL YOURHOURS WITH WELL PAYINGWORK. SHOW STUDIO GIRLCOSMETICS. CALL AFTER 7 PM624-2246.EXPERIENCED/Q UALIF1EDTEACHER FOR CATHOLICSCHOOL IN MIAMI, STARTINGSEPTEMBER 1967. WRITE THEVOICE, BOX #7, 6201 BISCAYNE.BLVD., MIAMI, FLA."WANTED" FOR CATHOLICRECTORY. A HOUSEKEEPER.MUST BE GOOD COOK ANDHAVE REFERENCES. WRITETHE VOICE, BOX 17, 6201 BIS-CAYNE BLVD., MIAMI, FLA.3313a2 Funeral Directors 2 Funeral Directors5SQ1 HOLLYWObD BLVD.-PH. 983-6565| | | | | l N i i i A ^ H O M E S ; .;• •"• -140 S; DIXIE HIGHWAY— PH. 923-6565Homelike SurroundingsDignified Friendly ServicePrices To Meet AnyFamilyBudgetQualified Leading Teacherneeded, for Catholic grade school inSeptember. Call between S & 9 P.M887-7161.18 HelpWanted-MaleWANTED-COUPLE ORFAMILY TO HELP OUTTHIS SUMMER ON SMALLFAMILY RANCH IN NO.CAROLINA MTS. SALARYPLUS FURNISHED COT-TAGE. CALL 377-226679 Help Wanted-Male or FemaleCATHOLIC ELEMENTARYSCHOOL desires qualified teacher,$4500-$5500. Write The Voice, Box18, 6201 Biscayne Blvd., Miami,Fla.19 Sales Help—Male or FemaleWANTED RELIABLE, NON-DRINKING, COUPLE TO MAN-AGE LOVELY 10 UNIT APT. BE-GINNING 1ST WEEK OF JUNE.NO MAINTENANCE. MAN MAYWORK OUT. FREE AIR COND.BEDROOM APT. & PHONE. NOSALARY. CATHOLIC AMERI-CAN PREFERRED. Ph. 371-0276.20 Sales Help-MaleRETAIL SALESMANBROWARD COUNTYTO SELL DISPLAY ADVERTIS-ING FORWEEKLY NEWSPAPER.Must have car and pleasing personality.Please write Box 13 TheVoice. 6201 Biscayne Blvd., Miami,Fla. 33138.27 Positions Wanted—FemalePRACTICAL NURSEWILL SIT with patients at home orhospital. PL 8-3480.37 Cars for Sale'65CATALINAPONTIAC2 dr. sedan. $1850. low mileage.Good cond. Must sell. MO 6-0791.'61 FORD GALAXIEReduced to $225.factory air.Call between 6-9 p.m. week days andAll day Sat & Sun. 665-2744'58 CADILLAC $150St Vincent De Paul. FR 3-385638 Birds-Fish SuppliesPISCES AQUARIUMVariety of Tropical FishDogs — Cats — Birds.Feed — Dog Grooming, Supplies.2201 SW 67 Ave. 667-708040 Household GoodsWashers. Colored TVs. Stereos.Refrigerators. Ranges. All new.Instant credit, low as ?2 a wk.Sid Mass Appliance Co. 661-54617279 SW 57 Ave., S. Mia. 666-8796.DIAL-A-MATICZIG ZAG. Brandnew. Makes buttonholes, designs.$28. MU 5-1565."HIDEABED—DOUBLE, NEW UP-HOLSTERY $60; CHAISELOUNGE $15; 2 PC. SECTIONAL$40. CALL 226-6652.43-A Musical InstrumentsLARGEST SELECTION OF NEW& USED PIANOS AND ORGANSIN FLA. VICTORS, 300 N.W. 54ST. MIAMI 751-7502; BROWARDJ A 2-5131.THE MUSIC GALLERYWURLITZER pianos, Organs,New-Used. Nodownpayment, 5yrs.'to pay. 198 E. 4 Ave., Hialeah,887-6275.GKETSCH, Fender, Gibsoii Guitars,Basses, Banioes, Pedal Steel Guitars,Amplifiers. Reverbs, P.A. Systems,accordions. Drums, Band instruments$25 up.SAM'S RADIO MUSICWEST HOLLYWOOD 983-4370\ Round Back German Bass,like new with cover & Ampeg. Pickup $200. Call443-9338.48.A Tool Rentalsliver 100 Low UentaJ ToolsSMITTY'K Hardware & I'aint Co.12320 .YW 7 Ave. 68M4H12 Funeral Directors 2 Funeral DirectorsCAUL, F. SLADE, F.D.CARL F. SLADE FUNERAL HOME990 PALM AVE. • HIALEAH « TO 3-3433Service Station GuideService Station GuideiILARGE FURNISHED BEDROOMApt Air cond., heat, off street parking.TV, walk-in closet 420 NE 74StreetFURNISHED EFFCY. with utility,private entrance. Close to everything.Call after 6 P.M., 754-9104,2 BEDRM.DUPLEXApt unfum. Adults.1050NW107StAIRY EFFICIENCYWalking distance to St Rose OfLima. Call 757-5083.60 Apt. Rentals - HialeahEffcy.Apt.,utilitie S/ $17Wk.Pets OK. Nr. bus line. 887-0539.6Q.A HOTELS and MOTELS j, * FloristsNEW OWNERMgr. on premises. Carpeting, tileshowers, baths, aircond. hub of 8businesses, at 24 hr. Mayflower Restaurant.