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CONVENTION EXHIBITS—This is one of the exhibits prepared for the
convention by each of the Diocesan committees.—(Morgan Fitz Photo).
ARCHBISHOP TELLS NEWMAN MEETING:
Teachers Must See Students
As Victims Of Depersonalization
DETROIT, (N.C.) - Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan, D.D., told
Newman Foundation teachers here that the students they face
today are victims of depersonalization, many raised in homes
which are no more than big telephone booths.
Archbishop Hallinan said that ‘'uprootedness is a phenomenon
of the big apartment building, the stylized suburbs, the face
less factories and the mechanized office buildings.
‘ These are the places from
which students are coming; they
e 3p f e the places where they will
eventually work.”
The prelate spoke (April 25)
to the National Newman Club
Chaplain’s Association meeting
here at the 59th annual con
vention of the National Catholic
Educational Association. The
Archbishop is a former New
man Club Chaplain.
He called upon the chaplains
in their educational programs
on non-Catholic campuses to
show students a higher ground
than the valley of conformity
and complacency.
"Far too many homes,” he
told a dinner meeting, “have
become large telephone booths
where we make arrangements to
go out; too many jobs are only
occupations devoid of craft,
pride and principles.
“The student who lives in
such a home, looks ahead to
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SECTION I
Big Red
The Big Wave
Road to Hong Kong
Zotz
Runaway
CLASS A
SECTION II
The Manster
The Miracle Worker
Lisa
CLASS A - SECTION III
The Pigeon That Took Rome
CLASS B
Wild Harvest
Confessions of an Opium Eater
CLASS C
Jules and Jim
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such a job, is hardly a suitable
recipient for truth. Where the
treasure is, not only the heart,
but the mind is--and the treas
ure today is in earth-bound se
curity, self-centered advance
ment and man-made de
cisions.”
Newman teachers, he said,
must expose for collegians “the
possibilities of the Mystical
Body of Our Lord as a plan
of life. ”
The teachers must "lead
them to read the gospels, not
as an arsenal of texts, but as
a close personal experience
with Christ and His Church.”
U.S. Catholics
Total Nearly
43 Million
NEW YORK (NC) — U. S.
Catholics now total nearly 43
million, according to the Of
ficial Catholic Directory for
1962 published here by P. J.
Kenedy & Sons.
The exact total given by
the directory is 42,876,665 and
includes Catholics in the 50
states, all families of the de
fense forces at home and
abroad, and the diplomatic
and other services abroad.
The new total is an in
crease of 771,765 over last
year’s figure of 42,104,900,
and a 10-year increase of
12,451,650 or (40.9 per cent)
over 1952’s figure of 30,425,
015.
With the elevation of At
lanta, Ga., to the status of
archdiocese, there are now
27 archdioceses in the United
States, with a Catholic pop
ulation of 18,518,165. The
establishment of the new
D’oceses of Baton Rouge, La.,
San Angelo, Calif., Oakland,
Calif., Stockton, Calif., and
Sarta Rosa, Calif., brings the
number of dioceses to 120 (in
cluding the vicariate of Alas
ka), with a Catholic popula
tion of 24,358,500. (This figure
includes two million Catho
lics reported by the Military
Ordinariate, the diocese for
Catholics in the armed forc
es).
Ctuontcut
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WONDERFUL MEALS IN MINUTES. 1
New Bishops
Appointed
TAIPEI, Formosa, (Radio,
NC) — An American missioner,
Father William F. Fupper,
M.M., has been named Bishop
of the new Formosa diocese
of Taichung.
The announcement of the
creation of the new diocese,
along with another at Chiayi,
puts into sharp relief the pic
ture of Catholic growth on this
island. In 1949 all of Formosa
was administered from one
apostolic prefecture. Today it
has an archdiocese, five dio
ceses and a prefecture.
Brooklyn-born Father Kup-
per, 53, had been perfect of the
Taichung apostolic prefecture
since its establishment in 1951.
The Maryknoll missioner came
to China the year he was ordain
ed, 1933. In 1948 he was named
superior of the Maryknoll com
munity in Hong Kong.
