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Courier-Journal — Friday, Oct. 11, 1968 What s Happening In the Diocese Columbus Day begins tonight for local knights and their ladies. Mass at 6:30 p.m. in Blessed Sacrament Church will be followed by a dinner dance in the K. of C. club, Monroe Ave. Judge Alphonse L. Cassetti will speak. Also tonight, The Scene (musicians) will be at St. Philip Neri school hall, under the sponsorship of the parish youth Club. Dress rule: ties and jackets or sweaters for boys; for girls, dresses. Know the Enemy ! And to all single college graduates, the Catholic Alumni ~i\Club says Willkomen zum Oktoberfest! at the Country House, | Linden Avenue, tonight, from 9 until 1. The Royal Bavarians, • in costume, will play for dancing. i i | At Blessed Sacrament Church hall tonight, at 8, the I Mother's Club of St. Rose parish will sponsor a country fair, \ plus a wig demonstration, to raise money for the Monsignor ' Connor Memorial Scholarship Fund. ! A garage and rummage sale at 80 Thompson Road, Henri- \ etta, goes on from 9 to 5 today and tomorrow, under the ! auspices of the Guardian Angels Rosary Society. ; This Saturday afternoon, from 1 until 5, the St. Anne's ! Mothers' Club of St. Rose parish will sponsor a country fair, I art festival and auction on Lake Avenue, Lima. St. Theodore's and its recent offshoot, St. Jude's parish, will join forces in a fund-raiser this weekend. The three-day ~t7esu\^aTTt\St\TfteTFd^eV-soTrtai-ce^ ; Gates, will feature dinner each night, from 5 to 8 Friday and . Saturday, and 4-8 Sunday. i I A Lebanese play and a fashion show will be presented by '• the St. Nicholas Youth Club at 3 this Sunday afternoon in the ; church hall. \Surf and turf\ will be served on the Catholic Adult Club ; picnic at 3 p.m. Sunday at Wadham's Lodge, Powder Mill Park. i Corpus Christ! Mothers' Club has scheduled a toy dem- | onstration for this Monday night; a next-to-new sale Oct. 29- i 31, and a bake sale Oct. 29. i ; There will be two fashion shows Monday night, at Cardinal ', Mooney High School, at 8:15, and at Sacred Heart Cathedral ; rectory hall, the latter to follow reception of new members at • a church service at 7:45. The St. Rita Society will have a fashion show Tuesday night at 8 at Sweet's Farm, Holt Road, Webster. Father Louis J. Hohman, rector of Becket Hall, will 6peak at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday at St. Mark's, Greece, at a meeting of the Women's Club. Mothers of first-year students at Our Lady of Mercy High School are Invited to tea in the gymnasium at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. The organizations of St. Patrick's, Elmira, will sponsor a card party at 8 Wednesday night. A walk-through for parents is scheduled for Mother of Sorrows school Thursday, 10-11 a.m. and 1:30-2:30 p.m. Next Saturday at 0:30, the two-day fall festival at St. Pat- rick's, Elmira, will open with a children's costume parade In .Jhe auditorium. ,. mil . rti • .-,.:. * JoHn A*. Te'iHmerman; director of the county laboratory, .will addreti (he Home-School Association of Our Lady Queen of Peace at 8:30 Thursday night. His talk on drug addiction will follow a film, \The Seekers,\ scheduled for 8 p.m. At St Casimir's, Elmira, a meeting of the Rosary and Sacred Heart Society Monday will follow Rosary and Benedic- i tlon, in church at 7:30 p.m. The Rosary and Altar Society of St- Mary's, Elmira, will give a card party and bazaar at 8 p.m. Thursday in the school auditorium. The Catholic Mission Guild card party will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Knights of Columbus club, Monroe Ave. The Ladies Auxiliary of K. of C. Council 178 will meet at the clubrooms Thursday. A box lunch and book review at noon will open the season for the Nazareth College Alumnae Wednesday noon at Medaille Hall, on campus. Mrs. Robert Morrison, a member of the White House Conference on Equality for Women, will review Stephen Birmlngton's The Right People. Guests are welcome. Reservations: Mrs. Richard Soule, 381-1274, or Mrs. John Considine, 244-5378. Next Friday, Oct. 18, will be Gay Nineties Night at Bur- gundy Basin Inn, for the people of Assumption parish, Fair- port Buffet-dance from 9 until 1. , Mrs. William Ciluffo of 38 Wllehen Drive will entertain \ the members of the 80th Seton Branch at a luncheon at 12:30 i Wednesday. j RABBI AT SEMINARY i Loretto, Pi. — (NC) - Rabbi 'Leonard Winograd of Beth Zion I Temple. Johnstown, Pa., ap- pointed to a resident lectureship on the St Francis Seminary faculty here, will teach two courses on \The American Jew- ish Community\ and \An Intro- duction to Rabbinic Literature.