$10 wk. up, $3 day up.Tipton Motel. 47 NE 36St.759 1 9383_61 House Rental, Miami Bch.WALK TO ST. JOSEPHS2 bedrm.2 bath, air cond. Furnished.Call HI 8-7823.63 Room Rentals-Miami Bch.KELLY'S 821-1-St Nr. Ocean PierrClean, Homey. Low Rates. 538-9657'66 Offices for RentSMALL OFFICE IN HEART OFNOETH MIAMI. AIR CONDI-TIONED AND PLENTY OF PARK-ING. CALL 7544731.CARMINE BRAVO, REALTOR- CLASSIFIED754-2651Music StoreSELLS Baldwin, Lowrey Pianos &Organs. ALL INSTRUMENTS,records, music, Accessories. 2 soundproofstudios — all air-conditioned.Modern Lake Park, Florida. Call842-3925.40 Household GoodsRugs $25 eachTwo 9x12 gray wool rugsExcellent Condition'.1125 Sevilla Ave.Ph: 444-7052Are ExpressionsOf" SympathyHSKEK-SPKAYS-WltEATHSRON $i2.S0O&er Van AnangenwtsROM $7.50MmFilli* Fit Uctl •Or (1st W T«n BctinriM.MHOEiY'S FLORIST2 LOCATIONS11803 N.E. 2 AVE. 75*47871 Block North Of tarry College1224 HI. 183rd ST. S47-M392 Funeral Directors 2 Funeral DirectorsR.JayKRAEER FUNERAL HOMEambulance serviceFort LauderdalePompano Beach565-5591 941-4111Deerfield Beach399-5544R. Jay Kricer.Fi/ntra/ DirectorHenry R. Ware, FuneralDirectorKING. FJX Funeral HomeServing faithfully /or ovtr 69 years206 S.W. 8th Street FR 3-2111VOICE CLASSIFIED RATES AND INFORMATION3 Line Minimum CbargsCALLPLcsxa 4-2651DEADLINE FOR ADSTUESDAY, 4 P.M.CANCELLATION DEADLINE.12 NOON, TUESDAYFor Friday EditionCount 5 Words Par Lisa1 Tint* Per Hue 40e3 Times P«r Una 50c13 ConsecutiveTime* Per Ulte 40c24 ConiecatlvaTimes PerLine 35c52 ConsecutiveTimes ..Per Line 30cAfter an ad is ordered it cannot be cancelledor changed before initial publication.Box Number Charge Replies mailed 50$Replies picked upMAIL AN ADHandy Order BlankStartmyad Ran for WeeksHamsPlease send money order or check if you live out of MiamiAddressCityPhonePRIRT AD BELOW(in pencil please)ClassificationPlease limit year line to 5 overage wordsPARISH SERVICE STATION GUIDECOMPUTt CAR SfftVKftuviccST.JAMESJOHN'SGVLV S K CI'll. 681-9133John Pastorella, Prop.N.W. 7th Ave. » 125th StST.ROSE OF LIMAPORSTSERVICE STATIONPick-up & Delivery Service{Sinclair)N.E. 2nd Ave. at 99th St.Miami SherasPL 8-299SCONSULT THESERVICE STATIONNEAR YOU FORALL YOUR AUTONEEDSST.AGNESLARRY'STEXACOProprietor —.Larry Gaboury1 CRANDON BLVD.KEY BiSCAYNEEM 1-5521ST. THOMASTHE APOSTLEMO 7-3344Early'sMILLER ROADCITIES SERVICEROAD SERVICES INC.WHEEL Af.lC.yiNGTUNE UPS (BRAKE JOItSOPEN 6 A.M. — It P.M.6700 MILLER ROADFUNERAL HOME, INC.7200 N.W. 2nd Ave.751-752331 Cars For Sale 37 Cars For SaleYOU'LL SAVE ONSE0R6E BERNARD SHAWSt. Agnes ChurchXWORLD'SFINEST


