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PAGE 6—The Southern Cross, December 19, 1963
Memorial
For President
John Kennedy
Fredericton, N. B.—A per
manent memorial to the late
President John F. Kennedy will
stand in the city where he re
ceived his first and only honor
ary degree from a Canadian
university.
PROPOSED MEMORIAL to late President John Kennedy.
Entering Wrong
Door Pays
Dividends
UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS,
Ohio (NC)—John Kovach of the
John Carroll University football
team has been presented a con
tract with the New York Foot
ball Giants—all because four
.years ago he walked in the
wrong door at Carroll.
Kovach, now a senior, visit
ed Carroll the summer before
his freshman year, trying to
line up a job through the un
iversity’s placement bureau.
But he ' walked through the
wrong door and entered the
athletic office and found John
Ray, Carroll football coach.
Ray asked the 5-11, 210-
pound Kovach if he played foot
ball.
Kovach replied that his high
school coach did not recommend
him for college football be
cause he didn’t think he was good
enough. Therefore, said Kovach
he didn’t intend to go out for
the team.
Try it anyway, said Coach
Ray jokingly. Picking up the
bait, Kovach said, "I guess I
will.”
He played with an undefeated
> freshman team, then starred as
defensive end for three years
on the Carroll team which has
become known in the Ohio-
Pennsylvania-Michigan area as
the “Wolfpack.”
He has been presented with
Carroll’s first Loyalty Award
as the senior who has “con
tributed most to the team in
his four years as a John Car-
roll football player.” The cit
ation came from Coach Ray.
There is only one thing sep
arating Kovach from a career
with the Giants. He faces mil
itary service which he hopes
to meet in six-month sessions.
Jottings
(Continued from Page 4)
and peace and joy. It is not so
much a time for spoken words
or noise but silence and thought.
I will never write the stars
out of the sky at Christmas or
any other time. It matters lit
tle. For everyone holds his own
communion with Christmas.
This year, there is much to
meditate upon.
One does not have to be a
mother, a nun, a little girl or,
alas, even a writer to know the
wonder of Christmas and to hold
it close, even amid darkness
and sadness. All we must do is
contemplate again the birth of a
Baby who brought victory over
darkness many years ago when
people were sad and lonely. His
first cries brought the leaping
of joy to the heart. This same
gift could be ours this year as
chastened and needy we ap
proach His crib.
$est Wishes
Lunsford-Wilson
Co.
714 Stewart Ave. S.W.
Atlanta, Ga.
Hon. Louis J. Robichaud,
Premier of New Brunswick,
has announced a memorial (mo
delled here) which will take
the form of a triangular shelter
in Officers Square on Queen
Street in Fredericton. The roof
and supporting uprights will be
of reinforced concrete. It will
measure 21 feet in length across
the front, while each of the two
sides will be 18 1/2 feet in
length. The roof will be 12
feet high at the front and will
slope back to a rearward col
umn measuring seven feet. The
railing will be of iron grill-
work with benches running along
the two sides.
The rear column will bear a
commemorative plaque. A vent
in the roof, with southward
exposure, will ensure direct
illumination by the sunlight for
a maximum period each day.
On cloudy days and in the even
ings the plaque will have arti
ficial lighting.
It is uniquely fitting that the
Kennedy memorial in Frederic
ton will be near the monument
to Lord Beaverbrook in Officers
Square. His Lordship has been
a longtime friend of the Kennedy
family and it was he, as Chan
cellor, who gowned (then) Sena
tor John F. Kennedy at the au
tumn convocation of the Uni
versity of New Brunswick here
on October 8, 1957.
Unveiling of the Kennedy me
morial is planned for the spring
of 1964, Hon. Mr. Robichaud
said.
Hail College Bill
NEW YORK (NC)—Two top
officials of Citizens for Educa
tional Freedom said here they
are encouraged by passage of
the Federal college aid bill to
press for similar equal treat
ment of all pre-college level
students.
In a joint statement issued
here, Mark Murphy of Flushing,
N. Y., CEF president, and David
La Driere of St. Louis, the or
ganization’s executive director,
said:
“Congressional approval of
the college and bill rejects the
Church-State extremists’ slo
gan, ‘public funds for public
schools’ in favor of the tradi
tional American position, ‘pub
lic funds for public purposes.’ ”
(jj Kristuias Jot)
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ALBANY, GEORGIA
FOR LIBRARY FUND—On behalf of the Little Apostles Club, Our Lady of Lourdes
School, Columbus, Dorothy Gott presents a check to Mother M. Paul (Principal) in the
amount of $290.00. The money obtained by the sale of Religious Christmas Cards will be
put in the school library fund. Also in the picture are Benedict Swiderek, Rosa Lewis,
Debbie Wourms, Susan Oswald, Maureen Martin, Susan Reardon, Leonard Eichkoft, Mike
Regnier.
