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139th Year, CXLIV No. 44 15 cents Established in 1844: America’s Oldest Catholic Newspaper in Continuous Publication Friday, January 13. 1984

M any from diocese to attend installation

B y STEPHEN KARL1NCHAK installed as the ninth of the W isconsin M ilwaukee Archbishop Rem bert W eakland. that a Protestant church in Green Bay w ill be d i o c e s e . O SB. who heads the province of W isconsin, w ill used as a site lo r closed-circuit television view ing M ore than 120 persons from the Pittsburgh Archbishop Pio Lang hi apostolic delegate to preside over the episcopal installation portion of ol the event Diocese are expected to attend the installation of the Untied States, will be the principal the cerem onies In addition. Kuick said that two television Bishop A dam J. M aida as the ninth bishop of the for the episcopal ordination. Serving Follow ing the ordination and installation M ass. stations in G reen B ay w ill televise* the ordination Green Bay Diocese. w ith Bishop Leonard as co-consecrator w ill be a reception w ill be held in the Schuldes Sports and installation M ass live from the cathedral He Bishop Aloysius W ycislo, the eighth bishop and Center on the cam pus of St. Norbert College, in said that both stations w ill re-broadcast the Anthony J. Bevilacqua and Vincent M . present apostolic adm inistrator of the G reen Bay nearby DePere, W ise. cerem onies at later tim es Leonard, Aux. Bishops Anthony G. Bosco and D i o c e s e . Bishop-Elect M aida w ill present his credentials K uick said that a series ol regional celebrations John B. M cD ow ell w ill head the group w hich w ill U nlike the cerem onies in P ittsburgh for Bishop from Pope John Paul II to theG reen Bay diocesan will be held on live consectutive Sundays, include approxim ately 60 priests. 20 Religious Bevilacqua, the G reen B ay event w ill include the board ol consultons at a 5 p.m . prayer service on beginning Feb. 5.. across theG reen Bay Diocese. and 40 friends of the bishop-elect. ordination of Bishop-Elect M aida as a bishop Tuesdav. Ja n . 24 in St. Francis X a vie r Cathedral Th e celebrations w ill be held: Feb. 5 in K im b e rly, Bishop Leonard will be one of the co- from the ranks of priests. In Pittsburgh. Bishop Tony Kuick. com m unications director lor the W ise., at H oly N am e Church; Feb. 12 at St. Agnes at the espiscopal ordination of Bevilacqua cam e to the diocese as an ordained G reen Bay Diocese, said that he was hesitant to Church. Green Bay. Feb 19 at Roncalli High Bishop-Elect M aida on W ednesday, Jan. 25 at 2 bishop, having Leen ordained a bishop for the say how m any cardinals, bishops and pnests w ill School, M anitowoc. W ise . Feb. 26 at St John p.m . in St. Francis X avier Cathedral. G reen Bay. Brooklyn Diocese in 1980 and only needed to be attend the ordination/installation M ass or total Church. Antigo. W ise., and M arch5 at M arinette Follow ing the ordination, the bishop-elect w ill be installed as bishop of Pittsburgh. num ber ol attendees at the M ass. Kuick did say H igh School, M arinette. Wise A look at the new bishop of the Green Bay Diocese

By PATRICIA BARTOS Frequently asked w hy he too didn't enter the priesthood, Dan responds, to his wife Pat s From his Polish im m igrant father, Adam J. dism ay, "Som eone has to grow the priests." Dan M aida absorbed the values of integrity, hard and Pat have three sons. w ork and optim ism . He learned from his father's To M sgr. Ferdinand Sojka, now director of St. actions in tim es of both adversity and success. John Vianney M anor in Crafton, who was the Fro m his m other, w ho saw that the fam ily unit M aida fam ily 's form er pastor w hen they lived in was bound tightly w ith m utual love, he learned St. Ignatius parish in Glendale and w ho taught kindness and w arm th. Adam two years of Latin at St. M ary College in These elem ents of his early developm ent add O rchard Lake, M ich ., the bishop-elect w as an "A - texture to the im age of the m an w ho w ill within 1 student," a m an w ho w as "so dedicated and so tw o weeks becom e the ninth Bishop of G reen B ay, sincere that he w as bound to go places. " W ise, in that diocese's 115-year history. M sgr. Sojka preached at the first M asses of Th e 53-year-old Pittsburgh priest has carved a both Adam and Ted. successful and noted career as a canon and civil N ew ly installed Pittsburgh Bishop Anthony J. law yer who has traveled this country and the Bevilacqua also knows the quality of Adam w orld consulting on problem s associated with M a i d a . canon law and church adm inistration. "M y association and friendship w ith Bishop- And. like all m en. he is also m any things to Elect M aida go back m any years. He was alw ays m any people. known as a kind and compassionate priest To his m other, M rs. Sophie M aida of Scott endow ed by G od w ith a special gift of intelligence. Tw p ., he is her first-born son w ho bears the nam e "Th e Diocese of Pittsburgh w ill be losing his of her late husband, a son w ho had alw ays w anted valuable talents and priestly presence but w e are to be a priest, one w ho visits her several tim es a consoled by the conviction that the Diocese of week and. she says with a laugh, takes her G reen Bay w ill be enriched by his leadership. garbage to the curb on collection day. "O n behalf of the Diocese of Pittsburgh I pray To younger brothers Fr. Thaddeus (Ted) and for an abundance of God's blessings in his new Dan M aida. he is a respected and loved older m inistry. W e will always m iss him ." Bishop brother, one who "set a tone and exam ple" for Bevilacqua said. Bishop-Elect Adam J. Maida, who heads the Zagrocki, secretary. Missing is associate legal Ted, w ho also entered the priesthood, and one w ho To his classm ates and fellow priests, Adam diocesan legal office, poses with his staff. From left counsel Bill S l e i d l e . shared his legal expertise and his enthusiasm for are Catherine Figola, secretary, Nicholas P . — Photo by John C. Keenan Steeler gam es and golf w ith baby brother Dan. (Continued on page 3) Cafardi, associate general counsel, and Marie

A n a l y s i s In sid e New ties to make U.S. envoy 9s job easier S c h o o l notified ol special events such as beatifications and By JIM LACKEY interview that Lugar toured Europe during Congress' canonizations but would not be officially invited, an St. Joseph Elem entary School M em orial D ay recess last spring and. while in Rom e, American source in Rome told NC News Iasi in O 'H ara Tow nship m ay close W ASHINGTON (NC) — Establishment of formal m et w ith Pope Jo hn P aul II and visited W ilson's offices. N o v e m b e r . its doors. Page 7. diplom atic ties between the United States and the W hile the pope did not raise the diplom atic relations Vatican m ay have little practical effect except for issue with Lugar, W ilson's office in Rom e did, That m eant that the am bassador Irom Cuba, which m aking the job of the U .S . envoy to the H o ly See a little according to Hastings. has diplom atic relations w ith the V atican, w a s ' 'used to I m m i g r a n t s e a s i e r . "They felt they ought to be accredited to the sm irking" at the U.S. representative because the V atican," said Hastings. It w ould m ake their lives so C uban could sit in the place reserved lor the diplom atic St. Ignatius School in In fact, congressional sources told N C News, the m uch easier." corps w hile W ilson could not. the Rom e source said. Glendale helps im m igrant im petus for rem oving the century-old ban that blocked He said the envoy's stall in Rom e used words like Lugar's proposal to end the ban on diplom atic children adjust. Page 10. establishm ent of form al ties cam e not from Congress, "silly" and "a charade" to describe the distinction relations was attached Sept. 22 to a bill authorizing where legislation ending the ban was approved in betw een a personal representative of a U .S. president program s for the State Departm ent A House-Scnatc Novem ber, but from the office of the current U.S. and a full am bassador. M a r c h conference com m ittee later agreed to the addition to envoy, W illiam A. W ilson, who was nom inated for Lugar returned to W ashington. Hastings continued, the bill, and Reagan signed the m easure into law N ov Seventy-five buses w ill take am bassador by President Reagan Jan. 10. and a m onth later saw that Zablocki had introduced, 2 2 opponents of abortion on Th e upgrading of diplom atic ties also is not expected with 25 co-sponsors, a bill to end the ban on lull dem and from western Pennsyl­ to greatly alter the w ork in W ashington of the pope's diplom atic relations. In W ashington an official at the apostolic delegation, vania to the annual M arch for representative in the United States, Archbishop Pio Hastings said Lugar then checked with the State w hich is being upgraded to an apostolic nunciature, said the change in diplom atic relations w ould be m uch Life in W ashington D .C . on Jan. Laghi. The pope's delegate in W ashington already is Departm ent and the W hile House to see if there was m ore signif icant lo r the status of the United States in 23. Page 7. treated as a full diplom at because, in addition to support in the adm inistration for the m easure before the Vatican diplom atic corps than for the Vatican's serving as a link betw een the U .S . church and the pope, introducing his own version of the legislation five representative in W ashington. he also is the Holy See's perm anent observer to the weeks after Zablocki. O n p r i e s t s Organization of Am erican States, according to an "Th is idea (of ending the ban on form al relations) The official, w ho asked not to be nam ed, noted that official at the apostolic delegation. has been run up the flagpole a num ber ol tim es, said Archbishop Laghi's official status at the O A S brings Father Charles Bober Bills aim ed at lifting the ban w ere introduced last Hastings. “ It certainly w asn't a Cabinet-level issue. him diplom atic courtesies and recognition from the explains the difference betw een sum m er in Congress by Rep. Clem ent J. Zablocki (D - A nother source, w ho spoke on condition that he not be U S. governm ent. a diocesan priest and a religious W is.), chairm an of House Foreign Affairs Com m ittee identified, was m ore blunt. "W ilson was breaking out order priest. Page 5. until his death D ec. 3. and Sen. R ichard Lu ga r (R -In d .). in hives w anting a change in the law so he could be "In reality there would be very lew noticeable chairm an of the European affairs subcom m ittee f i t t h e nam ed am bassador," this source said. changes" if Archbishop Laghi were to receive the Senate Foreign Relations Com m ittee. As m erely the personal representative of the official title ol papal pronuncio, or am bassador, the H e w r u l e s A n aide to Lugar, R ichard C . H astings, recalled in an president and not an am bassador. W ilson would be official said.

The federal governm ent issues new Baby Doe' rules. P a g e 9 . Vatican-American ties hailed9 criticized B y JERRY FILTEAU religious prejudice w hich once so sadly inf luenced our He rejected the view that the new ties w ould violate the principle ol church-state separation. "The € • A m e r i c a NC News Service national policy." ( The resumption of diplomatic ties signals the dawn ot exchange of am bassadors w ill not advance nor is it Jesuits in Central Am erica W hile Catholic officials hailed the U .S. decision to a new and renewed period ot mutual exchange and intended to advance the cause of Catholicism in this urge U.S. church leaders to form diplom atic ties with the Vatican on Jan. 10, a collaboration for the sake ot world peace. " said Bishop country." he said. w ork for non-m ilitary solutions leading Baptist spokesman called the move "a Bevilacqua. A sharply divergent reaction, however, cam e from to the conflicts in th eir country. ludicrous leap of logic" that im perils Am erican ("Such a gesture is intended to gel hope to all men and Jam es M . Dunn, executive director ol the Baptist Joint P a g e 6 . Christian m issionaries in the Th ird W orld. women who feel the threat ol insecurities in times of Com m ittee on Public Affairs, an agency representing A church-state separation group announced plans to increasing conflict and danger. At the same time, this some 27 m illion U.S. Baptists on questions of U.S. tile suit against the m ove on constitutional grounds. formalization gives evidence of the priority ot Pope John public policy. Calling Reagan's move "one m ore evidence of P i l g r i m a g e Cardinal John K rol of Philadelphia said President Paul II and President Reagan to obtain a prompt, /ust and Reagan's decision gives the United States "the lasting peace for our time.") massive misunderstanding on the part ol this Pilgrimage to Bethlehem standing it deserves" at the H oly See. Archbishop Jam es Hickey of W ashington issued a adm inistration of the appropriate relationship ol called a desperate plea' for He called the century-old U.S. ban on diplom atic sim ilar statem ent, saying, "1 rejoice that the passing church and stale." Dunn said the action was "a clear peace. Page 6. relations w ith the V atican, w hich w as recently lilted by of religious bigotry has m ade this development violation of the principle ot church-state separation. " Congress, a "rem nant of the unfortunate nativism and p o s s i b l e . " (Continued on page 3 A lso inside Editorials Pages 4-5 l 9SOO expected to e n r o l l in CCD courses H o m e A g a i n ...... P a g e 8 O b i t u a r i e s ...... P a g e 9 Fifty-live centers w ill offer religious education of CCD and Catholic school catechisls as well as Philosophy of Catholic Education lor Catholic School Entertainment Page 12 program s during the 1984 w inter trim ester as courses parents and adults w ishing to learn m ore about their teachers. Part B of Com m unicating the Christian in the Continuing Christian Developm ent program get f a i t h . Message for elem entary level catechists and CCD under w ay starting M onday, Jan. 16. Subject areas being offered include Scripture. secondary level catechists in nine locations com plete Sacram ents, and contem porary m oral theology. These the introductory program for anyone who has taken D e a t h s The Continuing Christian Developm ent program is courses and others provide m ore in-depth study of Part A during the fall sem ester or at som e previous sponsored by the Diocesan Office of Religious Sister M . M argaret W eiss, a topics catechists are teaching and catechists are urged t i m e . Education/Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. m em ber of the School Sisters of to increase their knowledge so that that they have In addition, courses of special interests, such as St. Francis of Bellevue. Fifteen hundred adults are expected to enroll in the greater understanding than gained in introductory "W om en of Scripture," w ill be offered. Sister Bonaventure G ieri, a courses that w ill be given at centers in all 16 deaneries courses and have m ore to share w ith those they are Preregistration is preferable but people will be m em ber of the Benedictine in the diocese. Courses have been scheduled on t e a c h i n g . adm itted to the first class session. Fo r inform ation, Sisters of Chicago. weekdays, Saturdays and Sundays, during m ornings, Catechetical workshops and creative teaching persons should refer to the (Dec. M rs. Julia Franks of afternoons and evenings as determ ined by the deanery courses are designed to im prove the catechists' ability 30) or the News and Notes (Novem ber/Decem ber Brackenridge. team s and availability of personnel to teach. The to com m unicate. Th e y w ill help catechists to arouse the issues) ol the diocesan Religious Education/CCD John Norman Harvey of length of series varies from 12 hours to 30 hours. interests of children or youth and to get them involved office. Fo r further inform ation. C C D catechists should Virginia, a form er resident of Courses in the Continuing Christian Developm ent in learning m ore about the faith. telephone 456-3115, w hile Catholic school catechists the the East End. program are designed to m eet the needs and interests Introduction courses are the Survey ol Doctrine and should telephone 456-3111. Page 2 — Pittsburgh Catholic, Friday. January 13, 1984 Diocesan news

Photo album of the new bishop of Green B

Bishop-Elect Adam J. Maida poses for a family son Tim, 15, wife Pat, and (kneeling front) Bob, 11 Maida family gathers in Rome 25 years ago for the Fr. Anthony Muszynski, pastor of St. Ignatius in photo with mother Sophie Maida, brother Fr. (left) and Joe, 13. Tim is a student at Canevin High ordination of Fr. Thaddeus. From left are the late Carnegie (where the Maidas belonged), Mrs. Thaddeus Maida and youngest brother Dan School and Bob and Joe attend SS. Simon & Jude , Fr. Thaddeus, Father Adam, the late Sophie Maida and Dan. (standing center) and Dan's family. They include School, Scott Twp.

