Msgr. Kolka Eulogized By Rev. L. Marvin Read doorways o f the airport to hold out his The more than 1,000 people crowded arms and smile a warm and gracious wel­ into the Cathedral of the Immaculate come to the refugees from Cuba and Eu­ Conception Jan. 11 heard Msgr. Elmer J. rope who came to this country under his guidance and interest.” Kolka eulogized by his Archbishop as **an inspiration to all of us” and as "a man of mercy." "H E W A S ," said Msgr. Jones, "a gen­ Requiem Mass was concelebrated in tleman and a diplomat of the Church the Cathedral for Msgr. Kolka, 61, who whose prayer, some 35 years ago, was had been associated with the Catholic simply that he might never forget that he was a priest forever. He never did, Charities program of the Archdiocese for and that is now his eternal glory,” nearly three decades. He died early Jan. At the conclusion of the Mass and ‘LAN 9 in St. Joseph Hospital. absolution. Archbishop Casey thanked Principal concelebrant was Archbishop those who had come "to join us this James V. Casey; other concelebrants were morning in sorrowing over the loss of our Bishop Hubert Newell, Cheyenne; Bishop (tra brother priest.” Charles Buswell, Pueblo; Msgr. Lawrence (50 The Archbishop referred to a note sent lild Corcoran, secretary of the National Con­ by the seminary rector when .Msgr. Kolka ference of Catholic Charities, Washington; $964,375 ADF Budget was in his first year of seminary studies: hil- Msgr. Leo Coady, director o f Catholic "This man,” the rector had written, "pos­ an. Charities. Washington. : at sesses a very self-sacrificing character.” Homilist at the Mass was Msgr. Wil­ 21 "He epitomized that evaluation,” said Okayed by Committee ier liam Jones. Archdiucesan superintendent Archbishop Casey, "from the day he was of schools and longtime associate of Msgr. appointed as assistant pastor at St. Phi- A 1969 Archdiocesan Devt lopinent Springs — $29,470 (first separate budget Kolka in many projects. Said lomena’s parish until he died a few days Fund (ADF) budget totaling $964,375 — for this office). Jones: ago, pastor o f the same parish.” $213,000 higher than the 1968 budget — • Catholic Charities, Springs "His life was an inspiration to me.” was approved Jan. 14 by the special 15- Social Service Agency — $33,000 to fund "FATHER KOLKA was a bridge the Ordinary said, and his life giving us a glimpse of the majesty of the member evaluating committee. an operation that began Oct. 1 and is not was "a life o f dedication, especially to the eligible for United Fund assistance until priestly vocation so that we might pres­ poor and the needy,” many of whom re­ Approval of the 11-item budget wound erve its essentials as the priesthood is up nearly two months of work by the it has been functioning one year. tained for life "a love and devotion to • Maternity Residence, Denver — being re-born in the Church in the pres­ this man.” committee; reque.sts for archdiocesan fi­ ent day.” Msgr. Elmer J. Kolka nancing of special projects were submitted $15,000 for a project approved in 1968 "A priest like Father Kolka,” said 1908-1969 early in November. but not yet established pending location AN E D IT O R IA L appearing in the of a suitable existing facility. Msgr. Jones, "was always able to appreci­ Saturday, Jan. 11, Rocky Mountain News, Among the largest single items in the ate the fresh, n^w insights and nuances Christ, and the human dimensions of the budget was $333,000 earmarked for the • Sacred Heart Retreat House, Sedalia — Church." said: $25,000 to help reduce capital debt. which the new school of priests are bring­ "All Denver was the loser when anti-poverty program inaugurated last ing to the glorious traditions of the past He credited the late Catholic Charities • Newman centers. Greeley, Boulder (Msgr.) Kolka died. The native of Denver year as a $1 million, three-year plan to . . . the stress upon the humanity of director as having been, for 25 years, and Denver (Metro State) — $30,000, and veteran churchman had spent his help the disadvantaged in northern Colo­ "the Church’s Number One Ambassador rado. Last year's allocation for the pro­ • Vocations Office — $13,000. of charity to this city, to the state and to priestly life caring for the poor, the un­ • Family Life Bureau — $1,500. fortunate and any in need.” gram forced indefinite postponement of Official the community at large.” the already approved construction of a • Catholic Youth Organizations — A telegram from Bishop Edward Swan- $ 12,000 . Heading the list of civic dignitaries new archdiocesan administration building; strom. National Director of Catholic • Chancery — $352,000; includes attending the funeral Mass were Gov. Charities, called Msgr. Kolka ”a zealous there likewise is no allocation for this I Catholic Charities construction in the 1969 budget. $180,000 earmarked for acquisition of John Love, Lt. Gov. Mark Hogan and and devoted friend of Catholic Relief Ser­ new’ property, parish sites, etc., and Mayor William McNichols — who were vices for many years” and praised the Dear Family in Christ: O T H E R ITE.MS included in the 1969 $60,000 for home and foreign missions, among the 43 honorary pallbearers — "tremendous contribution he made to the plus taxes, maintenance and ADF cam­ It is my privilege and responsibility to budget: who heard Msgr. Jones call Kolka "a fa­ promotion o f our Resettlement Program paign expenses. invite your support of our annual appeal ther to hundred of orphan children,” who for our Catholic Charities. This collection for the poor displaced people after the • Catholic Education Office, Denver - "should be receiving a tumultuous wel­ war.” FATHER R O B E R T Syrianey, pastor will be held this year on Sunday, Janu­ $130,069 (combined and come at the gate of heaven for the hun­ Among those attending the rites was CCD offices, a departure from the of Our Lady of Fatima parish. Lakewood, ary 19, and your contributions are vitally dreds of times that he waited along the ADF director and chairman of the eval­ ne^ed to supplement the funds derived Archbishop Urban J. Vehr, former Ordi­ previous separate operations). tracks of the railroad stations and at the nary of the Denver archdiocese • Catholic Education Office, Colorado uating committee, said the budget total from the United Way campaign. This somewhat exceeds the $906,000 collected year an added responsibility was under­ during the 1968 campaign, when the goal taken with establishment of a Catholic St. M ary’s Principal was $753,500. welfare agency in Colorado Springs. He noted approximately $140,000 of Our love of God and of His people the 1968 collection was returned to the form the very heart of our Christian parishes which exceeded their budget faith. This love creates a need to share Education Director Named quotas set before the campaign opened. and to give of ourselves to those in spirit­ The same procedure will be followed this Sister Thomasine Wilcox, S.L., princi­ be elective or that some members should ual and material need. We discover Our year. Father Syrianey said, and the next pal of St. Mary’s Academy, Denver, has be elected and others appointed. Lord in other people; and we love Him step in the ADf' campaign will be setting been appointed executive director for the and help Him in serving the poor and the 1969 quotas. Metropolitan Denver Board of Catholic SISTER THOM ASIN E was granted afflicted. Father Syrianey said plans would be Education to be established this month. permission by her superior. Sister Flor­ Catholic Charities, as your representa­ completed soon for organizing the cam­ The appointment was announced by ence of the Sisters o f Loretto, to serve in tive, serves more than 15,000 people paign at the archdiocesan and parish the Advisory Ck>mmittee on Catholic Edu­ the new position until June 30, 1970 — yearly with a wide variety of services. levels, in preparation for the advance cation appointed by Archbishop James V. in line with the committee’s request. She Many of these services have been provided gifts and pledge drives that secure the Casey to initiate implementation of the has been succeeded as principal of St. for a number of years, including a num­ needed funds. Notre Dame Study on Catholic Education Mary’s by Sister Ann Lucille Ryan. ber of services in the child welfare field. This year marks the second that a in the metropolitan area that was con­ Sister Thomasine brings a rich back­ The Catholic Charities agency is also at­ budget has been adopted and publicized tempting at the present time to begin ducted last year. ground of experience in Denver Catholic Sister Thomasine, who took office Jan. schools to the post. Before becoming prin­ widely in advance of the campaign — a some newer programs directed at provid­ departure inaugurated by Archbishop 15, is the first of three full-time staff cipal of St. Mary’s a year and a half ago, ing for the needs of families experiencing James V. Casey with an announcement a wide variety of problems. members to be appointed. Yet to be she served nine years as principal of named are a budget officer and a person­ Machebeuf High School — as its founding in the fall of 1967; the strict parish quota As a member of the Catholic communi­ system also was announced at that time. ty, you may take justifiable pride in the nel director. principal. work of the priests, sisters and lay people The board itself is to be appointed by She previously served one year as Other members of the ADF evaluating who arc giving truly dedicated service to Archbishop Casey Feb. 1, after a screen­ principal of Blessed Sacrament elementa­ committee are Msgr. William H. Jones, our neighbors in need as your representa­ ing committee set up by the committee ry school, during which she also worked Msgr. George Evans, Father Barry .1. tives in our Catholic welfare agencies. completes its processing of the more than with preparations for the impending Wogan, Leonard Doherty, Capt. .lames J. I ask your support of this essential 100 applications for membership received opening of Machebeuf. Egan. Martin Kelly, Robert Kelly, social program of the Church which Cath­ before the deadline Jan. 13. Before going to Blessed Sacrament, she Charles Hughes, Leo Payne, Paul olic Charities maintains and directs in served two years as principal of St. Schmitz, Thomas Sheehan, John A. Ye- Nine board members are to be appoint­ James’ School. Highwood, III., and before lenick, Mrs. Norman Patrick and Richard the name of all of us. ed to one-, tvr'o- and three-year terms — Devotedly yours in Christ. that taught for six years at St. Philome- Sister Thomasine Wilcox, S.L. Belknap. six of them from the six districts pro­ na’s School. Denver — her first teaching posed as a division of the area by the assignment. Notre Dame Study and three as at-large Sister Thom asine, a native o f St. members. Once established, the board Louis, holds a bachelor of arts degree Dutch Pastoral Council probably will decide membership should from Loretto Heights College, Denver, and a master of education degree from Marquette University, Milwaukee. Rejects ^Humanae Vitae’ Now in residence at the Loretto Edu­ cation Center, Littleton, Sister Thomasine Catholic Charities Adds Noordwijkerhout, The Netherlands — of Catholics from each o f the nation's is establishing her new office at St. Phi- A plenary session of Dutch Catholics — seven dioceses. The nine Dutch bishops, lomena’s School. among them the nation’s nine bishops, headed by Cardinal Bernard Alfrink of I'trecht. constitute the Council's presidi­ New Programs of Service SINCE THE first priority for the laity, religious and priests — called Pope um. new Metropolitan Board of Catholic Edu­ Paul VPs encyclical banning artificial Contributions to the annual special subject to solution by traditional agency cation will be the direction of the city’s birth control "unconvincing.” / ALTHOUGH the Council’s recom­ collection for Catholic Charities, sched­ procedures. five parochial high .-ichools. Sister Thoma­ The three-day session o f the Dutch mendations and resolutions difi'ered uled Jan. 19 at churches throughout the "We are pleased to provide this sort of sine is preparing reports on the problems National Pastoral Council also recr>m- sharply from "traditional ’ presentations archdiocese, will help finance innovative service,” Father Dunn said, "and we hope they face for the board’s consideration. mended new approaches to moral ques­ of some items of Church teaching. Cardi­ programs for the long established agency. to expand it.” The five parochial high schools — tions. saying, "Neither rules nor norms nal Alfrink reminded participants that In his pastoral bulletin asking gener­ Plans call for hiring another nun. Sis­ Cathedral, Machebeuf, St. Joseph’s, St. are supreme. Christ’s all-giving, sacrific­ their Church cannot exist without "Pe­ ous support for the collection. Archbishop ter Mary Helen, O.L.V.M., to join Sister Francis de Sales' and Holy Family — ing love is. for the Christian, the only ter's successor” — the Pope. James. V. Casey noted Catholic Charities Michael Mary in the project soon. were establised as the first concern of the and abs

