Passer au contenu principal
La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne

The Tablet du lieu suivant : Brooklyn, New York • 1

Publication:
The Tableti
Lieu:
Brooklyn, New York
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

r- 5 help te poor? page 4 For non-Catholic editors page 4 on page 10 priest in focus. 13 Uligion vs. race bis. 5 Debate on going steady. page 13 Freedom is up to you page 14 Return of Card.

Musial. page A CATHOLIC WEEKLY Saturday TH1 TAXLTT fubllahlnt Oompanr. Oh Bum Haca. BrpeMm IT, T. BROOKLYN N.

7lAlTORr9B3v 10 Onta Per Copy 5SthYer VOL. LV, No. 51 wood Claai recur paid al Brooklyn. R. and at additional malllna efflet ii) ii aL w'' t1" SAINT FRANCIS i I'ABIOIIOIIO GCin LIMITS WHAT PUPILS il Ml PRO 1 CATHEDSAL IS HOST 10 191 tfOll CATKQUCS COLLEGE ENTERS It Five Buildings in Civic Friendship' Sunday Is Part of Church One hundred non-Catholics, Including Negro Methodist minister, accepted Invitations to visit St.

James Pro-Cathedral on -FrlendshlD Sunday" (Jan. 20). 1 1 I Je, -V ill which was scheduled as part ofp Center Will Allow For Expansion Francis College will begin its Spring semester Feb7 1 in 1U new quarters on Remsen St. in the Civic Center of Brdoklyn. It was announced by Very Rev, Brother Urban Gonnoud, J3 JfH collegepresIdentr The phuuied opening date for.

the hew location, set when the property was purchased in April of 1960, was "The press of enrollment and the Increasing number of students desiring -admission to college today, necessitated an accelera tion of our original plans," Brother Urban said. Multl-Mllllon-Dollar Program The purchase of five office buildings on Remsen St. between Court and Clinton Sts, from Brooklyn Union Gas Company was the first phase in the col- lege's multi-million dollar expansion program. Renovation of toe- property began last May. The main building, at -178 Remsen an elghtetory struc ture.

conUms-a lecture rooms, an-audW torlum seating 200 perBonBrsa -electronic visual aid room, a music room, 12 seminar rooms, four conference rooms, admin istrative and departmental of-. flees, the facilities of the gold- ance center and (he Educational Consultatloa Center a. st. dent lounge. It will be used, by Daniel, Jr, IVi, and Kerry Marie, seven-month-old birth defect victim.

The O'Neills reside in Our Lady Help of Christians parish. Some 50,000 volunteers will take part in the 25th annivertary Mothers' March on Jan. 31. MARCH OF DIMES MOTHER of the Tear is. Mrs.

June M. O'Neill of 1223 E. Slst SU Brooklyn, shown with her DanleL an Air Force lieutenant witb 'the Judge Advocate General's Office In New York, and children. the observance of the Church Unity Octave. AEL(he Protestants within the wartsh boundaries received a printed Invitation, which said "Friends'.

Tou are Invited to visit a Catholic church. There will be a tour of the edifice and an opportunity fof you to see the different things' we use In our worship of God. There will also be a chance to ass questions, "Afterwards, refreshments will be served ln-oucjchool and i this will provide an -opportunity- more -informal eonversation with priests and Sisters over a cup of coffee and some cake." The Invitation was signed Tour nelghbon at St. James." rw-- la addition to the printed Ihvi- taUoheach of toe ministers In the area received a personal call from one of the parish priests. Rev.

Cornelius C. Toomey, ad ministrator of the Pro-Cathedral, "said: that all of the ministers were most friendly arid coopera- Federal Court Acts Bars U. S. Immunity" For -Ufc included within the term 'ambas Honored, as Mother of Tlie Year Citing her "determination to protect her child from being permanently disabled by a con genital malformation," the New York March of Dimes has proclaimed Mrs. June M.

O'Neill of Brooklyn Its 1963 Mother of the Year. Mrs. O'Neill, who resides at 1223 E. 31st in Our Lady Help of Christians parish, is the BiinSkTirGoiAVe Trust In Every N. Y.

Public School ALBANY State Assenv blyman Joseph R. Corso Brooklyn) will Introduce a bill "that will require prominent display of our national motto 'In God We Trust in every school room of New York State," He credits the idea to the Holy Name Society of St. Martin; of parish, Brooklyn, which made the' suggestion after an exten-slve study of the Supreme Court decision which banned 4he" Regents' prayer in public, schools, Holy Name President W1I- 11am J. Fugelsang issued an appeal for individuals, and organizations of all faiths believe that -God should have a place in our school -system" to write, to then state senators and assemblymen urging swift passage of the bill. ..2.

