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Your school can win high
honors and national recognition
in the Catholic Press by Catholic Press—newspapers,
taking part in the national magazines, pamphlets and
essay contest sponsored by books,
the Catholic Press Associa
tion. The subject is: • An Outline for sermons,
speeches and papers deliv
ered during Press Month
• A List of 35 new or re
cent books which Catholics
should read
• A Directory which gives
complete mailing addresses
of all publications . . . the
only one of its kind because
it classifies magazines by
type (juvenile, general in
terest, mission, devotional,
All you need do is assign etc.)
students in your high school
(grades 9 to 12 inclusive) • A Pamphlet which de-
to write an essay of not less scribes how to set up and
than 500 nor more than 750 operate a literature rack in
words on this subject. You your church and a blueprint
choose an official winner °f a make-it-yourself wood-
from your high school and en rac ^
forward the winning essay # A Project sheet with
to the Catholic Press Asso- j deas f or holding programs
cation for judging m the dllrin g Press Month
national contest. Well-
known Catholic editors will • And the colorful new
act as judges to pick three Press Month Poster featur-
national winners, who will i n g this year’s theme: “Get
receive: The Whole Truth . . . Read
Your Catholic Press.”
FIRST PRIZE: $200.00;
SECOND PRIZE: $100.00;
THIRD PRIZE: $50.00.
Certificates will be pre
sented to the winning schools
by the Catholic Press Asso
ciation. The contest ends
March 15.
You’ll want to get your
school’s copy of the Program
Kit quickly. Write today to
the Catholic Press Associa
tion, 6 East 39th Street, New
York 16, New York. Send
$1 to help cover printing
There is no entry fee. Each and administrative costs,
high school in the country
will be sent an official entry MEMO TO
form during January. The ORGANIZATIONS:
entry form gives all the con- You’ll want to purchase the
test rules.
Catholic Press Month Kit,
. , ., ,, too, to aid m planning Press
Also, the New Catholic , „ ’ , 1 ,
Month programs and activ
ities — and to use as valua-
Press Month Kit contains a
load of information on the
rs ,, , , . , ble reference material the
Catholic press which you , , ., ,
, •, , , , . whole year through. You
can use to guide students m . , ,
_r, • x, may also want to encourage
preparing Their essays. For ... ■* . . . ... .
instance • ’ the essay contest by offering
your own local prizes or
• A Pamphlet which de- arranging for local winners
scribes the purposes of each to speak at your Press
of the four elements of the Month programs.
THE CATHOLIC PRESS ASSOCIATION
6 East 39th Street, New York 16, N. Y.
MARRIAGES
O-
GUILTY LUCCHESE
-O
Q-
-O
ATLANTA, Ga. — Miss Jose
phine Lucche.se, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Francis Luc-
chese, and Edward Patrick Quilty
III, son of Mrs. Ann Quilty and
the late Edward Patrick Quilty
Jr. of Cleveland, Ohio were mar
ried January 18th at the Cathe
dral of Christ the King, Very
Rev. Msgr. Joseph G. Cassidy
officiating.
O
O-
o
DUNIGAN — JONES
-O
COLUMBUS, Ga. — Miss
Martha Kay Jones, daughter of
Mrs. Joseph Nocera and Lorean
Dunigan o f Columbus and
Chicago, 111., son of Fred Dunigan
of Hollywood, Calif., were mar
ried January 10th at the Church
of the Holy Family.
O-
-O
i MIDDLETON — PINCKNEY |
O-—— — O
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Miss Jane
Genevieve Pinckney, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Eustace Bellinger
Pinckney Jr., and Harry James
Middleton Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry James Middleton were
married January 25th with a
nuptial Mass at the Cathedral of
St. John the Baptist, Rev. Joseph
F. Ware officiating.
O O
MEREDITH — BURKE
O-
-O
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Miss Jean-
nine Marie Burke, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Burke and
Charles Cooper Meredith, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cooper
Meredith were married January
18th at the Blessed Sacrament
Church, Rev. Alcuin Baudermann,
O. S. B. of Sacred Heart Church
officiating.
“Sputnik 55 Has Quieted Dries
Of Church, State Separation
In Education, Cardinal Says
Stubborn Stand Of Chinese
Catholics Against Anti-Church
Drive Seen Proved In Red Press
(N.C.W.C. News Service)
LOS ANGELES,—Since “sput
nik” there has been a noticeable
change and. reaction against “pro
gressive education” and its “ab
use” of American principles, His
Eminence James Francis Cardinal
McIntyre told the Holy Name
Union here.
