Newspaper Page Text
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MAGI. 2 GEORGIA BULLETIN, JANUARY 11, 1963
ON PRIMITIVE ISLE
Mission Catechist Unlocks
Indian Child’s Darkness
TAGLILI. ISLAND, Peru,
(NO)—A tv, o-ycar-oid Indian
girl will sec again thanks to
the effort s of a catechist trained
by L. S. missioners.
Gregoria, a Quechua Indian,
lives with her family on this
remote primitive island in the
Qtfontna
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4011 P’tree Rd. CE. 7-1288
middle of Lake Titicaca, al
most 13,000 feet above sea
level.
ONE AFTERNOON, Juan
Quispe, a 25-year-old cate
chist—one of 2,000 Indian
volunteers trained bytheMary-
knoll Fathers in Puno to help
serve this priestless mountain
region—visited Taguile Island.
Right away he noticed that there
was something wrong with
Gregoria’s eyesight. She did not
step out confidently as other
children. He watched as she
probed the ground with her feet
before taking a step. Also, a
bluish film covering her dark
brown eyes told Quispe that
all was not normal.
He completed his catechetical
work on the island and returned
Hapeville Gold
Bond Project
The Ladies’ Guild of St.
John’s Catholic Church, Hape
ville, has been saving Gold Bond
Stamps and validated covers to
get playground equipment for
St. John’s School. So far, the
school ha s received two (2)
footballs, four (4) basketballs,
four (4) playground balls and a
Junglegym. Another Junglegym
was ordered December 1.
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The school needs more equip
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children. Extra stamps, or
stamp book covers validated for
St. John's Ladies Guild, should
be sent to St. John’s School,
Hapeville, Georgia.
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to the mainland. There he dis
cussed Gregoria's plight with
Father Robert F. Kearns, M.M.,
of New York, pastor of San
Juan’s parish in Puno. Father
Kearns arranged for Gregorla
to go to Lima for a medical
examination.
Maryknollers at their parish
of Santa Rose in Lima swung
into action. They found a doctor
who was willing to make cornea
transplants for Gregoria with
out charge.
GREGORIA and her parents
were provided with new clothing
and the bus fare to Lima. Since
they only spoke Quechua, Quispe
went along as interpreter. The
move from their primitive is
land which has no electricity,
television or any other modern
convenience to cosmopolitan
Lima was like taking them out
of the days of Columbus and
putting them into the year 1962.
Lima was a strange and omi
nous place to these Andean In
dians.
They agreed to leave their
daughter in the hospital only if
a Maryknoll Sister promised to
take the mother’s place in Lima.
A Sister agreed, and the family
returned to their mountain.
A WEEK later a call from
the hospital reported that a cor
nea was available for Gregoria.
The child came through the
operation successfully and after
two weeks, tests indicated that
vision in the left eye was im
proved.
Gregoria is now back at her
Island home again playing with
her four brothers and sisters,
thanks to a Maryknoll-trained
catechist.
Pope Thanks
CDA For
Council Aid
WASHINGTON, (NC)—A let
ter expressing the gratitude of
Pope John XXIII for a "gene
rous contribution" toward de
fraying the expenses of the
Second Vati can Council was
received by the head of the Ca
tholic Daughters of America.
The CDA sent the contribu
tion through its national chap
lain, Bishop Vincent A. Waters
of Raleigh, N. C. The letter
expressing the Pope's gratitude
and imparting his apostolic
blessing to all CDA members
came to Margaret J. Buckley
of suburban Silver Spring, Md.,
CDA supreme regent, from Am-
leto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal
Secretary of State.
Rome Altar
Society Meet
Sets Goals
Rome, Ga- The regular
monthly meeting of St. Mary’s
Altar Society was held on Mon
day Jan. 7 th at the Rectory.
Mrs. Norman Brierly, vice-
president, presided in the
absence of the president, Mrs.
Willis.