Membership Sunday Be Observed in 225 Parishes fcbfortaf on Page Ttn The missionary's -drastio need' itcourageritenfwlll form tl5 ur-l gent theme of over 18,000 ser mons to be preached tomorrow, Membership Sunday, in the Brooklyn Diocese. More than 1,000 priests will ascend the pul pits In the 225 parishes of Brook lyn and Queens seeking to enroll; every family In the Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Bishop McEntegart in his re cent 'mission membership pas toral, endorsed the project, a strong plea for the active participation in it of every fam- Hly, Auxiuary msnop Jonn Boardman, in. hi 26th yeafas mission director, announced com pletlon of a broad and compre hensive a designed to deepen JntereaL hi, mission program among Catholic famiUes everywhere. Early in his preparations, Bish op Boardman enustea tne in terest and prayers of over a quarter of a million school chil dren hi attendance at- diocesan high and elementary schools.

Of couraged to telephone tne mis sion director at -a special number Asks Equal Freedom Of Religion and Of Science ATLANTIC CITY (NO The president of St. Louis University chided some of the Nation's top education experts for sticking blindly to an educational system which, bv Ignoring God, seriously limits' what students can learn Father Paul Relnert, 8 made his charge in a policy statement on the place of religion in education, before some 800 delegates at the Association of American Colleges 49thr annual meeting here. The' association represents some 800 universities and colleges, including church related schools. Uses Secularists'. Own Language ather Remert entitled his views "The Theistlc Position In the Search for Truth." His marks "were-couched carefully far terminology used by secularist in education.

He said many edu cators are seeking to limit man's knowledge, rather than add to-it. They are doing this, he said, by following In the. footsteps of the mathematician Rene Descartes. Father Relnert -said-everyone agrees Universities exist to com' municate and advance the truth. But followers of Descartes are trying limit what can be taught in college solely to sclen-l tlflc facts "observable evidence" which is the most- prevalent method tn use today, the- Jesuit educator said.

Such an attitude seriously limits inan's-ability to team, Father Relnert said, because it limits By contrast to such limitations, the Christian scholar actually can add to man's knowledge of truth, Father Relnert said. Christian theism adds a new mariner of knowing bi which man knows on the basis of au thority -atone," -he said. "But much more is really true, because in the knowledge of God man Is immeasurably broadened in him self. He comes to know through the Judaeo-Christlan revelation the greatness Inherent In being a man, precisely because through! that revelation heknows the greatness of his ultimate des tiny." The priest told the delegates that every advance in knowledge wSrxiiiirxnjrifmMnirr "Each advance In knowledge whether scientific, technological ecOnom ic, represents doui an actuauza-tlnn of broadening of the vision of his destiny," he explftmedr The Jesuit issued a warning against educators who' would be dogmtifcjn tual evidence. t'' tV constantly increasing complexity of knowledge brings with it the constantly increasing Continued on Last Page in a tiversome apologizing for not being able ttfattend.

students In the day and evening sessions who -are pursuing He.7-- A Presbyterian minister ln-i2 ouired about a special tour for mother of Daniel, auditor prayerr financial helft lua parisn wieowKj tiu, fuu himself. which, has been ar- grees In liberal arts and busing 15 aOToIe' Llirarir A four-otory building at' 180 T- For the previous week-the Remsen St. contains a 100.000 -volume library, reference 'parishioners prayed for the suc- 1, of the venture and- tht children attended a special iMass a language laboratory, five read-lng rooms, microfilm rooms and on the first day of the Unity stack areas. T. Octave.

I The priests, Sisters of St. Jo seph and laymen stood at the main entrance, to the pro-cathe- Continued on Last Page Some Modern Theologians -Somersault for Non-Catholics HONG KONG (NO "In their anxiety to please non4 Catholics, some of our modern theologians are turning somer saults This is -the OmnlOn or BISnop JOnn tr. seven Mariig who was Jtorn with an open splner-r--: The March of Dimes praised Mrs. O'Neill for "her patience and perseverance in overcoming the physical and emotional damage a disabling disease brings to victim and family alike" and said that her "gallant example encourages mothers everywhere to strive for similar success when faced with the complex problems of crippling birth defects, ar thritis or polla'? As 1963 Mother of the Mrs. O'Neill will serve as" sOUroei of inspiration for the 50,000 volunteers who will participate In the traditional Mothers' March on Jan.