V i w h o |n 1 9 3 8 First Communion photo, with younger brother Thaddeus at left. Father Maida distributes Communion at his first Mass in 1 9 5 6 . Father Maida with his younger brother Fr. Maida, is pastor of St. Teresa in Perrysville. A sketch of new bishop’s career Follow ing is a capsule review ol Bishop-Elect • Fr. M aida was Bishop Leonard's personal Adam Joseph M aida s life and career. representative to the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, serving from 1969 to 1975. He also • He was born March 18. 1930 in East was an assistant professor of theology at Vandergrilt (W estm oreland County) to the late LaR oche College from 1965 to 1967 and has been Adam M aida, a Polish im m igrant w ho began life an adjunct professor of law at Duquesne in the U.S. as a laborer and eventually entered University's law school since 1971. He was m anagem ent at a coal m ine, and M rs. Sophie president of the Canon Law Society of Am erica (Cieslak) M aida. daughter ol Polish im m igrants, from 1968 to 1969. He has addressed canon law and presently a m em ber of O ur Lady of Grace societies of the U .S ., Canada and B ritain and has parish in Scott Tw p. He was the eldest of three given numerous lectures in this country on boys, followed three years later by F r. Thaddeus m atters pertaining to law and theology in the M aida. now pastor ol St. Teresa Church in c h u r c h . Perrysville, and eight years later by Daniel, • Fr. M aida was nam ed special counsel and owner of the Globe Parking lot at Greater canonist to the Catholic Health Association in P ittsburgh International A irpo rt and a resident of 1980. He has given legal sem inars and lectures Green Tree. throughout the U.S. in his work with the association and has authored num erous articles • Fr. M aida attended public schools for his and books. The latest of those books, "Issues in first 10 years ol education. Fro m 1946 to 1950 he the Labor-M anagem ent Dialogue: Church studied at St. M ary High School and St. M ary Perspectives," written by Nicholas Cafardi, College at Orchard Luke, Mich. He took associate general counsel in the diocesan legal philosophy studies at St. Vincent Sem inary in office, and edited by F r. M aida, w on first-place in Latrobe. Tw o years later, in 1952, he began the Professional-Educational Books category of studies at St. M ary Sem inary in Baltim ore, M d. the Catholic Press Association com petition this Father M aida in high school w here he continued until his ordination. That Father Maida at work in a 1950 photo. past spring. photo. occurred on M ay 26. 1956 in St Paul Cathedral. • F r. M aida also has been chaplain of the St. O akland, w ith Bishop officiating. Thom as M ore Society, an organization com posed (H e celebrated his 25th anniversary in 1981.) of Catholic law yers of the bar association, since • F r. M aida becam e an assistant pastor of St. 1965 in the diocese. • Fr. M aida is also noted for the m any Vatican Elizabeth in Pleasant Hills and in 1958, Bishop appointments he has filled. In 1971 he was Dearden asked Fr. M aida to study canon law in appointed to a papal com m ission charged with Rom e. He attended Lateran University there and drafting an adm inistrative procedure and law for earned a J.C .L. degree in 1960 Fr. M aida was the Church. A year later he was the only studying in Rom e at the sam e tim e that younger Am erican am ong the 25 canonists, theologians, brother Thaddeus was also taking sem inary bishops and one cardinal nam ed to a papal studies there. (Fr. Thaddeus was ordained in com m ission form ed to draft a constitution (Lex Rom e Dec. 20, 1958.) Fundam entals) for the Church, the first in the • O n his return to Pittsburgh, the bishop-elect Church's history. In 1973 he was appointed a w as nam ed assistant chancellor of the diocese, a consultor to the Vatican's Com m ission for the post he was to hold for 13 years, until he was R evision of the Code of Canon Law . In 1975 he w as nam ed vice-chancellor in 1973. W hen he first nam ed to serve as a representative of the Holy cam e back to Pittsburgh, Fr, M aida was asked by See for the international conference on "Peace Bishop John W right to take evening classes at Through Law " in Washington, D.C. He was Duquesne Univeristy's law school and work nam ed a consultor to the Vatican's Com m ission tow ard a civil law degree. He did so, earning his lo r the Revision of P rocedural Law in 1978 and in J.D . degree in 1964 In 1965 he w as adm itted to the S eptem ber of 1983 becam e one of the first tw o non­ practice of law before the Suprem e Court of resident consultors appointed to Vatican's Pennsylvania Fr. M aida was the only priest in Congregation of the Clergy. the state able to practice both canon and civil la w . • A sa bishop, he w ill serve on tw o com m ittees In addition to his w ork in the Trib u n a l, F r. M aida of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. becam e legal counsel to the diocese in 1965. Also, He is a member of the Conciliation and in addition to his chancery w ork, he w as chaplain Arbitration Com m ittee chaired by Sacram ento at O ur Lady of M ercy Academ y in M onroeville Bishop Roger M. Mahony and the Pastoral from 1964 to 1973. He took up residence at St. P aul Research and Practices Com m ittee headed by Sem inary in 1973 w ith his appointm ent as vice- Bishop Bernard Law of the Springfield-Cape Father Maida's 1956 ordination ter Adam Maida and former Pittsburgh lishop Vincent Leonard chancellor. G irardeau. M o. Diocese. ______photo. f Pittsburgh Catholic. Friday, January 13, 1984 — Pag* 3

A look at the new bishop of the Green Bay Diocese hom ily and his episcopate, to rem em ber that he is (Continued from page 1) an agenda. You go in and do the best you can. You To Fr. H ugh Lang, superintendent of diocesan address problems as they c o m e lorward and you schools. Fr. M aida's m any accom plishm ents a m an first, a person first, "and that people are Maida was an excellent student, a caring man, a learn to understand. " didn't happen by accident. interested in that person. Th e priesthood is a gift given h im b y G od. I told h im to tell the people how very "balanced" man, one who enjoyed his “He would alw ays take the tim e to w ork and studies as well as sportsand cultural events. And. He is generous with praise for outgoing Green he feels. I told him they w ant the m an to speak in Bay Bishop Aloysius Wycislo. who has provided think things out. H e m akes sure w hat he is doing is the bishop, not the bishop in the m a n ." as Fr. Hugh Gloninger. pastor of St. Sylvester in very thoroughly planned, and this has been the Brentwood, commented, Adam Maida's over­ warm support to his successor. Fr. Ted and the other fam ily m em bers — his pattern of his whole life, as a student, m other Sophie, younger brother D an and Dan's riding virtue was that, "he was always a very Fr. Maida will seek to focus his work on' 'being adm inistrator and priest." w ife Pat and sons Tim . 15. Joe, 13, and Bob, 11 — prayerful man." out w ith the priests and the people of G o d . " F r. Lang said it was not a m atter of "if" Adam know that Fr. M aida's departure w ill leave a To those who knew him well, it was no surprise H e s e e s "Church" as a community of M aida would becom e a bishop, but “w hen.” vacuum in their lives. that he became a bishop. The only shock was that w orshippers and believers. "I have a role in that, Reflecting on his new life, F r. M aida recalled They already have signed up with a long­ the elevation in rank came while he was still just just as do priests, deacons and laity,” he said. his thoughts ol just tw o m onths ago. distance phone service and all are planning to a “ Father," Msgr. Sojka explained. l e a v e Jan. 22 for the cerem onies in G reen Bay. F r. M aida view s as a challenge the opportunity He was eager for the arrival ol Pittsburgh's O ne ol the last special fam ily observances was Bishop-Elect Maida. who is vice-chancellor and to “ integrate the la ity into the work of the church, newly nam ed bishop, Anthony J. Bevilacqua. an the silver anniversary ol F r. Te d ’s ordination on to give them the opportunity to fulfill their old friend and colleague. "I w as delighted when legal counsel for the Pittsburgh Diocese, will Decem ber 20. The M aidas gathered for a quiet baptism al calling." he w as appointed. I knew him as a priest and as a become bishop in ceremonies Wednesday. Jan. dinner in an area restaurant. canon and civil lawyer. I was happy for 25. at 2 p.m. in Green Bay's St. Francis Xavier He also sees a new m eaning for his name M rs. M aida is adjusting to the idea ol Adam 's Pittsburgh and looking forw ard to w orking w ith Cathedral. “A dam .” To his knowledge, he w ill be the first departure, and she luughs that she would have h i m . " Milwaukee Archbishop Rembert Weakland U .S. bishop to bear that baptism al nam e. And he preferred to see him in a w arm er clim ate. (also a native of the Pittsburgh area) will install w ill use the them es of the “ old A dam and the new But at the end of October —- just as Bishop She m akes no secret ol her dislike ol cold the new bishop. Apostolic Delegate Archbishop A d a m " in his episcopate. Bevilacqua had several weeks earlier — Adam w eather, but as to lacing the prospect ol Ja n u a ry Pio Laghi will officiate at the ordination and As to adapting him self to the dem ands of M aida received an unexpected call from the w eather in G reen Bay she is undaunted 1 1 don’t retiring Bishops Vincent Leonard of Pittsburgh serving as an O rdinary, and of changing his w ork Apostolic Delegate. care ii 1 com e back an icicle — I’m going." and Aloysius Wycislo of Green Bay will serve as routine (as m uch as 70 percent ol his work She'll rem ain in W isconsin for several weeks "Som ehow the H oly Spirit interfered in those and she adm its it w on’t be until she com es back co-consecrators. currently involves traveling), Fr. M aida said, plans ol m ine," F r. M aida said. More than 60 Pittsburgh priests also have made “ I ’ve been in a great m a n y chancery offices. I leel that she'll really feel the distance of A dam , w ho would regularly visit her several evenings a plans to attend, along with Pittsburgh Bishop very com fortable there.” Becom ing a bishop was an honor he didn't expect. But when the Apostolic Delegate asked w e e k , and Auxiliary Bishops John Friends and colleagues foresee a smooth B. McDowell and Anthony Bosco. him to accept the appointm ent to G reen B ay. “ I "It w ill be very hard. I w on't be w aiting for him transition for the new bishop, due both-to his told him m y whole life had been devoted to the to com e hom e. “ The installation will be carried live on intelligence and to his easy m anner w ith people. church and that this appointm ent from the Holy The m oving van has already left Irom F r . television in Green Bay. A television crew T a l l a n d erect, with graying hair and his Father represented a call from G od to serve in a M aida's Diocesan Building oil ice and h i s already has been in Pittsburgh to talk with the m other's light blue eyes, facial features and further w ay. There w as no big traum a in m aking residence at St. Paul Sem inary. M any ol h i s bishop's family members and professional quiet, slightly hoarse voice, A dam M aida sm iles this decision. personal effects are en route to G reen Bay. colleagues in preparation for a TV special. easily, is outgoing, even-tem pered and Fro m the fam ily that gave him so m uch in life A nd the new bishop is fulfilling invitations from The new bishop will head a diocese that is well enthusiastic about his w ork and about people. — concepts ol “ love, integrity, friendship, jo y ’’ — parishes, m otherhouses and organizations seeking to bid him farewell us he prepares to over twice as large as the Pittsburgh Diocese H e has changed little since his sem inary days, and among whom "I experience all these l e a v e the diocese, w here he has w orked us a priest geographically, but with about one-half of the one aspect of the new bishop that m ost im presses w onderful hum an ideals that w e strive for in life," Catholic population as Pittsburgh. for 28 years. his form er classmate Fr. Joseph Lem p, now he also received som e heartfelt thoughts on his Am ong the celebrulions is one planned lor Because of the great geographical distances, pastor of St. Rose, D arlington (B eaver County). new role, including som e from his brother, Fr. Tuesday, Jan. 17, for priests ol the diocese. A his installation ceremony in Green Bay will be T e d M a i d a . "H e is a m an o! good spirit, good hum or and reception w ill be held at St. Paul Sem inary in followed by welcoming celebrations on five patience," Fr. Lem p said. The arrival and impact last month ol Crafton, w here F r. M aida is in residence, Irom 7 regional levels within Bishop-Elect Maida's new "H e alw ays had plenty of tim e for m e, to sit Pittsburgh's new bishop deeply im pressed Fr. to 9 p.m . H is priesl-clussm ales w ill serve as co- diocese. d o w n a n d laugh in a very friendly w ay. N o m atter T e d . h o s t s . Of his immediate plans in his new role, Fr. what he becom es," Fr. Lem p added, “he w ill be W ith these im ages fresh in his m ind, F r. Ted H i s lellow w orkers in the Diocesan B uilding are Maida said, " I don’t think you can go in cold' with the sam e good person he w as 30 years a g o . " urged his older brother, both in his installation also planning a farew ell dinner for him . New American-Vatican diplomatic ties , criticized (Continued from page 1) in 1977-78. The form alization ol said "m aintains it is im proper for One thing remains, Rabbi Both the leader of the U S, friendly relations already diplom atic relations w ill the United States governm ent to Tanenbaum added, and that is for D unn also called it "a dangerous bishops and Archbishop Laghi existing" had decided to establish "dim inish the opportunity of send an ambassador to any the Vatican to establish relations at the level ol an and divisive precedent ol said the establism ent ol com m unication" with the Holy church." The N CC is an um brella diplom atic relations w ith the stale governm ent m eddling in church diplom atic ties is recognition ol em bassy at the Holy See and an See, he said. organization for U.S. Protestant o f I s r a e l . apostolic nunciature in W ashing affairs, and the occasion lor papal leadership for peace and "A s a personal representative," and Orthodox churches with a M anhattan-based Rabbi Arthur t o n . practical problem s lor all those j u s t i c e . he said, "I could get access to the combined membership ol 40 Schneier, president ol the Bishop Jam es W. Malone ol engaged in the far-flung pope a lot easier than if I had been m i l l i o n . interlaith Appeal of Conscience -Youngstown, Ohio, president ol Pope John Paul U s current m issionary venture in developing just one of 95 other am bassadors Not all non-Catholic reaction Foundation, welcom ed the new the U .S . Catholic Conference, and represenlative to the U .S. bishops. countries." at the Vatican. Before, it was a was negative, however. W h i l e a diplom atic link as "a positive Archbishop Laghi said in separate Archbishop Laghi, w ho has served In cam paigning against the person-to-person relationship, number of American Jewish s t e p . " statements Jan. 10 that the as apostolic delegate in establishm ent of ties beforehand, and now it w ill becom e a country - organizations are on record Cardinal Joseph Bernardin ol decision reflects the efforts ol W ashington since 1980, could be Dunn had argued that widespread to-country one." (Since W alters opposing Vatican-U.S. ties on Chicago said he believed that the Pope John Paul and his appointed the new pronuncio. But anti-Am ericanism in Third W orld was there, the num ber of other grounds of church-state separa­ diplom atic link “ w ill strengthen predecessors to bring peace to the the Vatican norm ally does not countries w ould be linked w ith and countries having diplom atie- tion, their response to the m ove communications between our w o r l d . announce the name ol the would strengthen anti-Christian relations with the Holy See had was described as generally governm ent and the H oly See and pronuncio until som e tim e after feeling in those parts of the w orld risen to 106. Th e United States is *■ m uted" by Rabbi M arc w ill assist them both in their The Vatican, in a brief the announcem ent ol the if the U .S. diplom atic link to the the 107th to establish fo rm al ties.) Tanenbaum , director of Christian- efforts to prom ote justice and statem ent, said the tw o countries, establishm ent ol diplom atic Vatican took place. The Rev. Jerry Falwell, a Jew ish relations of the American peace throughout the w orld." "desirous ol developing m utual r e l a t i o n s . The Seventhbay Adventists had fundam entalist preacher and Jewish Committee. also waged a strong cam paign leader of the M oral M ajority One reason for this, he against U.S.-Vatican diplom atic m ovem ent, who supported suggested, was the shared "Modern Banking W ith Did Fashioned Courtesy Lies, as did the now -secular but Reagan in the 1980 election concern of Am erican and world Padre Pio 10-day Tour Protestant-originated Am ericans cam paign, also opposed the m ove, Je w ry over the Soviet threat and MAIN OFFICE S H A L t R United for Separation of Church saying it set "a precedent w hich recognition that the H o ly See is an SEPTEMBER 4 to 13 OFFICE of Italy and State. "W e are going to sue, we w ill regret later." He asked im portant force against that 5137 Butler St there is no question about that, how long it would be before t h r e a t . Pgh Pa 15201 900 Mt Royal Blvd * 1 1 9 4 ♦rom Pittsburgh pp do said AUSCS spokesman Joseph Mecca, the chief holy city ol W hile noting the church-state 7S1-0310 Pgh Pa 15223 fm rooorvotion A Intonai Kan C o n n . Islam , m akes a sim ilar request concern of Jew s, he also cited an P E N N A V E 4 S 6 -4 2 4 S Rov Anthony J. Cipolla Criticism of a different form lor diplom atic recognition. argum ent that in term s of Vatican OFFICE BLAWNOX McGuire Mamar 1*1 Heme {119 Mercer Reed Near Brighton Pi 15066 came from a form er personal Dean Kelly, church-state diplomacy, the Holy See can OFFICE Nam e...... presidential envoy to the pope, specialist for the N ational Council 4401 Penn Ave legitim ately be considered “a Pgh., Pa 15224 M iam i attorney David W alters, 201 Freeport Rd Address...... of Churches, reiterated the N C C ’s ‘secular’ arm of the church, 6 2 1 -6 S 2 6 who was President C arter’s envoy Pgh Pa 15238 official policy since 1951, w hich he conceived as a sovereign state." 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4 Page 4 — Pittsburgh Catholic, Friday, January 13, 1984 Opinions / comments