By James R. Sena that the question of civil bution made America bet- The former national disobedience, its pros and ter morally.” Iward member of the Na- A prominent Denver law­ cons, has been a vital issue Asked if civil disobedi- tional Association for the yer who happens to be a since the beginnings of law. ence was the only path to Advancement of Colored black man told a seminar Drawing an analogy be- profound social ameliora- People and a staff attorney of business and professional tween the plight of the tion, Andrews said: "Yes, for the organization said: “executivesexecutives at Regis College condemned Socrates in I’m forced to say ‘Yes’ be- "There’ll be violence al- last week that boc^tes of yore and the cause I look at history and right, but the questions are would never have stayed in black man see that that was the only what form it will take and the back ot the du» Andrews said So- way any profound social how to minimize it.” Irving K , ’ crates was not fighting change ever came about. Andrews said that highly who was raised in the Colt j:he W e A m ericans are the operative today is a "new rado Springs area and at­ state but was appealing to products of civil disobedi- breed of young people, tended Lutheran and Cath­ a higher law. ence. Christ was guilty young actors, young priesU olic parochial schools as only of civil disobedience.” and ministers, young well- as the r *1.public j ' schools. much the same way, Andrews, who took B.S, professional people not all was one of the discussion Andrews, did Martin ^ g degrees from Col- necessarily young in aee leade^ at e Luther King appeal to a orado College and his LL.B. but young in mind, recep- nual Regis o eg higher law, namely the fj-om the University of tive and responsive to new ities Seminar. American Constitution, as Denver, later expanded his ideas.” The. seminar r u loran , the Kin"8 art, executed by William Joseph of Denver. The circular church focuses on the table of sacrifice, to all Its present ramifica- Constitution. HE TOLJ) THE Register ronoun to refer to the embossed with flames, symbols of the patroness’ death. Off center, to the right, is the Ark of the tions today. that m his v.ew there is no generation that does not Tabernacle, and the stations of the cross, portrayed on tapestries line both walls of the church. Andrews topic was Law "KING, LIKE Socrates,” way to stop the momentum feel ready for change and Civil D isbi^ience, a ^aid Andrews, "was the 8“ °^ that has been 8 • Pastor of the parish is Father James Rasby. subject for which the semi- defender of the law not its by the new wave of nar read from St Pauls e„emy.” In a way, accord- I^ple m Amenc^ „ ^t, but not "Epistle to the Romans Andrews, today s There 11 be civil disobedi- Arvada Church Completed (Ch. 1-5); Sophocles "Anti- demoMtrator“s "'fo r justice ence in the future and we^I n g h \ "T r justice ^here^ gone;” and Plato’s "Apology are doing no more or less violence predicted Members of St. Joan of nishings, was blessed by Sundays at the Arvada rt.-rv,,rTir*ifT home. of Socrates.” than upholding a higher Andrews, but arguging "They see that the Arc parish, Arvada, have Archbishop James V, Cas- West High School audito­ moved into their new ey. assisted by the pastor rium and, on holy days, at DEAN OF REGIS, Fa­ eq^alit" KeTner R e P ^ l T t b e Cbb 8enerationa have church and educational fa- of the parish. Father King of Glory Lutheran ther Harry R. Klocker. S.J., cago riots, he said, "the ® cilities. The complex, built James Rasby, Aug. 22 church. ® ... ’ thAVthey nrAare hard-minded ...... ° said Andrews’ presentation The end result of Martin violence will not emanate by the newly-established 1967. enough to realize that they The building has been of 'The Apology” was "one Luther King’s operations from the demonstrators but 350-family parish at a cost Until recently, the pa- of the best I’ve ever heard.” "made the country cleaner,” from the entrenched es- arc not going to establish $390,OOO, excluding fur- rishioners have worshipped overseen by a 10-member UtopiaI lT.^r\l,^ AtfKxx,. either butKiv4. they’re . . C-. IX- v\parish n v*. c K KitilWirvi-r building nr\ commis­ vw. t-.^, c Andrews told the seminar said Andrews, "his contri- tablishment.” not going to stop trying.” sion; architect of the par­ "They’ll try,” said A n­ ish plant was John Mc­ drews, "they’re in a new Clergy To Study Guire, Denver. Blackington Education Director state of mind, operating and Decker, Inc., General from a new spirituality. Contractors, began con­ Their violence is not the struction Feb. 23, 1968. (Continued From Page 1) ESTABLISHMENT of the Metropoli- Social Alienation violence of cruelty but the will take up other problems of Catholic tan Board of Catholic Education is A lower level of the fa­ violence of change, asked Boulder — "Alienated with Denver Black Panther education — notably the religious instruc­ viewed by the archdiocesan committee as cility contains 10 class­ for now.” Sub-Cultures” will be the leader Lauren Watson, tion of children in non-Catholic schools the first step toward pu ttin g all schools rooms for religious instruc­ "I note,” said Andrews, title of a Continuing Edu- Ernest Vigil of the Cru- "as soon as we possibly can.” under the direction of regional boards; a tion. At the present time, "in the new breed for the cation Seminar for clergy sade for Justice, John Although direction of the private high board for the Colorado Springs area is some 1,500 youths receive first time a profound ques­ scheduled at the Universi- Buttny of Students for a schools in the community — St. Mary’s, one obvious follow-up. religious education from tioning of a national policy ty of Colorado Jan. 23-24. Democratic Society (SDS) Marycrest, Mullen and Regis — is not the pre-school through the - they don’t want the vio- The seminar is being and Don Vondra of the included in the new board’s jurisdiction, Jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Board high school levels. Two lence of Vietnam all they sponsored by the Arch­ John Birch Society. extensive cooperation in the over-all pro­ is to be "subject only to a veto of the Franciscan Sisters co-ordi­ ask is change — justice diocese of Denver, the Col- That night a "plunge gram ip a special concern of the board. archbishop and subject to existing state nate the program which now.” orado Council of Churches experience” is scheduled Sister Thomasine said she was reluc- statutes, accreditation requirements, Can- involves 200 other adults and the National Campus from 7 to 10 p.m. — field tant to comment extensively on the prob on Law directives for Catholic education, in teaching and ancillary HE OBSERVED the Ministry Association in trips in Denver or Boulder lems the board will face at this time, ;ind established archdiocesan school poli- positions. young people of today cooperation with the un­ "for further engagement Patron Saint beyond slating her belief that Catholics cies.” Plans call for the know where the action is - iversity’s Bureau of Con- with and observation of "must take a long, hard look at their church’s dedication in the A life-size figure of St, — not in Vietnam, but in tinuing Education. sub-cultures” under direc- schools and all their educational system.” The ar,.hdiocesan committee has near future by Archbishop Joan of Arc, in ham­ Yucatan, Africa and other A three-part program is tion of the four discussion Financing is a major problem for the stressed that administration of schools Casey. mered aluminum, adorns underdeveloped but devel- scheduled. After registra- leaders and others. schools, she said, and decisions must be will remain in the hands of the schools, All interior liturgical art the outside wall of the oping areas of the world tion at 1 p.m., Jan. 23 at The fee for the seminar made on whether and how to seek aid' — however, with the board’s job, initially, to was designed and executed new church; Joan holds they should like to employ Alumni Hall, University is $12 each, including reg- such as state assistance for secular educa­ be fiscal responsibility, and ultimately, by William Joseph of Lor­ aloft the sword with their energy in places like Memorial Center, an "en- iatration, materials and tional functions. the establishment of administrative poli- etto Heights college. which she led her victo­ that.” gagement” session is sched- lodging the night of Jan. . "We can’t meet the needs by tuition cies for other facets of the educational Assistant pastor to Fa­ rious French troops "I guess what I’m talking uled from 2 to 5 p.m. with 23 at Holiday Inn, Boul- alone; there must be some more equitable program, for CCD, pre-school, and pre­ ther Rasby is Father Mi­ against the English at about,” said the young four small group sessions der. means,” she said. school programs as well as the schools. chael Chamberlain. O rleans in 1429. Denver attorney, "in sum- ______ming up, is the sort of mentality of youth and Catholic Charities vigor I saw in the ancient Socrates defending his FEDERAL SAVINGS • COLORADO FEDERAL (Continued From Page 1) to meet a special need for a "halfway promotion of change, the cial Service Agency in Colorado Springs house” type of residence not currently urgent words I read in with a full-time office Oct. 1. This agency available. The project was approved last Archbishop Casey’s New S CO especially needs voluntary support since year for participation in the Archdiocesan Year's message calling for CO it cannot qualify for that community’s Development Fund (ADF) but implemen­ action in civil rights, ac­ • CO United Fund assistance until it has been tation has been delayed pending location tion based on love, NOW.” cn in operation for a year. of a suitable site; no construction would 'Tm always reminded.” cs be involved. said Andrews, "that Pope ^lllTlllfr John was one of the oldest SE D ID Y O U FA TH ER DUNN said the Colorado DURING 1968, Catholic Charities' men ever to to be named Sam Springs agency has begun work "along service to the community included assist­ to the Papacy, but he oper­ the traditional lines” of assistance, but is ing 310 unwed mothers; placing 241 of -OC ated always with the m a c developing plans for a special program of the 275 children relinquished ; to the CO SA V E A N Y youngest of minds.” CO service to the Hispano community in the agency for adoption, and supporting 160 area. children in foster homes. * c c mmmJ Catholic Charities is the second largest Newest In Denver Catholic Charities hopes to ac MONEY adoption agency in the state, second only Kohler Bathroom open this year a previously announced to the State Department o f Public Wel­ "maternity residence” for unwed mothers fare. Fixtures . . . iJ b J LAST y u i Heights Announces Program C 3 A new scholarship pro­ These are not need-based school; high academic KmmS^ gram for graduates of all grants, but are based in­ achievement as shown by ca MONTH Colorado high schools has stead on the academic re­ standing in the upper third been announced by Loretto cords of the candidates. of the class at the end of iS Heights College. The program is designed to the 7th semester and the cs> place an education at the results of the College wmmhJ GranU of $2,800 ($700 small, independent liberal Board examinations, SAT r— I f you have to answer “no”—you have a problem. .per year) are offered to arts college for women scores; recommendations for remodeling! e •% CD qualifying high school sen­ more within the reach of from the principal and two m < L S iors in the state in recog­ deserving Colorado high teachers at the candidate’s • Countertop CO nition of the college’s im­ school graduates. The high school. 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^hursday, January U, 1969 THE REGISTER, DENVER ARCHDIOCESAN EDITION Page Three Ambassador of Charity

Msgr. Elmer Kolka had back tp the east Denver with Christian charity in the Denver Zephyr, by marriage counselling sys­ been a formative personage parish, ‘it was to succeed the Denver archdiocese. dawn’s early light, to wel­ tem in the country.” in the activities of Catholic the priest for whom he had He had held positions in come those who speak bro­ Later in the same year, charities in Denver since worked more than a quar­ many civic, and religious ken English and broken Monsignor was re-elected 1940, when he was named ter century before — Mon­ charitable and social or­ German and broken Hun­ to the vice presidential its associate director. He signor William Higgins. ganizations, including: garian — the hapless vic­ post on the National Con­ headed the organization Member, executive board tims of other men’s brutal­ ference of Catholic Chari­ since 1955. IN 1940, Msgr. Kolka f of the Denver Council of ity.” ties m New York. He was He had been ordained for moved his residence to and Social Agencies; chairman, "It is the arranging for also selected chairman of six years when he was as­ accepted a chaplain’s posi­ program committee, C. of work and for lodging and the executive committee of signed by (then) Bishop tion at the old St. Clara's S. A.; member, advisory the minimum creature the Diocesan Directors of Urban J. Vehr to the char­ orphanage in north Den­ committee of the State comforts for those who Catholic Charities. (He had ities office; in 1937, he ver. Monsignor remained Department of Public Wel­ have lost everything, save served as president of the took graduate social work at St. Clara’s — now John fare, child welfare division; their self-respect,” conclud­ Conference in 1962-1963.) studies at the Catholic XXIII Center - until he charter member, board of. ed Father Giblin. In April, 1960, Monsi- University of America, returned to St. Philomena’s trustees of St. Vincent de At the community cele­ gnor Kolka joined a fact­ Washington and in 1939, less than a year ago. Paul stores; member, bration honoring Monsi­ finding tour of 22 charity his work in Denver with speakers’ bureau, Denver gnor Kolka’s 25 years of directors and officials in a Born Jan. 1, 1908, the the National Conference of Community Chest; mem­ religious and civic service, round-the-world trip that son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Catholic Charities — meet­ ber, Convalescent and Fos­ two bishops joined an saw the Pan American air­ Kolka of Denver, Elmer ing here at its annual con­ ter Home and Hospital impressive roster of Denver liner touch down in Korea, Kolka attended both vention — won him Investigation committee; and Ckilorado community Taipei. Hong Kong, the Cathedral grade and high immediate respect and business manager, Denver leaders who came to the Philippines, Vietnam, Thai­ schools, and he was grad­ honors for charitable en­ Grand Opera Ck).; auxiliary Brown Palace hotel to pay land, India and Pakistan. uated from the latter in deavors. Army chaplain; chaplain, him honor. Like all the participants. 