t- 2-s . .71 Business Investmentsand PropertiesCBS Business Zoned2 bedim. 2 bath, den, garage.Modem custom built beauy.Only $15',500. Call 757-4966.FIEBER REALTY, REALTORSHOME & DUPLEXGood rental area nr. Biscayne Blvd.bedrm. home & garage with aseparate duplex, all CBS buidlings.Owner will hold mtge.Fieber Realty, RealtorsLAKESIDE MOTEL12 units-3 acres, home for owner,recreation building, dock, boats, extras.Van Hoose Agency, 103 CircleSebring, Fla.73 HOMES FOR SALE:Ft. LauderdaleWalk to Our Lady Queen of Martyrsnd St. Thomas H igh SchoolJedrm 2 bath house, for largeaily. Many extras, including,screen porch, Florida rm. dble carport, dishwasher, chain link fence.$18,500 with $2,000 down & ?129per mo. plus pay on equity. HaveFHA 5 1/4 mtge. Shown by app'tCall owner Ft Laud. 581-2015.Ft. Lauderdale LakesAdult AreaATTRACTIVE 2 bedrm. 2 bath,on CanaL Central air & heat Screenedpatio. Nicely landscaped andsprinkler system. 3397 NW 32 St.Ft Lauderdale.Hollywood2 Bedroom home, close toSt Stephen's Church — $6,0003 Bedrm., air conditioned— $10,500989-2096 Eves. 983-8427 or989-5998J. A.O'Brien Realty6326 Pembroke RoadHOLLYWOOD, FLORIDA 33023X3 BUSINESS SERVICE:Aircond. & HeatingInstall, repair, sales and service,220 Wiring. Call 223-0172BUILDERSAl-The Handy ManPainting, Jalousies, Carpentry,Light plumbing and Household Repairs.NO JOB TOO SMALLWI 7-6423TONY THE HANDYMANELECTRICAL, Plumbing, Carpentry,Install Airconditioners. RepairsWI 7-4256.ADDITIONS, NEWHOMES,BUILDING PLANSAMERICAN ADDITIONS INC.,Hank DorionMember of St Monica's 621-1401.SO UTH Dade Area. No job too small.Licensed, Insured. MO 7-3631.CARPENTERSSOUTH Dade Area. No job too small.Licensed, Insured. MO 7-3631.CLAUDE the carpenter -- Sealing,tile, panelling, doors, locks, formicaalterations and repairs. HI 8-7252;25 years in Miami-Cabinet work. Kitchen cabinets andpanelling a SPECIALTY. N,E. andN.W. only. Neil I). Henry. NA 4-0662.Carpet & Rug CleaningA-l CLEANLiving-dine-hall 317.50Quality guarantee 887-8711LINGSAcoust coustical & LuminousCEILINGS thatprovidelighting distribution& sound control. Expertlyinstalled. Free estimates. Call MikeSpencer, 887-624aDRAPESDrapes - Custom MadeMY MATERIAL OR YOURSRods installed. Free Est. NA 1-1322DRAPERIES & BEDSPREADSCustom made Free Est. Call 621-9801.DRESSMAKINGFine Alterationsail kinds of garments.Long experience. PL 7-8016.^ELECTRICIANSMINNET ELECTRIC SERVICESSpecializing in Repair, RemodelL.gLO 6-7521 Ft. Laud., Pompano. Est:1£ vearsLAWN MOWER SERVICEMIAMI LAWN MOWER CO.Authorized Servta- and PartsFertilizers—Sharpening —WeldingTWO STORES TO SERVE YOU27 S.W. 27th Aye. Call HI 4-230520256 Old Cutler Rd. Call CE 54323Say You Saw It In The VoiceHollywoodWalking distance Nativity Churchand School and Chaminade, lovelyCustom built 3 bedroom 2 bath,carpeting. Central he and air,sprinklers. Best buy. HollywoodHills, $22,900, with 90% financing.LEONARD J. BAUER, REALTOR989-0917 eves. 989-7519Annunciation ChurchSchool & MADONNA ACADEMYjust across the street CBS 2 BED-ROOM, 1 bath, Florida rm., 2 utiLrma., carport, 2 reverse cycle airconditioners.Priced $10,000.Call YU 3-0588.Biscayne Gardens3 BEDROOM 2 BATHGARAGE, TERMS NICE LOCA-TION.BENDER REALTY 757-6422 or681-6422.Biscayne Park$700 DOWNFurn. 