E d i t o r i a l Church News peak Forgiveness conceived and com m unicated. By NORBERT F. GAUGHAN church language. Steiner thinks Am erican prim ary Will George Orwell's book The alternative opening prayers and secondary education have It was on May 13, 1981 at St. Peter's Square when the "1984” com e to be realized in 1984? at M ass, com posed in our tim e, contributed to the new speak of our world was shocked and alarmed as Pope John Paul II lay W orse, does it exist, at least are alm ost alw ays tw ice as long as day. Som ething like that can be capsized, backward in his seat, after being shot by a would- potentially in some church the ancient Latin prayers even NORBERT said about som e of the religious be assassin. structures? Th e re is one aspect of when they are translated. These F. GAUGHAN educators in our tim e who have A recovered Pope John Paul recently met that would-be Orwell's "1984" that m ight be alternates are prolix and the trained young people to use jargo n assassin, Mehmet Ali Agca, at Rom e’s Rebibbia prison and found today am ong church bodies. language "w ooly." W hatare we to "church" w ords which convey no W e refer to "N ew speak, ' ' O rw ell's m ake of a prayer to G od that asks m eaning, even to the user. forgave him. im portant, insightful concept of H im to “enfold our desire w ith the The pope sat with Agca in the prison cell for 21 minutes. Elsew here O rw ell had said that thought control by the abasem ent beauty of truth?” In another, we this abuse of language for political Time magazine called the meeting a ‘‘startling drama of establishm ent of a saving of language. Newspeak in beseech G od to guide us “through purposes could still be cured. The forgiveness and reconciliation.” The pope embraced his relationship with Him as O rw e ll’s 1984 pow erful Slate is the a w orld filled w ith lights contrary rules are sim ple. N ever use a long historical person that at one point | enemy and pardoned him, an act that was "profoundly officiai language used, not to to Yo ur ow n.“ That's m anichean; word when a short one w ill do. or other in the rite, the initiate is Christian." com m unicate but precisely to stop it certainly is not describing a (This author must search his brought into personal relationship Unfortunately, forgiveness and reconciliation often run com m unication. B y it, words are w orld that "G od so loved." A re all conscience.) Use active moods to the one w ho is. as president of contrary to human nature andean pit husband against wife, robbed system atically ol m eaning the world's lights contrary to rather than passives (if indeed the assem bly and as subject of the parents against children, neighbor against neighbor and and assigned only the m eanings G o d ? anybody trained in our schools tradition, a personal sign of the that those in control give them , In a 1980 book of papers on the knows that active and passive relative against relative. The home, the workplace and unity of the C hurch...” Oh. w hich are in fact, non-m eanings. Liturgy, a w rites that the mood m eans). Above all, use no i one's local environment become places that breed hostility In tim e such language a ll sounds As Orwell said, as Newspeak bishop "verbalizes the united jargon where everyday English when people are unwilling to forgive. the sam e, opaque, convoluted, grow s, "its w ords grow few er, and future which he has come to language can serve. And finally, On a larger scale, this hostility, due to a lack of dull. Too m uch do we practice m eanings m ore and m ore rigid, discern.” ??? A priest states, "break any of these rules rather • reconciliation, can divide citizens, governments and lead verbal inflation. W ords are and the chance of putting them to "Augustine will capsulize their than say anything outright states and nations into violence, hatred, killing and wars. im proper (i.e., revolutionary) theologies in his lapidary borrowed from the social barbarous." sciences, jim m ied into some Sociologists point out that often the process of forgetting uses alw ays dim inishing." expression ..." From capsule (a Possibly then som e aspects of vague theological position and is a substitute for forgiving, especially in countries such as Churches are caught up in the soluble container) to a rock in one "1984" Newspeak are in our then assigned the m eaning that the United States where there is rapid change and mobility, culture of the day. Church people fell sw oop! ecclesial m idst. Church people the writer chooses. As George both social and physical. For this reason, Americans often are subject to the sam e language Another writes, "Initiation is m ust all attend to o u r business, for Steiner, w riting on "1984'' fads and abuses that others are. not m erely a sacral transaction w hat is at stake is the freedom of have trouble comprehending the centuries-long hatreds Newspeak in the N EW YO R K ER Given the om nipresence of the which alters the purely vertical being hum an. W e m ust be able to i that are part of everyday life in the Middle East, the said: "Clarity of presentation, m edia, w hich is like a suffocating relationship between the com m unicate the eternal truths of Balkans and Northern Ireland. heresy of thought are to be m ade envelope all about, we begin individual and God..." But to G od and Christ — clearly, sim ply, It was near Northern Ireland’s border in 1979 that the speaking and sounding like make that clear, he adds, im possible by the elim ination of h o n e s t l y . pope said violence is evil and "unacceptable as a solution to everybody else — even in our "incorporation into Christ is the language in which they can be problems.” Violence is unworthy of man and is "a lie, for it ' goes against the truth of our faith, the truth of our S c r i p t u r e s , humanity." On a more personal level, a psychologist said that forgiveness frees the lorgiver. It takes away from the J e s u s , th e ' forgiver someone else’s nightmare. "Unless there is a breach with theevil past,” he said, ‘‘all C h o s e n O n e we get is this stuttering repetition of evil.” In the New Testament, Jesus taught and showed us how to B y FR. RICHARD MURPHY forgive and love one’s enemies. Pope John Paul’s pardon of One of the notable features of the B ib le is the w a y it sets forth the Agca examplifies what it truly means to follow Christ. m essage of salvation. Th is book is not so m uch a book filled with ideas, as a book lull of Ex perimentation recognizable people, and very concrete im ages. In its pages we m eet Abraham and M oses, David, The 98th Congress is expected to decide if government the prophets, and Jesus C hrist, the funding will be used for fetal experimentation when it M essiah, along w ith His dow n-to- resumes work on Jan. 23. earth disciples (some of them Last November, the House approved a new ban on fetal fisherm en). experimentation when the researcher has reason to believe It is this concreteness that gives the fetus is intended for abortion. But it also approved the Bible its strength. It is not a another amendment allowing exceptions for experiments "castle in the a ir." There is little of abstract reasoning in it; things deemed to be of "minimal risk" or experiments specifically are either black or white, and approved by the secretary of the Department of Health and secondary causes are by-passed Human Services. as a m a tter ol course, for G od is at Pro-life groups and the U.S. bishops' Committee for Pro- the root of everything. No Life Activities favor the ban on fetal experimentation but argument is offered for His reject the amendment allowing exceptions. existence: He is. Anyone who Father Edward M. Bryce, a Pittsburgh priest who is staff thinks differently is labelled a fool director of the bishops' committee, had written members of (Psalm 13:1). Congress that a humane medical ethic suggests that In the prophetical books there, are. to be sure, m a n y references to children, who cannot give informed consent, should not be peace and justice, to sin and subject to medical experimentation unless the procedure accountability, to victory over the might benefit them as individuals. evil foe. But these abstractions He correctly pointed out that parents of an ynborn child are voiced by that class of people intended for abortion “ clearly cannot give valid consent for called the prophets, m en w ho w ere experimentation because they cannot be assumed to have "characters," as we would say • any interest in the welfare of the child they have already Reagan9s grand design today. B ut they had to be to m ake an im pression on their hearers. decided to eliminate.” pressure within a sm all country By M SGR. CHARLES O. RICE The m ighty Isaiah, the first of Although the Senate may vote on the issue sometime in trying to m ove in a new direction. American elation over the the m ajor prophets, had a lot to the next few months, the matter is expected to be settled by Our occupation forces have Grenadian "victory" indicates a say about governm ental problem s a House-Senate conference committee since it is not likely acted high-handedly. They have softness at the national core. W e and policies, but he also spoke both amendments will be accepted to the same bill. arrested, interrogated, brain needed to beat som eone so that w e about an age to com e in which MSGR. C H A R LE S ^ washed, bullied, vandalized Constituents are urged to contact legislators and ask could feel good again. R eagan and justice and peace and light w ould O. RICE Cuban property, and taken over support for the Dannemeyer amendment supporting the his advisers do not run the country prevail. One of his m ost striking the precious airport the ban and call for a rejection of the Chandler amendment that very w ell, but they understand its contributions however was the revolutionaries w ere counting on allows exceptions for letal experimentation. m oods and hum ors, and they knew m ysterious figure of the Servant to attract tourists and com m erce. they could score by overw helm ing of the Lo rd. He spoke about him on Now Am erica w ill spend m oney Grenada. All they had to do was lour different occasions, in w hat if a proper pretext should em erge. on G renada fixing it up to becom e cover here, pul'f there and have are now called the “Servant W e have not only overpowered a controlled island paradise for Other viewpoints Reagan proclaim something G renada but enslaved it. There is Songs" (chapters 42, 49, 50, 53): Am erican and other tourists. The about peace and liberty to get they are used extensively in the every sign that we intend to dubious m edical schools will m om entum rolling. Once their Lenten liturgy. This is the time of the year when last year's top religious control that tiny spot perm anent­ reopen and the students w ho could adventure gained respectability O nce only is the Servant called ly, both directly and through our not m ake it in A m erica w ill return ; stories have been picked. Most press people recognized the as a patriotric endeavor, they Israel (as in today's re a d ing ). Fo r local allies. But before R eagan’s to be prepped. ironically, for U.S. Bishops' Pastoral on Peace as the leading story. could say and do what they the rest, he appears to be an second term has ended, the m edical practice in the United However, the end-of-the-year picture of two men facing wanted. It was a brilliant public individual, not a collectivity or G renadians w ill revolt. Th e y liked S t a t e s each other in a prison cell, the pope and his would-be relations m aneuver. people. The Lord had form ed this their revolution until it was Have you noticed that there W e Am ericans are vulnerable Servant lor a special task, to assasin, is the major story. torpedoed, and M aurice Bishop s w ere no big cerem onies to honor because en m asse w e are neurotic, restore Israel. M ore than that, It challenges us to think about what this world needs: m em ory w ill not die. the Am erican soldiers w ho died in burdened by lears and phobias however. "I will m ake you the reconciliation, forgiveness. For the wars and rumors of The Am erican public was shut G renada, no interview s w ith their about ourselves as a people and a light of the nations, that m y wars that abound in our day will not be brought to a halt only out of inform ation all along, and fam ilies, yet they are just as dead nation. A w arlike people we w ant salvation m ay reach to the ends of by diplomacy or displays ol brute strength. still is being shut out. Not only as the poor M arines in Lebanon. to be hailed as peace m akers: the earth." were we denied news of the Little has been published about What is still needed on the part of people and governments adept at exploiting the rest of the Here then, as unexpected as a invasion, but we hear nothing ol the 160 G renadians w ho gave their is reconciliation and the willingness to forgive. Here let us w orld and rather stingy, we w ant clap of thunder, is a revelation of what preceded it, nam ely, the lives. Cuban casualties have been begin 1984. Even the Bishops' Peace Pastoral says it is in to be known as generous and the incredible extent of G od's plan destabilizing efforts oi the C IA , played up and exaggerated. conversion of heart where the hope for a peace-filled future unselfish. W e suffer from national of salvation. It w ould transcend all w ho even started a new spaper and To have conquered a tiny island self pity and are so easily earthly boundaries and include all best lies. m aintained a superb rum or m ill. with 110,000 inhabitants was manipulated. Reagan and his nations. Paul could in very truth For some tim e before the hardly a glorious victory but it did cohorts are m asters at m anipula­ w rite to the Corinthians that they assassination of Bishop, stories distract us from Reagan's tion. They play °n «*11 our w ere “the church of G od, the holy were circulated that he and Lebanon folly, and it m ay help him anxieties, especially our people of Jesus Christ." The Cow ard w ere trying to kill each in his grand design to devour all of hysterical anxiety about little sophisticated Corinthians, lately other. We were in there long the Caribbean, for the sake of Pittsburgh Catholic C uba, and ou r dislike of the detiant converted by Paul's preaching, before we fired a shot. The C IA is liberty and dem ocracy, of course. O fficial Publication o f I he Oitwese o f Pittsburgh Castro w ho w ill not bend the knee an old hand at destabilization. rejoiced to hear this good news. to us, and always, of course, Chile w as its greatest success but Chris Searle's "Destabilization Jesus w as their Lo rd too, and upon Serving the counties of Allegheny, Beaver, Com m unism and revolution. Jam aica was a smoother job. In Grenada," published in them P aul called dow n "the grace Butler, Greene, Lawrence and Washington In the afterm ath of Grenada a Destabilizing is done not only by England by W riter and Readers and peace of G od the Fa th er and of Roper poll showed increased intrigue and rumors, but by w ould be w orth reading if you can the Lord Jesus C hrist." w illingness to intervene lurth e r in shutting off trade and credit, get it in this country, which I John the Baptizer too, was an the C aribbean and to go after Cuba which creates trem endous d o u b t . explosive, unforgettable charact­ er. John records how the Baptist, Pittsburgh Catholic Publishing Associates on seeing Jesus approaching him , Anthony J. Bevllacqua, M.A., J.C.D., J.D., Pratldont Most. ftav. cried out in a vivid m etaphor: Fr. ^ . IVter Morion, Executive Secretary The art of making peace "A h ! There is the lam b of G od w ho anti Cenerai Manager offered as a way to solve the takes aw ay the sins of the w orld! " B y FR. JOHN CATOIR, the Rom an centurion centuries Esiabl tolled 1844 by Most R e v . Michael O ' Connor. D. D. p r o b l e m . Then he went on to explain: "It Director, a g o . Annual Subscription Kate: $H in I » S „ | 9 in Canada was to reveal Him that I cam e The Christophers It's u n fa ir of anyone in the peace R ich and poor alike com m it sin, Member: ( aihobr Press Association baptizing in w ater." Served by NC News Service Taking sides on contem porary m ovem ent to characterize people suffer grief, physical pain and W e are so accustom ed to these Second'Class Postage Paid at Pittsburgh, Pa. issues should be done w ith charity in the m ilitary as war-m ongers. loneliness. Th e re are good and bad w ords that it is only w ith an effort Robert M elder, and consideration. The principle of legitim ate self- am ong both groups. It's E d ito r that we can appreciate their If Jesus w ere w alking the earth defense is self-evident: w e need a disturbing to hear M arxist W illiam Paul Palrirk Ko«liak. Auuriale Editor meaning. The lamb was the in 1984. how would He deal with strong defense system . rhetoric being represented as Patricia Hartoa. Stephen karim chak. Reporter* anim al par excellence for those in the m ilita ry ? Som e of the Nevertheless, all parties m ust Christian theology. Jesus never J a c k l e e . Adrertuing Re pretenlalire sacrifice (see the m any ritual gentlest, m ost peace-loving realize that nuclear weapons and preached class w arfare: He cam e Frank Kodr. Rustneu Manager passages in Exodus, Num bers, people I know are in the m ilitary, the arm s race cannot be treated on to convert all classes to the high Frank M urra>, t ¡n utation Manager Leviticus). It is a figure of and they grow more and more a "businessas usual basis.” I pray art of m aking peace. PuMuned Ecery Criday innocence, of sinlessness, and uncom fortable with the abuse that the passion to change the Pope John Paul II is right when calls to m ind both the Servant of they receive from well-intended present direction of our country's he w arns us to renounce violence Postmaster & awlacribera: Send address changes to the Lord (Isaiah .53) and the Pittsburgh Catholic, lit Third Avenue. Pittsburgh. Pa. 1SXZ2 protestors. policies does not give rise to self- as a m eans of social change. "Th e Passover Lam b (John 19: 36). They also suffer some righteous arrogance on either wisdom that com es from God is Pittsburgh Catholic (1SN 032-0383) understandable anxiety in trying s i d e . utterly pure. It is peace-loving, Like John the Baptist, we bear w itness w ith all G od's people that 110 Third Avenue. Pittsburgh. Pa. 15222 to discern w hat God is asking of Poverty is another issue that gentle, full of com passion and Phone: (412) 471-1252 them . I think the Lord w ould deal som etim es breeds hatred, show s itself by doing good." (Jas. Jesus is the Chosen One of God. kindly w ith them as He did with especially when Marxism is 3 : 1 7 - 1 8 ) . Praised be His nam e!

