Newspaper Page Text
PAGE 2—The Southern Cross, January 21, 1965
NOT CHURCWS VOICE
Liberal Thinkers
Create Doubts On
Council Meaning
4 1
<$t
BELLEVILLE, Ill. (NC) —
Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste of
Belleville criticized “liberal
thinkers” and “new age theo
logians” who he said have dis
torted the real meaning of the
Second Vatican Council.
“Let me assure you,” Bishop
Zuroweste told 800 persons at a
Confraternity of Christian Doc
trine banquet, “that these writ
ers and so-called experts, who
have confused you, are not the
official voice of the Church.”
v^They do not comprise the
teaching body of the Church
and may be questioned by any
member of the Church,” he de
clared.
He also criticized reporting a-
bout the council, saying “the
writer or speaker who does not
express an extreme opinion gets
no press coverage.’’
The bishop is a former epis
copal chairman of the National
Catholic Wei fare Conference’s
Press Department and has serv
ed as chairman of the U.S.
bishops’ press panel in Rome
and as a member of the ecu
menical council’s press commit
tee.
He charged that some editors,
“Interested only in the sensa
tional,” do not publish “sane
and serious” interpretations of
the council’s work.
“On the other hand, the writ
ing and opinions of those who
are considered the liberal think
ers, the new age theologians,
comprise the editor’s dish, and
he will dish it out in bold and
even exotic headlines and para
graphs. The result is doubt and
confusion.”
Bishop Zuroweste charged that
the source of current criticism
of the Church is “pride, a pride
born of a desire and hope that
the Church will change its di
vine doctrine.’’
But, he added, “sin will al
ways be sin and virtue will al
ways remain virtue.”
While it is too soon to make
final judgments about the coun
cil, the bishop said, “let me as
sure you that God is still in His
heaven guiding and protecting
the Church.”
“There is no need for alarm
although the present moment
may be one of confusion,” he
said. “It is confusion resulting
from those who are attempting
to usurp the teaching authority
of the Church.
“When all the decrees of the
council are promulgated and
the post-conciliar explanations
and statements issued, then we
will be in a position to judge
in proper focus Vatican Council
II.”
MEMBERS of the confirmation class at Blessed Sac
rament Church, Savannah, are pictured with Bishop
Thomas J. McDonough, Msgr. Andrew J. McDon
ald, pastor and Sister M. Finbarr, R.S.M.
(Ward Studio Photos)
LEGION OF DECENCY
CLASS A—Section I
'“Dear Brigitte—Fox
Boy Ten Feet Tall—Para.
Capture That Capsule—UA
Cheyenne Autumn—War.
Circus World—Para.
Dimka (Russ.)—Artkino
Disorderly Orderly, The—Para. * >
Duke Wore Jeans, The—Modern Sound
Pictures
Earth Dies Screaming, The—Fox
East of Sudan—Col.
Emil and the Detectives—B.V.
Fate Is the Hunter—Fox
Father Goose—Univ.
tFinest Hours, The—Col.
First Men in the Moon—Col.
Flipper’s New Adventure—MGM
Fluffy—U-I
Four Days in November—UA
Godzilla vs. The Thing—Am. Inti.
Golden Arrow, The—MGM
Guns of August—U-I
Hamlet—War.
Hard Day’s Night (Br.)—UA
CLASS A —
Aphrodite—Embassy
Atlantis, the Lost Continent—MGM
Baby, the Rain Must Fall—Col.
Back Door to Hell—Fox
Bandits of Orgosolo (Ital.)—Pathe
Blood on the Arrow—AA
Bridge to the Sun—MGM
Bullet for a Badman—U-I
Crack in the World—Para.
Devil Ship Pirates, The—Col.
Dr. Blood’s Coffin—UA
Escape by Night—A A
Evil Eye—Am. Inti.
Evil of Frankenstein—U-I
Fail Safe—Col.