Protestant Observer
On Council Future
(The following article gives
an evaluation of the second ses
sion of Vatican II as seen by a
noted Protestant ecumenical
leader. He attended the session
as an observer for the World
Alliance of Reformed and Pres
byterian Churches. He is pro
fessor of religion at Stanford
University, Stanford, Calif.)
By Dr. Robert McAfee Brown
(N.C.W.C . News Service)
ROME—A thorough evalua
tion of the ecumenical implica
tions of the second session of
the Second Vatican Council re
quires a perspective that is dif
ficult to achieve when it has just
ended and all connected with it
have battle fatigue.
But short-range appraisals
can sometimes give the “feel”
of an event better than more
considered, later judgments.
I came to Rome in September
as a Protestant observer with
buoyant optimism. I leave—
still a Protestant observer—
with chastened optimism, but
optimism nonetheless.
I now have a more realistic
picture of how the Catholic
Church functions. I have dis
covered that there can be epis
copal obstructionists just as
much as presbyterian obstruc
tionists.
I realize that things take more
time than I want them to take,
even when it seems perfectly
clear to me what the Holy Spirit
and I want. So the buoyant opti
mism is tempered by reality,
which is probably a good thing.
Why does the optimism re
main? There are many reasons,
but a handful must suffice to
indicate why the Second Vatican
Council remains very impor
tant to the ecumenical dialogue
with the non-Roman Catholic.
1. This council has made it
absolutely clear that ecumani-
sm is in the Catholic Church to
stay. It may take a while for
some bishops to discover what
it means, and there may be
some pockets of resistance, but
there is no doubt whatsoever
that the vast majority of the
Fathers want to foster ecumeni
cal dialogue and exchange on all
levels. Christendom will never
be quite the same again as a
result of the overwhelming ac
ceptance of Chapters I to III
of the schema on ecumenism
as a basis for discussion. A
new era in Christian history
was inaugurated by that vote.
2. The council has made it
clear that one of the tasks in
ecumenical encounter is inner
renewal. It is encouraging to
discover that "reform” is no
longer a dirty word. Indeed,
many of the council Fathers
are prepared to go far beyond
the relatively cautious schema
on ecumenism. Taking their
lead from Pope Paul’s opening
allocution, they press for open
acknowledgment by Catholics of
their share of guilt in the events
that have lead to disunity. Rea
lizing that we must know one
another better, they press for
greater opportunities of com
mon worship together than are
now possible.
Realizing that religion must
bind a family rather than tear
it apart, they are asking for
revision of the laws concerning
mixed marriages. Recognizing
that there is genuine ecclesial
reality in Protestant corporate
life, a number of them ask that
we be acknowledged as
“churches,” however defective
our churchmanship may be,'
rather than be described socio
logically as mere “communi
ties.”
3. The council has promulgat
ed a constitution on reform of
the liturgy that will open new
doors in the corporate life of
Roman Catholics beyond any
thing that can yet be imagined.
Provision for the vernacular,
greater participation by the lai
ty, certain occasions for Com
munion in both species, greater
stress on Scripture and ser
mon—these and many other re
coveries of ancient usage will
transform the Mass from being
a spectacle the faithful watch
to an experience in which they
share. And when the Church is
right in its prayer life, it will
become more and more right
elsewhere. Any renewal in inner
vitality and integrity is ecu
menically important.
4. The council demonstrated
that it wants to keep its un
derstanding of the Christian
Gospel properly focused. This
is how I interpret the vote to
include a treatment of Mary
within the schema on the
Church, rather than as a
separate schema.
This vote was most encour
aging to non-Catholics. Had the
vote gone the other way, it
would have suggested to us that
Mariological dogma was to con
tinue to develop in a fashion
independent of the rest of Catho
lic Faith. But now the under
standing of Mary is to be seen
within the context of an under
standing of the Church, rather
than the other around.
And if, as is proposed, the
new chapter has a basically Bi
blical orientation, then on these
terms Protestants must be will
ing to look with fresh eyes at
the Biblical material con
cerning Mary. Such treatment
of Mary might thereby draw us
closer together rather than
shoving us further apart.
