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Image provided by: Rochester Regional Library Council
Courier-Journal- Friday, July 12. infix AROUND THE WORLD Tower Moves Through Streets A 90-foot tower-honoring—St. Paolinn is curried through the streets on the shoulders of the yiainji men of Nola in Italy. The wortttm tower, (|icf»r i -ated with flowers, is borne through the minnm- nity's narrow streets each year in stflnte In tf-ic villagers' patron saint. It weighs 5,000 pounds. Fn 1500, villagers\'greeted St. Pauline wilh flmv ers when he returned with local citizens he had rescued \• fnmr 1lwatihig^TOTksrtRe'if*'t)iis News Servirc Question Novelty, Cardinal Advises London — (NC) — \The faith ofln;mv h.is in- come obscured since the (Secon<l.i Vntirnn '\nnixil. but this is not the council's fault* . .John ('mliii.tl Heenan of Westminster said in Westminster * at lie dral, at the Mass concluding the Year of Faith \There is nothing in the documents or de- cisions of the council to disturb the faith of riirier the learned or illiterate,\ the cardinal added \Unfortunately writers have attributed to the council their own strange views. If invited to ac cept novel doctrine, we should ask quite simplv 'Where in the council is this teaching U> he fouiici'.'\ Benedictines, Orthodox Join Hands London—(NO—Archbishop Antlxm, H!»<nvy metropolitan for Britain of the Russian Orthodox Church, celebrated the eucharist in Anvpleforlh Abbey in Yorkshire to mark the opening (if nn Or thodox center there. Orthodox cleig\ fn.\ 'mgo- slavia, the United States and Britain as.M t< d The Benedictines of - Ampleforth have uiven one of their buildings to serve as a school foi Or- thodox boys and a center for the entire OJ-IIHK'OX community in this country. The school bovsvvjll study secular subjects with the Benedictines The center will be directed by the Rev \'l;*di mir Rodzianko, a Serbian Orthodox priest. He I «->)<! the press: \The Ampleforth project is the first practical form of cooperation of its kind between Catholics and Orthodox in the last 1,000 years.\ Sesquicentennial For 'Silent Night* Salzburg, Austria (NC) ('hur'.'h and i ivtr authorities here have decided to sponsor a '\Y<ul<l Peace Festival\ to celebrate the lfidth anniversary of the Christmas carol \Silent Night \ The mayor of Salzburg and government offi cials have invited countries having diplomatic n> lations with Austria to send delegations to therHe bration. The music for \Silent Night,\' was composed in 1818 by a schoolmaster in Obemdorf, hirji in the Tyrolean Alps, Fran/, Xavier (\ruber lor a poem given him by Pastor Josef Mohr Spanish Cardinal Dies at 91 Toledo, Spain—(NC) —En- rique Cardinal Pla y \Dcniel of Toledo, Catholic primate of Spain, died July 5 M the .age of 91. -'7 * He was the second cardinal to die within a week. Francis Cardinal Brennan. a native of Shenandoah. Pa . who had served in Vatican administra- tive posts for nearly 20 years, died \July\\2 Iff Philadelphia. Cardinal Pla y Dcniel, who had spent a tort,\*- part of his ecclesiastical career as arch- bishop of Toledo, reciU-d the rosary and blessed all those present in his residence as he died. The cardinal was known as an able administrator inter- ested in building :m efficient arul strunu Church in Spain. He was a close friend of Chief of Stale (Jen. Francisco Fran- co, but he opposed govern- mental control of labor unions and was always quick to de- fend the Church's preroga- tives against threats from the regime. The cardinal was an ally of Franco during the Spanish Civil War of 1936-39. During pari of 19.T7 and 1938 his Sec city of Salamanca was na- nonalist capital. Pope Pius XI named him to iho Salamanca See in 1935. Most of the church property in the diocese had been de- stroyed during anticlerical demonstrations. In 1941 Pope I*iiis XII named him archbish- op of Toledo, the primatial See of Spain. The archdiocese had suffered heavy destrue- lion during the Civil War-and si-sf'i;il Inmdred priests and nun-- had been killed As primate, since 194l>. i anli rial PI y Dcniel gained natmtiai leadership in the de- M-lopnii'iil of welfare activi- ties and lay catholic uction. Czech Bishop To Return To Diocese Bonn, tier-many — (NC) — —Hehabilitation prit ee cl- ings for Bishop Stephen Trochta. S.D.B., of Litcmer-' ice, Czechoslovakia, have fin- ished and the bishop will soon return to his dioceso, ac- cording to an announcement of the Czechoslovak govern- ment office for Church af- fairs, it was reported here. Bishop Trochta. 