Frantic (Fr.)—Times Film Corp.
Gold for the Caesars (Ital.)—MGM
Goliath and the Island of Vampires—
Am. Inti.
— Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Indian Paint—Eagle American Inti.
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Voyage to the End of the Universe—Am. Inti.
Hey There, It’s Yogi Bear—Col.
Honeymoon Machine—MGM
Invasion Quartet—MGM
Lassie's Great Adventure—Fox
Lively Set, The—U-I
McHale’s Navy—U-l
+Magic Fountain, The—Davis Film Dist.
tMary Poppins—B.V.
Master Spy (Eng.)—AA
Mediterranean Holiday—Walter Reade-Sterling
Moon-Spinners, The—B.V.
Murder Ahoy!—MGM
Murder Most Foul—MGM
tMy Fair Lady—War.
My Son, the Hero—UA
Mysterious Island—Col.
Never Put it in Writing—AA
Nikki, Wild Dog of the North—Buena Vista
Only One New York—Embassy
Patsy, The—Para.
Pied Piper of Hamelin—Prod. Unlimited
Pirates of Tortuga—Fox
Section II — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults anti Adolescents
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
None But the Brave—War.
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Good Neighbor Sam—Col.
Guns of Darkness—War.
Horror of It All, The—Fox
Last Man on Earth—Am. Inti.
Miracle Worker—UA
Moro Witch Doctor—Fox
Munity On the Bounty—MGM
Naked Edge—UA
Night Train to Paris—Fox
Night Walker, The—U-I
One Potato, Two Potato—Bowalco
Pit and the Pendulum—Am. Inti.
Ring of Treason—Para.
Robin and the Seven Hoods—War.
Roustabout—Para.
Sardonicus—Col.
Satan Bug—UA
Scream of Fear—Col.
Seance On A Wet Afternoon—Artixo Films
Section III — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults
Mara of the Wilderness—A A
Purple Hills—Fox
Queen of the Pirates—Col.
Ready for the People—War.
Rhino—MGM
Ride the Wild Surf—Col.
Robinson Crusoe on Mars—Para.
Santa Claus Conquers the Martians—Embassy
Secret of Magic island—Embassy
Sergeant Was a Lady—U-I
Snake Woman—UA
Tattooed Police Horse—B.V.
Teenage Millionaire—UA
Thief of Baghdad—MGM
Those Callaways—B.V.
Tiger Walks, A—B.V.
Truth About Spring, The—U-l
Unearthly Stranger—Am. Inti.
Valley of the Dragons—Col.
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea—Fox
When the Clock Strikes—UA
Worltl Without Sun (Fr.)—Col.
You Have to Run Fast—UA
Secret Invasion—UA
Secret of Deep Harbor—UA
Send Me No Flowers—U-l
Sing and Swing (Br.)—U-l
Stolen Hours—UA
'Suitor, The (Fr.)—Atlantic
Taxi for Tobruk (Fr.)—Sev
36 Hours—MGM
Thunder Island—Fox
Trunk, The—Col.
Twenty Plus Two—AA
Unsinkable Molly Brown—MGM
Walk A Tight Rope—Para.
War is Hell—A A
Weekend With Lulu—Col.
Witchcraft—Fox
Your Cheatin’ Heart—MGM
Young Doctors—UA
Arts
CLASS A
Ada—MGM
•Ape Woman, The (Ital.)—Embassy
Andy—Univ.
Armored Command—A A
Bay of The Angels (Fr.)—Pathe Contemporary
Bebo’s Girl (Ital.)—Walter-Reade Sterling
•tBecket—Para.
Bikini Beach—Am. Inti.
Blind Corner (Br.)—U-I
Breakfast At Tiffany’s—Para.
Buddha (Jap.)—UA
Bus Riley’s Back in Town—U-I
Cartouche (Fr.)—Embassy
Claudelle Inglish—War.
*Code 7, Victim 5—Col.
