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York Daily Record from York, Pennsylvania • 20

Publication:
York Daily Recordi
Location:
York, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The York Daily Record, Monday Morning, November 8, 1971 House Bems must decide on role in i 4 economy cheme mirror. Fuller smiled and said: He has two fillings. Look. The pastor, Mr. Whyte, peered in.

Then he turned to his congregation and said: This man has two gold fillings that werent there a moment ago. The man, Hugo Mittendorf of Sharon, Ontario, told me later that he had not known he had two cacities but I certainly know I didnt have any gold fillings and look now. He opened his mouth and large fillings which looked like gold gleamed at me from two lower, molars. Other persons told me of miraculous teeth healings they had received. Mrs.

Ann Carter insisted that she had a gold filling where none was before. Mrs. Arthur Pressey said her teeth were dingy and stained until Mr. Fuller prayed for her and they started to shine as they have never shone before. potential gains in either course Democratic leaders may The kind of amendments the committee has.

approved are immediately popular with- important elements of. iabor and presumably with such consumer WASHINGTON (AP) House Democratic leaders must decide in" the next two weeks whether to commit their heavy artillery to a drive for a major congressional role in, shaping the next phase in control of the economy. Their decision involves both spokesmen as Ralph Nader. Mrs. Maxwell Whyte, the ministers wife, showed risks and possible reworads.

Can God heal ashed the religious tract. It was an invitation to a healing crusade conducted by Louisiana-born evangelist Willard Fuller who claims to have the God-given power to heaUeeth. Operating on. the premise that nothing (well, almost nothing) is too crazy to be true, I went to see and hear the Rev. Mr.

Fuller do his stuff. There were about 200 in the congregation and the fiftyish, wavy-haired evangelist was already pounding the pulpit and preaching up a storm when I arrived. God puts gold, silver or porcelain fillings in cavities, Fuller exclaimed. I dont know why some people get gold or silver and others get porcelain. But then, there are many things about this ministry I dont understand.

As he preached, Fullers own pearly teeth gleamed. (Later I discovered they were false.) If God can put silver or gold in a mountain, He can put it in your mouth, the evangelist shouted, thumping the pulpit. God will heal you, through my prayers, of anything thats wrong with your mouth. That includes cavities, gingivitis, receding gums, gum boils, malocclusion, teeth that need to be straightened, or a lack of teeth from one to 32." About 50 persons lined up across the front of the church in a Toronto suburb. The evangelist, accompanied by the churchs minister.

Rev. Maxwell Whyte, passed down the row peering into each mouth with a dental Whyte watched him intently. Look there, Fuller said, pointing into a mans mouth. Hes got two cavities there and there. Whyte peered in and nodded.

Fuller clapped his hands on the mans forehead and exclaimed: God heal these teeth. For Jesus sake! The tone of the prayer implied that God had better co-operate or else. Peering again into the mans mouth with his dental me two small white spots on two of her teeth which the evangelist said were new enamel forming. Other people told me their teeth had been straightened, and one man swore a new tooth had started to push up through his gum and it wasnt a wisdom tooth! There have been suggestions that Willard Fuller who used to be a Soifthern Baptist minister but left that denomination when he was divorced gives the Lord a helping hand in filling teeth. George Bishop, a reporter in Los Angeles, said one man found that the filling in his tooth was cheap substance used by dentists for temporary fillings which fell out in a week or so.

The implication was that the filling had been pushed into the tooth by someone other than the Lord. However, three months later I checked the people in Mr. Whytes church. All said their fillings were still intact including Mr. Mittendorf who was happy with his two gold ones.

Mr. Whyte gave me his impressions of Willard Fuller. He said that although he disliked some aspects of the evangelists ministry gypsy-like way of life and his habit of taking love offerings for himself), he personally had no doubt about the genuineness of the tooth healings. Nobody in our church has had a filling drop out, the pastor said. And as for Mr.

Fuller sticking them in himself I totally reject that. Thirty fillings in one night? But if the majority Democrats reshape the administration program to this extent, they $hare responsibility for it. If instead they give Nixon essentially what he asked for, they will be in position to blame him for any shortfalls in 1972 which of course is a presidential and congressional election year. While a number of Banking Committee Democrats were nursing proposed amendments when the' committee started -its legislative drafting last Wednesday, the let-Nixon-try mood was clearly in the ascendant. Enough Democrats joined the virtually solid Republicans to knock down every substantial amendment offered that day.