t Opinions/comments Pittsburgh Catholic. Friday, January 13, 1984 — Pag« 5

Letters to the editor Q uestions fo r F r. B o b e r

To St. Thomas Parish M ary’s telling us to believe

To the Ed ito r and to the Fam ilies of St. Thom as Parish: To the Editor: On priests It was a very sad when the fire gutted your beautiful church Uncanny was the word spoken by a news reporter when the which you had w orked so hard to renovate and then fire had to statue of O u r Lady w as revealed as it stood unscathed am idst the happen and destroy all your w ork. charred ruins in the church of St. Thom as. Coincidence? W e all By FR. CHARLES BOBEK But now is the tim e to show your strength and character by know the dilem na of St. Thom as the unbeliever. accepting this, for w e know there isn't anything perm anent in our QUESTION: lives w hether it is our fam iles, friends, jobs o r our w ay of life. It M ary, at Fa tim a , w arned the children of the threat of godless You recently wrote a general depends on G od's plan for us. Com m unism and the annihilation of certain nations. article about vocations and a call { l have in m y life belonged to m any churches — due to the tact W hen the story and film ol Fatim a w ere released, there w as a from God but my question is more specific. I have never seen FR. CHARLES that I left hom e to w ork, later got m arried, m y husband had to great surge of faith. Th e vigils and block rosaries m ust have been BOBER phange jobs — but each church m eant som ething to m e. N ot just very reassuring to M a ry that her visits to Fa tim a w ere not in vain. explained anywhere the real the fine architecture, special w indow s, bells o r w hether it was difference between a diocesan P) very old or very m odern but because I knew whenever I went Now, years later, evil, m uch suffering and despair have priest and a religious order priest. inside, Jesus C hrist was there w aiting for m e in the tabernacle to overcom e faith, hope and love. Can you explain that difference? welcom e and com fort m e whether I was happy or sad. I also W ho is to blam e for the unbelief? I realize that there are m any ANSWER: ¿ è discovered in each new church w hen you reach out to som eone in involved in M ary's work but considering the great num ber ol I haven't seen that difference the sign of peace you w ill be m aking a new friend. Catholics, it is not enough. fully explained either and 1 w ould pastoral care to a generation ol So in these tim es w e all know that each church has its needs — Th e sacrifice of the parishioners at St. Thom as C hurch w as not im agine that's because it’s not G od's people. m ay you find it in yo u r heart to extend yo ur energy and loyalty and i n v a i n . easy to do. H ow ever, I'd like to try Differences also are found in the love of G od to that church and m ake it a better place to pay M ary is telling us to believe. because I think for someone areas of service. D iocesan priests hom age to our Saviour. MRS. L. CAM PBELL m aking decisions about the future prom ise their service to a given M RS. DONALD R. BLACK Emsworth it could be im portant part of the C hurch called a diocese Forest H ills H istorically, the clergy serving and expect that their lives w ill be spent there. P riests from religious O n Catholic e d u c a t i o n the Christians ol the New Testam ent and Carly centuries orders pledge their service to the To the Editor: im portance and dedicated teachers are necessary to achieve this were rather ordinary people Church as tocuscd by the specific Catholic schools in the diocese are besieged by those w ho are t a s k . w hose lifestyle and dress differed charism or work ol their order attem pting to unionize the teachers. Th is is a direct attack on the It is tim e that it is m ade know n to the Catholic com m unity and very little from other Christians. such as preaching or w ork w ith the poor, precisely because, if tuition costs are raised to m eet the the com m unity at large that the C hurch of P ittsburgh is dedicated At the sam e tim e, however, there poor. They can expect to be dem ands of the union salaries, it w ill be the poor w ho a re forced to to Catholic education and to teaching the poor, w hether they are w ere som e w ho followed patterns assigned to m uch wider rem ove their children from our schools. able to afford tuition or not. established by the lifestyle ol geographical areas. Catholic schools from their inception were m eant to be It is tim e that the Catholic com m unity is approached, and those people like the prophet Elijah or The spiritualities ol these tw o instrum ents through which the Gospel message was to be w ho are able, asked to support C atholic schools regardless if they John the Baptist. groups also differ. P rior to the channeled: academ ic excellence w as alw ays sought but it was a have children or not. These m en and wom en lived in work they perform , m em bers ol secondary goal, and, prim arily it was the poor, the im m igrant, It is tim e that parishes w ho have a built-up reserve and do not uninhabited places and were religious com m unities find the w ho w as the recipient of this instrum ent. have a school be required to subsidize the education ol children know n for great holiness and self- path to their own sanctification N ot so today, w hile the descendants of the im m igrants are into who are unable to pay. denial. G ra d u a lly, the follow ers ol rooted in their vows us w ell as the th ird and fourth generations, the poor w e still have w ith us in It is tim e to appeal to C atholic educators and ask them to teach in these early herm its began to prayer and life in common. grow ing num bers and a new influx from across the sea, this tim e, a Catholic school from three to six years at salaries the parishes gather together and from this w as However, the Second Vatican refugees who grace the diocese. But we are no longer able to can afford to pay. After this tim e, if they feel that they are no born the great m onastic tradition Council taught that salvation lor respond to the needs of the poor: w e are no longer able to accept longer able to su rvive on th eir salaries, they should, in conscience, as w e know it. As great cathedrals the diocesan priest is clearly into our schools any significant num ber of children unable to pay feel free to m ove on allow ing new teachers to replace them and do and centers ol learning grew up, rooted in the proper and prayerful tuition and we have, of necessity, in m any instances, becom e t h e s a m e . the clergy attached to these places perform ance ol m inistry. This is schools for the upper m iddle class and the rich. Th is is not to say It is tim e that C atholic schools stop hiring teachers w ho are the also gathered together to live lives not to say that the religious priest that the rich and upper m iddle class do not have a right and a need sole support of a fam ily know ing, that in m ost cases, it is not of com m on w ork and prayer. m ust chose between fraternal lile for C atholic education. It is to say that w hen w e allow ourselves to possible to support a fam ily on a Catholic School salary. In addition to these two early or m in istry, H ow ever, the priority be placed in a position w here the rich and upper m iddle class It is tim e to appeal to the generosity of the single m en and form s ol religious life, w e should given to each is helpful in constitute the largest percentage of enrollm ent in C atholic schools w om en and the m arried w om en whose salary is a second incom e, add the friars who followed the determ ining one ol the im portunt or becom e the sole recipients of Catholic education we greatly to sustain our Catholic school system . The M orm ons give two great reform ers ol the Thirteenth differences betw een the tw o types renege on our responsibility to Gospel principles. years to the spreading of their religious beliefs and to attracting century. Both St. Francis and St. ol priests you m ention. W hile utilities, upkeep and educational m aterials are an converts to their faith. Can we expect Catholics to be any less D om inic established com m unities M any other distinctions expense, teachers salaries w ould have to be listed as the greatest staunch in their dedication? from w hich m any ol the ordained between these tw o groups can be factor that places our schools in this position. Catholic schools It is tim e fo r us, the R eligious of the D iocese, to ask ourselves if clergy were taken. Again in the made. However, I personally were never m eant to be an avenue of em ploym ent whereby w e do not, at least partially, bear responsibility for the present Sixteenth century, the Church w us believe that one ol the serious fam ilies were to be supported. W hen we speak of unionizing crisis in the C atholic schools. blessed w ith the insights ol m en flaws in the Church today is our teaching for the purpose of raising salaries and/or increasing It is tim e to ask the officials in the Schools' O ffice it they have such as Ignatius ol Loyola and preocupalion with differences. benefits, when we thing of strikes that have begun to be done everything in their pow er to sustain our schools. Vincent de Paul. They founded Distinctions are im portunt but in synonym ous with labor unions, som ething is wrong. Anyone, It is tim e to rem ind all teachers presently teaching in the religious com m unities w hich w ere doing so we som etim es obscure Diocesan Schools Office officials included, who supports the Catholic schools that teaching the W ord ol G od is a m inistry and different from the existing groups the great sources ol unity. In this teachers' right to unionize m isses the whole concept of Catholic not a m ere occupation hinging on a salary. of m onks, canons or friars and w ay, we also too easily fall into education. The right of individuals to unionize is not being it is tim e that teachers in the C atholic schools be challenged to they estabished patterns which m isunderstandings. Fo r exam ple, questioned but the right to unionize in the arena of Catholic exam ine their financial status and determ ine il they are able to w ould be follow ed by m any others. it som etim es happens that education is in question. Catholic education belongs to those w ho continue in C atholic schools at a sala ry the parish is able to afford From all these religious celibates fail to understand the are free to be dedicated to the point of sacrifice to spread C hrist's and if not to relinquish their places to those w ho are able to do so communities the Church has real meaning and tremendous t e a c h i n g s . w ithout placing Catholic education in jeopardy. ordained men for service as value ol m arriage and m arried M en and w om en whose responsibility it is to support a fam ily priests. Ye t along w ith a ll ol these people lull to understand the should not be engaged in Catholic education as a m eans of W e sit and w atch our elem entary schools close one after another clerics, others w ere ordained w ho charism ol celibacy. livelihood. Th e ir p rim a ry obligation is to their fam ilies and this because of lack of finances. A re w e going to hasten the death ol the belonged to none ol these groups. This can also happen when we dem ands that they engage in the best paying occupation they can com plete system by union organizers to intim idate us and force us These w ere the parish priests w ho talk about diocesan priests and obtain. W hen they are involved in Catholic education their into subm ission? served a given diocese and its those from religious com m unities. obligation toCatholic-education is at variance w ith their obligation To look back in retrospect and lam ent our e rro r ten or 15 years local com m unities of Christians. We cun too easily begin to to their fam ilies, causing them , m any tim es, to place dem ands from now will be of no consequence. Let us recognize and The distinction .ol diocesan establish value judgem ents about that m ake it alm ost im possible for Catholic schools to continue to cham pion the value of Catholic education w hile w e are still in a clergy and those ordained from the lifestyle and m in istry ol each. position to do so. e x i s t . religious orders is rooted in this It seem s to m e that in this question W e fail Christ, H is Church, and His people greatly ii w e allow SISTER M. JER O M E PLUSQELLEC, SHS history. Diocesan priests do not as in m any others, we cannot Catholic education to become an item to be determ ined and specifically associate their lives forget the guiding principle ol St. negotiated at a bargaining table. P ro vid in g jobs fo r teachers is not G eneral Assistant, Sisters ol the H oly Spirit or w ork w ith the great charism sor Paul: All charism s are m eant lor the purpose of Catholic education: producing students steeped in traditions ol people like Ignatius building up the Church. There are Gospel values and unafraid to defend those values is of prim e W e s t V i e w or Francis but rather see their m any gifts but the sam e spirit — m inistry as one of general one body but m any parts. R eply to M sgr. R ice’s colum n

To the Editor: live. I feel that those teens should have gotten the sam e sentence 1 am the m other of Tho m as Stanley B eitler. I find it necessary to they chose for m y son Tom . Then justice w ould be served. Milestones o f life answer M sgr. Charles Owen Rice's colum n (Dec. 9). If you w ant people to believe that you have com passion for Perhaps M sgr. R ice, if you w ould have attended the m u rd e r trial others, where were you when we needed you for some By FR. JEROME LrDOUX or bothered to get the entire transcript and read it over very understanding, sym pathy and spiritual guidance? N ever once did "Son, you know you are getting carefully or even know n their character you w ould not have gotten you get in touch w ith o r concern yourself to get in touch w ith To m 's along in years. You w ill have to yourself so involved and then w rite about it. It is your kind of loving and grieving fam ily — wife, parents or only brother. W as take care ol yourself better." biased reporting and actions that put divisions between m ost that asking too m uch? H ere it w as Septem ber 1983 and people. Because you w ear a collar doesn't m ake you all right all You criticized our legal system : District Attorney Robert m y m other, who hadjust turned 82 FR. JEROME t h e t i m e . Colville: Governor Thornburgh, because he does not com m ute in July, was telling m e, her 53- Le DOUX A t least a trial by ju ry is given the facts: they m ust sort out the sentences; and you criticized that the Honorable Sam uel Strauss year old son, som ething for the facts and com e up w ith a justifiable verdict. W hen the sentence w as chosen to preside at the trial. first tim e. Im m ediately, it hit m e: w as given and the sentence w as to be carried out, I w as astonished "Th a t’s a m ilestone." to learn of the pressures you put on our law m akers to avoid the Surely, you know that Judge Strauss was not "specially" There are countless m ilestones sentence that w as given. W hat w as your m otivation? W as it your appointed for this "nasty case.” He w as selected by Judge Robert in the life ol each one ol us. Som e ow n personal publicity and self-satisfaction, right or w rong? D id Dauer in the norm al process of assigning hom icides — on the stand out starkly against the and uncertainties ol childhood. you run out of parish or priestly duties to do? rotating system . C olville's “ hot staff,” as you described them , w as horizon; others lie alm ost hidden. Graduation at about 18, then Fo r those w ho did not read your colum n or those who got only K im R eister alone. H e w as also assigned on the rotating system . Som e thunder across our life's biological adulthood plus perhaps your opinions and for those w ho do not know about To m 's tragic D o you re a lly think that this rotating system pulls out all the stops, plain as fleet and as loud as a a second graduation at 21 are death, let m e bring them up to date. O u r precious son. a husband assigning their best m en at w ork? You said they overw helm ed a charging calvary. Others rise followed all to sw iftly by what and a brother, was cruelly, heartlessly and deliberately m urdered black boy and his young law yer. You also said that O lds's law ver slow ly into view , alm ost w ith the m any call the peak ol 30 a n d t h e on O ct. 9, 1979. advised O lds not to plead guilty but to go on trial. A re you sure ol inching appearance of a com et, dreaded w aterm ark ol 40. After W hile on a half-hour break from his place of em ploym ent, the that? (E d ito r s note: M sgr. Rice, in his Dec. 16colum n, corrected spending a considerable am ount the golden age ol 50, w e generally U .S . Post O ffice, he w ent to the Fo rt W ayne Tobacco Store to m ake his statem ent and said that Olds had w anted the trial.) of tim e w orking their w ay through fum ble around and try to forget a purchase. It w as a little past 3:30 a .m ., w hen m ost people are at You failed to bring out a very, very im portant point. Olds was o u r life. S till others dance righ t up a b o u t i t . hom e in bed. O f course, there are a few exceptions, but for the m ost given the chance to turn state's evidence, but he and his attorney to us and trip lightly through part Im portant and basic though part, those out riding around in a car or lurking in the streets are chose not to. As you stated clearly, the law states that if you are of our sojourn. they are, it can be argued that all looking for trouble. engaged in a felony and som eone gets killed you are as g u ilty as the A friend w as telling m e not long these m ilestones have relatively There w ere tw o such people that m orning, w ho got a loaded gun m urderer. B ut, you freely adm itted, it ra re ly w orks out that w ay. I ago how traum atic is w as for her little direct im pact on the th ru st ol the» evening before. A third person picked them up in his car. feel sure that w hen they cam e to their decision they also thought to reach her 39th birthday — until our lives. C orny as it m a y sound to - According to the testim ony, none of them w ere drinking, none of along those lines and O lds decided to take his chances. O lds had the she got the right perspective on som e, the heaviest im pact begins them w ere on drugs, so their heads and m inds w ere clear. constitutional right not to testify but once he does, his oath the whole situation. “You know and carries through w ith ; According to the testim ony, To m was m aking his purchase w hen m andates that he tell the truth. O lds had his d a y in co urt; it w as his how it is to read som ething w hich sacram ental life: baptism , • R ickey Lee Olds, age IS, cam e into the store, w alked past To m to d e c i s i o n . seem ed m eant just for you at the m atrim ony and Christian burial ; the back part of the store a few steps aw ay. R oderick Todd Allen, Thank God for our legal system . District Attorney Colville. m om ent," she w ent on. "W ell, just as a m inim um for three-tim e ; age 17. was w aiting at the entrance doorw ay. Tom paid for his G overn or Tho rn b u rgh and all those w ho fight lo r justice for ail and after I turned 3 9,1 picked upo n the Christians who insist on being purchase and left the store. He was approached by Allen. try to m ake it w ork. That is a tall order and they take a lot ol ladies’ journals and read: "Being hatched, m atched and dispatched \ According to the testim ony, To m was offering his w allet w hen he criticism but where would this country be without such 39 years old isn't so bad. In fact, in the church. w as shot for the first tim e. O lds cam e out of the store, ran past To m dedication? the only w ay to becom e 40-years- For Christians who are not! and around the corner into the waiting car where the driver. Just an added thought: law yers and judges sw ear under oath to old is to be 39’." m inim al, there are other | Claude Bonner, w as ready and w aiting to be on their w ay. O lds did G od to uphold the law and set aside personal feelings; priests do Th a t is definitely akin to the old sacram ental m ilestones such as not stop to help To m nor did he try to distract the k ille r so that To m not take a sim ilar oath but should be guided by facts, good quip: "G row ing old is not so bad Confirm ation and First Com m un­ could dash into the store. To m w as shot tw o m ore tim es, once in the judgm ent and understanding. when you consider the alterna­ ion. However, the milestones back, by a handgun that had to be cocked before each shot. To m I have been on television several tim es and I have had a few t i v e . ' ’ w hich im pact our lives m ost and staggered a few steps into the store and died w ithin a few seconds. letters to the editqr published in our local new spapers, but never The milestones of our life w hich people talk about m ost are That m y dear M sgr. Rice was the hideous, uncalled for crim e did the black and w hite issue com e up. W hat w as your purpose? sometimes coincide with the the sacram ents in action, not just that the teens com m itted and w ere sentenced to life in prison. No O ur lives w ill never be the sam e. As I said before, each new physical, m ental, em otional, being conferred. It is the doubt that one day they w ill w alk the streets again because people tomorrow hurts more than yesterday. There is always a social and spiritual stages through sacram ent ol baptism in action, like you w ill try e ve ry trick in the book to get them out, no m atter w hispered p ra ye r for the son I a m longing to see. I hurt m ostly for which we pass. At other tim es, for instance, w hich explodes into how right or w rong it m ay be. m y To m because he w as cheated out of living. H e had so m uch to these m ilestones alm ost random ly the m ilestone of being born again. I adm it that Olds did not pull the trigger but he was just as live lor and so m uch to give. He was healthy and happy with fall between the predeterm ined It is the sacrament of the involved. H e did not com e to To m ’s aid. H e could have helped if he w onderful plans and a w hole lifetim e of living ahead of him . It w as outlines of age and custom . Eucharist w hich blossom s into the chose but he chose to run aw ay to the w aiting ca r w hile Allen did cruelly brought to a halt. Most milestones are very m ilestone ol m eeting that certain w hat w as planned to do. According to the testim ony, Allen, w ith It has been m ost difficult for us to understand w hy To m had to im portant, not so m uch because ol person and that special joy and delight, gQt a "W hite M other..." F o r the joy and thrill of die this w ay. Lo rd know s he d idn'tdeserveit. I’ve heard it said that the im portance w e attach to them community in your life. The killing a m an that is w hy m y precious son died. there is a reason for eve rythin g. I do not buy that th eo ry but if it is as because of their real sacram ents ol penance leads to You readily adm itted that you did not know young Olds and no so, then I cannot let To m ’s life and death be in vain. Yo u gave m e im portance in giving thrust to our the m ost necessary of m ilestones: one asked you to intervene, but you also added that you involved an idea: I m ust fight for the rights of all To m Beitlers w hom ever, lives at given m om ents. Usually, reconciliation w ith hostile people yourself. Y o u r heart w ent out to the 15-year-old w ho had to spend wherever they are — those persons cruelly and deliberately it is m a inly up to us w hether these in yo ur life. the rest of his life in prison but th ere is still a chance that he w ill get m urdered by w hatever m eans. They are no longer here to speak thrusts w ill be for better or for M ilestones are everyw here in out som eday. for them selves. G od help m e and guide m e step by step to see that w orse. R eaching the age of six or our lives: acceptance into a In yo u r w ords, you had pity on a boy buried alive at the age of 15 justice is done for all people, once and for all. school age is one of the few profession or line of work (W ould he rather be dead?) M sgr. R ice, that w as his choice to get exceptions, due to the tender attaining a cherished goal. Yet involved and do as he did. M y 25-year-old son had no choice; he is M ARY ANN BEITLER years. B y the tim e the m ilestone of the greatest of all coincides with dead, buried underground and sentenced forever. I know he w ould 13 a rrive s, teen-age brashness has reconciliation, healing, peace o prefer to be living. To m lost his m ost precious right — his right to G l e n s h a w replaced m any of the anxieties m i n d .