The philosophy of progressive
education is being rejected, the
Archbishop of Los Angeles said,
and with it its errors of hostility
to religion and to private edu
cation.
“If this noticeable change be
the result of the exploration into
outer space, it will be an offset
ting compensation for the mili
tary apprehensions engendered,”
the prelate declared.
“We hope progressive educa
tion and its abuse of academic
freedom and of the principles of
separation of church and state
have met their Waterloo.”
The Cardinal spoke to 1,500
men at the Holy Name Union
Communion breakfast.
“Reports of recent conventions
indicate that college executives
are now lamenting the withdraw
l
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By Father Morgan J. Viitengl,
M.M.
(Radio, N.C.W.C. News Service)
HONG KONG, — The stubborn
and heroic opposition by Catho
lics to Red China’s current cam
paign, against the Church is com
ing into better focus here, thanks
to the Chinese communist press.
Communist news sources admit
that priests -— including vicars
general in charge of dioceses, Re
ligious and laymen have openly
defied the government’s plan to
establish the schismatic Patriotic
Association of Chinese Catholics.
: Most: xjf j^'tltisA’Olsiiosttii^n ■' has -
taken place at the very “indoctri
nation meetings” the Reds are
now holding throughout China.
The communists have been forc
ing priests and Sisters to attend
these conferences for “diehards
who oppose their policy toward
religion.
The Reds’ official New China
News Agency reports that at the
meeting for Catholics in Szech
wan province, Father.Liu Chien,
Vicar General and administrator
of the Diocese of Sichang (Ning-
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yuan), and several of his priests
“did their utmost to slander the
party’s various major, policy
measures.”
According to this communist
report, when the “absolute ma-
should love counter-revolution
aries, special agents and spies.”
Reporting a similar meeting in
Foochow for Catholics in Fukien
province, Jen Min Jih Pao, the
Peking people’s daily, stated that
three priests “publicly defended
THE BULLETIN, February 8. 1958—PAGE THREE
jority” of the delegates present the Vatican during the meet-
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proposed that relations with the
Vatican be severed, Father Liu
warned members of the clergy
present, saying:
“When you leave the Vatican
you will be excommunicated.”
Father Liu then denounced the
Patriotic Association of Chinese
Catholics as not being a “legiti
mate” organization, - the report
continued. It was also reported
that among the 149 Catholic dele
gates were those “who frantical
ly opposed the leadership of the
Communist party and the socialist
system as well as harbored hos
tility to the new society.”
The communist news agency
said that one rightist, Father Yeh
Ting-cheng, shouted at the meet
ing: “China will not perish with
out the Communist party.”
In another instance, the com
munist daily newspaper in Har
bin reports that at one “confer
ence” held , in .Mukden for Man
churian Catholics, a “number of
people held different views” from
those of the government Bureau
of Religious Affairs. The paper
reports that a Father Liu Wan-po
spoke out in defense of Bishop
Ignatius Kung of Shanghai, who
was jailed by the communists in
1955.
Father Liu is quoted as having
challenged the “election” of Fa
ther Francis Xavier Chang to re
place the Bishop, and then ad
ding:
“Although Bishop Kung was
arrested and put in jail, he is
still the Bishop.”
The Harbin paper also de
nounced a Father Chin Piu-Chien
for the “theory of loving our en
emies, advocating that Catholics
mgs.” According to the Peking
Red paper, Fathers Li Kuang-fei,
Huang Hsi-ming and Yeh Yu-
shih “openly opposed the anti-
imperialist and patriotic move
ment of the Patriotic Association
of Chinese Catholics, saying that
the Catholic Church must be led
by the Vatican and maintain the
principles of unity, holiness and
catholicity, otherwise it will be a
schismatic church.”
The news account further stat
ed that Father Li Kuang-fei de
fended the validity of the Holy
See’s excommunications of Father
Li Wei-Kuang, former Vicar Gen
eral of the Nanking archdiocese,
and a Father Li Yin-tao.
In its dispatch on the Foochow
meeting, the Peking people’s
daily gave prominent billing to
two priests as vicars general and
administrators of dioceses. In
formed sources here, however,
report that both priests, Father
Lin Chu-an of Foochow and Fa
ther Lin Tze-ting of Fuan, were
either invalidly “elected” or were
appointed outright by the com
munists.
According to the Red news
sources, all of the meetings passed
resolutions condemning the anti
communist views of “rightist”
Catholics and voted by an “ab
solute majority” to sever rela
tions with the Vatican.