When the three civil districts
comprising the Taichung mis
sion territory were turned over
to the Maryknollers in 1951
there were only 3,000 Catho
lics in five parishes. Today
there are more than 30,000.
Catholics in 35 churches with
resident priests. The new Tai
chung diocese has 102 priests,
including 59 Maryknollers, and
96 Sisters.
An Apostolic Administrator
has been named for the new
Chiayi diocese. He is exiled
Bishop Thomas Niu of.Yangku
on the communist-ruled main
land.
Books For Africa
PITTSBURGH, Pa., (NC) —
Six thousand books weighing a
total of 8,800 pounds have been
shipped to four African cen
ters by the Pittsburgh Dio
cesan Council of Catholic
Women.
Only 120
Priests In
Red Cuba
MIAMI, Fla., — There are
only about 120 priests in Red-
ruled Cuba to minister to
some six million people, ac
cording to a priest who ar
rived here recently from Ha
vana.
The priest, who asked that
his name be withheld, said
the clergy shortage is so criti
cal in Cuba that the remain
ing priests have received per
mission from the Holy See tc
offer four Masses on Sunday
and two or three Masses on
weekdays. He stated that up
until a year ago, when Pre
mier Fidel Castro ordered the
expulsion of foreign-born
priests, there were some 700
priests stationed in Cuba.
The exiled priest gave this
further account of religious
conditions in Cuba:
Seven priests are still im
prisoned by the Castro re
gime, but the faithful are free
to worship without harass
ment. Three priests who
served as chaplains during
the April, 1961, invasion of
Cuba are at El Principe Pris
on in Havana. They are: Fa
ther Tomas Macho, S.J.; Fa
ther Ismael Lugo, O.F.M.
Cap.; and Father Segundo de
las Heras, S.P.
Four are imprisoned on the
Isle of Pines: Father Fran
cisco Lopez; Father Jose Ra
mon Fidalgo, O.P.; Father
Luis Rojo Seiias, all Spanish-
born; and Father Reinerio
Lebroc Martinez, a native
Cuban.
Father Lebroc is in isola
tion and is forced to sleep on
the floor of a small cell.- He
is not permitted to receive
visitors.
Forty priests are in Ha
vana. But in the Province of
Camaguey, where the largest
number of Catholic churches
is located, there are only sev
en to serve a million people.
Altar breads for all of the
churches are made by two
Sisters of the Most Precious
Blood at a Havana convent.
Other communities of nuns
on the island include the Sis
ters of Charity of St. Vincent
de Paul, the Little Sisters of
the Poor, the Servants of
Mary, and Dominican and
Carmelite Sisters. They are
all native Cubans.
The priests who arrived
here said that the Cuban re
gime has stopped persecuting
the Church and clergy pub
licly because it wishes to cre
ate a more favorable atti
tude in other countries tow
ard the island’s communist-
controlled government.
THE BULLETIN, May 12, 1962—PAGE 3
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THOSE ATTEDING Augusta Deanery Council meeting pose in front of Sacred Heart Church, Waynes
boro, following Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament.
WAYNESBORO HOSTS AUGUSTA DEANERY
WAYNESBORO- The Spring
meeting of the Augusta Dean
ery Council of Catholic Wo
men was held here April 14
with 90 members attending.
The meeting opened with
Bendiction of the Most Blessed
Sacrament in Sacred Heart
Church. Rt. Rev. Msgr. John
D Toomey, Diocesan Spiritual
Moderator, as celebrant.
Mrs. Pauline Peuffier pre
sided at the business session
held at the Waynesboro Motor
Court. Officers installed for
the coming year were:
Miss Peuffier, president;
Mrs. E. A Markwalter, secre
tary; and Mrs. A. T. Cole,
treasurer.
In attendance at the meeting
was Mrs. J. Edwin Mulligan of
Savannah, Diocesan President.
Following the business sess
ion, a tea was served with the
Waynesboro Catholic women as
hostesses. Mrs. Robert Mobley
is local president.
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