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!•• i/ i; j ^ • Courier-Journal — Friday, July 12, 1968 Priests Challenge Spanish Archbishop Over Manual i-5bor (MC NMrt fmlee) — Eighty-year-old .Archbishop Enrique Delgaao y Gomez of Pamplona is being challenged by lilt priests en Ma stand against man- ami work by them and his refusal to snake cheages in seminary life. Pamplona, known in Spain for out- standing religious activity, if the site «t the snlr Church-operated institu- te of Wgher learning in Spain, the YJalrenity of Navarre. It also leads the country in vocations for the Vtiestlioei. If Carta*, iifimi fries* ef the «are*,««1 net anataisa Hte alfalty ^arnuf ska nusay years ne was a asHUMuel firir,\ tae Pasntlan ^a«laan>M •atunssnai ia \ ink * ska*anasnVlsBaWistta **w* WH M HsMit(ICU pfNteal m Wfr ctpthag awnwpttaanV' Archkisbnp Delgaao had Issued a pastoral letter torbMdiat all priests to engage iat manual labor, and add- sarthaittkay should ma alHhelr time ta paarteral duties. Ha did so after Learning that two priests and a semi- rurian had Jabs a* laborers in city projects. Jlammc* Mma Jkng m Serilk ftsvUss — (RNS) — The first \fla- cunco Mass\ ever aung In a gpanish Roman CatkMlk chare* was offered fca St Peal's ekurch here with three a guitarist performing '- In another move, 33 of 40 profes- sors at the Pamplona seminary resign- ed on the issue of academic and ad- ministrative reforms they consider overdue. About a year ago the rector, Father Jesus Lezaun, was dismissed. because he asked for the same changes. Archbishop Delgado became acting rector. The professors have been joined by another 125 priests who protested a new survey launched by the archbish- op on the seminary, taken without consulting them. The seminary has 780 students, many of whom have joined their pro- feasors in the protest movement. Sie \fliry ^popular anisic of ' Jeae Oanttaal Baeao y tfonreal, ArehbUMa of Seville, praised the nwrfo Archbishop Delgaao nisi that the pregnun of reforms \is totally dif- ferent from what eaaea law pre- scribes, is at variance with tae Sec- ond Vatican Council's resolatieas and deesnet fellow the plan of the Blab. ops' Cessualttee en Seminaries.\ He said he had gone for arbitration to the Apostolic Nuncio in Madrid, Archbishop Luigi Dadigllo. — fin ttiA •rnrlr»n.pHi»«t iisue, the pro- test letter said that \a direct con- tact between the priest and the work- er, who makes up the great majority of the population, seems more ap- propriate now than ever, as the coun- try quickly becomes industrialized.\ The priests defended the action of the three clerics in keeping the pay they received in their jobs. They said this pay was handled in a responsi- ble manner, rather than passing hVon to the diocesan administration, which seldom gives public account of moneys.\ German Fund to Latin America \Popular flaaasuLj must? imparts at. mat swatJiaal contour » the sac- ral text,\ b* eel*. \One • Sdressing (Set In tat aWi jag* « . a people.\ The •rawta < vsaaltste ware three oatabratei ff jtrnoo singers, Antonio kafiirena, rfareajito da Triana and L^ls CaaaUara, aeeaaapaaied by a gui- tarist knew* at B Pwta (the poet). The lyrte was sung in the Mala- gaMaa style, which takes its name nw taw Malaga region, and the (Horu la SM Cordoba awskal tradi- tfcea. Tlst Cnaed was presented in the P^lweras aaW the Saactaa In the niana stria, both parts of the leville Pjeapular asaaat traiiuoa. The Agnui West Cknsuuay — (RNS) — Adveniat, a Roman Catholic over- seas charity fund supported by an- nual collections throughout West Germany, will aHot approximately |8 million to 789 separate undertak- ings in Latin America. Bishop Fran Hengsbach of Essen, president of Adveniat, said that the principal objectives will be the edu- cation of priests and the providing of schools and social facilities for the people. __ Arthkiahep Gives Land For Housing Cetrieates, Argentina — (NC) — Archbishop Francisco Vicentln of Corrientes has given nearly four acres of cMy land to the Provincial Mt. Carmel Maps, New Education Plan (Continued from Page 1) the Tuesday meeting, wrote to each family that the new program is \to re-establish a religious and Christian awareness in the entire parish.