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ATLANTA 5, GEORGIA
Parochial Aid
Opposed By
Jewish Group
NEW YORK (NC) — Oppo
sition to any form of Federal
aid to private or parochial
schools was voiced here at a
meeting of the American As
sociation for Jewish Educa
tion.
The group, a service and
coordinating agency for all
Jewish educational bureaus
and communities, expressed its
adherence to the “traditional
and long established doctrine
of separation of Church and
State, as one under which both
Chuhch and State can thrive,
and as essential to the funda
mental concept of religious
liberty.”
“W’e regard religious and
private educational systems to
be the sole responsibility of
their respective sponsors,” the
resolution said. “We therefore
support the proposals now be
ing considered by the Federal
Government to extend Federal
aid to public education and we
oppose the extension of such
aid to private or parochial
schools.”
Earlier, a dissenting view
came from William W. Brick
man, professor of education at
New York University and
chairman of the Commission
of Education of the Union of
Orthodox Jewish Congrega
tions of America. He said he
favored Federal and State aid
to parochial schools providing
it did not involve “any unjust
and unreasonable control.”
Most of the Jewish groups
belonging to the association
are on record as opposing Fed
eral aid to private or parochial
schools.
NEGRO BROTHER S MONASTERY BECOMING POPULAR SHRINE — Lima’s Monastery of Santo Domingo,
the former abode of Blessed Martin de Porres, is drawing thousands of visitors weekly with the apparent approach of the
Negro laj'biothei s canonization. Attached to the monastery is the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary, which houses the
altar of the American saints, St. Rose of Lima, Blessed Martin, and Blessed Juan Masias. At left is shown the tower of
the Church which fell during the earthquake of 1940, but was rebuilt according to earlier colonial style. The skull of
Blessed Martin lies beneath his statue deft center) in a bronze casket for veneration of the faithful. The cross which
Blessed Martin erected to commemorate his victory over the devil still stands (right center) near the stairwell where he
had furnished a private shrine. At right is the famous crucifix which embraced Blessed Martin during a period of ecs-
tacy. He was seen leviating and receiving an embrace from Christ.—(NC Photos)
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Philadelphia Auxiliary
Requiem Mass Offered
For Bishop Benjamin
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(NCWC News Service)
PHILADELPHIA — Pontif
ical Requiem Mass was offer
ed for Auxiliary Bishop Cletus
J. Benjamin of Philadelphia
in SS. Peter and Paul cathe
dral.
Archbishop John J. Krol of
Philadelphia offered the Mass
(May 19) for Bishop Benjamin,
who died less than two weeks
after his 52nd birthday.
Bishop Benjamin died of a
heart attack which he suffer
ed (May 15) in the rectory of
Incarnation of Our Lord
Church, of which he was rec
tor. Earlier the same morning
he had offered Mass and had
attended the Requiem of a
parishioner.
He had been a bishop for
less than a year. He was nam
ed Titular Bishop of Binda and
Auxiliary Bishop of Philadel
phia in August, 1960, and was
consecrated last December.
Bishop Benjamin was born
at Old Forge, Pa., in the Dio
cese of Scranton, Pa., on May
2, 1909. His parents were Evan
T. and Mary (Corcoran) Ben
jamin, both of whom are de
ceased.
He attended the elementary
school in Forest City, Pa., and
Central High School in Scran
ton. He studied for the priest
hood at St. Charles Borromeo
Seminary, Overbrook, Pa., and
the North American College
in Rome.
He received his doctorate in
sacred theology from the
Gregorian University in Rome
and was ordained a priest at
the North American College
on December 8, 1935.
Following advanced studies
in theology at the Gregorian
University, Bishop Benjamin
returned to the United States
in 1938. He then was named
secretary to Dennis Cardinal
Dougherty, Archbishop of
Philadelphia, who died in 1951.
He was secretary to the
Cardinal from October 1, 1938,
to March, 1943, when he was
named vice-chancellor of the
Philadelphia archdiocese. In
December, 1945 he became
chancellor, a post he held un
til May, 1954.
He was named rector of In
carnation Church on May 2,
1954. He was also a diocesan
consultor and pro-synodal ex
aminer in the archdiocesan
curia.
Bishop Benjamin was nam
ed Auxiliary to John Cardinal
O’Hara, C.S.C., on August 24,
1960, just four days before
Cardinal O’Hara died. He was
consecrated December 22 by
Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi,
Apostolic Delegate to the
United States.