Miss Janie Fahy, chairman
of the visiting committee, re
ported that all Catholic patients
at Battey Hospital were visited
at Christmas time and given
gifts.
THE GROUP voted to make
new covers for use in the church
during Passion week. Mrs. Lee
Battle was appointed to order
the material.
Miss Janie Fahy reported that
the Cancer Society is in urgent
need of old sheets for use in
making pads for Cancer patients
and asked members who could
donate sheets to brings them to
her house or the Cancer Society
office.
Mrs. Battle, Sacristan,
appointed the committees to
prepare the altar during the
month of January.
Following the meeting a
luncheon and social hour was
held. The hostesses were Mrs.
Robert Cescutti and Mrs. Tony
Cescutti.
AN ALTAR BOY NAMED "SPECK"
“... sixty two, sixty three, sixty four....”
LIKE TV
Missionary Work
An ‘Open End’
LOVELAND, Ohio (NC)--The
Church’s missionary work was
compared to an "open-end"
television program by a priest
educator here.
Father Walter J. Ong, S. J.,
author and professor of English
at St. Louis University, said
"the communication of religion
has become less locked into
place than it used to be." He
addressed students and guests
at the Grail Apostolic move
ment for young women.
"THERE’S a real dialogue
approach to religion today,"
the Jesuit priest stated. "To
get our religion across to our
neighbor, we have to be able to
talk about it off-the-cuff, even
publicly—this is what the peo
ple want.”
And this is the kind of dia
logue the television medium
demands, he said. Like the
"open end" type of television
program, which has a definite
starting point but takes an un
rehearsed course, "our re
ligious communication today is
largely in terms of live con
frontations."
FATHER Ong called the ecu
menical council "a wonderful
example of what has happened in
regard to communications in the
Church.”
"There never was a council
so open as this one," he said,
citing the presence of Protes
tant observers, the welcome
given to reporters, and the is
suance of regular communiques
to the press.
RACIAL PROBLEM
Bigots Guilty of Moral,
"And this is the kind of pre
sence which the Church must
have today, and which she does
have," he said. "It Is the kind
of presence w e are all called on
to exercise. We live in an age
where everything has to be live
ft
FATHER Edward D. O'Connor,
C. S.C., president of the Mario-
logical Society of America, re
ceived his society’s annual
award for outstanding studies in
the field of Marian theology at
the 14th annual convention in
Boston.
Pope Honors
NCWC Official
HARTFORD, Conn., Jan. 3
(NC) —Father John C. Knott,
director of the Family life Bu
reau, National Catholic Wel
fare Conference, in Washington,
D. C., has been named a domes
tic prelate with the title of Right
Reverend Monsignor by His
Holiness Pope John XXIII.
Intellectual Dishonesty
Announcement of the honor
was made here by Archbishop
Henry J. O’Brien of Hartford.
Msgr. Knott, a priest of the
Hartford archdiocese, became
the director of the NCWC bu
reau in November, 1961.
Company
To Cubans
it is characterized by a retu
to emphasis on sound, on sp
ken communication, after ce
turies of emphasis on the wri
ten word.
THROUGH NCWC
Clothing
Donates
NEW YORK, (NC)— The Bond
Clothing Company, Rochester,
N.Y., has given 1,000 pairs of
trousers, 100 top coats and 100
overcoats to Catholic Relief
Services— National Catholic
Welfare Conference for distri
bution to needy Cuban refugees.
The clothing will be distri
buted to needy Cubans by the
Miami Cuban refugee reception
center of CRS—NCWC, the U.S.
Catholic overseas relief ag
ency.
THE CLOTHING donation was
made in appreciation for CRS—
NCWC’s assistance in locating
20 tailors and seamstresses
among Cuban refugees to work
in the clothing company’s Ro
chester plant.
Interviews with refugees
CBS MAN SAYS
Council News Easy
For Good
were arranged for a company
representative by Hugh Mc-
Loone, director of the CRS—
NCWC center in Miami. Catho
lic Relief Services transport
ed the 20 Cubans chosen and
their families to Rochester.