31, This year marks the wintinHedmist.Page fflrniiiiiiiiiiinninii DURING THE NEWSPAPER you can help f-spread the Catholio Press. When you have finished reading this, Tissue of THE "TABLETt'yaS7; lton--to a news-hungry In a rare test. Federal Court New York on Tuesday, Jan. ruled that occupying a seat in United Nations delegation does not in Itself entitle a person to diplomatic Immunity un der United Statej The decision came in the case of a member of the Cuban UJL mission, Robert Santlesteban Casanova, 28. charged with conspiracy to anemia.

reaerai Distnct Juage sawara Welnfeld said Santlesteban Casa nova has status here only with the United Nations, and la not accredited to the United States. and thus is without diplomatic refuge from prosecution, Directed Sabotage The ruling was regarded as un precedented, although there were qualifying factors. Santlesteban Casanova was ar rested with two other men last Nov. 10 and a month and a half alter ne 'arrived here Oct. 3." The FJ3X charges that he came "for the purpose of directing sabotage on behalf of, the revolutionary government of nceale iuia.Tresiui?nce as ine "moraine me it.xjj..

saia, were nana grenades revolvers and; various incendiary devices, all designed Jtor Bctgfnggbotagc weinfeld said U. S. Constitu tional and statutory provisions regardlngallplomatlc Immunity apply to diplomatic represen tatives accredited to the United States." He added the Cuban United States government as public minister." As for the U.N., the judge said "IQternaHcluTanizatlons which have come into full bloom only in the last several decades were not envisaged by the found- fathers: clearly it was not with in their contemplation that staff members of missions to such In ternational organizations were Boy Killed XAEDINAL GODFEEY England's Leading Prelate Dies IDNDON (NO William Car dlml Godfrey, 73, Archbishop of Westminster, died here Tuesday following heart attack. He was a member of the Central Prepara tory Commission for the ecu menlcal The death of the head, of Britain smloi arohbishpprkLJ'e- duees the number of cardinals to 84. Born in Liverpool Sept.

25, 1889rthemJoTCTeorge -and Maria Godfrey, the future Car dinal studied atJJflhaw College. nary. He pursued higher "studies at the Venerable English College Rome, where he was ordained In 1916- After taking doctorates In phi losophy-and divinity at the Gregorian University, Rome, Father Godfrey returned to England. Following a brief period of parish work, he was assigned to usnaw- College, where he taught classics, philosophy and dogmatic theol ogy ronxlszo to IpSOr Diplomat cwiW1tl1toerre4'bsBc tg Rome, where for the' next eight years he was rector of the Venerable English College, While in Rome he took part in several diplomatic missions for the Holy See. In 1937 he traveled as coun selor with the papal delegation to the coronation of King.

George VI 9f England. In 1938 he was named Apostolic Visitor to the Seminaries and Ecclesiastical Colleges of Eng land, Wales and Malta. AmericanSWasC6onsewatoT In November of the same year Pope Pius XI named him Titular. Archbishop of Cius and first Apostolic Delegate to Great TWhHn vm mfiewrntArf tho L. Hayes of Davenport, Iowa, then rector of the North Amerl- Continued on Last Page Education Message Due 'WMHmGTONr-president Kennedy's proposals- for- federal aid to educatkJn to be sent to Congress in a special message Tuesday, Jan.

29. It Is expecie'rihaf will ask fair federal aid to colleges and a discriminatory proposal or. elementary and sec ondary educationrwithHhe" hope that the latter may "sneak' through in a "package deal." -i the Faith, which missionary LThe original home 'of the col lege at 35 Butler Its home Since the college was founded la 1884,. will be converted Into the science center with facilities for 400 students. These new quarters will en able the college to Increase Its enrollment to 1,200 in the day session and sa teunber of-evening students.

St. Francis has a present total enrollment of 1,861 in the day and evening sessions. 1 JBien, Jthfepurchase wasLan-: nouncedr Bishop Bryan Mo- Entegart of Brooklyn," whb is chairman ol the college's board pf trustees, said, "It was most by theFranclscaa Brothers In the Diocese of Brooklyn should be crowned with the announcement of the St. Francis College Expansion He also noted that parents of CLoughlin, M.S.C., of Darwln.Cxt month, with Bishop Ralph -4 If Ii I Catholio or non Catholio vTparticular note, children were en Australia "The Bishop expressed hope that some of the con servative take up their peris to offset some of the writings of the more- revolu tionary theologians," and added: "It must be remembered that tboth the Holy Father and Car- dinal Bea made it very clear that IhexeAreJjiQujidaries beyond which we cannot go." It Is the way "dialogue" is be- big shuttlecocked by theologians -that has evoked the 51-year-old prelate's "comment "onrsome'-of rtheconversational efforts being made to achieve church unity. friend, or leave it on the bus or subway.