5. The council demonstrated
that it wished to move beyond
A NEW HOME FOR CHRIST
MAS—Because some American
Catholic families cared enough
to open their hearts and homes,
these four Asian waifs will have
a new home for this Christmas.
The four, shepherded on the
10,000 mile jet flight from Hong
Kong to New York by airline
stewardess Madeline Ho, were
brought to this country by the
Catholic Committee for Refu-
gees-NCWC, New York City.
—(NC Photos)
the one-sided view of authority
that has haunted the Church
since the First Vatican Coun
cil decree on papal infallibility.
Nothing has raised more ecu
menical roadblocks than the
First Vatican Council. And
while Vatican II does not re
move all of them, it puts them
in a new focus.
This is how I interpret the
famous “five questions” vote of
Oct. 30. The principle of col-
legiality, so heavily supported
by the council Fathers on that
date, does not, of course, deny
anything promulgated in 1870.
But if it does not repudiate the
definition, it amplifies it, en
larges it, gives it a more
significant context. Pope and
bishops have rule in the Church.
The ecumenical value of this
decision is incalculable. For it
lays to rest many of the gro
tesque stereotypes of “one-man
rule” and unilateral papal
monarchialism, that have been
attributed by most Protestants,
and not a few Catholics, to the
teaching office of the Church.
Many problems remain, but
they are new problems, or at
least the old problems focused
in a very new way. Had this
vote gone the other way, it
would have meant the end, I
think, of really serious ecumen
ical conversation between us.
For it would have seemed to
interpose the pope between God
and man as a new mediator of
proportions beyond our com
prehension.
6. The council showed us the
manifest concern of the bishops
for the state of the world. This
was not contained in anything
the bishops completed—and the
actual “results” thus far are
meager—but in the spirit and
content of many of the interven
tions made on the council floor.
Again and again there was an
exciting and prophetic quality in
these utterances.
No observer will forget Paul
Cardinal Leger of Montreal
warning against “immobilism”
in Catholic doctrine; Joseph
Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis
asking for forthright acknow
ledgment of sin in the Church;
Valerian Cardinal Gracias of
Bombay pleading again and
again that the Church concern
herself more directly with the
poor, the Illiterate, the hungry;
Auxiliary Bishop Mark McGrath
of Panama City reminding the
Fathers that if the Church is
not concerned about the physical
(Continued On Page 7)
Red Violence
(Continued From Page 1)
progress toward democracy are
of paramount importance to
them. Should Red violence come
close to precipitating chaos and
the intervention of the army—
which is what communism wants
—COPEI probably will stay in
the coalition.
But much of their impetus is
slowed down when the religious
issue is injected into politics,
mostly because the old conser
vative or liberal parties try to
use the issue for their own ad
vantage. To avoid this the ma
gazine Sic has urged a cam
paign of profound civic and po
litical education.
In a recent article it wrote:
“The Church has a doctrine
based on moral and social
grounds, but not a platform,
which is the characteristic of
politicians. Some platforms
may favor the doctrine of the
Church, some may oppose it.
Catholics, as citizens, must
study each platform and form
their own opinions.
“It is amusing to see some
candidates and public figures
—including a number who not
long ago said they were athe
ists, anti-religious or Marx
ists—now taking great pains to
say that they ‘highly respect
the Church.’ But to be a Chris
tian means more than that; it
means a whole concept of life.”
Whatever the political ba
lance of the government or the
impact of the Red offensive,
C atholics have been reminded in
recent times by the nation’s
Bishops that they have a duty
to contribute actively to the
common welfare of the coun
try. The record of Venezuelan
progress is impressive.
This country is diversifying
production — more industries,
more food crops and exports-
to avoid over-dependance on oil
and its world price fluctuations.
Thanks to a determined pro
gram of land reform and farm
improvement—one of the min
istries held by COPEI is agri
culture—crops are up 14% over
last year. Schools are now twice
as numerous as in 1958 and 1
million adults have learned
read. More jobs are being pro
vided by new farms, industries
and mineral exploitation in the
more heavily populated regions.
Housing programs are pro
viding over 38,000 homes by the
end of this year.
Therefore the communists
cannot claim popular discon
tent. What truly worries them
came out, perhaps unwittingly,
in one of their publications,
Critica, which lamented the
forced retreat of Marxism
education. The magazine be
moaned the fact that Catholics
have one-third of elementary
Schools and 53% of secondary
schools, and that Catholic in
fluence is growing stronger in
state universities in Carabobo,
Zulia and San Cristobal. Fur
thermore, Christian Democrats
have captured more and more
leaders among the university
student organizations there and
in Caracas.
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