1 Page 6 — Pittsburgh Catholic, Friday, January 13, 1964 W o rld new s News in brief C. America Jesuits urge U.S. leaders H ispanic m inistry pastoral to work for non-military solutions W ASH IN G TO N (N C) — The 9,500-word final text of the U.S. bishops pastoral letter on H ispanic m inistry w as released Ja n . 10. m urdered, am ong them priests, Religious, ecciesialiy com m itted lay The document, "The Hispanic Presence: Challenge and W ASH IN G TO N (N C ) — The Jesuits in Central Am erica have urged persons and even the beloved archbishop of San Salvador, Archbishop Com m itm ent" is also being m ade available in Spanish. U .S . church leaders to w ork for n on -m ilita ry solutions to the conflicts in The bishops had approved the essence ol the pastoral at their their countries. (O scar) R om ero,” the letter added "Hundreds of thousands are today found displaced within their N ov. 14-17 m eeting in W ashington. After the am endm ent process "F o r the love of G od. help us to prevent w ar so that in the difficult countries of birth o r have fled toother countries. Th e victim s of w a r are w as com pleted the pastoral letter w as officially approved D ec. 12, search for freedom and justice our peoples are not obliged to continue counted by the thousands and increase every day,” it said. the feast of O ur Lady of Guadalupe, and released Jan. 10. shedding their blood," said a letter from the leaders of the Central "W e find ourselves extrem ely concerned because of the danger, The total U.S. Hispanic population is estim ated at least 20 Am erican Jesuit Province to their U.S. Jesuit counterparts. which som e judge to be im m inent, of a m ilitary intervention in m illion and the United States ranks fifth am ong the world s The letter expressed concern about several volatile situations, Nicaragua, an event w hich could generalize w ar throughout Central Spanish-speaking countries." the bishops noted in the letter. including the U.S. m ilitary build-up in Honduras, increasing tensions Am erica," the letter said. “The costs of such a w ar would m ean The letter spoke against racism and called for U .S. Catholics, along the Honduran-Nicaraguan border, increasing m ilitary bringing to the m ost painful extrem es the situation of violence, death both Hispanic and non-Hispam c, to work together "to explore m obilization and the provision of arm s to the N icaragan people, the and structural injustice w hich today we suffer." creative possibilities lor responding innovatively. flexibly and deteriorating condition of the arm y in E l Salvador's civil w ar and E l “W e ask you to listen to our Christian call and to contribute, im m ediately to the Hispanic presence. ” Salvador's persistent violation of hum an rights. according to yo ur possibilities, so that m ilitary interventions w ill be The bishops recom m ended Spanish and bilingual worship, The letter was released Jan. 4 by the U.S. Jesuit Conference in avoided and that negotiated settlem ents w hich preserve life and lead to bilingual m inisters and m ore resources lor Hispanic m inistry. W ashington, a coordinating body for the 10 U .S . Jesuit provinces. It w as peace w ill be sought," it added. Th e y called for a third Encuentro. a gathering ol representatives sent to the U.S. Jesuits by Father Valentin M enendez, superior of the "W e recall that m any states have supported the so-called Contadora ol the Hispanic com m unity. Central Am erican Province. Alm ost 300 Jesuits are assigned to the Central Am erican Province, Group and that Pope John Paul II also supported it in his recent which includes E l Salvador, Honduras. Guatem ala, Nicaragua and allocution in Rom e to the bishops of Honduras, a country in w hich thousands of North Am erican troops are already found," it said Holocaust prayer Costa Rica. "W e have been witnesses to the situation of injustice which alluding to U .S. troops. The Contadora G roup, com posed of M exico, Venezuela, Colom bia NEW YORK (NC) — An inter-religious prayer service overw helm s the countries of C entral A m erica in w hich w e serve, " often and P anam a, is trying to m ediate the conflicts in Central A m erica. Th e com m em orating the victim s of the Nazi Holocaust has been leading to violence, the letter said. group takes its nam e from the Panam anian island w here the foreign prepared by the Anti-Defam ation League and the National "In Guatem ala, El Salvador and Nicaragua above all, tens of m inisters of the four countries first m et. Conference of Catholic Bishops. thousands of persons have been tortured, caused to disappear and "F ro m Death to Hope: Liturgical Reflections on the Holocaust" includes Pope John Paul U s 1979 prayer at Auschw itz and an A t t h e invocation by the Rev M artin Niem oeller. a G erm an pastor, as well as other prayers, Scripture passages and Holocaust V a t i c a n reflections. The collection w as com piled by D r. Eugene J F isher, executive secretary of the NCCB Com m ittee on Catholic-Jew ish Relations, W o m e n , c h u r c h and Rabbi Leon Klenicki, associate director of the AD L Departm ent of Interlaith Allairs. VATICAN CITY (NC) — The prayer is being distributed throughout the country by the "There should be m ore wom en A D L fo r use at interfaith Holocaust rem em brance services held on in positions of responsibility and Yom Hashoah (day of Holocaust rem em brance) in the spring. visibility in the church," but The A D L has sent 1,000 copies ol the booklet to the National they would m ake m ore progress Council ol Churches lor distribution to ecum enical officers of a if they set aside the issue ol num ber of U.S. religious groups and D r. Fisher has 500 copies ordination to the priesthood, w hich he w ill lorw ard to various dialogue groups, he said. said Lucienne Salle, a French The prayer service provides accounts ol how Christians (rom psychologist and a m em ber of seven European nations helped save Jew s I rom the Holocaust and the Pontifical Council for the •stresses the eternal hope ol the Jew ish people that they w ill L a i t y . survive the enm ity they have laced throughout history," said M iss Salle, who has represen­ Rabbi Ronald B Sobel, head ol A D L s Intergroup Relations ted the Holy See at United D i v i s i o n . Nations meetings on women, Th e text w as published by the Stim ulus F oundation, a N ew Yo rk- was interviewed Jan. 3 by NC based organization that publishes m aterials w hich further Jew ish- News and discussed a need to Christian dialogue, under the sponsorship of the Archdiocese ol Nuns released open up m ore positions in the church to w om en. She predicted M ilw aukee, the Liturgical Conference ol W ashington, D .C., and in “ rather good condition.” They said prayer In Rome, Sister Pilar Feliu, left, superior of the that women would progress ADL. helped them survive a 55-day march from their "Fro m Death to Hope" can be purchased lor $1 per copy >rom Santa Teresa di Gesu order, embraces one of five further in the church if they put mission in Calulo to an area near the Namibian the A D L at 823 United Nations Plaza, New York, N Y. 10017 or nuns released by Angolan rebels Dec. 29 after the issue of w om en's ordination nearly four months in captivity. A priest also was border. (NC photo from UP1) through A D L regional offices. aside given the opposition of freed by the rebels. The six arrived in Rome Dec. 31 Pope John Paul II. C a r d i n a l , Jaruzelski m eet Sister of missing priest B i s h o p s , p o l i t i c s W AR SAW , Poland (N C ) — Poland's top church and governm ent VATICAN CITY (NC) - The leaders have pledged to strengthen church-state ties, according to Paraguayan Bishops Confer­ a joint com m unique. ence has told bishops in the says brother was executed South Am erican country not to The com m unique was issued after a five- participate in political party hour m eeting Jan. 5 between Cardinal Jozef cerem onies, Vatican Radio said he w as killed during an arm y sum m er, but continued to be a Glem p of Gniezno and W arsaw and Gen. LOS ANGELES (NC) - The reported Jan. 3. sister of an Am erican-born priest anti-guerrilla m aneuver. priest. He worked w ith cam pesi­ W ojciech Jaruzelski, Polish prem ier. nos, poor farm ers, in Central The bishops' statem ent, who reportedly died in Honduras a later report said that the published Jan. 2, followed has asked President Reagan to A m erica before his decision to join The com m unique said the two men also priest died of starvation after the guerrillas as their chaplain. allegations by Paraguayan investigate the reports and "to condem ned the arm s race. It was the first "straggling" behind the rebels. He had been deported from governm ent officials that som e order" that the priest’s body be m eeting between Cardinal G lem p, prim ate of However, Father Carney's body Honduras in 1979 on charges of bishops were participating in r e c o v e r e d . the Polish , and Jaruzelski was not found and npne of the subversion, and after a short stay partisan events, Vatican Radio prisoners captured in the battle said, w ithout elaborating. since last June w hen Pope John Paul II visited Maureen Carney of Los in the U nited States he returned to had seen the priest dead, Ms. The docum ent said that rules the country. Angeles, the sister of form er Central Am erica, working with Carney said. prohibiting the identification of Cardinal Glemp Jesuit Father Jam es (Guadalupe) the poor in N icaragua. Th e com m unique did not m ention church ellorts to tree political M s. C arney said that the sources church officials w ith political Carney, told the president in a She also told President Reagan prisoners or to launch an aid fund lor Polish farm ers, tw o issues who reported that the priest had groups or parties "a re clear and Decem ber letter that "the fam ily that while the fam ily was in which the pope and the Polish bishops have been strongly been captured and killed "w ere must be observed," Vatican has heard from three separate Honduras, U.S. Am bassador John supporting. too fearful to use the m ail or Radio added. sources that Jim was captured, D. Negroponte “ suggested that he Also not m entioned in the com m unique was the governm ent telephone, but brought word of tortured and executed." (Father Carney) m ay not have decision to investigate several priests suspected ol m aking anti­ these events in person. TV and pope been w ith this group at all: that, governm ent statem ents in their serm ons. On Sept. 20 the fam ily received The three sources told the perhaps, w e should be looking for two conflicting reports on the fam ily the location, nam es of eye­ VATICAN CITY (NC) — The him in N icaragua." death of the priest, who was witnesses and "nam es of tw o U.S. Vatican's television production Reagan veto challenged serving as a chaplain to the The fam ily believes that the soldiers who allegedly were com pany is turning its cam eras guerrillas. Four m em bers of the priest was with the guerrillas present during the torture and on Pope John Paul II in an W A SH IN G TO N (N C) — President Reagan's "pocket veto" ol a fam ily, including Ms. Carney, crossing into Honduras from interrogation of m y brother," she unprecedented effort to capture visited Honduras a week later to bill extending hum an rights certification requirem ents lor El Nicaragua, she said, because in s a i d . the im ages of his papacy. Salvador was challenged Jan. 4 in a lawsuit filed by 33 House investigate Father Carney's his m em oirs he said the "rebel If the accounts a re true, she told F’orm ed in October, the Democrats. . d e a t h . fighters" needed chaplains and the president, "there is good com pany has been busy film ing The suit, filed in U .S. D istrict Court in W ashington, said that w hat until now w ere som e of the The death of Father Carney, because in m id-July he had said reason for those involved to cover under the Constitution a president can pocket veto legislation only m ost private papal events. The who had w orked w ith the poor in goodbye to his friends in up the truth, for neither you, nor in the period between the expiration of one Congress and the film ing is an attem pt to m ake Central Am erica for 20 years, w as N i c a r a g u a . most North Am ericans, nor the beginning of another. W hen Reagan announced his pocket veto of Pope John Pauls papacy the reported on Honduran television Father Carney, a St. Louis people of H onduras w ould condone the bill N o v 30, the 98th C ongress still had a ye a r to go in its 1983-84 best-docum ented ever. Sept. 19. A t that tim e the m ilita ry native, left the Jesuits last such an injustice." term . It had adjourned N ov. 18 for its Thanksgiving-Christm as- New Y e a r’s recess and w as scheduled to resum e m eeting Jan. 23. The bill, approved by Congress in m id-Novem ber, would have required the Reagan adm inistration to m ake at least two m ore 7,000-mile pilgrimage to Bethlehem reports in 1984 certifying that the governm ent ol E l Salvador deserved continued U .S. m ilita ry aid because ol its hum an rights One of the certification requirem ents is for E l Salvador to show called a 'desperate plea9 for peace continued progress in investigating and prosecuting the cases ol the lour Am erican churehw om en killed there in Decem ber 1980. Am ong critics of the veto w as C ardinal Joseph L. Bernardin ol Th e pilgrim s had plenty of tim e for p ra ye r and soul searching as they By BOB CUBBAGE Chicago, who said Reagan s action can only send the wrong walked an average of 15 to 20 m iles each day through all kinds of w eather and over all kinds of terrain. m essage” to El Salvador about hum an rights. SPOKANE, Wash. (NC) — The 7,000-mile Bethlehem Peace P ilgrim age, w hich ended Christm as day in Bethlehem , was an "alm ost Thom as said, "M ost of our tim e on the road was spent in quiet Priest rem ains in ja il desperate plea to G od for peace," said Jim Thom as, one of those who reflection and prayer. W e would converse w ith each other as well. m ade the trek. Som e people read books, som e sang songs. A few people said the The 20 pilgrim s, joining their spiritual exercise of prayer w ith the Rosary each afternoon. PR ETO R IA, South Africa (NC) — The Southern African physical challenge of w alking, spent alm ost two years covering 7,000 Catholic B ishops’ Conference has reported that it failed in a couri "W e were very elated and relieved when we reached Bethlehem , m iles and nursing countless blisters. effort to secure the release of F'ather Sm angaliso M khatshw a, the Thom as continued. “ Even though we w ere m ore than satisfied w ith the The brainchild of Jesuit Father Jack M orris of Seattle, the conference's general secretary, w ho has been jailed since O ct. 30 pilgrim age, w e w ere all glad it w as over and w e could rest. It w as great pilgrim age began April 9, 1982, at the Trident subm arine base at In a press statem ent sent Jan. 3 to the Catholic Institute lor to arrive at the place where Jesus was born and to sing Christm as Bangor, W ash. The pilgrim s w alked across the United States, Europe International Relations in London, the SACBC said that the carols and to pray under the stars." and the H oly Land on a quest for peace. Suprem e Court of Ciskei, the South A frican tribal hom eland w here Father M orris and Father George Zabelka. of Flint, M ich., who was The pilgrim s w ere w arm ly w elcom ed "m ostol the tim e" in the towns F'ather M khatshwa was detained, on Dec. 23 dismissed an the chaplain of the crews which bom bed Hiroshim a and Nagasaki they visited — "people w ould open their churches, their schools, their application to have the priest's "detention and arrest declared during W orld W ar II. led the pilgrim age "to call other believers to do tow n halls or their hom es and give us lodging for the night," Thom as u n l a w f u l . " som ething for peace and wake up others to the dangers ol nuclear s a i d . Father M khatshw a, the leading black Catholic C hurch official in w eapons," said Thom as, 29. one of the pilgrim s from Spokane. M any religious com m unities of sisters, priests and brothers in the South A frica, w asdetained O ct. 30 after attending a prayer service "A s follow ers of C hrist, w e felt obligated to do som ething to stop the United States and in Europe also offered shelter to the pilgrim s. at F'ort H are U niversity in the Ciskei. W hile authorities adm itted arm s race," Thom as said. "Th e w orld situation is so critical that the next day that he was being held, until m id-Decem ber they prayer m ust be coupled w ith action. The sojourners also m et w ith "fla k" from townspeople who did not refused repeated requests for inform ation regarding his state of After a short cerem ony at the Bangor subm arine base, north ol agree w ith their philosophy, especially during peace vig ilsat w eapons health or w here he w as being held. Th e y still have not stated w hat Seattle, on Good Frid a y in 1982, the pilgrim s w alked across the United plants on the w ay — stops that the pilgrim s had deem ed a special part of he is charged w ith. States to W ashington, arriving in the nation's capital N ov. 14, 1982. their journey. W hile in W ashington they spoke w ith som e of the U .S. bishops who w ere there for their annual m eeting and w ere discussing the second "W e never really escaped the verbal abuses," Thom as said. "People would shout 'G o get a job’ or Do your m arch in Russia' at us," but no Probe set in bishop's death draft of their pastoral letter on w a r and peace. They then flew from New York to London, took a train to Ireland, one on the pilgrim age was ever physically assaulted, he said. National Catholic News Service w alking from there through Scotland. England. France, Sw itzerland, The pilgrim s paid for approxim ately half of their expenses while relying on donations for the other half. A new ly elected Argentine provincial governor has decided to Italy, Yugoslavia, Greece, Jordan and Israel. probe the 1976 death of Bishop Enrique Angelelli ol La Rioja, In Italy the pilgrim s attended an Aug. 24 papal general audience at Th e pilgrim s w ere joined for segm ents of w alk by Buddhist m onks in A rgentina, in an autom obile accident, and the killing ol tw o priests w hich Pope John P aul II said, "Th e cause of peace is the cause of life, Seattle and London. M oslem s in Israel and the occupied W est B ank and who w ere his colleagues. and everything that wounds, weakens or destroys life attacks peace Jew s in Israel. Gov. Carlos M enem of the province of La Rioja called the and the destiny of humanity." ,.tl, Thom as said the pilgrim s received one of their best receptions in autom obile accident "intentional" in announcing the The odyssey for peace changed its participants, Thom as said. "W e Ireland w here children and bands turned out to greet them . investigation and said he was handing over nam es of suspects, have grown spiritually. O ur faith in God is m uch deeper and our One of the coldest receptions cam e in com m unist-controlled including politicians and m em bers of the arm ed lorces, in the com m itm ent forw orking fornucleardisarm am ent m uch stronger," he Yugoslavia. Thom as said authorities there did little to help them through the country, but alw ays had them under observation. report to the investigating m agistrate. s a i d .

