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1
ADVISORY COUNCIL
Name Msgr. Baum
To NCCJ Project
NEW YORK (RNS)—Msgr.
William W. Baum, vice-chan
cellor of the Kansas City-St.
Joseph, Mo„ diocese, was ap
pointed to the Advisory Council
of the National Conference of
Christians and Jews' Religious
Freedom and Public Affairs
Project here.
He replaces the late Father
Gustave Weigel, S.J., of Wood-
stock (Md.) College, noted theo
logian and ecumenical leader,
who died last January at the
age of 57.
MSGR. Baum is executive
secretary of the newly estab
lished Bishops Commission for
Ecumenical Affairs, created by
the American hierarchy to im
plement the Vatican Council's
Decree on Ecumenism. He also
is vice-chairman of the Kansas
City-St. Joseph Diocesan Ecu
menical Commission, and ex
ecutive secretary of the Dioce
san Commission on the Liturgi
cal Apostolate.
The NCCJ Religious Freedom
and Public Affairs Project was
launched in 1961. It is designed
to raise the general level of pub
lic discussion and understand
ing among religious and other
groups differing on issues of
public concern.
POPE PAUL
These include religion and
education, federal aid to private
and parochial schools, birth
control legislation, use and
abuse of religion by secular
groups and practices by relig-
iousorganizations in shaping the
public order,
IN cooperation with NCCJ re
gional offices, the project con
ducts seminars, dialogues, in
stitutes and conferences on spe
cific problems in these fields.
Participants have included civic
and political leaders, educat
ors, lawyers and clergy.
Among the project’s Advisory
Council—of which Msgr. Baum
is now a new member-are em
inent theologians, educators,
legal experts and leaders in
public office.
In 1962 Msgr. Baum was
named by Pope John XXIII as
a peritus (expert) of the Second
Vatican Council. Last March,
the Vatican Secretariat for Pro
moting Christian Unity appoint
ed him a permanent observer-
consultant for the Consultation
on Church Union, His group con
sists of representatives from
six major Protestant denomin
ations holding talks looking to
ward possible merger to form
one Church.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1964 GEORIGIA BULLETIN PAGE 9
AIRMEN at Alconbury, England, USAF base help five American nuns preparing a new convent. Clearing underbrush at
Badby House are: (Left to right) Al/c Lawrence Chase, Sutton, Mass.; Mother M. Bernadette. Frankfort, Ky.; A2/c Fred
Engle. Butler, Pa.; Mother M. Regina, Barre, Vt.; Mother Superior M. Catherine, Cincinnati; Mother M. Gemma, Hay
Springs, Neb.; T/Sgt. Ed Burchill, St. Johns, N.B.; and (in front, bending) Sister M. Pius, Lexington, Ky.
CATHOLIC ACTION
Lay Co-Director For SSCA School
Will Say Christmas
Mass For Workers
VATICAN CITY (NC)—Just
as he did last Christmas—
his first as Pontiff—Pope Paul
VI will celebrate one of his
Christmas Masses this year in
a working-class parish.
Pope Paul will begin Christ
mas with the customary mid-
J night Mass in the Sistine fc^a^J
Pel with'representatives of all
nations having diplomatic rela
tions with the Holy See.
AT 8 a.m. he will offer Mass
in the parish church of St.
Raphael the Archangel in the
Trullo quarter just outside
Porta Portese, Rome’s “flea
market/’
At 11:15 a.m., ifweatherper-
mits, he will offer Mass out
side the Basilica of St. Peter
before the crowd in St. Peter’s
Square. At noon he will give
the customary blessing to the
city and the world from the bal
cony of the basilica.
I t/ . U I I H i l k ^
THE Pope has scheduled this
year s Christmas message to
the world for Dec. 22 at 8p.m.,
Rome time. The Pope's broad
cast will be carried by Vatican
Radio and other broadcasting
systems throughout the world.
On Christmas Eve the Pope
will hold his customary audience
with cardinals and prelates of
Rome.
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How To Understand
Changes In The Liturgy
by
ARCHBISHOP PAUL J. HALUNAN
Foreword by
HIS EMINENCE JOSEPH CARDINAL RITTER
WIDELY ACCLAIMED at National Liturgical W'eek
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CINCINNATI (NC) — A Cin
cinnati layman, TerryToepker,
has been named co-director of
the Summer School of Catho
lic Action, famous leadership
training course founded by the
late Father Daniel A. Lord,
S.J.
Toepker, a teacher and coach
at St. Xavier High School, will
assist Father John J. Camp
bell. S.J., director of the pro
gram.
IN AN interview Father
Campbell also announced:
—That the name of the course
will be changed this year to
“Summer School of the Chris
tian Apostolate," because the
old term, Catholic Action, “has
taken on political overtones.*’
—That the number of U.S*.
cities in which the one-week
course will be given next
summer will be 14, nearly
double last year’s total.
—That the SSCA expects to
reach approximately 18,000 so-
dalists and moderators next
summer, some 5,000 more than
ever before.
YOUTH director of the Na
tional Sodality Service Center
at St. Louis, the Denver-bom
Jesuit said that although the
sodality movement is 401 years
old, it is as up-to-date as the
ecumenical council and as re
levant to the 1960s as it was
to the 1560s.