Commando—Am. Inti.
Couch, The—War.
Crooked Road—Seven Arts
Dear Heart—War.
Don’t Tempt the Devil (Fr.)—Doll & Co.
Face in the Rain—Embassy
Fargo—U-I
For Those Who Think Young—UA
Gold finger—UA
Good Bye Charlie—Fox
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
• Lipstick—Miller Inti.
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Great War, The—Lopert
Guns at Batasi—Fox
He Who Must Die (Fr.)—Lopert
Horror Castle—Zodiac Films
Hustler, The—Fox
II Bidone (Ital.)—Astor Pics.
Invitation to a Gunfighter—UA
Kisses For My President—War.
Los Tarantos (Span.)—Sigma 3 Films
Luck of Ginger Coffey, The—
Walter Reade-Sterling
Mafioso (Ital.)—Zenith Inti.
Mamie— U-l
Moneys Money, Money (Fr.)—Times Film
Corp.
Nightmare in the Sun—Zodiac Films
One Plus One—Selected Pics.
Outrage, The—MGM
Panic Button—Gorton Assoc.
Panic in Year Zero—Am. Inti.
Rage to Live. A—UA
Rio Conchos—Fox
Rocco and His Brothers (Ital.)—Astor
•Rounders, The—MGM
Season of Passion—UA
Seduced and Abandoned (Ital.)—Walter
Reade-Sterling
Signpost to Murder—MGM
Soft Skin, The .(Fr.)—Cinema V
Strange Bedfellows—Univ.
Summer and Smoke—Para.
Susan Slade—War.
Thin Red Line—AA
Third Secret, The—Fox
Three On a Spree—UA
•Three Penny Opera—Embassy
Thunder of Drums—MGM
Topkapi—U A
Torpedo Bay—Am. Inti.
Town Without Pity—UA
Two on the Guillotine—War.
Two Women (Ital.)—Embassy
West Side Story—UA
W'here Love Has Gone—Para.
Wild Affair—Seven Arts
Woman of Straw (Br.)—UA
W oman Who Wouldn't Die, The—War.
Youngblood Hawke—War.
Young Lovers, The—MGM
Zulu (Br.)—Embassy
CLASS A Section IV — Morally Unobjectionable for Adults, with Reservations
(An A-IV Classification is given to certain films, while not morally offensive in themselves, require caution and some analysis and explanation as ;
lection to the uninformed against wronc inlerpretat
•Anatomy of A Marriage (Fr.)—Janus
Anatomy of a Murder—Col.
Best Man, The—UA
Black Like Me—Walter Reade-Sterling
Cool World, The—Fred Wiseman
Devil's Wanton (Swed.)—Embassy
•Divorce, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy
Dr. Strangelove—Col.
Easy Life, The (Ital.)—Embassy
Eclipse (Ital.)—Times Films
3Mi (Ital.)—Embassy
Girl with Green Eyes (Br.)—UA
Girl Happy—MGM
and false conclusions.)
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Zorba, 'Phe Greek—Fox
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Important Man (Mexican)—Lopert
Intruder—Pat he* Am.
L- Shaped Room, 'Phe - Columbia—Davis-Royal
La Dolce Vita (Ital.)—Astor Pictures, Inc.
Lilith—Col.
Loljta—Seven Arts
Long Dav’s Journey Into Night—Embassy
•Marriage, Italian Style (Ital.)—Embassy
Martin Luther—de.Rochemont
Mondo Cane—Times Films
Night of the Iguana—MGM
Nothing But the Best (Br.)—Royal Films Inti.
Abysses, Les (Fr.)—Kanawha
Americanization of Emily, The—MGM
Black Sabbqth—Am. Inti.
•Carpetbaggers, The—Para.
Cleopatra—Fox
Comedy of Terrors—Am. Inti.
Crazy Desire (Ital.)—Embassy
Cry of Battle—AA
Curse of the Living Corpse—Iselin-Tenney
Prods.