4 bedrm 2 bath, carportBENDER REALTY, 757-6422 or681-6422.NortheastSTATELY BEAUTY3 bedrm 2 bath, 2 half bathsdining rm. den. Fla. rm, 2 cargarage. Foyer, fireplace, lovelygrounds. Well, pump&sprinklers.Nfcely Furn. 757-4966FIEBER REALTY, REALTORS4 Bedroom Large PoiolMUST sell, estate settlement, 2 StoryIsland Home, value $40,000 reducedto $27,900, balance of mortgage$23,500.Carmine Bravo, Realtor754-4731NorthwestBY OWNER —Furn 2bedrmCBS,plus 2 apts attached and 110 x 100'lot Excellent location & income.Walking distance to chruch, storesand bus. Reasonable. 8277 NW 5Ave.BUSINESSMOVING and STORAGE$11 PER HOUR OR FLAT PRICE.PADDED VAN WITH LIFTGATE,2 MEN. HANDLE HEAVY AP-PLIANCES. STORAGE $3 UP.CALL HAL, 821-7:845.MOVINGLocal,-Long distance, StorageDELCH ER'S OF MIAMICALL OX 1-5951; OX 1-3571LOWEST PRICES. RELIABLEMOVERS. PADDED VAN LIFT-GATE. INSURED. NA4-3406.Universal Moving & StorageWeathers Bros. Van LinesLOCAL, STATE WIDE, NATIONWIDE. MODERN, SANITIZEDVAULT STORAGE.CALL 888-5261OR EVES. 821-3579.WILLIAMS MOVING STORAGEPadded Van, Lift-gate. $3 up. &IU 1-9930.HOME REPAIRSLAVAL VILLENEUVEALL KINDSOFHOMEREPAIRSWEEKDAYS AFTER 6: 751-4262SOUTH Dade Area. No JobToo SmallLicensed, Insured. MO 7-3631.LAWN MAINTENANCELawn Sand, Driveway Rock, MarlBob Kinkade, 271-8001.EXPERTLawn Digging H a Ft.Sodding and Complete landscaping.624-1805Lawn Maintenance& Sprinkler Repairs by Kxpert_Reliable, Xeat Work.CallSAM221-B629" LAWN-Sand-Muck ""GRAVELJ. Wandemberg OX 1-6077GIVES YOU PROMPT SERVICEPAINTINGHONEST PAINTER, expert, pressurecleaning - small repairs. Reasonable- free estimates. Ph. 221-2585PAINTING for thoso who care. Neat& clean. By M. J. Spellman, licensedand insured. Member Little Flower.444-5123.Quality HousePAIN'TINI!. REASONABLE. RE-FRIGERATORS SPRAY PAINTEDMO1-9548.Interior-ExteriorALSO PAPER HANGING. Licensed,insured, clean, reliable. Lowrate. Frank Fortino, NA 1-9801.Painting-S.W.Licensed —Insured, CallFrank226-6652 for free estimates.Interior-ExteriorPAINTINGLicensed — InsuredQuality work - 666-0709QUALITY PAINTING Licensed, Insured.ST EVE ARAD1. 226-8793.Paper Hanging, PaintingCall Andy 444-8124KAY AT 754 " 2651 FOR CLASSIFIEDTHEVOICE754-2651Miami BeachWalk to. St. Joseph's2 bedrm. 2 bath, aircond.furnished.Call HI 8-7823.N. Miami BeachSWIMMING POOL3 bedrm 2 1/2 bath, partly furn. 2air conditlones. Priced low.BENDER REALTY, 757-6422 or681-6422.North Miami920 NW 130 Street2 bedrm 1 bath, Fla. rm., well &pump $ 11,500. B ENDER R EATLY757-6422 or 681-6422.Screened Pool BeautySpacious 3 bedrm., 2 bathSunken living room.centralheatFormal dining rm., gar age too!Holy Family Parish, only$31,000ANGELA DALEY, Realtor757-2559T2 InstructionsSooth waif3 or 4 bedroom home, 2 baths, tileroof, terrazzo floors. On 1-1/4 fencedacres, Epiphany area. Second CBSbldg. of workshop, carport, horsestables. Owner. 9000 SW 60 Ave.NEAR ST.MICHAELSCHEAP LIVINGBUY this run down duplex, nicearea. Live cheaply.TOTAL §10,500 $1,000 DOWNC. M. BAYER Realtor 633-008873 Suburban So. WestST. LOUIS PARISHMove right inTO A NEWBABCOCK CO.5 BEDROOM 2 BATH, FAMILYROOM HOME. AIR COND., H EAT,2 CAR GARAGE. PALMETTOSCHOOL DISTRICT.