I O iocesan/ nation al n ew s p,"“>ur'"’ C"n°‘,c' ' r '** Pw7 Buses slated to roll Jan. 23 to National March for Life

Seventy-five buses w ill lake opponents of North Versailles/McKeesport: M. Milko, 8 2 3 abortion on dem and from w estern Pennsylvania 3 1 4 8 . and Penn Hills/Monroeville. M. Faman. to the annual N ational M arch for Life, scheduled 7 9 3 - 6 1 5 3 or C. Bremmer, 7 9 5 - 1 5 5 8 forM onday, Jan. 23 in W ashington. D .C. University of Pittsburgh: Becky Marshall, 6 2 4 According to Mary Lou Gartner, area director 8 5 4 6 . Pleasant Hills: Jean Hartman. 8 8 2 - 5 0 2 0 for the march, the day was chosen to coincide South Hills: Mary Lou Mahon. 2 2 1 - 3 9 2 0 : and with the opening of the second session of the U.S. Wildwood: Evelyn Fabian, 4 4 3 - 3 2 4 5 Congress. Butler County — Butler Dorothy Singleton. The them e for this year's m arch is "Th e Pro- 2 8 7 - 7 1 9 5 . Cabot Rich Given: 352-4120 Chicora: Life Phoenix." M rs. Gartner said that, in Chuck Burns, 445-2714; C ranberry Tow nship; Pat m ythology, the phoenix w as a bird that could not M oore, 776-9991; G lade M ills: G retchen Cararie, be destroyed but continually rose from the ashes. 898-2529: Herm an: Harold Schnur, 285-4983. She said that the them e w as chosen to represent Meridan, Kathy Gahagan. 4 8 2 - 2 6 1 4 ; and the pro-life m ovem ent's view of itself. Zelinople: Ray Badzek. 4 5 2 - 8 3 8 7 Th e m a rch w ill begin at noon w ith a ra lly at the Washington County — Bentleyvitle Kay Ellipse, across from the W hite House M archers B rovey. 2 3 9 - 4 8 1 1 ; Canonsburg Marlene will proceed up Constitution Avenue to the Hutchinson. 9 4 1 - 9 3 3 7 : and Washington George Congressional offices w here they w ill m eet w ith Sawyer, 5 8 7 - 3 3 7 5 local legislators. In addition, there w ill be a Beaver County — Ambndge/Braver Falls R protest dem onstration at the U.S. Suprem e Court Cossenlino, 266-2512; and Beaver Pat S k o r u p i n , b u i l d i n g . 744-8696 Law rence County — New Castle Jean M ost buses Irom the area w ill depart at 6 a.m . Kogan. 6 5 2 - 9 2 0 9 and return between 11 p.m . and m idnight I n addition, there will be buses for Bus contacts lor w estern Pennsylvania include, Westmoreland. Fayette. Armstrong and Indiana Allegheny County — Allison Park/Glenshaw : M counties as w ell as lor W heeling. W, Va For more Deasey, 486-8918; Aspinw all. Sue Lindow , 782- information, c o n t a c t bus coordinators Jean 3791. Beecheview: Tom M cClelland, 563-4374; Brinzer at 2 4 3 - 2 5 2 9 or M e r c e d e s Haubach a t 2 4 2 - Bethel Park. Becky Schrieck. 344-9735 or 4 2 2 9 Rosalind Gorm an 833-4283: and Bridgevillo: G e rry Kochosky, 221-9605. Interfaith breakfast Carlow College. A m y R uhl, 578-6532; Carnegie M ellon U niversity: A. Sicree, 621-2911: Cralton: The annual lnlerlailh Prayer Breaklast lot Pat Collins, 922-2554; Coraopolis: Kathy Life will be held on Saturday, Jan. 21. beginning Stephenson. 262-5617; and Duquesne: Kay at 9 : 3 0 a.m. at the Howard Johnson's Motof Strum p. 469-3025. L o d g e , Monroeville. : Chris Bendel. 434-6716. Greensburg Bishop William Connar e w ill be t h e East Liberty: Doris G rady, 661-0570; G reenTree: keynote speaker. Also attending the breaklas] Planning committee N ancy Kenny. 921-5962 or Blanche H rivnak. 276- w i l l b e Sister Marylouise Fennell, RSM 0231; M ount Lebanon: M arge Sim cic, 341-3587; president ol C arlo w C ollege: Pastor James L e a k e Planning the Interfaith Prayer Breakfast for Life Lou Gartner, area director, Helen Cindrich, and M ount W ashington: F r. John Staab. 381-9878 ol the M onroeville Assem bly of G o d ; and B o b at Howard Johnson’s Motor Lodge, Monroeville, on president of People Concerned for the Unborn Natrona Heights: Fran Jankosky, 224-8739: Rodinelli ol Steel V alley Citizens lor Decency Jan. 21 and the bus schedule for the national March Child, and Kathy Bales, chairperson for the prayer N orth H ills: P hyllis Casey. 364-0727 or Dot Lydic, Tickets are $6.50 and reservations can b e m a d e for Life in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 23 are, from breakfast. Also on the committee is Jean Brinzer. 366-0569; North Side: M arge Sabon. 322-5886. by telephoning 793-1727 or 341-3421. left, Mercedes Haubach, bus coordinator, Mary — Photo by John C. Keenan

Te a ch in g as Jesus d id Creativity in the parish Board expected to approve closing By CAROLE OBROKTA, of architects instead of partners. and it is contagious. Th e re is great of St. Joseph School, O’Hara Twp. Director, W e send aw ay to stores that sell potential for different form s ol a rt Learning Media Center goods for liturgical needs and creativity w ithin parish life. kindergarten through eight, St. in Sharpsburg, failed to w in the As an artist. I think and w rite assum ing that if it is sold in such a M usic and liturgical dance By STEPHEN KARLINCHAK The diocesan school board is Joseph w as one ol the sm allest support of parishioners in all visually. Th is can be a difficulty to place it s the best for our parish possibilities are lim itless. expected to approve the closing schools operating in the three parishes. those w ho don't use or see im ages needs. O u r processes for building, There are, of course, m any diocese. The school plant had am ong the w ords. W hen we aren't rem odeling and celebrating tend ways to add color and change of St. Joseph School, O 'H ara accustom ed to seeing as we read, Township, at its February the capacity for approxim ately to ignore special talents w ithin the m eaning throughout the liturgical St. Joseph is the second the images can be m ore of an m e e t i n g . 250 students. Th e school has a parish fam ily. The possibility for year. Banners seem to be the m ost diocesan elem entary school in interruption than an explanation. stall ol three Religious, affirm ing the uniqueness of our popular. N a il a banner to the w all the Fox Chapel vicinity to close Consequently, I offer this article " It’s a leadpipe cinch that the m e m b e r s ol the Ursuline and tim e, our place and our people and it becomes a wall hanging. w ithin three years. St. Edw ard as an interruption and a challenge school will close," said Fr. Holy Spirit orders, and nine m ay be lost in the shuffle. Instead, it should m ove, process School in B law nox closed at the Hugh Lang, superintendent of laypersons. concerning the creative possibili­ It is disheartening to observe and dance. A banner should com e end ol the 1980-81 academ ic diocesan schools. ties of parish life. the attem pts of parish priests to in and go out w ith the w orshipping y e a r . A parish looks like people doing draw out the special talents of the c o m m u n i t y . Provisions are being m ade for the students from St. Joseph as children of God what they are faith com m unity w ith little or no The use of ceramics in the Cited as the reasons for the to attend nearby St. M ary called to do. A nd so often w hat w e success. Why? Many people liturgical space is becom ing m ore school's closing by F r. A rthur The previous elementary School, G lenshaw , for the next do is first visual.then verbal. If struggle w ith the uncertainty that widely appreciated. Changeable G arbin, pastor ol the parish, school to close in the diocese academ ic year. Sixty-five w hat you say to m e is contradicted their w ork w ill not be good enough ceram ic pieces using velcro w ere the declining enrollm ent was St. M ichael in Munhall, students in grades kindergar­ by what 1 see, I will probably lor its special purpose. M aybe fasteners m aking a processional and the increasing student w hich closed in 1982. Tw o high ten through seven will be believe m y eyes first. fellow parishioners w ill not accept cross adapts to each liturgical costs. Tuition at the school w as schools in the diocese. D ivine affected by the closing. If you invite m e to your hom e, >r appreciate the tim e and energy season nicely. Ceram ic clay $450 per student. In addition to Providence in Chesw ick and St your hom e itself lets m e know if teeded for a particular project. shaped into a chalice for the the tuition, F r. G arbin said that Thomas in Braddock. have you really want m e to com e in. Others are afraid of criticism . Eucharistic celebration prepared the parish subsidized the A proposal to consolidate St. announced that they w ill close O nce in, m uch of w ho you are, w ho All of this sounds a bit petty, by a m em ber of the parish has so s c h o o l . Joseph w ith tw o other schools. at the end ol the present school you love, how you spend your tim e doesn't it? N ot at all the w ay the m uch added m eaning. W ith 76 students in grades A ll Saints in Etna and St. M ary y e a r . and m oney, your taste and w hat is parish "business'' should sound. The use of projected im ages in im portant to you becomes m ore Unfortunately, it’s not uncom ­ w orship can m ake very concrete a p p a r e n t . m o n . what, if only verbalized, m ight The same is true about the But lor those blessed with rem ain an abstraction. Th e list of parish, m ost of the m essages are interest and skill in the m any creative ideas is endless and has com m unicated visually. In an age form s of creative expression, it the potential of m aking the parish w here technological advances are m eans being w illing to risk not another real hom e. m ade daily in video com m unica­ only the fear that comes with O ne can never say that he or she A. J. VA TER tion, the im portance of the visual sharing but also the necessity of is a follow er of C h rist but w ants no ANO COMPANY INC is further heightened. having to give those gifts aw ay. part in the expression of the parish I w ant to encourage the hidden I also w ant to encourage you to com m unity. Since this is the creativity in your parish to show yourselves as you actually m onth of new resolutions, w hy not surface. We have become so are: chosen, redeem ed, loved and resolve to use your creative Mellon fearful of doing som ething w rong able to love. Creative living does talents for the benefit oi your we end up doing nothing at all. not collect, it distributes. parish fam ily. It means being Because of fear w e becom e slaves Creativity is a variety of hope G od's w ork of art. Investment Cardinal: End scandal of division HARRISBURG, Fa. (NC) Catholics m ust C ardinal K ro l said the bishop is the sign of unity Plan Rates 'join forces to put an end to the intolerable w ithin the church in hisdiocese and w ith the pope. W heth er yo u ’re saving for next year’s vacation or scandal of Christian divisions," said Cardinal "W e m ust w ork w ith faith that knows no fear. I Rif IM lM A'lNl ,(HvlU Jo hn K ro l of P hiladelphia after the installation of W e m ust w ork w ith the conviction that the unity of to send yo u r child to college five years from now , all C hristians is not an option, but a sacred duty to Phone 921 2258 Bishop W illiam H . K eeler as the seventh bishop of M ellon has a high yield Investm ent P lan that’s Harrisburg. conform to the ardent desire of C hrist," he said. Th e cardinal presided at the Ja n . 4 installation The installation of Bishop Keeler, who is m ade to order for you. cerem ony and spoke to m ore than 1,000 people at Catholic co-chairm an of the Interchurch Cooperation Conference and president of the N o m atter w here yo u are, no m atter w hat tim e of a dinner w hich followed. Support Your Parish Pennsylvania Catholic Conference, was led by (Attending from the Pittsburgh Diocese were day, yo u can alw ays get the latest rate inform ation Bishop Anthony J. Bevilacqua, retired Bishop the cardinal and Archbishop Pio Laghi, apostolic Share Program Vincent M . Leonard, Auxiliary Bishops John B. delegate in the United States. ______b y calling our toll-free num ber— 800-554-4000, M cDowell and Anthony G. Bosco, and Bishop- elect of the G reen Bay, W ise., Diocese. Adam J. M ellon Investm ent Plans M a i d a . ) A "If w e Christians can m anage to m eet in peace — to unite," that unity would be a "powerful Hilton s Classic M i n i m u m A n n u a l lesson of optim ism " for all people, C ardinal K rol Maturity Deposit R a t e said. Christian unity would teach that "hum an (Effective life can base itself on peace, unity, understanding J a n u a r y 1 0 .) and love, and w e can find a com m on denom inator Sunday Brunch for a just and lasting peace." From 6 m onths to A fabulous array o f tempting appetizers plus: less than 1 year $2,500 9 . 1 0 %

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The R e v Fred Shuttiesw orth, a close associate of the l a t e D r . M artin Luther King Jr., w ill be in Pittsburgh M onday, Jan. 16, to speak at tw o services honoring D r. King's birthday. The first service is at noon at Trin ity Cathedral, Downtow n, as part of the 10th annual interfaith service of the Pittsburgh R eligion and R ace Council. Tha t evening at 7 p.m . Rev. Shuttiesworth will speak at the Rodman S t r e e t Baptist Church (adjoining Sears).