\ With the acute problem rats are causing in the Inner city and the accompanying danger they present to all parts of the area, Joseph DeSantls, as- sociate puhlic health sanitar- ian for the county, has pre- pared a series for the Courier- Journal providing insight on the problem. By JOSEPH DESANW Monroe County Department of Health There are few if any places in the world that are free of rats. These pests have followed man to almost all inhabited parts of the world, usually traveling to new countries by hitchhiking on ships. There are several species of rats, but the one we are con- cerned with in our community is Rattus norvegieus, or more commonly, the Norway rat. This species is also some- times called the \domestic\ rat, the \sewer\ rat and the \brown\ rat. Because the Norway rat oc- curs in a variety of color com- binations — from reddish brown to dusky gray — the designation \brown\ rat is really a misnomer. No matter what his color, the Norway rat Is a .stubborn adversary. If we are to defeat him, we must understand him, we must know his habits and how he lives. In essence, we must learn to think like a rat In size, the average adult Norway rat is 12 to 16 inches long from the tip of his nose to the end of his tail. Dis- tinctive features are his blunt nose and his ears which are covered with short, fine hair. The tail is usually shorter than the length of the body. The life span is a maximum of three years, but the aver- age life expectancy is shorter under competitive conditions. The Norway rat is a prolific breeder throughout the year with a peak in the spring. Breeding begins at 3 to 5 months of age and the average female will have from five to seven litters a year. The gesta- tion period is 20 to 25 days, and there are between 6 and 14 rats per litter. Young rats can swim when they are only eight days old. As anyone knows who has set out cheese-baited traps, Inner City Groups In Week's Training India Euts-Bressure On Missionaries the Norway rat has a^ood sense of smell. His vision is fair. He is able to discriminate between simple patterns. He has good depth perception, ap- pears to recognize motion, but is color blind. By means of hair feelers, he relies on a constant touch of objects along his path for a feeling of security. That is why he likes to travel,along the base of walls. The Norway rat Is largely a nighttime feeder. All the food of men and animals is accep- table to him, and given a choice of foods, he will seek out a well balanced diet very similar to man. To him, an un- covered garbage can is a ban- quet. He consumes about one ounce of food per feeding. He finds an ideal home in the city's combined storm and sanitary sewer system where he has water and harborage and where daily he is served great quantities of ground up food from home automatic dis- posals. By MARGARET CONNOLLY Christians are scarce in In dia. Foreign missioners are being eased out or expelled banned from one state after another. In some places conversions are subject to police investiga- tion, lest they be accomplished \through force, undue persecu- tion, allurement or other frau- dulent means.\ Discussing these circumstan- ces, a newspaper man from In- dia told the Courier-Journal: \We sometimes spread the Christian message in an odd way — without mention of Christ.' Jesuit Father John Barrett, who runs a Catholic news ser- vice now, was talking about a secular paper he was involved in, a weekly that he described as one of two pro-Western pa- pers in all of India's thriving secular press. This weekly, he said, would run.a Bishop.She^n article such as Rochester readers see In the morning paper.- -The —writer would not be identified, how- ever, and references to Christ would be deleted. Father Barrett, from Tip- perary Hill in Syracuse, has lived In India 31 years. He went as a missloner for the Society of Jesus In 1937, and was or- dained there in 1942. His legal standing is solid, though: he be- came a citizen before that privi- lege was. withdrawn. At about the same time, in 1950, he began his newspaper career, founding twin papers in English and Hindi. \I wish I had started earlier,\ he said. Ho has gone back to New Delhi, uncertain whether his summer's work in the states will bear fruit. He had been trying to tap foundations for funds to improve journalism education. \Good help,\ he said, \Is hard to find.