An estimated three million
Catholics in the U.S. are ac
tive in approximately 8,000
groups affiliated with the Na
tional Federation of Sodalities
of Our Lady. A St. Louis
layman, Arthur J. Conley, is
federation president.
* It's not just the idea of
personal holiness that the so
dality strives to cultivate/’said
Father Campbell, “but the in
tertwining of personal holiness
and the apostolate/’
WHAT apostolate? “For the
past 10 years, there has been
a tremendous emphasis in the
sodality movement on aposto-
lates which are forms of com
munity development/’ he said.
'These include serving the
needs of orphans and the blind,
promoting programs of interra-
Ministers Meet
FLINT, Mich. (NC) — The
Greater Flint Ministerial Asso
ciation held its December meet
ing at St. John Vianney Catholic
church—the first time it has
met in a Roman Catholic church.
I 1 ■ -
ANSWER TO
LAST WEEK'S PUZZLE 1
cial justice, taking part in the
work of the Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine, cooperating
with groups like the Legion of
Mary, and so on.*’
He cited a group of 17 high
school sodalists in St. Louis who
formed a junior interracial
council which grew into a dio
cesan-wide organization invol
ving 26 schools and sponsor
ing serious interracial pro
grams in their schools and
parishes.
TOPEKER teaches physics at
St. Xavier and coaches fresh
man football, reserve basket
ball and tennis. A graduate of
St. Xavier and of Xavier Uni
versity, he is a candidate for
JV.C. GOVERNOR
jai'ifcM moil
a master's degree at the Uni
versity of Cincinnati.
He is moderator of the soph
omore sodality at St. Xavier,
and last summer was a lec
turer in the Summer School of
PLAN TRANSFER
Jatholic Action.
He and his wife, the former
Patricia Clark of Cleveland,
lecture to high school groups
on marriage under the spon
sorship of the Archdiocesan
Family Life Bureau. They have
two children.
Passionists Study
With Benedictines
ST. MEINRD, Ind (NC)~ Pas-
slonist Fathers of the Holy
Cross province will transfer
Tells KKK To Read
Story Of Christmas
LOUISBURG, N.C, (RNS)—
An integrated Christmas parade
here which included religious
floats was staged without inci
dent despite threats by the Ku
Klux Klan after Gov. Terry
Sanford warned the Klan against
molesting spectators or parti
cipants.
The governor said it was
“height of sacrilege for me
Ku Klux Klan to try to inject
hatred into the Christmas pa
rade. I would urge all members
of the KKK to read again the
Christmas story and the mes
sage of goodwill to all men con
tained in the Bible.”
He had cautioned that any “il
legal acts on the part of KKK
members will be prosecuted.”
Among the floats with re
ligious themes in the parade,
which has been integrated for
ten years, were two entered by
Negroes.
Meanwhile, attention has shift
ed to nearby Franklinton, only
nine miles away, where similar
Klan threats have been made
against a scheduled integrat
ed Christmas parade. Such pa
rades have been integrated for
three years at Franklinton.
Award Presented
CONVENT STATION, N.J.
(NC)—The ninth annual Mother
Xavier Award of the College
of St. Elizabeth has been pre
sented to Mary A, Sheehan, an
alumna and consultant to the
head of St. John Fisher Col
lege, Rochester, N.Y„ where
she is director of the division
of teacher education.
their center for theology stud
ies from Sacred Heart Retreat
in Louisville, Ky., to St. Mein-
rad Seminary here, which is
conducted by the Benedictine
Fathers. i
The transfer will take place
next September and will involve
24 Passionist theology students
and six Passionist priest-pro
fessors, according toajointan-
nouncement by Archabbot Bona-
venture Knaebel, O.S.B., of St.
Meinrad Archabbey and Father
James Patrick White, C.P., of
Chicago , the Passionist pro-
vinvial.
AMONG those coming to St.
Meinrad under the plan are
two nationally known Bible scho
lars—Fathers Barnabas Ahern,
C.P., and Carroll Stuhlmueller,
C.P.
St. Meinrad Seminary, con
ducted by the Benedictines since
1854, provides a complete 12-
year program for students for
the priesthood. More than 600
seminarians are presently
studying there, including 120
theology students.
The Passionists' facilities in
Louisville will be used for col
lege-level training of members
of the community, who will take
most of their courses at Bellar-
mine College there.
Endotod find $ for copier of Archbithop Heliinen't Rook
"HOW TO UNDERSTAND CHANGES IN THE LITURGY."
PRINT Name
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ST. MARY’S, Rome, football team has completed a season in the inter-county league for boys under
12. Shown here, front row and left to right, are: T. Yarborough, C. Kirby, Marc Malanka, S. Patten,
Gary Brown, M. Wollstein, J. Penna, Jimmy Brown, K. Guldenschuh. Second row: M. Kirkort, Tony
Cescutti, Mike Malanka, T. Papalado, W. King, N. Johnson, R. Wollstein, C. Penna, J. Sargent.
Third row: Mike Cescutti, T. Hackett, M. Teat, M. Rogers. Coaches are Mike Marsh and Don
Ingalls. Not shown; M. Tolbert.
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