There the Rochester Diocesan
Catholic Charities found homes
for the Cubans.
AUXILIARY Bishop Edward
E. Swanstrom of New York, exe
cutive director of CRS—NCWC,
praised the Bond Company’s
gift of clothing as a "generous
gesture of good will."
"Because most Cuban refu
gees arrive without sufficient
clothing and because so many
of them will be relocated in
cities and towns far from the
warm Miami climate, the cloth
ing will fill a great need."
DETROIT, (NC) —Racial bi
gots are guilty of both moral
and Intellectual dishonesty, re
presentatives of Detroit’s re
ligious community have charg
ed.
The accusation was the of
ten-expressed theme of the first
Metropolitan Conference on
Open Occupancy (Jan. 2 and 3).
THE CONFERENCE was
jointly sponsored by the Met
ropolitan Detroit Council of
Churches, the Archdiocese of
Detroit and the Jewish Com
munity Council in cooperation
with the Detroit Commission on
Community Relations.
Official spokesman for the
Detroit archdiocese was Msgr.
Hubert A. Maino, former editor
of the Michigan Catholic, ar-
chidocesan newspaper, and now
pastor of St. Lucy’s parish in
suburban St. Clair Shores.
Msgr. Maino described the
race problem as "primarily a
moral one, and therefore, a re
ligious problem."
“CHRIST identifies Himself
with the homeless and the disin
herited and when we refuse
housing or any other necessity
of life to a fellow human being,
we deny it to the Lord Him
self," he said.
Science studying the races
of men, he said, dismisses the
idea of racial inferiority as
"scientific nonsense."
He added that differences in
cultural standards between
many Negro and whites are ex
plained by the "facts of his
tory" and the Negro’s "inabi
lity to enjoy equal opportunity
in education and in employ
ment."
Speaking for Detroit’s Jewish
community, Senior Rabbi Ric
hard C. Hertz of Temple Beth
El said forced segregation
"threatens to destroy us as
free people."
MAERICANS have listened
too long only to the voices of
fear and bigotry, he commented,
and if "men of good will speak
Board Names
Miss Sutherland
Jeanne Sutherland, St. Jos
eph student, has been elected
from the Junior English classes
to be the Teen Board Repre
sentative from her school to
EXTENSION magazine this
year.
Every year, EXTENSION
magazine holds a Teen Board
contest asking for representa
tives from all Catholic high
schools. From the represent-
tatives the editors select four
students to be guest editors for
the forthcoming issues.
Of the four Guest Editors,
one will be awarded the grand
prize. This includes a $500
scholarship to a Catholic Col
lege and a free trip to Chi
cago.
out they will find each other in
every neighborhood."
Dr. Allan A. Zaun, president
of the Metropolita n Detroit
Council of Churches, voiced
the Protestant position.
He hit at prejudiced whites
who judge the Negro race on
the behavior of the worst ele
ments of the Negro community.
"There are just as many
careless, shiftless and irres
ponsible people among whites*
as there are among the Ne
groes," he asserted. "Shp’l
the entire white race be judg a
by the undesirable behavior of
its worst representatives? No
Indeed. Then why do we so judge
the Negro?"
SPEAKING for the Negro
community, the Rev. Charles
W. Butler, a Baptist pastor,
said that although Negro eman
cipation was granted a century
ago, some of the major ele
ments of slavery are still prac
ticed today.
He cited a "formidable,
four-deep barrier to Negro
housing" in the combination of
the builder, owner, broker, and
banker.
"The excessive energy the
Negro must expend against this
opposition in obtaining a home
often leaves him too exhausted'
to maintain it," Rev. Butler
said.
ST. LOUIS (NC)~ Plenty of
news was available at the ecu
menical council’s first session
for reporters who were willing
to dig for it, the Columbia
Broadcasting System’s Rome
correspondent Winston Burdett.
"It just took some digging to get
it.