1926. He attended Regis Until he was appointed Knights of Columbus; Monsignor's fare was paid associate director of Catho­ college on a scholarship, member, Denver Defense In charge of the Denver from his own pocket. lic Charities. Msgr. Kolka and was graduated from Council. Archdiocesan Resettlement had been assistant pastor the Jesuit institution in committee, Monsignor had He had borne the title at St. Philomena’s Parish 1930. ON THE occasion of seen personally to the wel­ "monsignor” since 1949 — a parish to which he It is not by accident that Monsignor Kolka’s silver fare of Hundreds of Hun­ when he was appointed ‘Welcome to Denver!’ returned 27 years later as Monsignor Kolka's name jubilee, in 1961, Father garian and Cuban refugees papal chamberlain by Pope pastor. When he came had become aynonomous Bernard Giblin, O.F.M., when the Ckimmunist men­ Pius XII, and in 1959 he "Welcome to Denver!" — words spoken hundreds of times as the late defined the prie.sthood in ace necessitated emigration was raised to the rank of director of Catholic Charities extended warm hands of welcome to Hungar­ terms of the monsignor’s to this country. domestic . He has ian and Cuban refugees. Monsignor Kolka spent countless hours and days varied charitable activities: served as archdiocesan attending to the resettlement needs of these and other escapees. "Among other things,” IN 1960, Mosnignor Kol­ consultor since 1957 and the Franciscan preacher ka was among 13 leaders was re-appointed to the said, the priesthood "is the singled out for praise by board of consultors by See's Paper bailing of clothes and the District Judges Edward Archbishop James V. Cas­ crating of shoes for the Pringle and Neil Horan for ey upon the latter’s arrival In Trouble naked and impToverished their work in establishing in the Denver See in lands. It is the meeting of "the beat court-sponsored May, 1967. Oklahoma City — A two- month subscription cam­ paign has been launched by The Oklahoma Courier, weekly Catholic newspaper serving an interfaith audi­ ence of more than 20,000 families. Readers were warned "the newspaper can die.” Financial assistance from the Oklahoma City and Tulsa dioceses has been cut back for 1969, the newspaper said in a full- page "message to our read­ ers.” It was also pointed out that a change in circula­ tion procedures will re­ Labor of Love move from Catholic pastors any strict financial respon­ Msgr. Elmer Kolka headed the annual U.S. sibility for seeing their Bishops Thanksgiving Clothing Campaign in the archdiocese since it began 20 years ago. The parishioners receive the more than 100 tons collected in the 1968 drive paper. Payment for sub- last month set a record, and sent the 20-year total scription.s will be made collected in the Denver See over 2 million voluntarily by each family, pounds. Above, Msgr. Kolka is shown with Vin­ or the newspaper will no cent Schmitz, chairman of the board of St. Vin­ longer be sent to that fam- cent de Paul Stores, of which the monsignor was ily. a charter member, during preparations for the The newspaper, in its 1968 campaign. Meeting Pope John statement, said it may lose half or more of its present At the conclusion of a round-the-world fact-finding tour in 1960, Monsi­ circulation. If this happens, gnor Kolka met in private audience with the late Pope John XXIII. He had it said, quality of the pub­ spent six weeks with 16 other priests observing first hand the life patterns lication will "wither,” It Ho can help you ini ost in other nations and examining the effectiveness of Catholic Relief Service added. "The situation__ is programs. very grave.’’ Charles A. Order Delays Haskell II He 1% a RetstsU-red Rcprc'-cni.invc Renewal —'No with tlie >killN and Knowledge needed lo hell' >m i i i i ' cnI in Now listed on the Miick'. bi>nd' and tmiitial fund'. Urgent Need' Give him a call. Philadelphia — The Co- B o s w o u r ii lumban Fathers will delay New York Stock Exchange action on renewal until CX3M1»A>’V, I.NC. their 1972 chapter meet­ ing. Father Thomas J. MEMBERS. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Cronin, superior of the 660 17th St.. Denver. Colorado Columban residence here, Telephone 534-1177 announced,

"THE THING is - we DILLON COMPANIES. INC. don’t have much to renew,” the superior said. Commenting on the changes in the liturgy, he ' i ; said: "We just go with the V pace of the place.” The decision to delay the (N.Y.S.E. SYMBOL ) renewal meeting until 1972 came after 90 percent Dillon Companies, Inc. has become a diversified company o f the priests who partici­ with operations in 6 states — Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, pated had voted for the SKI JACKET delay. Oklahoma, Arkansas and Missouri. Sales in fiscal year ending July 1, 1969, will be FATHER CRONIN approximately $200,000,000. commented: "We don’t like Common shares outstanding - 3,555,000 CLEARANCE to have meetings. The few­ Number of stockholders - 6,900 er meetings you have, the G ir ls ' 4 to 6x ...... 7.99 fewer rules you get.” G ir ls ' 7 to 14 12” He also said that that T h e Dillon Companies a r e • the missionary order had Preteen 6 to 1 4 ...... 15.99 N T R A L i n v e s t m e n t CO. OF DENVER • not lost any priests to DILLON STORES - 49 S« 34 Kantot 8 S«^i k «t« In 7 Butiaat* iavestmani Compoa)' with lavatt- private employment or to Ark«nt«« 32ce'«penia» Haadquart*'* Oaavar.Cala Entire stock of ski jackets reduced for marriage. KING SOOPERS -26 PC.n9 : • in 6 C eleteJ a eiti*» JACKSON ICE c r e a m CO . IHC Aa ka Craa. big savings at the peak of the season! GERBES SUPER MARKETS INC. 9 MoaHlaetgriap Company tacatad >a Hulchintan, Kai Choose from several popular styles and onJ 1 Voriafy 5tO'« N 9 Cantrol tailing thair pradgett i N 7 ttatat outfit your children now while the prices AIRCRAFT ENGINE SERVICE. INC -AnF A A. O rd e rs 11 K W IK S H O P . IN C . - J l Canvaniaaca Stara* are low. Good assortment of colors, all in 7 K a m a * tawi I. Cartiliad Aitcrotr Engina Rabgilding Plant lacatad • NEB. KWIK SHOP, INC . 5 Canvaaiaaca Steva* ad|a«ant ta Wilay Pott Airport in Oklahoma City. machine washable nylon. Downtown, ,ka 60 Caaaaaiaaca oparattng in Omaka. Nabr D I L L O N i n v e s t m e n t CO . INC. . A Ra«|. girls' coats, third floor; University Hills, Slaras platMtad ta ^ apan K Habraaka Ia2)raart. EttaU Company. Among ift papartiat .. 6 thapping D G. CALHOUN. INC • 12 J r . D a p a rta ia a t- contort, gndavalopad proparty in Colaroda. Kontat, Westland, Bear Valley, North Valley, Slafa* a^aratinf in ^Tka and Atkantat, commaroal praporiiat ran tad athort, DILLON CAPITAL C0RP0R*TI0N- a othar commorcial praparty gtad by ana of 0 i I I a n Colorado Springs. Capital Caapany haadqvartarad m Oanvaf, Cala. Com paniat.

AN IDEAL PLACE FOR EAMILY DINING Dillon Companies, Inc. OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Hufehinson, Kansas. N. Speer at Federal 67501 Pa«* Four THE REGISTER. DENVER ARCHDIOCESAN EDITION Comment for Today ^ VLet ' An Attack or Human Digmty ■ Editor I Thi. ii • y F« m I N . H r IU h ■actions ct back DGvels or magasiiiai whldi have no I Since I away from their homes and become en­ Of the bills now before the Colorado other purpose then to eerre es aexual Ihigh echo Legislature, that which makes unlawful tangled in prostitution. Boys and young l o f Arts i men who have had difficulty resisting excitanU. They are not Htereture but the selling o f pornographic material to machines to torture the sexual aeneibilities lof time 1 undue sexual stimulation become sexually Ivalusbio minors under 17 deserves prime consider­ of man. One commentator thus distilled ation. The menace of printed and picto­ aggressive and gvierally incorrigible. The Itually cU more vicious delinquent or psychopathic their noisome essence: rial filth must be fought with special "It*8 the bare senution rf pain and I classrooiB type may become an exhibitionist, a rap­ I Perhapi regard to the young. pleasure. This reducticm o f life to varie­ The National Council of Juvenile ist, a sadist, a fetishist. He may commit I today tha ties of sex is but the spinning out of un­ Court Judges has gone on record with such antisocial acts as arson, pyromania, I that case real fantasies which upset the burden of this statement: ”The character o f juvenile kleptomania, which are often symbolc achi reality and individuality, o f conflict and Ih igh delinquency has changed as a conse­ sexual acts. The Philadelphia municipal I woman ii commitment, thought and consideration.** quence of the stimulation o f these publi­ court has case histories in which sexual ■ take an cations, being no longer the thoughtless arousal from smutty books led to crim ing The State exists to guard not just the lo r not hi mischievous acts of children, but reflected behavior from vicious assaults to homi­ safety but also the dignity o f man. It is I nation ol [V5-' in acts o f violence, armed robbery, rape, cide . . . In several instances these chil­ impossible to defend human dignity while I saving U torture, and even homicide, to which the dren were very young, varying in age allowing the unrestricted traffic in mate­ Isary woi vicious and vile publications conditioned from 9 to 14. The filthy ideas implanted rials that attack the reverence for aex. Ineering, the minds of our children.** in their immature minds impelled them A Colorado statute, similar to many I someone to crime.** others of its kind, makes it illegal to I money, c • V ie w p o in t DR. NICHOLAS Frignito, chief neu­ "mutilate, deface, defile, or defy, trample ■ learning. ropsychiatrist and medical director of the Dr. Frignito’s testimony is so well upon or cast contempt upon the flag.” If the borne out by everything we know about Philadelphia Courts, has been in a posi­ The State must demand reverence for it­ I their te< the effects of this exploitation of sex that tion of unusual opportunity to observe self and its symbols, even if this curtails I After all A Day for King? it is one of the deepest shadows of the and evaluate the effects o f reading on so-called freedom of expression. Isors are By Rev. L. Marvin Read the conduct o f law violators. He recently mystery of iniquity that antipomography I students’ In the same way the State must main­ declared: "Antisocial, delinquent, and legislation has such determined oppo­ I has eari AND NOW THIS. Dr. Martin Luther The proposition made by Southern criminal activity frequently results from nents. tain reverence for its citisens. That is I business King; A National Hero! why it will balk attempts at suicide. Why Christian Leadership Conference chief sexual stimulation by pornography. This ■ been lea How ever can these black men and then should it not, for the reason of Rev. Ralph Abernathy that Dr. Martin abnormal sexual stimulation creates such IT IS HARD to concede that such J The 8ti Luther King’s birthday should be de­ their demands be taken seriously if they a demand for expression that gratification people really know what pornography is reverence alone, prohibit material that is ■ of his e< clared a national holiday is preposterous. would rank a King along side of a Wash­ an insult to the nature o f man? by vicarious means follows. Girls run or have ever examined any of the paper- I the colle One wonders what these black people ington, a Jefferson, a Lincoln, a Kennedy! The c are up to, nowadays, anyway, what with Whatever did King accomplish with linstrumi all their demands and marches and Res­ his scores and scores of peaceful sit-ins, lion, an urrection City. When ever will the Amer­ his drives for voter registration, his professio ican Negro remember his place in our marches and his rallies? • • • society: The offspring of slaves, brought However did this nation benefit by ‘Dear Aunt Agnes event, it of what to our white-beached shores centuries ago integrating lunch counters, buses, public ers to the Catholic W orker readers? except ii and generously given the opportunity to facilities and schools? By Dolores Curran hostile manner. And the woman from Illi­ provide the brawn to make our country What profit did this nation see as pre­ *'I had no idea you had so many nois who points out that since none of Does one side have to constantly try to negate the other or can we receive Com­ strong? cious Jim Crow laws fell by the wayside, friends or that they were so sensitive the characters in the Good Samaritan We have watched with interest, these as the sleeping giant of our government about their ages. Tell them, though, that parable were black, that lesson is inappli­ munion together in peace? "If I promise not to do away with the past many years, as the seemingly un­ awakened reluctantly to the pressures I still can’t accept their premise that it’s cable today. grateful black man threw away his pro­ exerted upon it by an impatient black just the young people responsible for all Latin Mass, will you quit complaining O u t tective shackles, left his paternalistic community? the chaos in the Church today, as they **BUT OTHERS — would you believe about the English one? I won’t doom you owner, and taken up residence in our cit­ Who even noticed as this black Ghandi they liked it? Yes, even some Irishmen, because o f your lack of social concern if Editor: insist upon calling it. As a ies - freed for Ciod only knows what. died in Memphis? Did presidents mourn? "After all, what was the average age and several over 50. I guess it just goes you stop telling my kids they’re doomed outrage We have watched with contempt as Did a nation focus its gaze on his funer­ of the bishops at the Council? Or how old if they can’t list all the sins by age eight. to show you that we both have skeletons ther by the Negro got himself educated and then al? Did a whole American people fear — was Pope John, who started it all? We Let’s keep the devotional candles, yes — in our generation gaps. "anti-& began to want what we had — homes, not only for their lives — but for their both know that age alone doesn’t deter­ "There is the man from Minnesota right next to the banners. jobs, respect and dignity. integrity? "If we could accept each other’s wor­ througl mine your Catholic attitude today. As who wrote, 'Atta, boy. (?) Keep telling arouse ship and sacramentals. just think of all We have watched with suspicion as you said earlier, you just can’t under­ them!’ And the Texan who said, T clipped For THINK OF IT a man of King’s ilk the time we could save by not continually the black man began to influence the stand how some of your friends can get your letter and sent it to my own Aunt have bi wise lawmakers of this country, obtaining atop South Dakota’s Black Hills, along excited over bible vigils instead of wakes Agnes. She still depends upon the rosary justifying them to each other. We could side of nation-founding Washington, Con­ 1948 a the protection of our lily-white Constitu­ and I can’t understand why some of my and candles to get to heaven.’ stop worrying about each other’s final stitution-sponsoring Jefferson, Emancipat­ Abraha tion for everything he did and said. friends can’t. But please. Auntie, tell "But to be honest, Aunt Agnes, those resting place, about the Church, about ing Lincoln and Rough-Riding Roosevelt. have li them that I, too, am over the hill today. letters bothered me as much as the hos­ the sensational press, and so on. We have prayed fearfully in churches What ever would King add to those mon­ centuri Anyone over 30 is, you know, and it may tile ones because I didn’t intend to dis­ "Instead, we could write about the which preach "equality” for men — what­ umental dimensions? this or ever their color, whatever their origin, make them feel better. parage your use of the missal, the bazaar, kids, the flu, the world situation, politics Our nation, we would humbly suggests World or the novena. I just don’t want you whatever their limitations. is not yet ready to suffer the equalization "I’ve gotten to know some of them . . . on the other hand, let’s keep talking nothini We have banked carefully, ever aware of heroes, the integration of giants. Why, quite well. There’s the anonymous one demanding that I use them. If they are a about the Church. I fir part of your faith, who am I to campaign that money-soundness may well be affect­ the next thing you know, some wiseacre from Brooklyn who always ends his let­ "FIN ALLY. Aunt Aggie, if you insist offlcial’ to end ^em? ed by the buying power of this ever more will come along and suggest that Dr. ters with. T il bet you won’t have the upon calling a gap a gap, weren’t there a Pope I "What I asked of you was the same vocal, ever more belligerent and ever King was a prime example of a Christian nerve to print this.’ And the priest from few religious skirmishes between 3rou and that tl consideration. If we find a family liturgy strengthened minority. . . . a saint, even. Oregon who tells me to love in such a Grandma in your youth? Be honest now, the Ge more relevant than the rosary, are we what did she say when you wanted to this idi less Catholic for it? Why should you date during Lent? Wasn’t she a little Arab c think we are endangering our faith if we The Black Voice appalled when Catholics were encouraged leFs E don’t support bingo? We might be endan­ to receive Communion daily instead of dissem' gering your faith, but we all have to use rived i our own means to acquire a solid faith. waiting to be worthy of it, say every four More Thoughts on Schools months? And didn’t she refuse to serve tine. I anything with shortening in it on Friday? though By Rev. Lawrence E. Lucas **IF WE COULD compromise that his coi much. Auntie, I think a lot of our pres­ "Who was the rebellious Catholic incum One o f the reasons why black people traditional power or a m^or p urt o f it 2 of approach for the boards. The first was ent chaos could be minimized. Isn’t this youth then? As a matter of fact. Auntie, while simply cannot trust the different es­ once exercised by the central administra­ timidity: "W e do nothing or extremely lit­ battered old Church which has survived you haven’t changed very much — other hands. tablishments, church or otherwise, is the tion to the local administration. If there tle because 'they didn’t tell us what we far greater crises than guitars big enough than your Friday indigestion, of course. The blatant hypocrisy with which they oper­ is no exchange of power, there is no real can do.’ ” The second was to presume a for all of us? From the W anderer read- "Your loving niece” allegec ate. By hypocrisy I mean saying one experiment but simply a play on words. real transfer of power and move on with in ligh thing, often with a great deal of fanfare There is much to suggest that all that what was necessary for educational im­ li air and publicity, but not meaning it or real­ was really desired by the school es­ provement, "because they did not say we throug ly meaning just the opposite. More recent tablishment in the O^an Hill-Browns- couldn’t.” The result of Ocean Hill- developments in the New York school ville and the I.S. 201 districts was only Brownsville school district’s taking the decentralization struggle afford a good something to look like local control. school establishment "experiment” seri­ example. In the first place, there was no clear- ously is now history. Dissent Won*t Separate uine conscience in his listeners, even if Let us assume that an "experiment in cut mandate and outline of power given he is not able to ascertain that this for­ A LB E R T SHANKER and the U.F.T., Catholic From Church local control of schools,” if it means any­ to the local school boards. In such a situ­ mation of conscience is equally successful representing the teachers’ union and oth­ thing, must entail the transfer of the ation, of course, there were two avenues "A Bishop must not act and dare not • with everyone...” Ifi the case of a mar­ er interests, illegally shut down most of act as if the papal declaration were sim­ ried Catholic, one may follow "a position New York City’s school system by taking ply incapable of reform and as if any dis­ which dissents from the papal norm” advantage o f the deliberate non-spelling senting from It would necessarily imply a provided he has arrived at that positioi) out o f jurisdiction. The agreement ending basic denial of the Church’s teaching in conscience "after full reflection and the "strike” was something to behold. It authority, which would separate the self-criticism. Such a Catholic needs to virtually stripped the local board of any Catholic objectively from the Church...” fear no subjective guilt or to consider claim to power. In addition, it had the The fact that the encyclical Of Human himself as formally disobedient to the gall to include a program for enabling Life is a reformable and non-infallible Church Authority.” — Father Karl the teachers to make up pay lost during statement "does not mean that such a Rahner, S.J. the strike under the guise of make-up letter does not have any importance for instruction. For example, an extra 45 the teaching, interpretation and con­ minutes per day did not become an extra science of a Catholic.. A Catholic must Integrity Needed period, but five extra minutes attached to "seriously consider that it was drafted regular periods. according to the best knowledge and con­ In Evangelism science of the Church authority and un­ "This blow-in and blow-out evangelism, There have been additional interesting •he der the inspiration of the Spirit.. How­ is not going to work. The church that statements and developments indicating oil ever. "such a non-deflned declaration is just talks, delivers Thanksgiving baskets exactly what the establishment means by really basically capable of reform and a mil their "experiment.” William D. Firman, and drives tlie middle o f the road is not Catholic, especially a theologian, has the practicing integrity in evangelism.” - successor to Herbet Johnson as state trus­ right, indeed even the responsibility, to le< tee for the Ocean Hill-Brownsville school Dr. Ralph Holdeman, evangelism di­ take cognizance of this fact.. The theo­ rector of the National Council of district vowed "to operate the district’s logian must "attempt to develop a gen- eight schools with or without the commu­ Churches. nity’s help.” He has "reassigned” the unit •i administrator Rhody McCoy and is now TNI Pmident ...... James V. Casey. D D. "sifting through a number o f prospective ...... Rev. Daniel J. Flaherty 't candidates for McCoy’s post.” The criteri­ General Manager ...... Frank Schiro on for the "reassignment” and reappoint­ Managing Editor...... F. Porter ‘I ment is not the community and its wish­ Advertising Director ...... Robert Keim ‘t es, but ability to get along with Firman. Local Advertising Director ...... Frank Veechiarelli Denver News Editor...... Jack Bacon Black people have been around long Associate Editors ...... Rev. L. Marvin Read. Judy Edinger enough to realize this means a black face Chris Hernon, William Blevin, Tom Officer, Jamae Sena, Linus willing to be subservient to Firman and Riordan, Paul H. Hallett, James R. Walsh, Ernest Sanchez. Kim the establishment. Larsen, David Millon.

WHITNEY YOUNG, JR ., and Ken- Published Weekly by neth Clark have demanded the removal t h e CATHOLIC PRESS SOCIETY. (INC.) of Finnan for his "callous and insensitive 938 Bannock Street, Denver. Colo. 80304 Telephone, 825-1146 action” against the experimental sdKwl P.O. Bos 1999 district They want him replaced with someone "who has the sensitivity to work Subscription: $6.00 a year. with the community rather than dictate Canada, $6.60 a year per subacriptioii. to i t ” It is my opinion that the black K o i^ MuntriM, tocludta, PhlHppto^, ST-OO • yMr. and Puerto Rican communities should not Second Claaa Poatage Paid at Denver. Colorado. only be given their right to self-govern­ ment in the districts where they are in the nuQority; they should also be able to demand that their teachers should reside within their community and send their osNVta ^ Rev. Matthew J. Smith. Ph.D., Foundiiw Iditsr. THE FORESEEABIE FUTURE duldren to their district community AaCMDIOCCOAN 1 s d i t i o n Iwfwtw System of Catholic Newtpepm e 191S-1M0 adiools. Thursday, January 16, 1M9 THE REGISTER, DENVER ARCHDIOCESAN EDITION Page Five COMMUNICATIONS already beleaguered people are the real victims of "anti- ‘Let Them Learn Semitism.” Editor; It would app>ear to me that it is the duty of the • This is neither pro nor con — just wonderment at the to speak out on behalf of justice for all actions of some young people in their education. people, and that the Catholic news media in particular Since four years are alioted for the completion of a take the initiative in shedding some much-needed light high school course and four years alioted for a Bachelor on the entire Middle Eastern problem. of Arts degree in college, setting aside a certain amount V. L. J. of time for recreation, aren’t the demonstrators losing Denver valuable time in preparing for demonstrations and ac­ tually demonstrating, ie., usurping study time and Hispano Objection classroom time. Time is our most valuable asset. Perhaps students arc better informed on most subjects Editor: today than they were 20 years ago, due to television. In The Board of Directors of the Latin American Re­ that case, probably there should be less education in search and Service Agency, a United Way Agency, has I ' ^ high schools and colleges, and when a young man or had the opportunity to consider in detail Dr. Gilberts’ woman is old enough for employment, he or she could proposal for integrating the Denver Public Schools of ^.ake an intelligence test, which would indicate whether October 10, 1968 and it is the feeling o f the Board of for not he or she is capable of holding a job. The elimi­ Directors that this proposal is a minimal foundation nation of high schools and colleges would be a great upon which to build provision.s for quality education. • saving to the taxpayers. Then the only colleges neces­ However, it is the feeling of the board that the proposal sary would be technical or professional, such as engi­ does not deal with those problems peculiar to the His­ neering, scientific, medical, dental, etc. In this way, if pano community and would herewith submit recommen­ L for L ll someone wants to riot, he won’t be rioting on taxpayers’ dations and objectives and respectfully reserve leave to .money, or on the premises of an institution of higher make additional recommendations for the improvement learning. of the education of the Hispano in the Denver Public Appoints If the dissenting students feel they know more than Schools system. their teachers, why do they matriculate in a college. In addition to the recommendations and proposals Chairman After all, students go to college to learn and the profes­ which follow, it is the position of the Board of