Dementia 13—Am. Inti.
•Devil and The Ten Commandments—Union
Diary of a Bachelor—Am. Inti.
•Four For Texas—War.
•From Russia With Love—UA
Get Yourself a College Girl—MGM
He Rides Tall—U-I
Honeymoon Hotel—MGM
Horror of Party Beach—Iselin-Tenney Prods.
House Is Not a Home, A—Embassy
Irma La Douce—UA
Organizer, The (Ital.)—Walter Reade-Sterling
Pressure Point—UA
Pumpkin Eater, The—Davis-Royal
Servant, The—Landau Co.
Storm Center—Col.
Strangers in the City—Embassy
This Sporting Life (Br.)—Continental
Tom Jones (Br.)—UA
Too Young to Love—Arthur-Go Pictures, Inc.
Victim (Br.)—Pathe-America
•Visit, The—Fox
Walk On the Wild Side—Col.
Young and the Willing, The (Br.)—U-I
CLASS B — Morally Objectionable in Part for AH
REVIEWED THIS ISSUE
Pleasure Seekers, The—Fox
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
John Goldfarb, Please Come Home—Fox
•Joy House—MGM
Kissin’ Cousins—MGM
Kitten with A Whip—U-I
Long Ships, The—Col.
Looking For Love—MGM
Love on the Riviera—Ultra Films
•Love, The Italian Way (Ital.)—Trans-Lux
Man in the Middle—Fox
Masque of the Red Death—Am. Inti.
New Interns, The—Col.
Night Must Fall—MGM
No Greater Sin (was: 18 and Anxious) —
Alexander Enterprises
Nutty, Naughty Chateau, The (Fr.)—Lopert
Of Human Bondage—MGM
Pajama Party—Am. Inti.
Palm Springs Weekend—War.
Psyche 59—Col.
Affair of the Skin, An—Zenith
Balcony, The—Continental
Bell’Antonio (Ital.)—Embassy Films
Boccaccio 70 (Ital.)—Embassy
Bonne Soupe, La (Fr.)—International Classics
Breathless (Fr.)—Films Around World
Christine Keeler Affair, The (Dan.)—
JaGold Pictures, Ltd., Inc.
Cold Wind In August—ALdart
Contempt (Fr.)—Embassy
Doll, The (Swed.)—Kanawha Films 4
During One Night (Br.)—Astor
Empty Canvas—Embassy
Five Day Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl.
Girl With the Golden Eyes (Fr.)—Union Films
Green Carnation (was: Trials of Oscar Wilde)
(Br.)—Warwick Films
Green Mare (Fr.)—Zenith
I Love, You Love (Ital.)—Davis-Royal
Image of Love—Raab & Stoumen
Joan of the Angels?—Polish-Telepix
lules and Jim (Fr.)—Janus
; Me Stupid —Lopert
in the Water (Pol.)—Kanawha Films
l. ventura (Ital.) —Janus
La Notte (Night) (Ital.)—Lopert
Lady Chatterley’s Lover (Fr.)—Kingsley
Ki:
Knife i
L’Avv
Racing Fever—AA
•Seventh Dawn—UA
CLASS C — Condemned
PREVIOUSLY REVIEWED
Law, The (Fr.)—Embassy
Les Liaisons Dangereuses (Fr.)—Astor Pic
tures, Inc.
Let’s Talk About Women (Ital.)—Embassy
Love Game (Fr.)—Films Around World
Love Is My Profession (Fr.)—Kingsley-Intl.
Love on a Pillow (Fr.)—Davis-Royal
Lovers, The (Fr.)—Zenith
Magdalena (Ger.)—Buhawk
Maid in Paris (Fr.)—Bellon-Foulke
Mating Urge—Citation
Miller's Beautiful Wife (Ital.)—DCA
Mistress for the Summer, A (Fr.)—American
Film Distributors
Molesters, The—Aristocrat Films
Mom and Dad (Sideroad)—Hallmark Prod.