Continued on Last Page on FoUowtng. Page sadors and other publlo minis- ters" Had Diplomgtlc Passport Santlesteban arrived In this Country from Havana with diplomatlo passport Oct. 3 and was granted a temporary visa He has been contending that he gained diplomatlo immunity on entering J3tates as- a memoer ortne cuoan united Na tions, r-fc. wJ. Judge Welrifeld ruled that in granting Santlesteban a visa and landing" permit Jhe: United States government did not agree that he was entitled to diplo matic immunity.

The ruling goes beyond the Question of. when diplomatlo immunity becomes ef fective. "The constitutional provision and the statute regarding diplo matic Immunity are designed to apply to diplomatic representa tives oi loreign governments ac-i credited, the United States," said the Jurist. "The petitioner, is not a 'public ministef -wlthm the meaftlng of the -censti tut lonal -or-statutory provisions." 'Open the Floodgates Such an Interpretation, he. as serted.

"would mean that a mem- ber state of the United Nations which? may be hostile to our In terests is free" to "send" tOthe United States individuals deslg-l nated -as-resldentxnemDersor their staffs to engage in conduct destructive to our national Inter est -and security-and-yet-Jjave them protected from criminal prosecution on the theory that his designated status cloaked hiaorlth: dipiomatlcjmmunlty. It would, open the floodgates for the entry of saboteurs. agents provocateur and others under a built-in guarantee that no matter what the criminal con duct, the government would not prosecute them." ba allowed to ride public school He railed Or repeal of the state -law which denies transpor tation to children in non-public schools the fact that their jaientaLpaytaxesijL. "Sometimes buses pass up chil dren at a farm house. I can see no logical reason for this," he Governor Hughes, a Methodist, had not mentioned the school during his campaign but he said In- an intcrvlsw here that he made his position clear whenever he Was asked.

He confirmed reports that he had received numerous petitions froii all over the state, many from chapters of Citizens for Educational Freedom. Mr. Rooda of Pella, a member' of the Christian Reformed Church; and Tragedy MciyAid Iowa I mwm? FKfwj-ws WHStKllif if; i- I i I -i '5? i If- 4 'I i -sr. DES MOINES, la; The fight jfora-fair -school bu laln- Iowa may have been aided by a tragedythe death In a car-train ao-i cident of a parochial school pu pil who; was from tax- paid transportation; 1 Frederick JRelser, eight, died Jan. 14 of Injuries received when the family car was hit by a train on the way to St.

Rose of Lima School, Denlson, His father and three other children were injured, two't-f whom are" stifl ln CEF Protests to Governor Stanley Rooda of Citizens for Educational Freedom Immediate ly wired Governor-elect! Harold E. Hughes to protest continuing discrimination in school bus serv ice. Three days later, in his lnaugu- ral the Governor, took; state legislators by "surprise with a recommendation that children in Independent schools 'a 1 i 4 REBUFFED BY SUDAN: New York-born uunK nfUourh rrnorts to Pom John UUUUp exlr.e rtkt are "1 cr tzez'M eZaea. lie Eair j. tf Li.

rrzsc'j c'--e Its t.l. tie science center for tLs rracL.t Lrors is responsible for the Church's efforts. Archbishop McGeoug Apostolic Delegate In South Afrloa, told ef bis fruitless mission to the Sudanese government which declined to stop the expulsions. (Details on page three.) NEW HOME OF ST. FRANCIS COLLEGE on Remsen St.

In the Brooklyn avio Center: The main building wifl house the liberal arts aa4 business administration students. On the left is a library. Thre buildings XXIII on the systematic expulsion or mission-, arles from southern Sudan. At right is Gregbrio Metro Cardinal Agagianian, Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of Mrs. Val Doering of Fort Madison, a Catholic, have been leading the A jbuUtntion.

i a.

Obtenir un accès à Newspapers.com

  • La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
  • Plus de 300 journaux des années 1700 à 2000
  • Des millions de pages supplémentaires ajoutées chaque mois

À propos de la collection The Tablet

Pages disponibles:
49 812
Années disponibles:
1908-1963