Rev. Shuttiesworth was am ong the five founders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

O u r A d ve rtise rs like to h e a r “I saw yo u r a d in the C ath o lic.” R e p ea t it often!

DIRECTORY

P la sterin g P ain tin g F '—i»i n lim it i i ii n k j.P. Jonas Plastering Winter Special S T E R E O 1 Equitable Window Company Pifchwsrk Specialty Interior Painting R E P A I R S 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE R E E ESTIMATi N S IM D Particular W o rk to r Factory Service CLEAN UP UPON Particular People COMPLETION for many Brenda

372-1165 SPECIAL PENNTRONICS Ml I Adjust 4110 PENN AVE. South Hill» 581 -3810 L PAINTING \ 683-2348 / Replacement Windows. Prime 4 Storm Doors la b .m . bailey In te rio r + E x te rio r Siding e Soffit e fosoo • Pooling • Gutters a Downspouts w a l l c o v e r in g s Plastering Co insured references MARTIN L. SCHMOTZER — Owner FREE ESTIMATES sr-e Hut />, • CI»M DANIEL SARR The “ Key” Place • 0 W or 441-5795 Locksm ith Shop / i f ') Mow Port located in Oakland S Ho JA Th lNOTE:»tl s Satisfaction guarantied I Deadline' for advertising in the Business Directory has U n \ ) 'Jfs| m *•** D ft R PAINTING I been changed. All advertising for this section including Our 32nd Ysar Commercial - eaaldantlal cn 682-2038 changes must be in our hands by 12 noon on the FOURTH Stucco ad typaa Interior - Ex (Of(Of Pointing O maman tal Plastering DAIlY 5 TQ 5 ..... ¡Wednesday ol each month. Current advertisers will be Homo Remodeling J contacted when their contract expires. Molda S Cómicas Free Estimates - Insured FREE ESTIMATES d o n HAZLETT HEATING LIGHT MOVING 884-3131 002-2707 461-3022 HOT WATER/WARM AIR R e m o d e lin g Fumancaa Inatalled & CLEAN WINTER CHECK - CLEAN Interior1 aliiiiloir HAULING Samuel JBIIIante y t n m GENERAL CONTRACTOR CABINET REFINI8HIN6 Appliance BY atu BOSUBA PAINTING LICENSED INSURED Guaranteed Lowest 921-5783 KITCHEN CABINETS AkualMia String Installed CALLED. 731-6498 Prices on Top Quality FREE ESTIMATES INSURED REFRIGERATORS Therm otlzad Windows OFFICE FURNITURE Appliance Repelr D utch Soy Points and Doors. FURNITURE FAL PAINTING FOR ESTIMATi CALL Puharlc Brothers S U P E R IO R 279-7789 278-7115 343-2763 FURNACE SALE! 793-4790 All typ«s of Modtlt E L E C T R IC 24 HOUR SERVICE Low Low Prices Residential/Commercial/ FURNACE GLEANED 124 Industrial 2 3 1 - 2 7 5 3 Interior Painting Budget Heating Co. FREE ESTIMATES Bel Construction Co. FREE ESTIMATES REGISTERED INSURED Home repairs, roofing, FULLY INSURED oua mice w o n t s h o c k y o u 6 6 1 - 2 9 1 6 274-7606 327-3210 remodeling, additions, NO JOB TOO SMALL gamerooms & cement Answers W a n t A d s Honeat Reliable Work work. _ . , 24 Hours Bring Results! 9 2 1 - 1 0 3 6 TREE REMOVAL \ K K II H E L P W ith y e w iloommg B R epair AND TRIMMING cam - Mr. BuelnMtmsn: EMERGENCY A STORM Remodeling Work DAMAGE WORK c l e a n AND SHINE Sidewalks, drivaways, any Are you concerned about rising coats in the operation FREE ESTIMATES H e m is Sgul O tU te v Business Beal Estate to sell kind of walls, block, brick, of your business. Interested In reaching a potential Fl'lXV INMTMU» stone. Carpentry, roofing, audience for a minimal costa. For example an ad this 412-751-8799. aluminurr siding, soffit & Support size would cost less than..... fascia, railings, insulation, hauling. Free Est. Insured. $25 P E R W E E K 266-9095 734-5298 your if you want some more information, please cell PULSE 471-1252 oxl. 23 Parish The world’s most efficient furnsce REMODELING Vastly superior efficiency from biggest Additions— Rooting— Gutters P lu m b in g breakthrough in hom e heating technology in over Porches— Siding— Kitchens 40 years. Call us today and see how 92 to 97% Baths— Windows— Ceilings Share REGISTERED efficiency pays for itself. 6E0R6E GALLAGHER RENZ BROS. PLUMBING MASTER PLUMBER Lee Berkey 787-1558 884-4157 8844257 Program NiW HOMES KITCIEMS Old and New Work HEATING 4 AIR CONDITIONING BATHS BAS B WATEB LINE All types ol Service UKTBCia Imllng Remodeling 8 8 4 -4013 2 3 1 - 2 7 5 3 Com ont Contractors C a w e p i+ U e i t U m r i m r TMC ORIGINAL 1.1 « S i R m m a d w it n g B U ER K LE G R E E N T R E E CERAMIC TILE H E A TIN G A K-C COMPANY NEW • REPAIR PLUMBING CO Plumbing A Huting CONCRETE SPECIALISTS REMODELING On I Kxatti Uutainl Sava PLASTERING NO JOB TOO SHALL WALL COVERINGS * Bm Br i • W ta d w ri am. sm. n u n . 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE Special: fist ft Walar LIrsb Bathroom» our • Siding • H«Bw FURNACCS » Gudin • Alr CandUNnlm WATIR MCATIRS Sswtr ft Oraki Clamino S p e c ia lty BATHROOMS GAS UNSS Wstsr Hsatsrs Waterproofing Specialists FREE ESTIMATES • SsflR A Ft MU STUFKD DRAINS CLIARCO ANY HOM E IMPROVEMENT S O U R S RAOtATORS NawandRaMSdallngWarfc NO JOB TOO SMALL R|CH GUARANTEE D E N N Y ______Emergency Kwtck Sente* 885-3697 F i n a n c i n g 271-6246 683-0140 885-5494 921-0615 466-0715 655-7286 .t i e r ONE CALL CAN DO ALU