My Life to Live (Fr.)—Union
Never On Sunday (Greek)—Lopert
Nude Odyssey, The (Ital.)—Davis-Royal
Odd Obsession (Jap.)—Harrison
Of Wayward Love (Ital.)—Pathe
Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Four City Enterprises
Passionate Summer (Fr.-Ital)—Kingsley
Phaedra (Greek)—Lopert
Playgirl After Dark (Br.)—Topaz Films
Please, Not Now! (Fr.)—Inti. Classics
Port of Desire—Union
Quick, Before It Melts—MGM
Sex and The Single Girl—War.
Shot in the Dark, A—UA
Small World of Sammy Lee, The (Br.)— 7
Arts
Soldier in the Rain—A A
•Station Six Sahara—A A
Strangler, The—AA
•Sunday In New York—MGM
•Sylvia—Para.
Tiara Tahiti (Br.)—Zenith Inti.
Time Travelers, The—Am. Inti.
Under Age—Am. Inti.
•Vice And Virtue (Fr.)—MGM
Viva Las Vegas—MGM
•What A Way to Go— Fox
Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed—Para.
•Why Bother To Knock—Seven Arts
•Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (Ital.) —
Embassy
Pot Bouille (Lovers of Paris) (Fr.)—Con
tinental
Prime Time—Essanjay Films, Inc.
Private Property—Citation
Question of Adultery—NTA
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (Br.) —
Continental
Savage Eye—Trans-Lux-Kingsley Inti.
Seven Capital Sins (Fr.)—Embassy
Silence, The (Swed.)—Janus
Sins of Mona Kent—Astor
Slave Trade in the World Today—
Walter Reade-Sterling
Tales of Paris (Fr.)—Times Films
Temptation (Fr.-Ital.)—Shelton
Terrace, The (Span.)—Royal Films
To Love (Swed.)—Prominent Films
Too Young. Too Immoral—Rialto Int’l.
Trials of Oscar Wilde (Br.)—Warwick Films
Truth, The (La Verite) (Fr.)—Kingsley Inti.
Viridiana (Sp.)—Kingsley lntl.
War of the Buttons (Fr.)—Sami. Bronston
Wasted Lives and The Birth of Twins —
K. Gordon Murray Production
Weekend (Dan.)—Jerome Balsam Films
Woman in the Dunes (Jap.) —
Pathe Contemporary
FORMIA-GAETA
6 St. Elmo’s Fire’ Burns
Feuding Towns In Italy
FORMIA, Italy (NC) — Italy’s
reputation for feuds goes back
even farther than the fighting
Montagues and Capulets of
“Romeo and Juliet”. Here on
the country’s west coast are
two towns still arguing over
which was the safest place to
keep a saint’s body threatened
by ninth century marauders.
Formia and its neighboring
town, Gaeta, are the quarrel
ers. For 1,100 years there has
been no armistice in trade boy
cotts, and barriers between the
citizens extended even to mar
riages. Even today the success
es of one town are automatical
ly belittled by the other. Each
tries to woo the other’s indus
tries. Sports competitions end
in free-for-all fights. Each town
has accused the other of pollut
ing the water near their beach
es.
The feud rages over the re
mains of a saint of Christian
antiquity, Erasmus, the St. El
mo of popular usage. He was
the bishop of Formia, and suf
fered during the Diocletian per
secutions. Legend has him born
at Antioch in Syria, twice lib
erated by angels, and saved
from tortures in miraculous
ways. Once he was encased in
a tunic of red-hot bronze and
thrown into boiling pitch, but he
emerged uninjured.
Under the guidance of an an
gel be traveled in a small boat
to Formia where legend says
he preached the Gospel fervent
ly for nine days and then was
called by a voice from heaven,
whereupon his soul departed
visibly from his body.