\ The pastor's letter, delivered in each home yesterday stated: \Mt. Car- mel has asked Bishop Sheen to per- mit the Mercy Sisters in Nt. Carmel School to engage in the wider aposto- .late of the total parochial problem rather than to limit their efforts to the relatively restricted program of school Instruction.\ Instead of using 12 Sisters and 5 lay teachers to instruct children in the school, the future program will find 7 Sisters engaged in continuous home, visitation, reaching the entire parish, instructing parents as well as children. \The Sisters aim,\ Father Ventura said, \shall be to help the parish families in all their needs. The Sis- ters will assist the parents in the burden they bear for the religious education of their own children.\ In this past year Mt. Carmel school had 445 children (100 of whom were not Catholic). Although forced to seek a major subsidy from the Diocesan Pastoral Office to maintain the school, Father Ventura insists that it is not finances which demand replacing-the school with the Chris- tian Formation program, but a con- viction \as the result of careful thought by the priests of the parish and the faculty of the school** that the new program will \better serve the needs of the total parish.\ Maryknoll Plans New Training Maryknoll, N.Y.—(NC)—The Cath- »llc-^ ! oreign-Misslon=Societyt>f^Amer i - lca (Maryknoll) will begin a new program of overseas training for its seminarians this fall. Six students have been assigned to mission parishes in Chile, Tanzania and the Philippine Islands. - The new program, given experi- mental status by Maryknoll, has four fundamental goals: provide seminar- ians ln-depth, supervised pastoral ex- perience in the mission country of their eventual assignment; provide a mission background that will moti- vate and orient further theological education; achieve an early start at language and acculturation, and link the seminary and the mission region in mutual responsibility for prepar- ing members for mission work. The concept Is a relatively untried one, he said. While some Religious institutes of men send students over- Church Buildings of Future Must Be Geared to Serve Neighborhood, Bishop Says y * l '\.W a S'^ a V A tor * ^ttpw*.housing - teas, it i s almost entirely for aca- < '-\ r* •JevjeTl^'J gf ** < \ demic studies. $ « « wv^in-l ^ — A 1 • SELLING ONLY THE FINEST USED CARS IN ROCHESTER FOR OVER '33 YEARS\ *•• •LatSMOIIILE Convertible, All power, JegLJiilflif^JMto_rjaon; witkmed by our expert mechanics. 4 9 M POOTI AC Bonneville 2 Door Hard- top, Maroon. Like new. Owners -name on request. 'MJEEP Wagoneer 4 Door. 4-wheel- drive. giMMf fur family hunting or work. Below wliolfMlr. CADILLAC 4 Door Hardtop, All power, nice second car. Slate in- spected and ready t<» go! t \ *«3 CADILLAC 4 DiM»r Hardtop, hilly re- \ 1\| conditioned. Owners name nit request. 9 ft4 C ADILsLAC 4 Door Hardtop, All Power, -^olthnd-Servicerf-arVailey-- since new! , . 9 65 CADILLAC 2 Door Hardtop, All power. Owners name on request. 9 65 CADILLAC 4 D«mf Hardtop, All power. \i factory air conditioning, power door lock. '66 CADILLAC 4 Dour-Hardtop. Black and black vin>| top. All |M»wpr. $ '67 CADILLAC 1 bour Hurdlu|j, Sedan 1 DeVille. Low mileage. JDwners name, on request. When Wt Make It Easy For You To Own A Cadillac The Valley Cadillac Corp. Iff! Mt«St **•• (Ngxrt. Iriftiton lowl) 244-86 lO *'..;•;•* e\'-*»*V (Continued from Page 1) February when St. Bridget's Church- in Rochester was offered to the Fed- eral government for use as a low-in- come housing site. Bishop Shceu's belief that the fu- ture usages and size of churches must be changed IK documented in today's formal statement: The Church must be the servant of the entire community where it is just as Christ was a servant, he states. Every church building \must include moderate facilities for human ser- vice\ making it a \center for educa- tional, physical, psychological and medical care of all who come to Christ\ However, in offering secular ser- vice to the neighborhood, the church must not keep the Blessed Sacra- ment in the building, the