Overnight there -was a startling changes Tough proposals by management and public members of the Pay Board had jolted the labor members, and had been leaked. THE YORK HIGH BAUD is selling TRASH CAN LINERS on sole of the WE BACK YORK HIGH Store for delivery call 845-7687 or 764-4886 or 854-7273 Their hand is being forced by the House Banking Committee which apparently without previous, broad party consultation, suddenly went on the offensive with sweeping amendments to President Nixons proposed Phase 2 legislation, scheduled for a House vote before Nov. 19. The most conspicuous of the amendments would require payment of previously negotiated pay increases, even retroactively, in all but grossly disproportionate instances. Nixon wants this decision left to the labor-management-public Pay Board.

Speaker Carl Albert, and Majority Leader Hale Boggs, have avoided any commitment, saying they want time to study the committees recommendations in detail. The committee itself, resuming work on the legislation next Thursday, has more key decisions to make, such as the one whether to grant a full year's extension of control powers. And it could backtrack on some of the changes it has already approved. Even if it does no more than it already has done to the Nixons legislative proposals, the resulting bill could have tough sledding on the House floor. In private, some of the backers of change concede this and say the degree of formal party backing the bill receives could be crucial.

There are political risks and We Wish To Announce New Additions To Our Staff DEL (Pictured) and PANDA Appointment Sot A I way Secetsary Some applaud Berrigan drama some denounce; but tickets sell I to censor the play reveals an igornance of what democracy is all about. Most critics agreed on the artistic merits of the play, prasing the John Stix production and the performances of Ward Costello as Daniel and John Newton as Philip. The major source of dispute was the play itself, which is essentially the transcript of the trial, cut down to show what the Berrigans see as a conflict between federal law and a higher Christian law. Yes, we violated the law, addmits Philip Berrigan in the play. But the law is no absolute to us.

The real issue is: how can men serve love and war? The fact is: they cant. til MARIE LOUISE HAIRSTYLING 586 W. Market St. Phone 854-0569 BALTIMORE (AP) The Trial of the Catonsville Nine, a play by antiwar priest Daniel Berrigan, has sparked new controversies among Catholics and non-Catholics in Baltimore, scene of the trial on which the play is based. Two Catholic legislators in Maryland denounced the play, which opened Oct.

29, as subversive and said they would ask the state to cut sharply funds for Center Stage, the theater staging the production here. Area drama critics are split widely. One urged every responsible citizen to see the play; another called it a polemical declamation an apologia for Berriganism. The response at the box office has been overwhelmingly favorable. Every performance has been sold out, and Center Stage thinks the production will be the most successful ever at the theater.

The play is based on the trial of Daniel Berrigan, his brother, the Rev. Philip Berrigan, and seven -other Catholics, convicted of pouring napalm on some 350 draft files at a Selective Service pffice In Catonsville, Md. Baltimore got its first look at the play at a special preview in Philip Berrigans old Josphite parish. The performance was arranged by one of the many priests who have supported the Berrigans. Immediately afterward, John J.

Gallagher and Michael E. Foley, two Democratic members of the House of Delegates, denounced the play as subversive and said they would ask the state legislature to stop subsidizing treason by cutting state aid to Center Sage from $50,000 to $10,000. Both Delegate Foley and being Catholic, feel that it is a national disgrace that the church which took 2,000 years to build could well collapse in the next few years due to the support being given to these subversive motivators, both from within and outside the Catholic Church, said Gallagher. WJZ-TV, in an editorial on the controversy, said: The question is one of freedom, pure and simple. The far-reaching question is whether the state pan, through financial retaliation, coerce Center Stage into presen-enting plays that meet the appro vaf of all politicians.

WJZ noted that the state funds are not a gift to the theater, but recompense for Center Stage performances ini Maryland high schools. Stephen H. Sachs, U.S.' Attorney for Maryland at the time of the Catonsville trial, said Center Stage -is to be richly complimented for bringing it (the play) back to the place where it was bom. What really frightens me, Sachs added, is that the attitude of these public officials in seeking xxxr i 4, f. wav'- 'v.

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Pages Available:
1,098,175
Years Available:
1918-2021