The meteorological phenomen
on, in which dancing light ap
pears at the tops of trees and
masts of ships during turbulent
night weather, is named “St.
Elmo’s Fire” after him.
He was buried near the Rom
an amphitheater in Formia in
the year 303. There his body re
mained until 842, when Formia’s
Bishop Constantine ordered it
moved to Gaeta to foil Saracen
invaders. Formia was destroyed
by the Saracens. The citizens
who survived maintained that
the town would have been saved
had not St. Elmo’s body been
transferred. So began the feud
that continues to this day.
Festivities honoring the saint’s
feast on June 2 are a part of
the contemporary rivalry. An
tonio Testa, secretary of the
Formia committee for the fes
tivities, said in an interview
that “although Gaeta has the
body, Formia is always the
most successful in the celebra
tions.’’
Formia has the same emo
tional ferments of other Euro
pean places about possession of
relics. Florence has always
striven to get Dante’s body
from Ravenna; Paris was tri-
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DAY OR NIGHT
More than 500,000 parochial
school youngsters will become
members of an international
children’s mission organization,
the Holy Childhood Association,
in ceremonies across the nation
on Holy Childhood Day, Febru
ary 2.
The youngsters, most of whom
are in the first or second grades,
will join the nearly four million
present members of the Associ
ation who will rededicate them
selves to the aims and purposes
of the mission society that day.
The Holy Childhood Associa
tion is made up of children up
to 13 years old who provide
funds for the care, shelter and
education of millions of less for
tunate youngsters in mission
countries throughout the world.
Last year, Holy Childhood
members in the United States
helped more than 322,660 aban
doned or neglected children in
over 80 countries, including In
dia, South Vietnam, the Congo,
Brazil, the Philippines and Chi
na.
Holy Childhood Day was es
tablished in 1950 by His Holi
ness, Pope Pius XII, as a spe
cial day for Holy Childhood
members to dedicate themselv
es to the work of the Associa
tion. It is on this day that new
members are acepted into the
organization and old members
reaffirm their pledge to offer
prayers and sacrifices in behalf
of the missions.
A special ceremony is held to
enroll the new members into
the Association. Each new mem
ber receives a membership cer
tificate and a Holy Childhood
medal.
Ceremonies will be conducted
in most of the 142 Catholic
LIVED TO TELL—"We were
killed on the bridge of the
liver Bomokandi at midnight
of Dec. 1,” Brother Carlo
Mosca tells newsmen in
Rome, recounting his escape
from Congo rebels near Run-
ga. “I say ‘we’ were killed.”
he explained, because ”1 was
convinced it was all over for
me, too.” But. Brother Carlo
only appeared to be dead,
and when he and his three
priest- companions were
thrown into the river. Brother
Carlo managed to float with
the current until he could
hide. Wandering four days
in the bush, he was finally
found by Spanish nuns, and
eventually reached safety.
I N< ’ Phot os) *
Catholic Leaders For
Immigration Reform
umphant in getting Napoleon
back from St. Helena, and Pa-
tros, Greece, welcomed St. An
drew the Apostle back from
Rome in 1964.
“All the elements of the mat
ter are in our favor,” argued
Testa, “and very soon we may
start energetic proceedings for
the return of the saint’s body.
It was taken to Gaeta to be
safeguarded from the fury of
the Saracens, but once the dan
ger was over it should have
been returned.”
Meanwhile the vendetta goes
on, transmitted inexorably from
father to son in these two pret
ty seaside towns, so close to
gether that the outsider thinks
they are almost one—until he
hears the talk about St. Elmo.
Archdioceses and Dioceses of
the country with students from
nearly 10,000 schools participat
ing. In some areas, schools
throughout the Diocese will hold
their festivities in one city
while in other Dioceses schools
will hold individual celebrations.
mm
WASHINGTON (NC)—Two of
the nation’s chief Catholic
spokesmen in immigration af
fairs lined up behind President
Johnson’s program for sweep
ing overhaul of the country’s
immigration laws.