63, was placed under house arrest in III.'JO and foiied from the ac- tive direction of his diocese. in 1952. In 1954, he was sen- tenced to 25 years in prison mi charges of spying for the Yatii.Hi. Later that year, he was reported lu be critically ill in the Pankrac prison in Prague after having been tor- tured. In HltiO, there were rc- por'.s III.it lie had been forc- ed to work with a road build- ing gong Bishop Trochta spent sev- eral years in the Nazi Dachau concentration camp dui'ing World War II and was liber- ated by U.S. I roups shortly befon- the end of the war. Optimism Noted In Czech Situation Ilerlln - (NC) — Franzis- kus Cardinal Kocnig of Vienna told a press eonfer- eiii c here that Czechoslo- \,iki.fs bishops view the Chinch's situation in that country with optimism. , He said they have become much\ freer since the liberali- zation of the government. Cardinal Koenig also spoke of his admiration for the Cburr-h m Poland and handed the v itahty and strength of Polish Catholicism. THE STUDENT PLAN A low-cost, long term loan for quali- fied students placed through the New York Higher Education Assistance CoYporation Up to $7,500 may be borrowed with repayment after grad- uation. THE PARENTS PLAN An errnnoimoal loan for pat- ents -who wish to help their chi Iff ion with (.ollpqe ex pens^s Up in $10,000 m.iy lie bfuiowpd GET MORE INFORMATION, AT THE FIRST FEDE« Al_ 0FMC|TNME7^ST~VOU FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AIMD LOAN ABBOCIATIO M OF ROCHESTER 32Q MAIN STREET EAST (WAIN OFFICE, . ' ,0 MAIN sm,r HS , . J6 „o,wlM»| NU F m MAIM STREET WEST • EASTWAV PLAZA . TWEL VE COHNF «s . „,-. MONROf AWN./E mONDEOUOfT PLAZA • BROCKPORT . WFSTG«tf\pL AH Bishops Give 50,000 To Help Alleviate Starvation in Biafra Vew York— (NO—-The Cath- olic bishojis of the United States have «ivt«n a «rant of $50,000 to Catholic Relief Services to help alleviate wide-spread star- vation in Miafi-a, the separated eastern region of Nigeria. Bishop Kdward S Sivanstrom, executive director.of CRS, said (July :i) the funds would be channeled to Biafra throuirfi Caritas .Jnternationalis, interna 1 - Lonal Catholic ch-arity organiza- tion. CHS, the overseas aid agency of American Catholics, has pre- viously sent more than $115,000 for Kiafron relief to the Cath- olic hierarchy in the area, the Room at Top For Church In Store Kyoto, Japan—(NC)—Kyo- to's newest department store, located in a newly developed suburban shopping center, has a Catholic church as its top- floor tenant. It's a revival of an old ex- periment for the pastor, Mary- knoll Father Loo .1. Steinbach of Chenton, Iowa. Just over 20 years ago, Fa- ther Steinbach helped Mary- knoll open one of its first postwar churches in Tokyo —oiTrtre Icrp-fhinr of the VT.it- sukoshi department store, lo- cated on the bustling Ginza Succes-s for the department store at that time spoiled ihe experiment — when business boomed, the store needed the space and so the church wis forced to move. Colleges Seek Aid Tn Puerto Rico I'once, P.K. — (NC) — Tlv- Association of. Puerto Rican Colleges and Universities has renewed its appeal to the gov- ernment to make a financial commitment in higher educa- tion, \for the good of all the people.\ , Msgr, Theodore McCarriclc. spokesman for the associa- tion and presidorvt of the Catholic University here, com- mented on a recent report by- j the U.S. Association of Amer- ican Universities urging in- creased aid to higher educa- tion. \The serious problems fac- ing; the prestigious universi- ties of the United States are magnified in Puerto Rico,\ Msgr. McCarriek said. International Committee of the Red Cross, and Caritas. < Biafra declared its independ- ence from the other four re- gions of the Nigerian Federal Republic on May 30, 1967. Civil war broke out between it and the federal government in July, 11967. Biafra's leaders have ac- jcused their opponents of geno- cide, particularly against the llbos, the dominant ethnic group |in Biafra. Many of the Ibos are Christian and Catholic. ' -Tshe federal government, which' now occupies large sec- lions of the secessionist region, had agreed to permit relief sup- plies into Biafra, but only by overland routes from entry points it controls. Biafra leaders have objected to this procedure, reporterly saying that it opens the way to diversion of the sup- plies or even poisoning of the food-. Patriarch Takes Part in Vienna Catholic Rite Vienna, Austria—f'N(\) — The participation of Roma- nian Orthodox Patriarch Jus- tin in a Catholic ordination ceremony in St. Stephen's Cathedral hero climaxed the, patriarch's 10-day visit to this country. / Both the patriarch and Kranziskus Cardinal Koenig of Vienna, who had invited him to visit Austria, preached sermons at the ordination ceremony and exchanged the (jlciss of peace The patriarch told news- men that his visit should serve to begin contacts be- tween the Romanian Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church and to strengthen tics between Rumania and Aus- tria. The patriarch described such contacts between Catho- lics and Orthodox as a stage on the way to the reunifica- tion of Christians. Such meet- ings, he said, can prepare for meetings on a higher level. 39th Annual NO VENA M Saint Anne July IB to 26 at 7:45 P.M. CONDUCTED BY REV. ALBERT BARTLETT S.J. 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