Bishop wrote. \The Real Presence of Christ must be united to the physical pres- ence of.the-community who come to the church for service\ even though a dividing wall or separate room keeps the Blessed Sacrament apart. The Bishop insists that all pro- :. grams - for- church-use- must- remeiru- ' ber that the non-believing may touch Christ through His Church. Even though the needy do not come as church-members, \healing may go out from Him\ when they are in His building, he said. Maintaining that the sacred and the secular can be united in our so- ciety, the Bishop's statement says that through community use of church buildings \liturgy and service Jif neighbor can be combined\. _ If the church doors once marked the boundary line between the world and the Church, the time has now come, the Bishop wrote, that \the Church as a husband will carry the bride of the hungry world over the threshold.\ The Bishop concluded: \Sometimes oae hears a parish is going down 'be- cause the Negroes are moving in'. Now let as say whenever we build: 'Something; Is going up, because Christ Is moving in'\. 'Baby' Parishes Flex Muscles (Continued from Page 1) people called me up and introduced themselves and I suggested their homes be the sites for the parish's first Masses. After that, when their friends and neighbors saw how beau- tiful the whole event was, I got swamped with requests,\ Father J*c- Donald said. As a result, he's booked solid for three days or the- ve^kr througii this month and August.^ Father McDonald continues to re- side at St. Augustine's, where he wis an assistant pastor until his June ap- pointment. Father Steger plans to live with Bishop Hickey at Ids' new home until a house, also on the church property when purchased, can be readied for his use. l £ Both parishes report a full sched- ule of organizational meetings, «orne centering around census taking. Fa- ther McDonald said that meetings this week and next would organize a task force of women from the parish for a census to be taken July 21 through 31. Just like a new baby, a church has got to have a name. Father Steger reports plans have been made to have parishioners nominate names at their first Mass, Aug. 4, and then cast final ballots the following Sunday. #*«»*.*» ^ t yxv- **NX : ;iii.oui«trv memr co. 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Vicar Archbishop^ to coordinate m of t^aats^aifeoilc »#HW Fatter Harold Salmon, t= pastor of St Charles Borroir ish. said thcat \intensified lay •ship training\ should be pan Church's role in Harlem Explaining his appoint vicariate delegate, Father pointed out that \the Church ing this opportunity to brio, the union of the Barlexn parL a common $oal, the best poss: vice of all ahen.\ ITie 38-jnear-old pastor was ed in 1958. Before his appc to St Chaarles hie had been faculty of Cardinal Hayes Hlg: in the Bronx. Non -Catho Negro to He Parish Sclio Pittsburgh — (NC) - H> ary grade schoo»l in a blacl here is replacing its nun i with a Wack non-Catholic, 1 layman to head a parochial s the diocese. John Mosley, 33, will succ ter Bridgest as principal In ber at the? school, whose 223 meat is about 80 per cec children. The mints will continue fo- ster the religion program. Notice of the change was in, the parish Sunday buL which the pastor, Msgr. Charl Rice, veteran labor priest als in peace and civil rights a commented: - \It is very important in as neighborhood such as ours boys, particularly, have a strc symbol of authority. It is ev important for black children white.\ Many Poor A item Consecration of 'Bishop oi Bower (NC News Service) Worcester, Mass. — The i disadvantaged vrere well rep among the 1,000 people who - Paul's catliedral here for tb cration of Auxiliary Bishop J. Harrington of Worcester. Bishop Harrington -has b« bed \the ~»rsnop> oTIBe Bow cause of Ms work since 191 rector of Worcester Catholic and his residence in the E 0w Lady of the Way, Wc hospice fo»f men. Principal consecrator ,was Bernard J.cFlanagan of W Coconsecrators -were Bishop. Wright of Eittaiburgh, first of Worcester, and Bishop Clc J. Weldon of Springfield, fi dioceie th.e new bishop was i priest In IMS. u