$34,5007240 SW 110 Terr.ASK ABOUTOUR OTHER MODELS INOTHER LOCATIONS OR ONYOUR LOT.Open dailyW. F." BUI" Russelleves. 235-8701 665-2639BABCOCK CO.Building in Dade since '35HOLY ROSARY PARISH3 bedrm 2 bath, pool, sprinkled1/2 car garage, central heat. Owner.$23,900. 9340 SW 177 St Ce 5-6858.12 InstructionsLast Month of SchoolGef help now . . . Tutoring all subjectsElementary through CollegeCertified teachers . . . 945-4842Air Cond. Studios,, oChOOl Of TutONngPAINTINGI'Al XTi.VG, inside - outside, anysize job. Carpentry work Free estimates.Member St. Mary. Dee.t'l. 7-3875.HXl'KRT.'House Painter & Fiberglassboat repair. Reas. S.W. area.226-2090.Interior-ExteriorPainting. By hour or contractD. R. WALKER, Wi 7-7723PLASTERINGCall. 681-2274.FOR EXPERT work in stucco andpatching old or new work. Licensedinsured.PLUMBINGJack & Sons Plumbing ContractorsELECTRIC SEWER CABLES30 Yrs. plumbing experience. 24 hoursservice. Special repairs. 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Popes Plea For Peace(Continued from Page 1)through the fruits of the Holying of the Church, disruptingits traditional and con-Spirit"stitutional structure, replacingthe theology of the true "love, faithfulness, joy,These fruits, he noted, areand great Fathers of thepeace, patience, kindness,Church with new and peculiarideologies — interpreta-self-control."goodness, gentleness, andtions intent upon stripping Pope Paul prayed thatthe norms of faith of that "the love of God now andwhich modern thought, often forever reign in the world,lacking rational judgment, that His laws guide the conscienceand customs of mod-does not understand anddoes not like."ern man."Pope Paul said such interpretations"change the preme light of humanity,"Faith in God is the su-apostolic fervor of redeemingcharity to the negative never be extinguished in theand this light not only muststructures of a profane mentalityand of mundane cusnewitself through the stimu-hearts of men but must retoms."lus which comes from science"What a delusion our effortsto arrive at universal The Pope said thisand progress."unity would suffer," he said, thought caused him to re-on "those nations "if we fail to offer to ourflect inChristian brethren, at thismoment divided from us,and to the rest of humanitywhich lacks our faith in itsclear cut authenticity and inits original beauty, the patrimonyof truth and of charity,of which the Church is theguardian and the dispenser."UNITED CHURCHURGED"We want to ask of Marya living Church, a trueChurch, a united Church, aholy Church," he said. "Wewant to pray together withyou in order that the aspirationsand efforts of the councilmay find fulfillmentwhich religious liberty is almosttotally suppressed andwhere the negation of Godis promulgated.. .""We pray for such nations— we pray forthefaithfulof these nations — thatthe intimate strength of Godmay sustain them arid thattrue civil liberty be concededto them once more," he said.Turning to his secondmajor theme — peace in theworld — Pope Paul notedthat the world today is in " aphase of great transformationdue to the enormousand marvelous progress inthe knowledge and in theconquest of the resources ofFATIMA