Directors 'Learning for Living' Resuming sors are there to help them make the most of it. The o f the Latin American Research and Service Agency Watt Pye, president of students’ experience in administration comes after he that integrated activities under voluntary and normal The brochure describing the 16 courses offered in the coming session of Denver Films. Inc., has has earned his degree. The college is for learning. The conditions are beneficial to members of difierent racial Learning for Living, adult education program, will be available in parishes been named chairman of business and professional world is for applying what has and ethnic groups. However, it is the position of this of metropolitan area Jan. 19. Classes begin Feb. II and 12 and run for six I.earning for Living, adult weeks. been learned. Board that the impractical, artificial mixing of students education program which The student’s tuition does not begin to cover the cost through forced transportation simply to achieve "racial started in October, 1967. of his education. Each student is a financial burden to balance” would be detrimental to our community as a Pye heads a board of the college. whole. While it is piossible that some of our more Learning for Living Lists directors which includes The day may well come when television will be the aggres.sive students would derive benefits from interac­ Mrs. Eugene Blish and in.strument o f elementary education, secondary educa­ tion in an involuntary racially and ethnically balanced Mrs. Charles - Cassidy. Jr.,, tion, and higher education, except for technical and situation, it is our position that the majority of Hispano 16 Spring Series Courses co-chairmen of curriculum; professional education, as mentioned above. In that students — and their parents — would be adversly and Mrs. Patrick Cronin, Mrs. event, it will be up to each individual to make the most disastrously afTected by the change from a familiar to a Sixteen amtemporary Ian, St. Mary’s parish, Lit- ALL daytime courses' William Shea and Mrs. of what God gave him — his brain — and not his fists, foreign and unfriendly environment instead of being courses by outstanding in- tleton; A Smooth Path will be from 9:30 to 11:30 Joseph Sprug, promotion; except in case of self-defense. motivated to high achievements through competition structors will be offered in through Childhood and a.m. North: Holy Trinity Mrs. Gerald Cooney, publi­ with affluent Anglos. It is our feeling that most Hispano five centers for the coming Adolescence, by Mrs. Alice on Thursdays. F'ch. 13 to city; Mrs. Joseph Mattern, u Mary O’Donnell students from lower income families would sufTer from spring series of Learning Fehrenbach, Ph.D., psy­ March 20. Sister Cecily secretary; Mrs. James ■ Denver the transition, neglecting or giving up their schooling for Living. chologist, and Father Har­ Jones, S.L. will teach the McCoy, director of educa­ entirely, thereby aggravating an already alarming drop­ Classes will begin Feb. old E. Hoewischer, S.J., Old and New Testament. tional centers; and William Outraged by Israel out rate in our community. As a consequence this Board 11 and 12 and run for six Ph.L., Regis college. South: St. .\Iar>-’s academy, Schmitz, religious educa­ is opposed to the forced transportation of Hispano stu­ weeks. The adult education Tuesday mornings, Feb. 11 tion coordinator who serves Editor: dents. program ha.s seen a 90 per CLASSES IN the North­ to March 18. Father Phe­ as liason with the Denver As a Roman Catholic I feel compelled to express my Our recommendations for the quality education o f cent increase since its in- west center at Holy Family lan will teach Protestanism archdiocese. outrage at the venomous attacks against the Holy Fa­ Hispano children including integration on a voluntary ception in the Fall o f 1967. high school. 4343 Utica and Catholicism: a Com ­ A graduaie in philosophy ther by religious leaders in Israel. The hysterical cry of level, use of Federal funds, relevant curriculum, lan­ To accommrxlate the in­ will be on Wednesday parison. East: Pre-Cana from the University of "anti-Semitism” which echoes across the front pages guage programs, effective use of personnel and parental crease in enrollment, six evenings. Feb. 12 to March center. E. 5th Avenue at Notre Dame, Pye has re­ throughout the world should no longer be permitted to involvement are submitted herewith. new instructors have been 19, 7:30 to 9:30. Josephine on W'^ednesday sided in Denver the past arouse the guilt feelings of informed people. Donald N. Pacheco added to the faculty o f the Courses offered at Holy mornings, Feb. 12 to 11 years and is a member For one thing, the Arabs of Palestine whose homes Chairman o f the Board of Directors "grassroots university,” and Family will be: What’s March 19. Father Wicker of St. Philomena’s parish. have been illegally occupied by European Zionists since Latin American Research and Service Agency three daytime courses will Happening in Teen-age will teach Guilt Feelings, He belongs to the Associa­ 1948 are Semites. Their descendency from the tribe of be ofTered- Religion Classes, by four Your Conscience and God. tion of Industrial Advertis­ Abraham is unalterable historical fact. Jews and Arabs Charles Tafoya Classes in the East-cen­ high school chaplains, Fa­ The new brochure, de- ers and is Colorado Lieu- have lived side by side as brothers in the Holy Land for Executive Director tral center at Machebeuf thers Michael Chamber- signed by Watt Pye with a tenant Governor of Toast- centuries. Race and religious hatred were introduced to Latin .American Research and Service .Agency high school. 19.58 Elm st., lain, Kenneth Leone, John description o f a ll the nissters International, this once peaceful area by the influx of Zionists after will be on Tuesday even- Wind and Dennis Dwyer, courses and pictures of the World War II. Zionism is a political movement. It has coordinated by Father Law­ faculty with background Sacred Heart nothing to do with Judaism. New Kind of Parish totso" rence St. Peter, associate data will be available in I find it clinically interesting to note that two "semi- Editor: Courses offered will be: superintendent of educa­ the parishes throughout Father Francis L. Filas, oflicial” Israeli newspapers felt constrained to compare The article "A New Kind of Parish” published in Creating Better Racial tion; Creating Better Un­ the metropolitan Denver S.J., of Chicago points out Pope Paul with Pope Pius XII, the insinuation being your December 26. issue was read with great interest Understanding: The Afro- derstanding: the Hispanic area Jan. 19. Registration recent changes in Catholic- that the latter was "anti-semitic.” Strange that it was and enthusiasm. W’hat a tremendous breakthrough St. American People, Mrs. People, Juan Cordova, di­ forms may be secured from Protestant relations in his the German playwright Rolf Hochluth who perpetrated Mary of the Lake of Minneapolis has accomplished. Dorothy King. Denver rector of new careers train­ the brochure, or for further talk on the Sacred Heart this idea. And stranger yet is the little known fact that Bravo! Public Schools consultant ing center. University of information call 355-0947 Program on KBTV, chan­ Arab countries opened their doors to refugees from Hit­ I received during the weeks before Christmas a plea Negro history; the Sa­ Colorado; Laboratory Ex- or 428-2764. nel 9. at 7:15 a.m. Jan. 19. ler’s Europe when Britain and the United States were to protest the phasing out of St. Joseph’s High School, cramenta in the Modern pieriences in Human Rela­ dissembling. The "solution to the Jewish Question” ar­ Why not phase out the formal educational program and World, Father Paul Wick- tions, George E. Mathes, rived at by the great powers was to "give” them Pales­ instead substitute a Community Center? At present it Evangelist Ph.D.; Listening to Enjoy tine. It was too bad for the average Palestinian. Al­ merely duplicates existing public facilities. Why not turn parish; Protestantism Good Music, Father Robert though there were no ovens or concentration camps in it into a Community Center available to all ages from and Catholicism: A Compar­ Greenslade, Archdiocesan his country, he was used to assuage the guilt feelings pre-schoolers to our senior citizens? Life could become ison, Father Gerald Phe- director of music. incurred by the slaughter of six million Jews in Europe, more meaningful. All our parochial schools, primary and The South center classes while Western Christianity stood by and wrung its will meet at St. Mary’s w holesaler! secondary should be phased out. The buildings could be Budget Increased hands. used as Centers and serve a much larger percentage of Academy, 4545 S. Univer­ The hypocrisy of the rabbis castigating Pope Paul’s our Catholic families. At present our parochial schools Washington — A presi­ sity Blvd., on Wednesdays alleged disregard for human life app>ears rather cynical serve about 20 per cent of Catholic children.. dential committee has also, Feb. 12 to March 19, GROCERIES & MARKET \ in light of the fact they remained silent while the Israe- Religious vocations are at an all time low. Why not urged the expansion of a 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. They will • li air force strafed and napalmed refugee camps utilize the skills of our Religious in the Church operated program of family planning be: Old and New Testa­ 2342 B R O A D W A Y I A throughout Jordan in June 1967. These unarmed and Center? Think what could be accomplished with the fi­ information and services ment, Sister Elaine Marie • nancial savings. There would be money and personnel to from a current $30 million Prevallet. S.L.. Ph.D., Lor- S “Compare our price and (fuality in the meat dept. { etto Heights college; Small assist the students in our Catholic colleges. The New­ budget to $153 million by { with anyone else in to w n ." ^ man Club on the State-operated campus would become a 1973. Heading the commit­ Child and His God, Sister living and breathing organization, not merely a token tee are Wilbur J. Cohen, Mary Ann Walsh, S.L., St. The first thing to look for effort of a few. Secretary of Health. Edu- Mary’s Academy; Better How long can we continue to ignore the crisis in the cation and Welfare, and Communications — Person I POTATOES RED 10 LBS. 39'^ I United States and cling to our outdated attitudes? There John D. Rockefeller III, to Person. Keith Case, in a used VW. Ph.D., and Mary Jaeger. was a time when the parochial school fulfilled a much chairman of the board of #1 NEW CROP needed purpose. We are no longer victims of discrimina­ Population Council. Ph.D., University of Den­ 25 LBS. tion as in years past. W hy not direct our energies to­ President Lyndon B. ver; Art Enjoyment, Mrs. I PINTO BEANS *2.591 ward helping the minorities pull themselves up by their Johnson endorsed the Marilyn Dietrich. Abraham b(K)tstraps? We had the opportunity. Can we not share committee’s report and said Lincoln high school; Litur­ OPEN EYE with others? the population explosion gy in an Age of Change, I SWISS CHEESE LB 69'j Mrs. T. A. Sievert, Jr.. was one of the most criti­ Father Edward Maginnis, Broomfield. Colo. cal in the world today. Ph.D., Regis College. VERY LinLE BONE I PORK STEAK LB. 55T The V W 100?o Guorontee. INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE If doesn’f mean that you pay 50% and we pay 50?o.’ But I SMOKED PICNIC HAMS r.43‘ fhat we guarantee 100% the free repair, or replacement of all major mechanical working parts’" for 30 days or 1000 ON USED ORGANS • FLOOR MORRELL’S NO- miles. W h ic h e v e r c o m e s first. #1 LEAN RIND L B . J J You won't find this guarantee everywhere you look. 