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MIKE & STEVE SERTICH
Serrans
Expect 40
Of Hierarchy
CHICAGO (NC) — Some 40
members of the Hierarchy and
150 priests are expected to
meet with members of the lai
ty at the 19th annual Serra
International convention June
29 to July 1 at the Radisson
Hotel in Minneapolis, Minn., it
was disclosed here.
A cardinal, two archbishops
and six bishops will be among
the principal speakers at the
sessions. The organization is
composed of Catholic business
and professional men devoted
to increasing vocations to the
priesthood and religious life.
The organization’s headquar
ters here said observers from
the Sacred Congregation of
Seminaries and Universities in
Rome, as well as representa
tives from 10 foreign countries
are expected to attend the con
vention.
Speakers will include Albert
Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of
Chicago, who is episcopal ad
viser to the organization;
Archbishops William O. Brady
of St. Paul, host to the conven
tion, and William E. Cousins of
Milwaukee, and Bishops Wil
liam G. Connare of Greens-
burg, Pa., Andrew G. Grutka
of Gary, Ind., John P. Cody of
Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo.,
Loras T. Lane of Rockford, Ill.,
and Auxiliary Bishop Leonard
P. Cowley of Minneapolis.
Bishop Alonso M. Escalante,
M.M., Vicar Apostolic of Pando
and rector of the Seminario de
Misiones in Mexico City, and
Father John J. Considine,
M.M., director of the Latin
American Bureau, National
Catholic Welfare Conference,
will be the principal speakers
at sessions which will be de
voted to a consideration of the
shortage of priests in Latin
American countries.
Be Selfless In Serving
Cause Of Christ, Bishop
Urges Catholic Press
(NCWC News Service)
VANCOUVER, B. C. — A
Catholic bishop urged here
that Catholic journalists be
selfless in working to bring
Christ and His Church to the
world.
Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste
of Belleville, Ill., declared that
“like the priest who is the alter
Christus (other Christ), so the
Catholic editor is the altera
vox, the other voice, proclaim
ing and clarifying that which
is contained in the deposit of
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U. S. Catholics
Help Resettle
12,000 Refugees
By John Goetelen
(N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE)
GENEVA, Switzerland —
American Catholics, working
through their worldwide relief
organization, helped 12,122
refugees find new homes and
new homelands in 1960.
This was announced by
Catholic Relief Services-Na
tional Catholic Welfare Con
ference through its deputy di
rector for Europe, Jean J.
Chenard.
More than 1,200 “physically
and socially handicapped” ref
ugees were received in Aus
tralia, Belgium, Canada, Nor
way, Sweden and Great Brit
ain, Mr.' Chenard said. Before
the end of 1960 Denmark and
Switzerland launched projects
to resettle handicapped refu
gees, and the United States
also opened its gates to the
tubercular, the aged and the
otherwise handicapped.
The largest numbers of refu
gees were moved from Italy
(3,298) and Austria (2,603).
They were mainly Croats,
Slovenes, Hungarians and
Poles who had taken tempor
ary refuge in. Italy and Aus
tria.
Australia headed the list of
resettlement countries, as
usual. It took 4,393, more than
a third of the total number.
The United States took the
second lar fe st group of refu
gees, 3,542. Of these, 1,834 were
Dutch who were expelled
from Indonesia.
There was a decrease in the
number of stateless refugees
resettled in the U. S. because
quotas had been oversubscrib
ed and departures under
America’s new refugee law,
(P.L. 648) began only in the
last few weeks of 1960.
Mr. Chenard said many of
the resettlement and local in
tegration activities of CRS-
NCWC could not have been
carried out without the help
of the United States escapee
program, the Office of the
United Nations High Com
missioner for Refugees and the
Intergovernmental Committee
for European Migration.
“Throuh the coordinated
help of all these bodies, CRS-
NCWC can thankfully look
back on 15 years of work re
sulting in the re-establishment
of more than 300,000 stateless
refugees,” he said.
Vote Medal For
Dr. Tom Dooley
WASHINGTON — The House
of Representatives approved a
bill authorizing a special gold
medal honoring Dr. Thomas
Dooley, famed as the jungle
doctor of Loas, who died of
cancer last January. Dr. Dooley
was an alumnus of Notre
Dame and St. Louis univer
sities.