PILGRIMS surrounded POPE PAUL VI as he arrivedlast Saturday at the Basilica of Fatima where .he called foran end to war, armaments and world hunger.Two Million GreetPontiff At Fatima(Continued from Page 1}came from all parts of theworld. One bishop, it wasreported, broughttwotons offlowers.After the Mass, near thealtar' the Pope greeted SisterLucy (Carmelite Sister MaryLucia of the ImmaculateHeart), the lone survivor ofthe three children who sawthe vision of Our Lady 50years ago. He also greetedmembers of her family, thebrothers and sisters of Jacintoand Francisco, the othertwo children who saw theapparitions, and governmentand Church officials.Later in the day, Sister Lucywas to have a private audiencewith the Pope.The Pope then went to thestatue of Our Lady of Fatimaon the same platform onwhich the Mass was offeredand placed a large rosaryat the base of the statue.Following the Mass andthe blessing of the sick, thePope went to the residenceof the director of the shrine,Msgr. Antonia Borges.Page 28At 3:30 p.m. the Pope receivedthe Portuguese presidentand Dr. Franco Nogueira,minister for foreign affairs.M ore than a hundred cardinals,archbishops andbishops were at Fatima forthe anniversary celebrations.The world's press, radioand television came in forceto cover the Pope's visit andFatima celebrations. Thegovernment information office(May 11) had issuedapproximately a thousandpress cards, not includingthe Portuguese press, whichneeded only the usual presscredentials.The Pope left Fatimaabout 5 p.m. for the airport,this time going through Batalha,wherehestoppedbriefly,then Leiria and MonteReal airport. He was at theairport only a few minuteswhen the plane left for Romeabout 6:40 p.m., followedby a second plane carryingmembers of the press not onthe papal plane. He arrivedin Rome about 9:30.the earth and of the universe."WORLD NOT HAPPYEven so, he said, "youcan easily see that the worldis not happy, is nottranquil,and that the first cause of itsuneasiness is its difficulty inentering into harmoniousrelationships, its difficulty infollowing the paths ofpeace.""Everything seems tolead the world to brotherhood,to unity, but insteadthe heart of mankind stillbursts with tremendous, continuingconflicts," he said.He singled out "two conditions"which in particularthreaten the world's peace:"It is full of tremendouslydeadly annanent, and it hasnot progressed morally asmuch as it has scientificallyand technically."* "Moreover," he added,"a great part of humanity isstill in a state of need and ofhunger, while it has beenawakened to the disturbingconsciousness of its own needand the well-being which surroundsit""Therefore we say thatthe world is in danger," PopePaul declared." For this reason we havecome to the feet of the Queenof Peace, to ask her for thegift, which only God cangive, of peace."While peace is a gift ofGod, he said, "it is not alwaysa miraculous gift, it isa gift which works its wondersin the hearts of men, agift therefore which has needof free acceptance and of freecollaboration."For this reason, he said,"our prayers. . .afterhavingbeen turned towards heaven,is turned towards the men