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Page Six THE REGISTER, DENVER ARCHDIOCESAN EDITION Thursday, January 16, 196r Pope Takes Note Of Nuns' Renewal Vatican City - Some for chapter sessions that "innovating designs” well revise their constitu­ threaten the religious life. tions to provide updating Pope Paul cautioned a permitted by the Second large gathering of nuns Vatican Council. here. He spoke o f two concep­ He noted that the "pres­ tions of the religious life. ent moment almost repre­ One sees it on the vertical sents a period of contesta­ plane o f a life o f consecra­ tion for nuns." tion to God, he said, while The religious life, he the other, called horizontal, said, "is now under the conceives life as dedicated scrutiny of many critical to earthly experiences. eyes and of many innovat­ THE FIRST, the Pope ing designs which, instead said, is the one that must of rendering religious life be emphasized. tranquil and sure of itself, "The love of the Lord,” he bring it almost to the said, "comes before all the point o f doubting its own other aspirations o f man. way, its own historical You have chosen the love Mardi Gras Captains past, and its future. of Christ and the service of "HOWEVER,” the Pon­ the Church." Mrs. Joseph P. McConaty, left, captain of the ninth annual Mullen Mar­ tiff added, "we are quite The ascetical aspect of Seminary Auxiliary Party di Gras Ball, visits with past captains Mrs. Eve Daly, center, and Mrs. sure that' your chapter religious life is being criti­ St. Thomas Seminary Auxiliary members will sponsor their annual card Albert Seep at a luncheon hosted by Mrs. McConaty. Other guests includ­ meetings will not only be cized along with communi­ party Jan. 25, from 12:30 to 4 p.m. at St. Philomena’s School Hall, 940 Fill­ ed board members of and committee chairmen for the important and decisive ty life, the Pope pointed more St. Denver. Dessert luncheon will be served and there will be door Feb. 8 event which benefits the Christian Brothers who staff the college moments for your religious out. preparatory boys’ school. Mardi Gras is open to the public. Tickets may be families but will do more •’YOU MUST have the prizes. Admission is $1 and tickets may be obtained at the door or by call- • obtained from Mrs. Byron B. Hall, 322-3862. to reconfirm certain char­ courage to live it in ing Mrs. Michael Galvin at 575-4493. Shown making plans are, from left, acteristics that are essen- strength,” he told the nuns. Mrs. Joseph Liuzzi, Father Harold B. Persich, C.M., Rector, Mrs. Robert tials of the religious life." He admonished them to Kinkel, auxiliary president, and Mrs. Michael Galvin. Mrs. Galvin and Mrs. The Pope was address- "grow in your love for the Liuzzi are co-chairmen for the party. Springs Deanery Sponsors ing delegates of several Church and also in your orders who are in Rome love o f liturgical prayer.” Annual Fashion Show Calendar Of Events \ Victory Noll Offers Colorado Springs — The Victory Missionary Sisters. Women of Divine Redee­ Snows Guild Colorado Blvd., in the have a cookie bake on Jan. Colorado Springs Deanery Support of the Victory mer. lounge, for a T.G.I.F. party 26, for servicemen in Viet­ Council of Catholic Women Noll Sisters was assigned Mrs. William Calvert is 'Workshop on Woman' (^r Lady of the Snows on Jan. 24, beginning at 6 nam. Girls will bring the will sponsor its 10th an- to the Deanery Council, in president of the Deanery Guild will hold a "Snow­ p.m. Socializing will con­ ingredients and fellows nual benefit show 1942. by Archbishop Urban Council with Mrs. George A Workshop on Woman flake Luncheon” at the tinue until 9 p.m. and will bring cans, boxes, ^ Jan. 23. J Vehr. C urrently the Habiger as general chair- will be ofTer^ in Denver Golden Steer Restaurant, then the group will move wrapping paper and string. The show will follow a council is aiding in the man of the style show, next month to the modem W. 26th and Kipling, on to Your Father’s Mustache. Names and addresses of 12:30 p.m. luncheon at the repair o f the convent at 14 Both are members of St. girl who is either attend- Jan. 20 at 12:30 p.m., to For further information, servicemen may be sent to Antlers Plaza Hotel, and W. Costillo St. in addition Paul Guild. ing college or who is work- honor Father Michael call Joe Wilson at 794- Sue Decker, 1559 Milwau­ feature fashions from May I'® continuing monthly sup' Mrs. Claude Ford, presi- ing and is under the age Pfieffer, Oblate o f Mary 5803. kee St., by Jan. 25, to be D & F o f C h a se S ton e Port dent of St. Mary’s Guild, is of 30. Immaculate, who will be The CAC community placed on the receiving list The Council also aids the Center. in charge of reservations, It is aimed at the woman the guest speaker. service committee will for the homemade cookies. The show, planned at a Sisters in their apostolate taken first by an affiliate who stands on the thresh' Father TOeffer. who is meeting of the board o f di- than 2,000 chairman, who will make old of the 21st Century. 3c. mission procurator for rectors at El Pomar Cul­ children who do not attend the final report to Mrs. The workshop will be an Mexico for the order’s tural and Renewal Center, Catholic schools. Ford, at 633-7454. opportunity to explore and Southern Province, will .loin the Collax will benefit Our Lady of Twenty-two parish wom­ Hostess for the style discuss such topics as: show slides on the works en’s organizations are affil­ show will be the St. .Jo- . Woman encountering of the Oblate Missionaries iated with the D e ^ e r y Guild of the new St. r'ulj-t thmiierh"nthAra in Mexico. National Council, representing Black pp^iBh, with Mrs. through others. R eservation s may be Forest, Manitou Springs, Janitell Jr presi- •T he role o f woman in made by Jan. 18 by calling Woodland Park and the dent. Theme of the show the Church Martha Popovich at 477- Bank three military installations jhig year is "Fantastic • Man and woman, 0710. in the addition to Fashions,” and the decora- "W h at’s it lik e?” — a Colorado Springs proper, following the theme, panel on the fulfillment Catholic Daughters of being made by Our found in the different Catholic Alumni Silver Set America Court St. Maiy Lady of Good Counsel So- states of life — is a fea- The Catholic Alumni 513 also IS affiliated with dality of Ent Air Force ture of the program. Club of Denver, for single the council. Olfgring you > fro* place M ltin g of the Wm. Base. An art film will be ‘On the Threshold' Catholics with college de­ Each affiliate has a role A. Roger* Silverplate or Stainie** juat lor Models will be selected viewed and discussed. The School 2851 W 52nd Ave grees. will meet at Celebri­ savin g... in the style show. from the afiiliates. Eucharist will be celebrat- Denver ty Sports Center, 888 S. Here's how to get your tree 5 piece place Door prizes, a $75 gift setting. certificate and a S25 c V ' ' ' - daily “ the center of ^he workshop will begin 4 1. Open a naw savings account of $50 or government bond will .dent.tyKX>mmumty 7 at 8 p.m. and tSlI I Makes Dean's List | more „ laison chairman _ for Our experience. close about 3 o.m. Feb. 9. awarded, according to Mrs. 2. Add $50 or more to your present savings John Bovko of the Catholic Missionary This opportunity to share ^he fee, which ' includes Among students named account Jonn ttoyKo ol tne oatnolic Sisters. ideas, interesta, concerns, ______’ . to the Dean’s List at Briar 3. Take out a new-car loan lor $2,000 or more Mrs. W. H. Bradley of and perplexities is being j Cliff College, Sioux City, Court St. Mary C.D.A. You can purchase additional place settings HUNT CLEANERS ervx offered by the Victopr Noll Any young woman inter- Iowa, for high scholastic lor $2 SO each, a Iraclion of the retail cost, COMPLETE LAUNDRY A publicity chairman. Sisters at Marycrest High ^ weekend o f in- achievement at the close of with each deposit of $25 or more in your For ALTERATION SERVICE savings account; or with each monthly pay­ tense Christian living cen- the first term o f the cur­ ment on your new-car loan S«r«icin« St. Jem M'. SI. Th«rt««'« rent academic year, was * Insurance •nd C h rltl lh « King Pariihdt Pa ra m O U n t Cl U b Sets tered on the topic of wom- I HOUR SERVICE ON CLEANING ^ an can contact Sister Mary Eileen Allen, daughter of COLFAX NATIONAL BANK • Surely Bonds 7MI E.»lhAVe.-9SS.f«4l Alice or Sister Francis Mrs. M arion L. A llen, 5901 Cast Colfax • Denver. Colorado • 388-5957 Business Meeting Ann by Jan. 31. She can Denver. Miss Allen, a MEMees F 0 I c CSLL be reached at 2161 Tre- freshman, earned a 3.58 11 iff REXALL Paul T. McGrady The first business meet- sistant 'Treasurer Ike Rod- Place, Denver 80205; grade point average. Prescription Druggists ing of the new year o f the quiez. Recording Secretary pbone. (303) 244-4791. V A N SCHAACK & CO Catholic Paramount Social Helen Billiard, Correspond- First in I’restcriptionn Vocation Directors ,F 624 17lh Sheet F.mi Free Delivery Club will be held at 1555 ing Secretary Katherine Phone 297-5636 . 22.')H So. Colorado Blvd. Grant St., Knights of Bradley, Parliamentarian New Orlenas — A Na­ Phone 757-7677 Colmbus Hall, Jan. 22 at Amelia Desmond, Historian tional Conference for Sister REGIS COLLEGE EVENING DIVISION 7:45 p.m. Anna Patinia and Organist Vocation Directors, spon­ W. 50th and Lowell Blvd., Denver, Colorado 80221 Members of the club Mary Crowley, sored by a committee of were urged to make a spe­ the Conference of Major WAy P a y More for Your Superiors of Women, is CONTINUING EDUCATION >1F cial effort to attend, as Sr. Patricia matters of utmost impor­ slated March 13-16 at the tance will have to be dis- N a m e d tO A A t Fountainbleau Motel here. NON-CREDIT COURSES Wedding cussed miiiBiyM i v m m v Beginning February 3 President Invitations || Jwn. fZ ue aancing. to an or- gigt^r Patricia J. Manion Short Story Writing, Generation Gap, Sanskrit, of Heights College. Refreshments will be Negro History and Cuiture, Reiigion 8. Mass •^LOW LOW PRICE OF >»: Denver, was elected to the served by Amelia Des­ commission on College and Media, Swahiii, Hispano History & Culture, St; mond. Stella Manes, IN F O R M A L ^ Society of the Association Profit Techniques for Restaurants. Watfciingi Katherine Bradley and I N A M E S I ^20?5, W At R. !• aI is • of American Colleges at Cji: inn Irma Becker. PRINTETEO IN GOLD OR SILVER J >0C EJcr> >lt* the association’s annual To register call 433-8471, ext. 283 or write Regis Evening The following officers for 825-1201 *11* l^nvpr'a Wpdding Spc><-iKUat>. hAving xprvpd ThouMnda of ’«][, meeting Jan. 14. 4850 VAS:)UEZ BLVD. S S Satiaflpd Cuatompra for over *4 yeera. Z | 1969 were installed by ...r...... JU C D D IT T. Printing and ,1- .255 s -3097 c. .'Jt; chaplain. Father John JF IfltnntlEKKI ill I I stationery Co 714 Lincoln Sf.St. ,j{. President Irene Norton, First Vice President Ceci­ lia Campbell, Second Vice President John List, Treas­ urer Clarence Soucie, As- TRAVEL AGENT Our enlarged facilities include the Drawing Room Chapel DIRECTORY MONA LISA and the Chapel of Our Mother of Perpetual Help. DOWNTOWN,^^' BEAUTY SALON

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Colorado Blvd. 4043 Tejon 433-6575 Thursday, January 16, 1969 THE REGISTER, DENVER ARCHDIOCESAN EDITION Page Seven A View of the Police Romney School Comment (Continued From Page 1) WHAT IS MEANT by police brutality differa, o f course; the authors define it as evaluation is not unique; 40 per cent of unjustifiable 'physical assault," but mi­ Gets Hostile Reaction the dominant community ■— and the nority people, both Spanish-named and same percentage of police officers — give Negro, link brutality to the cop's refusal Washington — Michigan Governor sume the duties of a Cabinet post.” similar ratings to the courts* "fairness." to listen to both sides of a story, unfair George Romney’s suggestion that church­ "In the light of Mr. Nixon’s two state­ It is for this reason, Drs. Bayley and usage of authority and law, and the tak­ es "leave secular education to the state" ments encouraging private education dur­ Mendelsohn insist,, that "minority people ing o f situations into hand without consi- apparently in.no way reflects the Nixon ing the campaign, how will the governor may very well be alienated from the en­ deration for the people involved. Administration’s attitude toward public fulfill his future obligations to administer tire system of legal adjudication." In other situations, police brutality aid for education of children attending programs which broadly involve educa­ Minority people have some practical may be defined in various ways: Verbal nonpublic schools. tion. specifically the Model Cities pro­ experience on which to base their judg­ abuse, threaU, physical force and outright gram?” Monsignor Donohue asked. ment; half the interviewees had had some manhandling. Monsignor James C. Donohue, director contact — first hand — with the police Although they doubt it would be wide­ of the Division of Elementary and Sec­ A FEW DAYS later, in an address to ondary Education, U.S. Catholic Confer­ during their lifetimes, and half of these ly used, the authors tentatively recom­ the opening session of the Michigan legis­ ence. said the President-elect had commit­ had been "in touch" with the pjolice dur­ mend the creation of an independent lature. Romney said his remarks had ing the last year. A.s few as one-third of complaint-receiving agency - a civilian ted him self repeatedly to the child-benefit been misunderstood. the minority people felt their contact had review board — to clear up the several principle o f aid to education and that "I did not advocate that all private Romney surely "will have to support Mr. been "satisfactory” and one out of four charges of brutolity. .Nearly half the schools be shut down,” he said, adding Nixon's position.” said they had personally witnessed cops dominants interviewed agree with Drs. that there was a big difference between treating Negroes or Spanish-named people Bayley and Mendelsohn, and a full three- Romney is leaving the governor’s chair saying the schools should "concentrate* badly. Only one of 25 dominants recall fourths o f the minority people do also. to become secretary of housing and urban ■ on religious education and that they worKshop Planned development in the Nixon C)abinet. His ever having witnessed the same thing. Four per cent of the police think a should abandon secular education. controversial comments about private and Sister M. Sheila O.S.F., principal, and Mrs. The discrepancy is great. review board would be a good idea, and Monsignor Donohue acknowledged the parochial schools were made in a farewell later Romney statement "corrected" the Barbara Elliot, members of the Faculty Advisory PERHAPS, DRS. Bayley and Mendel­ only U per cent of them think that civil­ address to the people of Michigan. impression that he thought church Council at Marycrest High School, plan schedul­ sohn say, this doesn’t prove much. Maybe ians want one. Once again, the gap is ing and room assignments for the Workshop on great. schools ought to close, but added: "He it says that some are more sensitive *'I B ELIE V E in efTective competition Over-all, what minority people experi­ still puzzles me a little bit. He originally Educational Innovations at Marycrest for Catholic about the way they’re treated and others (for public schoolsi and I believe pro­ ence at the hands of their police depart­ did say it.” educators in the Denver area Jan. 24-25. are less sensitive; maybe it says that foundly in the desirability of increasing ment is of great emotional significance. The U.S. Catholic Conference official those for whom hostility is more native the