Bruce M. Mohler, director,
Immigration Department, Na
tional Catholic Welfare Confer
ence, said the national origins
quota system “long since has
become outdated.’’ Elimination
of the system is the heart of
the President’s program.
Bishop Edward E. Swanstrom,
executive director, Catholic Re
lief Services — NCWC, asserted:
“It is high time that Congress
approved such legislation which
is in the best Christian and A-
merican traditions.”
Reaction, generally, was fa
vorable among members of the
Senate and House after the
President’s program was sub
mitted (Jan. 13) in a special
message to Congress. It was
agreed in several quarters that
a tough legislative fight lies a-
head for some reforms propos
ed by the President.
House Speaker John W. Mc
Cormack called the program
“constructive and beneficial to
the American society” and add
ed that he was “very optimis
tic” about prospects for its ap
proval.
Sen. Philip A. Hart of Michi
gan, longtime advocate of more
liberal immigration regulations,
readied a bill embodying the
President’s recommenda t i o n s
and said he will press for early
Judiciary Committee hearings.
He declared: “The quota sys
tem should have been changed
years ago.”
Under the program the esti
mated number of immigrants
admitted annually to the U.S.
would be increased from 300,000
to 350,000.
The national origins system
allots immigration quotas on
the basis of the national origins
of the 1920 U.S. census. Critics
maintain this system gives un
duly large and often unused
quotas to • some ■ northern Euro-
Bl. Sacrament
Parents Hear
Superintendent
At its regular meeting the
Blessed Sacrament Home &'
School Assoc, voted a change in
its constitution and by-laws re
garding monthly meetings.
Monsignor A. J. McDonald,
pastor, introduced the guest
speaker, Father John Cuddy,
diocesan superintendent of
Schools, who spoke on the need
for more church affiliated
schools in the nation. “Since
children are growing up in a
difficult world there is an ever
growing need for God to be
placed in our schools.”
He said the big difference in
parochial and public schools is
that God is the center of our
educational system.
Father Cuddy also gave a par
ish-by-parish, breakdown on the
number of children in Catholic
schools in the diocese of Savan
nah.
A basketball game between
mothers and daughters will
take place early in February.
Savannahian On
Dean’s List
Terry Tatum, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Tatum, Jr. of
Savannah, and a member of
Saint James Parish, has been
recognized as an outstanding
student at Abraham Baldwin
Agricultural College, Tifton, Ga.,
and has been placed on the
Dean’s List for the fall quarter,
1964.
She was one of nineteen
young women to have attained
this honor at the college and is
majoring in Home Economics.
In Savahnah
pean countries, while discrimi
nating against people in other
parts of Europe and the world.
Other features of the progra^^
include: preferences for adml|^
sions to close relatives of U.S.
citizens or U.S. resident aliens
(parents of U.S. citizens could
obtain admission without await
ing a quota number); prefer
ence for immigrants with skills
that could fill needs in the U.S.;'
eliminate discrimination in the;
“Asia - Pacific triangle” provi
sions of existing laws, and per
mit quota numbers unused by
a country to be made available
to countries where they are
needed.
Opposition to the President’s
program was voiced by Sen.
John L. McClellan of Arkansas,
a member of the Senate immi
gration subcommittee, who said:
“I don’t think we ought to let
this country get flooded with
immigrants. We’ve got enough
of an unemployment problem as
it is.”
Sen. A. Willie Robertson of
West Virginia also lined up a-
gainst the program, saying he
opposed “a recommendation that
could increase immigration by
abandoning the national origins
quota system.” He added: “I
have opposed this in the past
and will continue to do so.”
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts predicted C
gress will pass the Presidenl^F
program. He said the national
origins quota system is based
on, “bigotry and mistrust” and
should be replaced with “a poli
cy based on equality and digni
ty for all people.”
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