ofthe whole world."Pope Paul urged men to"strive to be worthy of thedivine gift of peace.""Be true to yourselves,begood, wise, open to the commongood of the world," hesaid. "Be magnanimous.Try to see your dignity andyour interests not as contraryto but as conforming tothe dignity and the interestsof others."Do notcontemplateprbjectsof destruction and ofdeath, of revolution and ofsuppression, but think ratherof projects of mutualstrengthening and 'of solidcollaboration. Think of thegravity and of the grandeurof this hour, which can bedecisive for the history ofthe present and.x)f the futuregenerations, and begin toapproach each other withthoughts of building a newworld, yes, the world of truemen, a world which can neverbe without the light of Godon its horizons."SISTER LUCIA, 60-year-old Carmelite nun who is the onlysurvivor of the three children who beheld the 1917 apparitionsof the Blessed Mother in the Cova de Iria,kisses the ring of POPE PAUL VI at Fatima, during her firstpublic appearance in 20 years.SPECIAL OFFERTO VOICE READERS!RENAULTBUN®THIS 101 HOOVEfto,qadMHLBS of m&m \WITH YOURPURCHASEOFRENAULT10WITH YOURIPURCHASELIMITEDYou mustbring this adTHENATIONS'URGES?RENAULTDEALEROPEN 7 DAYSBring in your old screensto be Rewired-RepoiredReplacedQS10% OFFOUR LOW PRICESWITH THIS ADDRIVEWAY SEALER$ 1699OFFERRich black GilsoniteAsphalt for Sealing,Waterproofing, Beautifyingblacktop suifaces.OUR PRICE4Reg.5 gal. 8.95JACK MASSDO IT NOWDIAMONDS2190 S.W. 8th SI. • 373-5436 ,1340 SO. DIXIE HWY. • 235-1053 VHitPITTSBURGH (NC) —The Catholic InterracialCouncil (C1C) of Pittsburghhas denounced the nationalby-laws of the Loyal Orderof Moose (LOOM) and theFraternal Order of Eagles(FOE) for barring nonwhitesfrom membership."While we are forbiddenby the Gospel of Christ todenounce any man," a statementissued by the CICsaid,"the same Gospel of Christdemands .that we denounceany attempt to set men apartfrom one another."SO YOU'REGRADUATINGFROMHIGH SCHOOLNOW WHAT"In the next four years, anestimated 500,OOOmore computerprogrammers will beneeded, and close to 50% willmove into this highly paidnew profession without collegedegrees. With the aptitudeand desire, anyone canbegin, a rewarding career inthe field of ...mmCOMPUTERPROGRAMMINGAct Now!LEARN WHILE YOU EARN. . . need not interfere withyour present employment.COMPUTERCENTER• IBM System 360/20Computer on premises» Complete Data Processingand ElectronicsLaboratories523-3454FORT LAUDERDALETECHNICAL COLLEGEFLORIDA ELECTRONICSDATA SCHOOL203 W. Sunrise Blvd.Fort Lauderdale, Fla.» STATE APPROVED• G.I.TRAINING APPROVED• STUDENT LOANSAVAILABLEDay and Night Classes NowBeing Formed for Both Menand Women.See if you can qualify . . .MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!. . . . . . . . . . . . . .l!a.2"NCORRUGATEDFIBERGLASSPANELS26" Wide8-10-12 ft. lengthsMANY COLORSTO CHOOSE FROM21PAINT CLOSE-OUTINTERIOR - EXTERIORDuPont - O'Btian - Glidden - No WhiteSPECIAL CLOSEOUT!=>^ PAINT PAN42%f AND* ROLLER3aaK 8i•3 3 5 a k OSic o, a. " £ BS5S, a »S. .£ SOB'S H g.oannna «THE VOICE Miami, Florida May 19, 1967

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