moral and religious instruction of all "It symbolizes for them the back-handed said he thought Romneys comments rate the cops more .severely. But maybe, children,” he said. "But I seriously doubt treatment they receive from society as a should be considered in the light of the too, the authors say, there IS a double­ that either of these worthy objectives can Teacher Workshop whole,” the study’s authors assert, since considerable pressure in Michigan for a standard — one for the dominants and really be achieved by simply granting a they (the cops) are the ever-present, plan to provide state assistance for chil­ one for the minorities. Bayley and Men­ subsidy to children attending private and dren attending nonpublic schools. In any delsohn insist other data supports this as public and authority-rich symbols oppos­ parochial schools. . . . event, he said, there has been no implica­ Set at Marycrest fact. ing their own second-class citizenship. "Rather than starting down a new and tion of a change in the Nixon viewpoint. It will take actions — meaningful ones expensive road with no assurance that it '’Innovations in Educa­ School Jan. 24-25, will of­ — rather than words to "regenerate” the IT IS IN this latter a.spect that the .Monsignor Donohue noted Nixon "sup­ tion," a workshop to be fer Catholic educators in key to improving police-minority relations will acomplish needed objectives. I urge ported very strongly ’ the principle of relationship that could be between the the state and the churches to reassess held at Marycrest High the archdiocese an oppor­ is to be found; although it will be a long public education assistance for nonpublic police and the community-at-large. Good their respective roles in education. tunity to explore in depth actions on the part of the police will al­ time in com ing, police must be under­ school pupils, adopted at the federal level "I suggest we seriously consider wheth­ with passage of the Elementary and Sec­ the new trends in educa­ ways be outweighed by the bad ones: "A stood differently by minorities — perhaps er it -would be more desirable to leave ondary Education Act o f 1965. He pointed ^ Archbishop's tional theory and methods. single instance of impropriety or mis­ by the dominants as well — and the po­ secular education to the state with the out the incoming President also assured treatment by a police officer may undo lice must understand the non-police world The sessions, planned in churches — all the churches — concen­ the U.S. bishops of this support in letters the patient work of multitudes of other a little more realistically than they ap­ ^ : cooperation with Educa­ trating their elTorls on expanding week­ sent to them a few days before the elec­ G uild officers.” parently do at the present time. tional Coordinates, former­ day religious and moral instruction on a tion. The annual Presidents "Police brutality” remains anything The police, Drs. Bayley and Mendel­ ly the Stanford School more formal and systematic basis for all MONSIGNOR DONOHUE predicted dinner will be held at the but a myth. 14 per cent of the dominant sohn point out, "will continue to function &heduling Service, will the children of their faith.” "not much new” would be done in the Arvada Elks Club at 57th community feel that brutality is a con­ as a lightning rod for minority discontent cover topics such as small T H E COMMENTS triggered numer­ way o f federal education programs during and Yukon, Jan. 21, at cept "trumped up” by the criminal and/or so long as they must enforce laws created group instruction, use of ous protests from churchmen and Michi­ the first few months o f the new^ Congress. 6:30 p.m. The spaghetti Communist element and most express by a community with which minority unstructured time, the re­ gan legislators. Father John B. Zwers, He said, however, there well may be a dinner will cost $1.50. some severe reservations about its ser­ people only imperfectly identify." source center, individual­ superintendent of schools for the Arch­ new attempt to put federal aid to educa­ iousness. But 32 per cent of the minority ized instruction, and per­ diocese o f Detroit, expressed concern on tion in the form of "block grants” to Circle meetings sched- peoples interviewed know it is a reality (Next week: How the minority peo­ formance criteria. two counts. states, instead of in allocations for pro­ . uled are: because they've seen it happen. ple are viewed by the police.) Jan. 16, Blessed Sacra- Speakers will include "W e are concerned for our Catholic grams administered directly by the feder­ ’ ment. Dinner at the Prudence Boswick from parents’ freedom of choice in education," al government. Normandy Restaurant: San Fernando Valley State Father Zwers said. "We are also con­ If such an attempt is made, he said, Jan. 18, Infant o f Prague, College, Calif.; Dorothy Renewal Center Schedule cerned for the taxpayers of the state of the administration may be more inclined Open house for husbands eJones, Salt Lake City, and Michigan. As everyone knows, many to accept the block grant principle than , and wives at the home outstanding educators from Activities at John XXIII Jan. 17, 4 to 10 p.m., •John XXIII Center is now public school districts are experiencing was the Johnson administration when the of out-going president; the Denver area. Center are scheduled as Archdiocesan Religious in process of increasing grave financial crises at the present time. proposal became the subject of heated ' Irene Dunnebecke; Besides talks, there w’ill follows for the coming Education meeting and their membership. Six If 315,000 (Catholic school) students were congressional debate in 1967. Jan.’ 19, St. Catherine of be films, individual consul­ week. Beginning on Jan. dinner, to establish curric­ members of the original 12 to be added to public school enrollments, In any event. Monsignor Donohue said, , Sienna, Mrs. Johnston; tation with the speakers, 16 will be a 16-week, adult ulum for teacher training w ill form a panel Jan. 23 many districts would be operating with he was sure the administration w'ould Jan. 21; St. Jude, Barbara and special meetings for education program to be programs and credit hoiirs for the PTA meeting at deficit budgets.” assure that ,^ y legislation passed con­ Depperschmidt; the various ' subject areas held on Thursdays at 7:45 for certification. Sts. Peter and Paul Parish, Monsignor Donohue, said Romney’s tained safeguards against states' channel­ Our Lady of Lourdes, to discuss specific applica­ p.m. The first three weeks Jan. 19, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., After showing a filmstrip, statement was "most disconcerting, com­ ing such funds to public school children Theresa Korte: tions o f the new trends to will be on group dynamics, "Dayorama" for teen-agers they will answer questions. ing as it does when he is about to as­ only. ■' Jan. 22, Our Lady of the individual fields such as conducted by Mike Welch from the CCD high school , Sacred Heart, Rita Lo­ science, math, English, so­ and Steve Hall. of religion at Holy Trinity gan; cial studies, the arts, for­ Jan. 16, 12:15 p.m., din­ Parish, Westminister. Jan. 27, Miraculous .Medal, eign languages and Physi­ ner and meeting for the Jan. 21, 7:30 p.m., CCD Bernice Donnegan. This cal Education. Theresians. beginning teacher training. circle has five new The $5 registration fee Jan. 17, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., members. for the day and a half eighth grade student work­ Jan. 23, 7:45 p.m., adult workshop includes lunch shop for pupils from St. education program. Jan. 24. James school. The youth council of Easter Seal — Auxiliary Dutch Pastoral Council "VVlrero Denver Shope ■with Oenridenoe (Continued From P a ge 1) the absolute rejection by the encyclical Sponsoring shall only be able to hold our discussions . . . of the artificial means of birth con­ in union with Peter’s successor. . . trol not convincing, on the basis of the argumentation given. The well-considered Further Reduction But Cardinal Alfrink, in a speech that .Festival personal decision of the conscience of set the tone of the three-day meeting, married people should be respected.” The Auxiliary of Sewall insisted that "every local Church has the in Children's Easter Seal Center for responsibility to decide in what way she All nine bishops voted for the resolu­ Crippled Children and will realize the mystery of the Church." . tion. Adults of Denver will hold Fine Quality Shoes its sixth annual games fes­ "TH E R ESPO N SIBILITY of the local Although the Vatican recently request-, tival Jan. 23 at Pinehurst Church and the responsibility of the un­ ed — and obtained — some basic changes Country Club. iversal Church of Christ do not exclude in the presentation of doctrine in the con­ A gourmet hunt brunch each other; they include each other," he troversial Dutch Catechism, the Council will be served at 11:30 said. declared that the catechism "in its origi­ N o w 4 . 9 9 a.m., bingo will begin at Adopted by a 100-4 vote (with five nal form” was a "safe guide for religious 12:30 p.m. abstentions), the resolution regarding instruction.” * A flight for two tb Las birth control read: Vegas on Frontier Air The bishops abstained from voting on "The plenary assembly asks for further Originally 7.50 to 14.00 shoes. Be sure Lines, reservations at Ho­ the issue of the catechism, but the coun­ consultation among the world episcopate, tel Tropicana for three cil approved the resolution overwhelming­ to get in on these rem arkable buys the Pope, married people and experts nights plus all good, bever­ ly. The bishops themselves bowed to the about a present-day (Christian outlook on on fam ous label shoes. Alexis O rigi­ age, and a dinner show at Vatican's request to make the changes in marriage. nals, Buster Brown, School Life. All Folies Bergere; a weekend the catechism — in the form of a supple­ at Snowmass in a private mentary pamphlet, rather than in amend­ with built-in action, appearance- home that will accommo­ "THE PLENARY assembly considers ing the original publication itself. appeal, and, of course, our famous date 18 people; a complete mink colored ski outfit, careful fitting. Mostly girls' styles. including a fur hat; a Children's Shoes, The Denver, all portable television set, stores, except Greeley. $100 cash sweepstakes, and gold and pearl ear­ rings will be among prizes awarded. Tickets are available RTKHID from Mrs. Spencer Davies for $10.00; 3298 S. Wabash F o r the newest^ fastest Court, Denver, 80222. For further information call 399-1800. and easiest to use 1966 drive-in banking Chevrolet Bel-Air 4 Door V-8 Stan. Trans. in Colorado Good Mechanical Condition ♦1395. COMING r R O T H CHEVROLET S O O N of , 8303 W. COLFAX 7560 W. COLFAX PH. 237-1311 OPEN 8 TO 9 Located right FOR NEW CARS AND Aurora National Bank in the heart TRUCK tfASING EAST COLFAX 4 IRONTON • Phone 364-7671 of Aurora CALL 337-131 1 M iM iii FiQflUL ouosrr w sviuiia cosroiunoa • m im iir fim r a l m u r v i s t s t u i Thursday, January 16, 1969 THE REGISTER, DENVER ARCHDIOCESAN EDITION Pag^ Eight Raiders, Pirates Jay Upset Portends Looking at Sports Win 2 Games Each Regis’ Raiders remained points to pace St. Mary’s Tight DPL Campaign; By Bill Slevin Rams, or Cleveland points up the importance undefeated with two victo- in its win over Canon City. Peralta notched 20 The New York Jets the Browns, or Minnesota Vik- of m en tal attitude in ries, St. Mary’s of Colorado points in the Pirates’ victo­ best team in pro football? ings, or the Chicago Bears sports, particularly in a springs also notched two Forget it, Charlie. (with Gale Sayers) or the game like football. wins, Mullen split a pair ry over Mullen but high tr Two Games Tomorrow For 60 minutes last Sun Green Bay Packers, or the The^ Colts, we believe, Holy Family suffered man was Bob Porter with day th ey were a better Kansas City Chiefs or the lacked another important defeats in basketball 21. Ai Oakland Raiders. element — pride — the Mike Horvat had a hot ex The Denver Parochial tion time. Gordon’s two well,” and especially corn- team than the Baltimore action last week. H( plimentcd the defensive Colts. But the Colts, on thing that made the Green shooting hand for Mullen Basketball League race free throws in the last 12 Powerful Regis scored M work of I.,eBois who held WOULD TH ESE Jets’ Bay Packers so great in in a 58-53 win over Maple- shows signs of going right seconds of the overtime pe- Sunday, were not the best Skyline League victories be Blue Jays Wray’s high scoring Steve team in the NFL, fans be willing to give, the first two Super Bowls. ton, hitting for 12 field down to the wire following riod gave the over A,dams City, 82-49, th the victory. ..ueddens, who had been There’s no doubt the Jets say three to six points to We’re not trying to de­ and Ranum, 61-50, to goals and eight free throws Cathedral’s 64-63 overtime any of the above-listed Lc The Bulldogs were led by averaging over 20 points deserved their 16-7 victory mean the Jets’ victory bring its league record to for a total o f 32 points. win over favored St. Jo­ teams? Or take the Jets Sunday. They deserved it 11 Jerry Williams with 14 game, to five tallies. over Baltimore. They 3-0. Horvat was also high seph’s last Friday night. even up, for that matter? and it will certainly prove jjoints. Close behind were earned it, simply by out­ Three Raiders hit in scorer in the loss to St. At the same time Mache- all. they are the a shot in the arm for the Dan Hermosillo and Jack LE BOIS was Mache- playing the heavily favored double figures in the easy Mary’s, h ittin g for 19 m' beuf proved it has to be "world champions.” We AFL. The gap between the Caruso with 12 each and beufs big gun Friday Colts, who helped by put­ win over Adams City. Pat points. Jim Ryan with 14, let reckoned with by winning have a feeling the answer two teaguca has narrowed, Dan O’Hayre with 11. night, hitting lor 23 points ting on the most unin­ Kelly led with 20, followed Tom Kelly with 13, and po the Wray Invitational to both questions would but it has not been closed, sc Tournament over the O’Hayre sank two free in the win over Yuma. spired performance seen in by Mike Boryla with 16 Tim Wilhelm were other be no. Ajvd a rev ised playoff V til weekend while St. Francis throws in the last few sec­ Schuster added 15 and a championship game in and Darrell Lathrop with Mustangs hitting in double No one can argue that s>stem for the AFL next 4 \ at w’cnt over the .500 murk onds of regulation play to Hensen nine. years. 