"ONE OF the amazing things
is the numbers of people who
were available who were will
ing to discuss the issues at
great length," Burdett said.
He commented on news
coverage of the Second Vatican
Council in a talk to the St. Louis
Advertising Club. He and other
CBS correspondents were here
to confer with CBS officials.
Burdett, who identified him
self as a non-Catholic, took note
Priests Host
In Pasadena
PASADENA, Calif., Jan. 5
(NC)—Mater Dolorosa Retreat
House again played host to a
football team before the Rose
Bowl game. The University of
Wisconsin team spent 44 hours
there.
It was the third time that the
establishment operated by
Passlonist Fathers has put up a
Rose Bowl squad. Previous
visitors were Ohio State and
Minnesota.
Reporter
of criticism of the Batican’s
arrangements for news cover
age of the council. While the
official Vatican press releases
were not detailed enough to be
of great value, he said, this
did not prevent reporters from
getting news.
"THERE were sources avail
able...and the best sources of
information were the delegates
themselves," he said. "Itwould
depend on the ingenuity of
the reporter to find bishops
who were willing to speak."
Other valuable news sources,
he stated, were the experts in
various fields assigned to offer
advice and information to the
council Fathers.
BURDETT said there was no
reason for surprise that the
press arrangements for the
council did not compare with
those for some other news mak
ing events. "After all," he
noted, "this was not like cover
ing a Republican or Democratic
national convention. This was an
ecumenical council 0 f the
Church, and it was not the same
thing as a political event."
He predicted that the council
will go down In history as the
"greatest event of the Church
in this century."
His Holiness Pope John XXIII
"has opened the door for
change, and that Is significant,
Burdett said.
Catholic Parochial League
1962-63 Basketball Schedule
BOYS
1- Marist
2- 1HM
3- CKS
4- STM
5- SA
6- OLA
7- St. Jos
8- St. Paul
GIRLS
1- St. John
2- IHM
3- CKS
4- STM
5- S.A.
6- OLA
Jan. 5
Feb. 2
2 v 5 Boys
9:00
3 v 4 B
8:15
3 v 7 B
10:00
3 v 5 G
9:15
4 v 6 B
11:00
2 v 6 B
10:15
1 v 8 B
12:00
4 v 6 G
11:15
8 v 5 B
12:15
3 v 1 G
1:15
1 v 7 B
2:15
Jan. 12
Feb. 9
6 v 1 Boys
8:15
2 v 1 B
8:15
2 v 3 Girls
9:15
2 v 1 G
9:15
3 v 2 Boys
10:15
3 v 8 B
10:15
4 v 5 Girls
11:15
5 v 6 G
11:15
5 v 4 Boys
12:15
5 v 6 B
12:15
1 v 6 Girls
1:15
3 v4 G
1:15
7 v 8 Boys
2:15
4 v 7 B
2:15
Jan. 19
Feb. 16
8 v 6 B.
8:15
4 v 2 G.
9:15
2 v4 B.
10:15
8 v4 B
9:00
6 v 3 a
11:15
2 v 7 B
10:00
3 v 1 B
12:15
3 v 6 B
11:00
1 v 5 G.
1:15 !
1 v 5 B
12:00
5 v 7 B.
2:15
Feb. 23 - DOUBLE ELIMINATION
Jan. 26
1st v 8th B
9:00
3 v 5 B
8:15
2nd v 7th B
10:00
5 v 3 G
9:15
3rd v 6th B
11:00
2 v 8 B
10:15
4th v 5th B
12:00
1 v 4 G
11:15
4 v 1 B
12:15
Mar. 2 - DOUBLE ELIMINATION
6 v 2 G
1:15
9:00
7 v 6 B
2:15
10:00
11:00
TOT
12:00
Mar. 9 - Dbl. Elim.
MpgK*
Mar. 16 - DBL. ELIM
9:00
OT
10:00
10:00
11:00
11:00
12:00
12:00
Mar. 23 - FINALS
10:30733