\ More newspapers are pub- lished in India than here, Fa- ther Barrett said, producing ran- dom statistics: nine dailes in New Delhi; four in Kerala; 16 papers In the Catholic Press of India; 18 owned outright by the Communist party. One of the latter, a weekly tabloid with a circulation of 300,000, distributes 65,000 copies in the Middle East, \and they are paid for by Russia,\ the priest reported. Catholics comprise 1.2 per cent of the population, he went on. Yet Pope Paul's encyclical, \Of Human Life,\ aroused wide interest, particularly because of ongoing controversies over birth control and abortion. In India, Father Barrett ob- served, man's relation to the Creator is generally understood, deeply felt, i \The faith of the people, Hin- du or Christian, is very deep.\ Catholic Paper Ups Czech Circulation Bonn, Germany — (NC) — A relaxation in the availability of newsprint has enabled the Czechoslovakian Catholic week- ly Katolicke Noviny nearly to double its circulation. At the close of 1987 the paper's circulation was 75,000. It is now 140,000 and its editors claim that it has not reached its market potential by any means. A Bhirlty MJbcrf Planning a WEDDING or PARTY? FOR HORS D'OEURVRES BEAUTIFULLY AND FRESHLY MADE CALL THE SEIDBERGS 467-2989 - 544-6657 Your education shouldn 't end with a degree. The College of Stint Rose, a fully-accredited four-year liberal uts college for women, Is dedi- cated to preparing its graduates for a continuing, personally, re- warding liberal education, for entrance to a profession, and for spiritual and social development is an individual <uid a member of society. Here is a College with an atmosphere of learning tad a great faculty that is inter- ested in helping students get the meaningful and rewarding col- lege education they seek. Small classes mean that faculty mem- bers get to know their students as individuals, not just faces in a crowd. Undergraduate degree programs are offered in biology, business\ administration, business educa- tion, chemistry, elementary edu- cation, English, French, history and political science, mathema- tics, music, secondary education. social studies, sociology, and Spanish. Saint Rote Is located in Albany, New York, an area rich In history, beauty, recreational, and cultural opportunities. For additional information, write Admissioni Director, Box 420, THE COLLEGE of SAINT ROSE ALBANY, NEw\ YORK 12203 '••Mno\ AS Sill* kissi' Smooth as Silk. That's not the name of our whiskey. But that's the name it's been given. Because it's the only whiskey that tastes that way. Our other name? Kessler. A nice name, but not Very descriptive. The Norway rat also finds NMSC Names Semi - Finalists Twelve students from dioces- an Catholic high schools have been named semi-finalists in the] National Merit Scholarship Pro gram. Another 117 students have received the program's letter of commendation. Among the semi-finalists are Carol L. Hee and Jean M. Mar- chinock from Notre Dame High School in Elmira. Laurence D. Behr and Paul F. Wendelglass from Aquinas and Michael J. Ciaraldi and Carol M. Dole from Bishop Kearney High School were also named. McQuaid Jesuit High School's scholars James E. Keenan and Roger R. Schaeffer, and students from Nazareth Academy, Joyce A. Desmarais and Elizabeth A. Zimmer were given the award, as well as Lea M. Mutschler, from Our Lady of Mercy High School, and Linda M. Grady, from Sacred Heart Academy. ? an ideal home in areas of the community—in the inner city particularly—where 'there is deteriorating property and poor sanitation. Here, rats nest in burrows, coming out at night to feed on exposed garbage and litter. They are able to gain entrance to many homes-because of cracks in foundations and broken base- ment windows. We find similar rat burrows in out-of-the way places in the county, such as a lonely road where suburbanites may come only to dump garbage and trash in a ditch, not realizing that they too are setting a din- ner table for the rodents. A few more things about the Norway rat. He can do a standing high jump of two feet, and a running high jump of three feet. He has been ob- served to fall two stories with- out harm. He can reach 18 inches in any direction along a wall. Gnawing is essential ta^his health. His upper incisbcs„ \grTW^-lniciiesrand-his-iower incisors 5*4 inehes per year. So he gnaws—be it on wood or concrete — as a necessary control of tooth growth. The County Health ftepart ment is conducting a week-long course at its annex on ^estfall Road to train inner city resi- dents to control the |rat popu lation. Josebh DeSantis, associate public health sanitarian for the county, gave the opening talk. Films and addresses by city and state officials also were on the agenda. Meanwhile, the city and coun- ty last week announced they will\ undertake on an