13. figures. Joe Namath called a heady season w on’t help to close with a win over Holyoke. send the game into over­ Steve Widman hit for 25 Against Ranum, Kelly R< H IG H L Y emotional AFL game and passed well. Or the gap. It will only serve a r Things could tighten up time. points as St. Francis again paced the Raiders, MULLEN meets Chey­ that the New York offense to add an extra game, thus D even more this coming nipped Holyoke. 53-52 to fans (and writers), seething with 25 points, while Bory­ enne Mountain in a road line blocked well for him pouring more loot into pro weekend when Machebeuf CATHEDRAL’S sched­ bring the Warriors’ record under the scorn heaped game Saturday night. Or that Matt Snell ran la added 16. meets St. Joseph’s and uled game with Highland to 4-3. Mike Genner also upon the AFL since its football’s coffers. Holy Family dropped a C l like a man possessed (with Coach Guy Gibbs’ team Cathedral takes on St. Saturday night was can­ hit in double figures, scor­ inception have, since Sun­ 61-53 decision to Sheridan Bi a desire for $15,000). Or takes on Thornton in an­ Francis in the first full celled due to a scheduling ing 1 1 points. A 16-13 day, been higher than a UNDER the system, the and lost to Holyoke, 66-44. ge that the Jets’ defensive first place team in the other league game Friday league schedule of the sea­ conflict. margin in the final period hippie under a full load of David Kunovic, Nick unit played a tremendous Eastern Division will meet night (Jan. 17) and plays son Friday (Jan. 17) and Machebeuf wrapped up gave St. Francis the victo­ LSD. W hich is fine, but Manfro and Frank Rupoli de game. All this is true. the second place team in Sterling in a non-league Machebeuf faces Cathedral the Wray Invitational ry. sooner or later they, like tilt Saturday night. each scored 12 points in be STA.SniNOS On the other hand, Balti­ the Western Division and Sunday (Jan. 10). Tournament with a 64-35 the hippie, must come back the loss to Sheridan. of more was as flat a looking the West’s first place team ST. MARY’S victories Cathedral surprised a lot victory over Wray Satur­ ('uthHra) down to earth and face b£ team as we’ve seen playing were scored over Canon The Tigers play Wood­ of people with its win over day night. The Buffs St .ionfph'n reality. will meet the East’s second he Machi'tM'uf for ( championship. This place finisher. The winners City, 63-58, in a Will Rog­ land Park there Friday St. Joseph’s. The inexperi­ gained the finals with a St. Francis And reality is that the was not the same Balti- will meet for the AFL ers League game, and over night and take on Crowley enced Blue Jays weren’t 54-43 win over Yuma Fri­ Jets are not the best pro more team that beat Mullen, 73-58. County in a home game given much of a chance day night. THIS W EEK’S team in the country. And championship and the Cleveland 34-0. Did the Ted Peralta registered 21 Saturday. against the veteran Bull­ Den Hensen; Don LeBois SCHEDULE deep down, we think even right to participate in the Friday, Jan. 17 Colts take the Jets too Super Bowl. dogs, but led by Jim Owens and Steve Matthews with the most loyal Jet fan will is Machebeuf at St. Joseph’s admit this is true. lightly? We don’t know. Which means the best and Kick Gordon they 15 points each and Mark to outscored St. Joseph’s. 8-7, Schuster with 10 led St. Francis at Cathedral Wrong? Well, there’s We do know they were not team in the AFL could Mullen Wins Freshman mentally prepared for the very easily end up watch- in overtime for the victory. Machebeuf in the title Saturday, Jan. 18 really no w ay to prove it, game. The Jets were, ob- ing the Super Bowl on Coach Leon I’almisano, game. St. Joseph’s at Deertrail but let’s say the Jets were Basketball Tournament Sunday, Jan. 19 to play Baltimore again viously. television. pleased with the big win, Coach Mike MacLaughlin Mullen won the St. An- drew’s, 56-53, with Rick said the Buffs played "fine Cathedral vs. Machebeuf this Sunday. Or the Dallas Let’s assume, for exam- praised his players for drew’s Freshman Basket- Marciel playing well for "getting in there and defense, we hit the boards .(at St. Francis) Cowboys, or Los Angeles W H IC H ONCE again ple, that Oakland ends up with a 13-1 record and the ball Tournament with a the losers; Mullen outlast- working hard” at the be­ 61-50 victory over M t. ed Machebeuf, 50-43; with ginning of the season in Western Division title next year. They then will meet, Carmel last Saturday. Bob Backenbusch tossing order to overcome their The ju n ior M ustangs in 31 points for Mullen; lack o f experience. Steinke Heads Regis Directors say, Houston, the Eastern Division runnerup with, whipped St. Francis. 53-37, and Machebeuf defeated St. Gene E. Steinke, v ice their response to another and Mt. Carmel defeated Andrew’s, 41-29. OWENS scored 19 point.s say, a 9-5 record. Oakland pre.sident and director of challenge, that of today’s Cathedral, 54-38, in semi- The tournament served and Gordon 17 to lead the has an off day and Hous­ business services of OHn- youth revolution, a matter final games. as a warmup for Denver Blue Jays over St. Jo­ ton plays its best game of ger Mortuaries was named he termed "of survival Steve O’Neil paced Mul- Parochial Freshman seph’s. Chauncey Peter.son the season and knocks off 1969 chairman of The Re­ importance to all o f us.” len in the finals against League play which began chipped in with 11. the Raiders. gis College Directors dur^ Special entertainment T- Mt. Carmel with 18 points, today (Jan. 16). Opening St. Joseph’s took a 15-13 ing the 11th annual Direc- was presented during the Butch Ziegler was top scor- games pitted St. Francis first quarter lead but IN THE O T H E R game, tors Dinner on the Regis evening by speaker-hu- ^ - i ' er for the losers with 17 againsl St. Andrew’s; Cathedral came back to the Jets (we’ll assume they campus, Jan. 11 morist Shearen Elebash. win the Eastern Division points. Cathedral against Mache- outscore the Bulldogs. 20- The event cited the Montgomery, Ala. In the seni-finals, Rick beuf; Mullen against Holy 15 in the second period to with a 11-3 record, admit­ more than 600 members of Sieinke has been active tedly not a good one for Sabell top Mt. Carmel Family. Mt. Carmel drew a take a .33-30 halftime lead. scorers with 18 points, the directors, an honorary in Denver civic affairs for the "world champions”) bye. The Bulldogs regained the eluding 10 out of 10 free organization of men and m any years. In 1968 he take on the Kansas City lead with a 15-6 edge in throws. women from 29 states who served as Golden Anniver­ Chiefs who finish behind S ince 1878 the third quarter, but Machebeuf took third contribute their interest sary president of the Ki- Oakland in the Western Cathedral came back to place honors by nipping St. and annual financial sup- vvanis Club of Denver and Division with a 12-2 mark. score 17 points to 11 for Andrew’s, 46-45. in the port for the development of is a member of the group’s The "world champion” St. Joseph’s in the fourth consolation finals. Danny Regis jCollege. board of directors. He was Jets defeat the Chiefs. So period to knot the count at Sl.'Ctmr'perfbrmeJ well TiT Steinke, appointed by 1966-67 president of the what do we have? The two 56-56 at the end of regula- E'ather Louis G. Mattione, E aster Seal Society for two losing causes for Holy top teams in the eastern S.J., president of Regis, C rippled Children and FamTIyl COMPLETE CAR SERVICE Division playing for the TUNE-UP • CARBURETOR has been active in The Adults of Denver and last In opening round games, league championship. And AUTO. TRANS. Regis Directors program year served as chairman of Mt. Carmel defeated Holy Your Car Problem - Oor the situation gets more for several years. He sue- the Mayor's Committee for Family, 60-40, with Siegler Spccidlty ridiculous if Houston beats EXPERT TELEVISION REPAIR ceeds E. J. Dempsey, presi- Employment of the Handi- leading the way for the New York. Which is not ONEIDA GARAGE dent of Johnson-Anderson cappxid. winners with 19 points; St. ill k )400 OneidA 322 SSSS Regis Directors an impossibility after what Francis defeated St. An- 1544 Broadway Mortgage Co., who as 1968 STEINKE HAS been a happened la.st Sunday. Directors chairman direct­ Gene E. Steinke, right, vice president and di­ leader in Denver Council & we end up with Hous­ ed the organization to new rector of business services of Olinger Mortuaries, 539 of the Knights of Co­ ton playing Dallas in the areas of growth in the lumbus and served as state was named 1969 Chairman of the Regis Directors. Super Bowl. community. Appointment was made by Father Louis G. Matt­ deputy of the Colorado K Well, it will be a good ione, S.J., center, president of Regis College. of C organization from day for Texas, at least. DEMPSEY presided at 1963-65. Steinke su cce e d s E. J. Dempsey, left. the program, attended by HR. DRY over 400 persons as guests of the President and Board Rangers CLEANING of Trustees o f Regis Col­ 'Rebel Youth Not the Problem' lege. The crucial issue in to­ There are three re­ bled and difficult times.” sponses that can be made, To M eet I DAY LAUNDRY In his remarks paying day’s revolution is not the Father Mattione continued. tribute to the Directors. revolt of the youth, but the he said. The first two, He suggested that "we o f The Beer with GUSTO RADIO PICK-UP Father Mattione urged nature of the response to backlash and suppression, the older generation must CSC, A F A DISPATCH A DEUVERY it. Father Louis G. Matt­ and apathy or muted hos­ re-examine our attitudes, tility, will not work. ione, S.J., president of Re­ our assumptions and our Colorado State College Malt Liquor of Quality ARVADA JACQUES gis College, told a Regis The third response and goals. W e must take seri­ and Air Force Academy 9535 W. Sflth AVE • 434 7733 the one we must make, Directors dinner audience ously as do the young, the provide the opposition for at the college. Father Mattione said, is WESTMINSTfR BROS. great Judeo-Christian Regis College cagers Satur­ MURRAY BROS. Noting the manifesta­ simply to be responsive, to 2B95 W 73NO AVE. • 438 5097 values o f our heritage. We day and Monday. tions of the youth revolu­ trust our young people, to must have a sense of re­ The Rangers split a pair tion in three basic institu­ listen to them, to under­ THORNTON sponsibility individually of games last weekend, DISTRIBUTING CO. tions o f our society: Our stand them, to let them 810 E 88TH AVE. • 387 SS86 and collectively for solving defeating New Mexico legal system, the family know we care deeply about the massive problems of Highlands, 64-54. and los­ WHEATRIDGI and the Church, Father them. our society.” ing to Adams State. 76-68, WHOLESALERS 7393 W 44TH AVE • 473 1438 Mattione said: "The prob­ "Many of these young in a Rocky Mountain Con­ people are the brains and Father Mattione noted Robert M. — Paul V. Murray lem is not in any of the ference game. 979 I5TH ST • 344 4493 three, but in ourselves as elite of our society. We are our existing institutions, Don Fortney again led 2915 SPEER BLVO • 433 6359 mad because they shake us whether they be in educa­ people.” Regis in its game against out of our complacency. We tion, government, religion, FORT COLLINS Highlands, scoring 21 badly need their ability business or politics, must 3315 SO CO LLEG E • 483 0996 points. Also hitting in and fervor in these trou­ be revitalized, given fresh approaches to be made rel­ double figu*-es was Paul LEE OXONNOR NEED Drinkhahn. with 11. Member: Sts. Peter & Paul evant to today’s problems. Parish Regis put together two OFFICE "We have a unique op­ identical halves, scoring 32 portunity to bring together points in each. The game , BAKERIES our age, our experience, SUPPLIES . Home of Fine Pastries was tied, 47-47. with 10 our money and our organi­ minutes to go before a lay- 66 So. Broadway zation with the energy and 3100 So. Sheridan up by Tim Kelly put the idealism and social con­ Rangers ahead to stay. I 1500 E. Colfax sciousness of the young,” 2410 E. 3rd Ave. Four Rangers hit in dou­ 1673 So. Colo. Blvd. Father Mattione said. A RETREAT ble figures against Adams "Working together we State but Regis was never Sue Newberry reads ... when and where you come can do almost anything. able to overcome a 38-31 aside and rest awhile. Thus we will be involved halftime deficit, being out- Peanuts, studies Plato, personally and positively scored. 45-30 in the second I SATRiANO in the grpat drama of our half. listens to Bach and dances g Retreat begins at 8:00 P.M. FRIDAY SEE BROTHERS times. The antidote to de­ Bruce Powdrill led the to Simon and Garfunkel. spair is to be involved.” Rangers with 15 pointe. Closes at 6:00 P.M. SUNDAY JANITORIAL SERVICE She also uses CHECK'N'CREDIT COMMERCIAL INC. when her funds run a little short. 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