Observers here believe it sig
nificant that no mention is made
of Archbishop Ignatius P’i Shu-
shih of Mukden as having taken
part in the meeting held in his
See city. The official Vatican
yearbook has listed Archbishop
P’i as being “in jail for the Faith.”
But the communist press reported
last year he had been elected head
of the “Patriotic Association,”
which was organized in Peking
last summer.
There is also a tendency among
observers here to discount re
port in the communist press of
statements made at these meet
ings by bishops and priests, al
legedly denouncing the Vetican
and praising the communist re
gime. The credibility of similar
reports during the Peking meet
ing last year was assailed when
-he bishops and priests in ques
tion sent personal messages here
stating that they had been coerc
ed into making such denuncia
tions against their will and con
science.
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ATLANTA SERVICES
FOR MRS. BARRETT
ATLANTA, Ga. — Funeral
services for Mrs. Ellis Barrett, Jr.,
were held January 15th at the
Cathedral of Christ the King, Rev.
Dale Freeman officiating.
Survivors are her husband, Lt.
Ellis Barrett, Jr.; brothers, Mr.
Harold Willis, Tampa, Fla. Mr.
I. N. Willis, Mr. J. N. Willis, both
of New York; aunt, Mrs. James
I. Woolsey, Ormand Beach, Fla.,
and several nieces.
al of the influence of religion
from the content of the subject
matter of education,” the Cardi
nal said.
“Thus we find those who re
cently ignored, if not condemned,
the historical place of religion in
education are now urging its re-
storal. They no longer claim that
the mention of God in education
is union of church and state.”
Cardinal McIntyre commented
that “even in that armored cita
del of progressive education in
Columbia University,” a top com
mittee of trustees had noted
abuses of academic freedom.
The Cardinal said the errors
of progressive education had
come full circle. He traced the
rise and fall of this system which
he said was based on philosophy
of “behaviorism” which advocat
ed catering to the will and the
likes of the child and relegated
to disuse the tradition of disci
pline.
Cardinal McIntyre said “pro
gressive education gradually and
persistently eliminated acknow
ledgement of religion as a neces
sary factor in, general education.”
“As progressive education de
veloped,” the Cardinal continu
ed, “it cultivated the denial of
the existence of God. History,
languages, mathematics were re
placed by the fads and fancies of
the frivolous, presented with dig
nified titles. The subject matter
in many instances was What, in
other days, we learned at home
and in the hours outside of the
time alloted for classroom teach
ing.”
Elimination of religion in edu
cation, the Cardinal declared, re
ceived impetus with general ac
ceptance of the slogan “sepa
ration of church and state.” This
phrase he described as a shib
boleth — a pet phrase of doubt
ful meaning.
Application of this phrase was
made to circumstances that had
no bearing upon the relations of
church and state, he said.
Cardinal McIntyre explained
how the phrase occurred as a
figure of speech in a letter by
Thomas Jefferson. Yet it be
came necessary for a Supreme
Court Justice recently to deplore
giving this figure of speech the
force of law.
Jefferson, said the Cardinal,
was referring to a compulsory
state religion when he used that
figure of speech. He did not mean
the elimination of God from gov
ernment.
“It is almost unbelievable, 1
said the Cardinal, “that such a
complete distortion should find
such almost universal application
in a day of supposedly keen dis
cernment.”
This distortion reached its log
ical conclusion when the daily
school curriculum forbade any
reference to the existence of God
as our Creator, to the sanction of
God as the Lawmaker.
“It is interesting,” continued
the Cardinal, “that those who
are most vocal in demanding so-
called separation of church and
state are the same persons who
resent the place of private edu
cation in our economy and assert
that it makes for ‘divisiveness.’
“They seek a complete disso
lution of private education: name
ly, they oppose the acknowledg
ment of God because they allege
it would promote union of church
and state, and they object to
private education because it pro
motes divisiveness.
“They eliminate entirely the
cooperation of church and state,”
the Cardinal stated.
“The reasoning they advance
that religion promotes divisive
ness could be equally applied to
national differences, but it is
not.
“The genius of our country
has been the tolerance of these
nationality and religious differ
ences. Surely they are more tol
erable in education than in civic
relations.”
Mrs. Nora Powell
Services In Atlanta
ATLANTA, Ga. — Funeral
services for Mrs. Nora Daly
Powell were held January 17th at
the Sacred Heart Church, Rev.
John Emmerth officiating.
Survivors are her sister, Mrs.
Howard Bosworth, Silver Springs,
Md., several nieces and nephews.
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