It takes at least 20 minutes
for a driver’s eyes to adapt to
darkness, but their adaption
can be shattered in a second
by sudden bright lights, the
Harvard School of Public
Health reports. Experiments
also showed that the degree of
difficulty in adjusting vision
to darkness increased with
age.
faith.”
Bishop Zuroweste also call
ed on Catholic journalists to
correct the “distorted” image
of the Church in some people’s
minds and present the Church
as it really is.
The Bishop preached (May
16) at a Mass opening the 51st
convention of the Catholic
Press Association. The Mass
was offered in Holy Rosary ca
thedral by Archbishop William
M. Duke of Vancouver.
Bishop Zuroweste, episcopal
chairman of the National
Catholic Welfare Conference
Press Department, said the mo
tive of the Catholic press
should be “to preach Christ
and His divine doctrine to all
men.”
“Now the doctrine of our
Saviour embraces all phases of
human life,” he said. “It is not
restricted to dogma but in
cludes moral principles applied
to the life of the individual
and to his duties to God and
country.”
The Bishop emphasized that
“Catholic morals concern
themselves with questions and
problems that are religious, ec
onomic, social, political and as
such come within the scope of
the Catholic editor’s writing.
“in fact, everything that
happens in the world today is
of interest to the Church and
therefore comes within the
sphere of the Catholic press,”
he said.
He deplored the fact that
many persons, including Cath
olics, have a “hazy and ob
scure” notion of the Church.
Too often, he said, the
Church is looked upon as “se
vere and unreasonable,” while
its “positive programs in all
fields” are overlooked.
“Against these erroneous no
tions the Catholic press must
raise its voice,” he said. “We
.must present the eternal truths
and expound the testimony of
Christ and His Apostles. We
must defend the Church.”
For this reason, Bishop Zu
roweste said, “it behooves us
. to forget self and to work
for the cause — and the cause
is Christ and His Church.”
It is natural, he continued,
for Catholic journalists to dif
fer in their interpretations of
news and to take opposing
sides in discussions of current
issues.
“But it is essential,” he add
ed, “that the Catholic press be
not used as an instrument of
propagating personal or pet
ideas to the detriment of the
ultimate purpose of the Catho
lic press — the diffusion of
truth.”
He told the Catholic journal
ists that their efforts should
“not be restricted to our own
people, but enlarged to em
brace those outside the fold.”
He appealed to them to use
the power of the press “with
prudence and charity so that
you might enlighten the minds
of men concerning Christ and
fulfill the divine command to
‘preach the gospel to every
creature’.”
THE BULLETIN, May 27, 1961—PAGE 3
Queen Elizabeth Visits
English Catholic School J
Next To Windsor Castle
By John A. Greaves
(NCWC News Service)
WINDSOR, England—Queen
Elizabeth dropped in on her
next door neighbor, Beaumont
College, one of England’s fore
most Catholic schools.
Her visit to the Jesuit school
came (May 15) within a fort
night of her official visit to
His Holiness Pope John XXIII
at the Vatican. It was in honor
of the school’s centenary.
A hearty cheer went up from
the 300 schoolboys when the
Queen arrived at the gates of
the college, which lies next to
the royal castle of Windsor. An
address of loyalty was read at
the gates and the Queen then
went on a two-hour tour of the
grounds, escorted by priests
and senior students.
It was the first time an Eng
lish monarch had entered the
college grounds.
Queen Victoria visited the
school three times, but each
time remained at the gates
seated in her carriage.
The first occasion was in
1882, in recognition of the loy
alty of some students at Beau
mont who leaped to save her
from an assassin’s bullet at the
local railway station. She came
again during the golden jubi
lee year of her reign in 1887
and her diamond jubilee year
in 1897.
When Father Thomas Clarke,
S.J., went to inspect the empty
house of Beaumont as a pro
spective school site in 1854 he
disguised himself as a farmer.
The Jesuits feared that any
publicity might thwart their
purchase of the property under
the walls of Windsor Castle.
When Father Clarke went to
London with a layman, Samuel
Tucker, to close the deal, he
discovered that the lawyer for
the owners was also a lawyer
for the Queen. The property
was therefore purchased under
Mr. Tucker’s name.
This care to avoid publicity
was responsible for a tart reply
from neighboring Eton College
when, in the last century,
Beaumont challenged Eton to
an athletic contest.
“What is Beaumont?” asked
the letter from Eton. Beaumont
replied in turn: “Beaumont is
what Eton was, a school for
Catholic gentlemen.” The two
schools have been friendly riv
als in athletics since.
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