experi- mental basis a second refuse collection in the target area, part of the Model Cities site. It also will concentrate on enforce- ment of city property and sani- tation ordinances. The county will conduct a sur- vey to note the effectiveness of the increased refuse pickups as well as cleanup projects involv- ing neighborhood groups and an extermination program. ^ A $321,920 federal aid pro- gram for the county to be used to expand its demonstration pro- gram has passed the House and is awaiting Senate action. In another development, the Rev. Bennie Brass, president of the Southern Christian Leadef- shTpT^nTereiicelrerertold-coun-\ ty. legislators he wanted blacks of the inner city actively in- volved in the program and of- fered the SCLC's efforts. Next week—the public health Tne SCLC will provide the importance and economic im- coun ty with specific complaints .pact of rodents. « to help pinpoint the nuisance. Also the county will hire 12 part-time aides from the inner city not only to work in' rat- abatement but also to go door- to-door to inform residents of their role in the program. Among groups represented at the week-long county training program were the SCLC, Action for a Better Community, the Monroe County Human Rela- tions Commission and various neighborhood centers. ' \ WHEN IT'S TIME FOR A THEN IT'S TIME TO SEE BERNARD J. HENSLER (JEWELERS 307 COMMERCE BLOG. Open Tues. and Thurs. Eves 'til 9 * Phone 454-6918 FOR PERFECT DIAPER SERVICE StoAL BABY WASH 328-0770 MiMiiiiijiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; FALL means . . COMFORT is bock in style with DRURY LANE Custom Fitted SHOES BLACK and OTTER BLACK and OTTER Choose Your Fall Shoes from Many Styles and Patterns In Sizes 4 to 13 and Widths AAA to EEE j • Famous for Arch' Supports - Prescription Shoes Personalized Service Undivided Attention OPEN DAILY 8 to 6 (Deluxe ShonShop YOUR FAMILY SHOE STORE 477 MONROE AYE 271-6391 FRIDAY 'til 9 P.M. One of the nicest things about our Personal Loans: They*re so impersonal! \Impersonal\ really doesn't describe our attitude. We're just trying to be clever with words. What we mean to say is that we're not the least bit nosey. We believe that a person should be able to borrow money with ease... and dignity. And with privacy. Our Personal Loan application simply covers what we must know. Nothing more. We do not contact friends, relatives or your employer. Everything is in the strictest coilfidenee. , \ f If you need $500, we'll give you as much as 24 months, to pay it back. If you borrow over $1,200, yon can have three years. And all our loans include life insurance on the unpaid balance. It costs just a trifle. Come to-think of it, our Personal 4i>an customers usually ask us more ques- tions than we ask them. Usually about our other services. JULIUS KESSU* COMPANY. LAWRENCE8UR0, • NOIANA. BLENDED WHISKEY. 86 PROOF. 72-l/2;< GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS. KesslertheSmoothasSilkwhiskey. 4.99^4.49 g 2 .85 Plnt YOUR HERITAGE OF FREEDOM \W • •* preserve it by exercising your privilege and duty. ...VOTE You can get a loan for any need at any office of SECURITY TRUST f*£f*Sc5NAL LOANS UJl'v Wjw>«Sis „ 'WW** .4tailiMl Making plans for the Elligott, Mt. Carmel ti mel Ladies' president: nanny will be held Fri game. All proceeds go Sister Mary Aloysius 2,500 trading stamp t Aloysius, a victim of Williamsport, Pa., an< •1 *f&*- Bishop McCafferty tal D'Aurizio of Catholic Flower Chapel of Dum cenWy Id nelp get the Red Cross ci Father Ki Should St By Fr. R. A. Graham, S.J. Service Special Correspondent Vatican City — (RNS) — fro£-Hans Kueng^Swiss-bom Catholic scholar, writes in his latest book that if theologians find their scientific conclu- sions do not square with creeds or definitions they should not for that reason . leave the Church. In these days of depressing and progressive divisions, it makes no sense to create a new church for every newly discovered truth, he holds. Father Kueng, a professor at the Catholic theological faculty of Tuebingen Univer- sity in Germany presented these views in a book titled \Truthfulness—the future of the Church.\ He charges that the Church suppresses freedom of scien- tific research by penalizing thinkers who dare to dissent. He addresses himself there- fore to the problem of how a • Christian and a theologian, normally bound by the tenets of the faith, can avoid this \untruthfulness.\ According to the prevailing rule, writes Father Kueng, \Science must serve the sys- tem: one speaks one way in r. public and another way in \\ private; the scholar speaks k otherwise than he writes; he