t Classified ads Pittsburgh Catholic, Friday, January 13, 1964 — Page 9,

— —— p— ———g— —— B— ——— ACCEPTANCE of an advertise­ ment in the Pittsburgh Catholic, 500 SERVICES while based on an assumption of 1 2 0 T O U R S 200 HELP W ANTED New rBaby Doe9 rules issued integrity on the part of the OFFERED advertiser, does not imply WASHINGTON (NC) — The endorsement of a product or BABYSITTER—Housekeeper PHOTOGRAPHER-For all m inim ize federal intrusion into coalition ol m edical and disability service. needed. Part time. References occasions Specially weddings & federal governm ent issued new day-to-day health care decisions organizations, which says that required. 683-6726. portraits Call J. Tarr rules and guidelines Jan. 9 to and actions. CLASSIFIED ADS ordered Photographic, 828-9285 "clearly beneficial" m edical car* killed after being set but prior to Atlantic City COMPANION—Live-in for protect handicapped “ Baby m ust be provided regardless of PHOTOGRAPHER-Weddings, A key provision in the new rules publication will be billed at half elderly woman. Sharpsburg Does' from being left to die o r go actual or anticipated handicaps of rate. Classified "kills” cannot Spadai Atea 781-1612. 863-5368 portraits and family groups is a recom m endation that w ithout treatm ent solely because the individual, while "procedures be accepted after 11AM Mon. for Copy and restoration Norman hospitals establish Infant Care current week's issue. 2 DAY 1 NIGHT Studio 341-3775.______o f their h a n d i c a p . w hich are clearly futile and w il) FEB 5-6 Review Com m ittees (ICRCs) to JAN. 29-30 2 9 0 SITUATION The new Departm ent of Health only prolong the act of dying" can ALONE & PREGNANT—F or A WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY- set guidelines for the care ol WANTED Some spring & summer date and Hum an Services rules, w h i c h be ethically and legally w ithheld; coni ¡denial caring friend call handicapped infants, to review LIFELINE-562-0543 Downtown < 4 9 available Winter discounts Cali take effect in February, follow a specific decisions to w ithdraw or Pittsburgh, Butler Area 282- Other dates available LOOKING FOR A-Roomatr in today IMAGES UNLIMITED year ol controversy since In cases of doubt, the stalem en} 1200. Mon Valley 489-9020. Mt. Lebanon or near by area 7 3 1 - 4 0 4 5 .______3 day/2 night $86 President R eagan called for such withhold m edical care, and to of ethics says, "a person's Beaver 843-0505. 728-5651. Call 563-7685 3 day/2 night WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY/ r u l e s after a handicapped baby in m o n ito r periodically the disability m ust not be the basis for VIDEO—Offering traditional Golden Nugget Indiana was allowed to die hospital's actual practices in the a decision to w ithhold treatm ent 4 385 W A N T E D photo candids and contempor­ treatm ent ol handicapped infants. PREGNANT? ary color/sound video record­ b e c a u s e his parents rejected a presum ption alw ays should be in Jan. 16-20 <116 T O B U Y The ICRCs and state child A n d you dtdnl moan to be? ings. Phone 714-8454 surgery to open his blocked favor of treatm ent." For a fraa pragnan cy Mat and Las Vegas e s o p h a g u s . protection agencies are to act a s confidential support ALL—Good used furniture the prim ary m onitors and Mar 4-8 5 day/2 night wanted, kitchen sets. DR or BR 510 ENTERTAINM ENT T h e HHS rules seek to A third im portant provision CALL BIRTHRIGHT Imperial/Holiday Inn sets, 1 piece or entire home Day guarantee appropriate m edical enforcers guaranteeing protec­ requires all health care facilities Transportation to and 6 2 1 - 1 9 8 8 786-5115. Eve.. 761-4821______A BEAUTIFUL EVENING— treatm ent of handicapped infants tion oi the rights of handicapped w hich treat infants to post notice# from Pittsburgh Airport. AMERICAN FLYER. LIONEL. With MUSIC-U-LIKE. Wed­ and com pliance with state and in fa n ts , w ith the federal that briefly explain federal rule# F l o r i d a IVES—Toy trains and acces­ dings. all occasions, by federal laws against discrim ina­ governm ent norm ally entering for the medical treatm ent oj DJ/Emcee. Unlimited hours, at Feb. 25-Mar. 3 sory. By collector. Any age or tion. A t the sam e tim e, responding the picture only as a last resort. handicapped infants and inform PREGNANT? Cao ata condition. PAY UP TO $10.000 a reasonable price Jerry, 884- to protests from m edical Another key provision is the readers w h a t telephone n u m b e r # Lets talk about your options. 276-5325. 6431. • 2 8 9 organizations over an earlier adoption by H H S ol a statem ent oi to ca ll to re p o rt a case ol suspected HOTLINE: (412) 711-24» Bingo Trips to Ohio and BUYING—All Gold. Class ATTENTION: -Expert wed­ PREGNANCY TESTING ding consultant Discjockey/ version ol the rules, they seek to ethics, drawn up by an ad hoc non-com pliance. Erie $20 Rings. Sterling Stiver 55. U.S. Door mown Egri 71124» and Foriegn coins. Century Emcee entertainment service Washington P i 22S-M64 Kay’a Tours Coins. 4628 Route 51, Whitehall. Black lie attire. Free cham­ Caring and confidential information, 882-6500______pagne. Sonny's Record Revue -Obituarie s- counseling, pregnancy testing 271-5989 241-2212.______andrelated services CASH—For old oak furniture. D aniel and M ark, all ol C harleroi: ALTEMATIVES TO AMOTM *C Furnishing old home. Not BAND—For weddings, parties Sr.Bonaventure four sisters, M ury Henrion ol John N. Harvey a non-profit organization Good Variety. Spectrum. 4 antique dealer. Call 361-6185. W orcester, M ass., M artha M azzei persons $300 with vocalist $350 F u n e r a l Mass for Sister LOOKING FOR- 1930's or older 885-6246. 661-4495.______ol Belle Vernon, Theresa John Norm an H arvey, a form ei dining room sets and other misc Bonaventure Gierl, a diamond resident ol the E a s t E n d , died furniture. Also glassware, BAND—"Second Wind". *1 Bartololla ol Greens burg and jubilarian of the Benedictine Saturday, Dec 31, in a Richm onds Abortion con bo o Z O N A T O U R S pottery and etc. Call 372-5169. choice ol hundreds ol couples lor Sisters of Chicago, was offered Sister M . Anne, also ol the School Ellwood City Transit Inc. their wedding entertainment. traumatic oxporionco. Sisters ol St. Francis in Bellevue. Va. hospital following a briel WANTED—Old furniture, cedar Top quality, excellent variety. Tuesday. Jan. 3, at the St. H yeti naad halp In putting chests, dining room, kitchens Funeral Mass was offered i l l n e s s . 731-5412.854-5873. Scholastica P riory in Chicago. M r, H arvey w as 67 and a nativtj your Ufa back in heu* sets, fancl carved furniture, Thursday, Ja n . 12, in the Queen oi BINGO painted dishes, glassware, BAND-"EASY STREET - Sister was 82 and had entered Angels Chapel at the Bellevue ol Pittsburgh. W ith his late w il* Call C .A .R .E. lamps, slain glass, gold jewelry, The best in music enterlaiment t h e o r d e r from Pittsburgh. m olherhouse. Burial followed in Ann M adden Harvey, who died in IConfldantial Support Brw p to silverplaled & sterling flatware, for weddings, parties and For m any years she taught and dolls, wind-up toys, teddy bears, banquets. 184-9133. the com m unity cem etery. A pril ol 1983, he lived for manjt halp you cape.) MARATHON served as principal and religious CHEROKEE. N CAROLINA oriental rugs, mirrors, clocks, years in the East End and Our Servlcw ara Fraa CELEBRATE—Your special superior in parochial schools ol Jan 21 most old things. For cash call occasion with music by belonged to Sacred H eart Church? Dorothy or Paul before selling Colorado and Chicago. 5 3 1 -9 0 9 2 Feb. 4 and 18 ETERNITY. Excellence in all He was retired from the R C A 279-0359. 242-0451.______types ol music. Call 487-4930 or M em orial offerings for support Mar. 3 and 17 C o r p . . w h e r e he had w orked as ad WANTED USED FURNITURE 881-8276. ol the convent infirm ary m ay be Julia Franks SPECIAL electronics engineer, traveling —And antique. Crafton Trading COMBO-Thc Godfathers sent to Sister M . Catherine Lynch. Post 922-4441. 10-5. closed extensively. THANKSGIVING—To St. Jude Music for all occasions, St. Joseph Convent, St. Joseph Mass ol Christian Burial was for graces received. C'.L.O. Tuesdays A Sundays.______satisfaction for all ages. 761- offered in St. Alphonsus parish, $ 4 9 9 5 Court, 7430 N . R idge, Chicago, III He later lived in Norfolk. Vu> WANTED: —American Flyer. 4121 Springdale, on Jan. 6 l o r M r s . TO ST. JUDE—St. Anthony. St. 60645. and Colum bia. S.C. Michael. Sacred Heart ol Jesus Ives and Lionel Toy trains. FOR POLISH POLKAS- Julia Franks ol Brackenridge, Trip includes: Transpor­ Notre Dame Alumnus will pay Surviving are one daughter; and Blessed Mother. Thank you Standards and a bit ol form erly ol Harw iek. tation. One nights up to $20.000. any condition, any everything. Music for all Suzanne Sealey ol New port News. lor hearing my prayers. L.Z. M rs. Franks, 86, died Jan. 3 at lodging, Holiday Inn. Roll where. Collector. Drew Bauer occasions and places. Call Sr. Margaret Va.: one son, Paul F. Harvey ot 683-4457. 821-338» h o m e . and Coffee. Trip leaves Lenny 276-3850.______Richmond. Va.; one brother; 1 2 0 T O U R S every Friday morning, She was a form er m em ber of LADY DJ—For all occasion Sister M . M argaret W eiss of the David Harvey ol Penn Hills; am ) returning Sunday after­ Our Lady of Victory parish in EUROPE—Oberamergau. June 400 M ISCELLANEOUS experience & reasonable. Music School Sisters ol St. Francis in tw o grandchildren. noon. 40 s Ihrus 80 s Mary 344-3085 !1, 1984. 19 davs. 5 Countries. SALES Bellevue, a form er provincial H a r w i e k . ltfi.Il 276-1376 after 4 P.M. ahd Atlantic City Special 'ONE MAN BAND " OR superior lor her order in Chile, Bom in Hungary on M ay 13. Funeral Mass was offered weekends JAN. 29-30 BEDROOM SET-For sak: "COMBO"—Music for all died M onday, Jan. 9, at the M t. 1897, she w as the daughter ol the Tuesday. Ja n. 3, in C hrist the K ing GHEENBRIAR HOTEL-While 2 day. 1 night living room couch and chair. 921 occasions, complete with organ, late Peter and Agatha Kozlow ski. Church. Norfolk. Burial followed accordian, & bass sound, (ail Assisi m olherhouse. She w as 68. Sulphur Springs. West Virginia. 4022______Born in Charleroi, she spent 31 Preceding her in death w ere her in St M ary Cem etery in Norfolk* Big band weekend, February $70°° Jeff 276-3954. GAMES—For bus group 01 years of her life am ong the people husband, Charles Franks: son 18th. $260.00 person. Tommy Tour includes, transpor­ THE DIPLOMATS COMBO- showers. Typewritten copies Richard; sisters M ary Rubinow- Dorsey Band. Call 701-7168 tation, roil and coffee on Variety of subjects. F01 Featuring male vocalist. o f C h i l e . Weekdays. bus,box lunch on bus, 1 information, call 781-7168 Weddings & Banquets our Sister taught in Am bridge. sky and Valerie Rakowski: and TOUR TO-Our Lady ol weekdays.______specialty For a variety ol line Bellevue and in Nem aeolin and brother John Kozel. Necrology night lodging, Prime Rib nuisk Call 922 4394/167-8424 Czestochowa. April 7-8. $100 Dinner. Show, Breakfast ICONS—Made to older Fine New Jersey. On Jan. 9, 1948, she M rs. Franks is survived by four includes bus. motel, dinner and Buffet. $20 quarters. woods, egg tempera pure golc TIRED OF HIGH PRICED boarded the ship Santa M argarita daughters, M rs. Joseph (Violet) J a n . 1 6 more. $25 deposit by January halo's, also gold leafing BANDS?—Want continuous non­ Rusnak of Nitro, W .Va., Mrs. Fr. Jam es L. Stew art .. .1952 25th. For more info call 372-8459'. Nashville/Florida stop music! Hire a DJ i n N e w York en route to Russian. Greek, Serb.. Serian. Clyde (Helen) Moore of Palm Fr. A u g u s t P . Black — . 1951) 366-6376. 364-4518. FEB. 25-MAR 9 Restoring painting, churches reasonable rates. Call Chuck. Valparaiso, Chile. 761-1766 or Mark 741-2872. F o r the next three decades she Dale, Calif., M rs. Richard J a n . 1 7 etc: 381-8736. ____ , 1 9 4 1 *525 pp do WEDDING—Receptions for worked in the cities of P r a d o . (Victoria) Simon of Phoenix, Fr. Thom as P. Gillen .. AMITY TOURS Caff for details 1984 at 1983 prices. Professional T a l e a a n d Vina d e l Mar i n C h i l e . A riz., and M rs. Thom as (Dolores) Fr. Jam es P. Harvey .. . 1 9 4 $ E8C0RTED BUS T0UR8 Write or Call PERSONALIZED experienced Discjockey. Dance Sister returned to the U .S. in 1 9 7 9 Sm alara of Cheswick: two Fr. Thom as J. Lynch... 1952 music 50's to 80 s. Call Music brothers, Joseph and Frank Fr. Charles F. G w y e r . . 1 9 5 Ì Florida Special Z O N A TO U R S Magic 673-6936 and had been ill since 1982. Mar. 18-25 COOKBOOKS Surviving are her m other. M rs. Kozlowski, both of Harm ar Fr. Edw ard A. Ricarda. . 1 9 5 8 1750 STEINER AVENUE For your group or Catherine (Krisko) W eiss: six Township; 11 grandchildren and Fr. Francis J. B ailey... 1 9 7 2 W. MIFFLIN. PA. 15122 520 PROFESSIONALS organization brothers. Gabriel of M onongahe- six great-grandchildren. Fr. Francis C. Slreiff .. 1 9 8 3 $299 469-3902 (Pittsburgh) SERVICES Burial was i n Our Lady of Hope J a n . 1 9 Tour includes; Escorted For more information l a , Joseph o f Youngwood. L e o o l Scabrook. Texas, and Thom as, Cemetery. Frazer Township. Fr. F.M . De Francesco . 1951 from Pittsburgh. Deluxe 752-9701 lEllwood City) call or wrlta WOOLENS RESIDENTIAL Motorcoach transporta­ BELKRAFT CARE FACILITY HOME-For tion, lodgings, 3 day elderly. 24hr personal care by Disney World/ Epcot PUBLISHING CO. qualified stall. For admission information. Call Jan 331-6590 Calendar Center, 1 dinner, Visit to VIA TR AVEL St. Augustine. Baggage 306 THIRD STREET Handling. PRESENTS CALIFORNIA. PA.. 15419 THURSDAY, JAN. 19 inform ation, call 963-0445. 412-938-3550 Salava ttera RaaManoa Florida Deluxe H A W A I I New Beginnings group for Separated, Divorced, SATURDAY. JAN. 21 Feb. 18-26 Mar. 3-11 A p ril 4-18,1984 AnMahnf A Cwnlnn* Remarried Catholics, St. Catherine, Wildwood — FOUR ISLANDS Mm ¿W arn s Talk oh annulm ents by Fr. Law rence DiNardo, Cenacle Retreat House, Oakland — Day I of 500 SERVICES $359 Un. RNoMb Lyow.R-N 7 “. " J jV *m vice-oi'ficialis, diocesan tribunal, 7:30 p.m .. m em bers ol A A and Al-Anon, 10:30 a.m . to 4 p.m i Tour Includes: Escorted OFFERED •m H o u r Mmwéwm C a ra church hall. Donation. $1. O ffering, $10. F o r reservations, call 681-6180. > rom Pittsburgh. Deluxe *1399 Includes:Round trip 4otorcoach transporta- HAULING. MOVING,—Cleanup FRIDAY. JAN. 20 SUNDAY. JAN. 22 ion, lodgings, 3 day from Pittsburgh A ir­ attic, garages, estates, cellars. Fair prices, move anything, 828- Disney World/ Epcot port. 5 nights on Oahu, 6614. 782-4492 ______St. Paul Retreat House, South Side — Sacred Cenacle Retreat House, Oakland — Day lot Center, Cypress Garden. tour of Pearl Harbor Scripture retreat for men, wom en and m arried separated and divorced, 10:30 a.m . to Daytona Beach, Visit St. and Honolulu. 2 nights INVITATIONS—All occasions, 4 pm ; couples, 7 p.m . through Sunday, 2:30 p.m . For \ugustine, 2 dinners, on Kauai, tour of Fern embossed or engraved, O ffering, $10. F o r reservations, call 681-6180. • laggage handling. G rotto. W ailua R iver. 3 stationery, napkins, favors, inform ation, call 381-7676. nights Hawaii .inclu­ missals. Discount prices. — M ass for >ick up points in McKees- Shirley Stationery Co. 421-4806 WPXI-TV, Channel II shut-ins, 6:3Q des cross island tour New Pittsburgh Chamber Orchestra — Concert. 8 a.m . Fr. Matthew Stokan, assistant at St; jort and Pittsburgh Hilo to Kona. Visit or 421-2792 p.m.. Synod Hall. Oakland. Featuring works ol Elizabeth, Pleasant Hills, celebrant. C hoir ana Volcano National Park CHARLANE GROUPS Haydn, Stravinsky, Bach and Jolivet. For and Black Sand Beach. congregation from the parish. Mass w ill b<| DaH for Special Group ■im 3 nights on M aui, visit cam interpreted for the deal. Balea on all 1984 tours •FNTTSSUMM MANOR Wo provide all yo u r Ioa Valley and Lahalna Forward Ava. Sq. Hill W haling Village. All H O M E ravel Air1 HALL RENTAL 6 0 0 H O M E 700 AUTOM OBILES •10 RESORTS AND •11 OFFICE SPACE ; I needs inter ialand air inclu­ Crulaot/But. ACCOMMODATES FO R T H E IMPROVEMENTS F O R S A L E VACATION PROPERTY ded. Baggage handling, 150-500 PEOPLE FOR RENT—With view ; CALL AMITY TOURS tips and taxes on ELDERLY 2 4 2 - 9 3 3 5 HANDYMAN—All type* home 197$ NATIONAL SCOUT-$aou storeroom Suitable for ollictx RT 51 PLEASANT HILLS included features. NEAR MCKEESPORT HOSPITAL 660 sq led Carpetted. paneled; ACROSS FROM EAT N PARK repairs. Plumbing, painting, or best offer. 1977 Ford L.T.D.. 2 Reno *Lae Vega* STATE LICENSED carpentry. eletrieai.fc cement. dr $900 or best offer. $31-0397 off-street parking, on bus-line 184-2707 882-2707 A P R I L 7 - 1 4 For kilormadon Very reasonable, promt service. FLORIDA 366-2191 Need a Bust Call US on Admission» Jim 431-3026______P la n your 04 vacation now G A E T A N O S 803 SLEEPING ROOM Hurry bat ora it's to lata Charter Buses AvaU-abft $589 BAE0UET NALL A PLEASE CALL PAINTING—Interior $20 per Taking reservations now for Atlantic City CATEM M SERVICE average room. Exterior SLEEPING ROOM—Attractive April 29 through December 2 Stay where you play Your toeatton or Out» painting, and wallpapering Call 672-9011 Don 184-0837 Catholic Home. Laundry and FLORIDA 8 M 8 T Fauna Travai prsaantt Bally Park Place 111 Broadway Am. Kitchen available Resubnsible KEPT SECRET |usn of the W orld Taurs F E B . 1 2 - 1 4 PLUMBING—Paneling. Re­ student or person I female only) dExclusive Ocean Village modeling. Furnace Work, Sewer Everything included. $150 a Resort on Hutchinson Island 2 H oly Year Tours Cleaning. 421-2147. month On Bus-line. 531-0397 $129 pp do 6 0 0 H O M E with exquisite Oceanlront 1EWARK DEPARTURES SENIOR CITIZENS-Haveyour Restaurant and Lounge IMPROVEMENTS FREE GoU/Tennis S Maid P A D R E P f O Harrah'e Marina SHOWER A wioblNQ walls washed or painted at •09 APARTM ENTS Service 30001private beach, APRIL 9 -APRIL 18 F E B . 1 2 - 1 4 FAVORS prices you can afford. 241-5953. T O R E N T and DECORATIONS CARPENTRY-Decks. porch sauna, jacuzzi, 3 poo*, security Decoratively $109 pp do PAR TY TIMS es. doors, windows, kitchens, $1059 pp oo bath, gamerooms, drywall, NEAR ST. CANICE—Four room furnished, 1 BR villa, first isit Loretto. Padre Pio, Oh» Why Arroto. UM. Bathtub» Raaurtacad apartment. 1st fl . w/w carpel floor, sleeps 4,___ Dog Races/Jamboree ceilings, additions. Small jobs issisi, Rome, Fatima. MIKE F B U E M CS.INC 8 m B * U r t t h r IS v a n $250 plus gas and elec All tor enly S27S/waak Featuring Glen Campbell welcome. 344-7444. H O L Y L A N D 120 Seventh St, Pgh , Pa. 15222 $ m $1500 comparad to Attractive 241-7611. Better then e motel J A N . 2 8 281-0480 EXPERT ROOF REPAIR— now tuO tnotaOotlon APRIL 14 - APRIL 25 Repair work our specialty. Also REGENCY SQUARE-3 rooms and teae expensive, tool *35 down spouting, chimney $150.95 VattanM and bath, w/w carpelling, PRIVATE OWNER $ 1 3 9 9 PP do pointing and painting. Freeest. Refrig, and stove, private Far Paresi sin Resurfacing entrance. February 1st. 242 Avon Lake Ohio LETHAL WEAPONS All wont guarantee Ml-2944 Visit Rome, Jerusalem. 3 2 7 - 1 4 9 5 » 6 5 6 Callr w r a n r Fatima F E B . 1 0 - 1 2 TRAINING FURNITURE REUPHOLS Mandatory Certification lor TURING—And Custom made Other tour» available *139 pp.ao. Security Officers under Act. slipcovers. Furniture repairing. Par Is/Lou rdw /Fatlm a 235 Registered upholsterers. How can “Catholic" advertisers Featuring Ram adi Lowest prices. Free est. 17 yrs . CLASSIFIED RATES JUNE 23 - JULY 1 Far lafarwaiati c m iearning [Identity YOU. Aquam arine Lodge February Ctoaaai call exp. Lou. John. 361-8101. -NON-COMMCRCIAL RATES PP do Resort. W eekend pack­ Armor Security GENERAL CONTRLCTION/ A “C A TH O LIC " reader? $899 REMODELING-New or addi ANN BUGLE age w ith m eal a. Training Institute Pick up points lions Residential or commeri- 20 Word«.,$4.50 Each addidonalword.lS cents 341-9724 E venings Butler/M onroeville 7 2 8 - 8 0 2 9 cal. Complete fire restoration and insurance work. 486-1307. Pittsburgh COMMERCIAL RATES ------FOR DETAILS CALL MINIMUM CHAROS TOM SIMPSON 0 3 0 FUNERAL DIRECTORS 20 Worde-$5-50 Each additional word.16 cent* Call Toll Free I 1-800-842-8687 Deadline 11 A.M. Mondey 471-1252 ( VIA With ease — If you just take a moment to introduce yourself to the advertisers that THE PITTSBURGH CATHOLIC BEINHAUER you patronize, and tell them... 110 THIRD AVENUE.,PGH .PA..15222 TRAVELS INC. “ I saw YOUR AD In the CATHOLIC.” 120.503 Average Weekly Circuit Usa A Bonded Tour Broker

4 Page 10 — Pittsburgh Catholic, Friday. January 13, 1984 Diocesan news St. Ignatius School helps immigrant children adjust

Kajdeep Sandhu, 11. Mandeep By PATRICIA BARTOS They arrived first in Thailand, where the men worked as Sandhu. 12. and Bhagdeep Sandhu 14, members of one The message Fr Zygmunt lum berjacks and the wom en and f a m i l y . 13 -year-old H airy Paul Szarnicki and Sister Anne hope to children picked cotton and corn. (H ardinger); and Shubha instill in children at St. Ignatius They lived and worked in the School in G lendale is sim ple: "W e relugee cam p in Thailand for five Venugopal. 10. are all G od’s children, w e are all years b e lo re a rrivin g in the U .S . in human beings no m atter what 1 9 7 8 . The Sandhu children have been • color, religion or econom ic at St. Ignatius for five years and Th e y settled first in Kansas C ity several of the Indian children also 'condition." for five m onths before com ing to laced harassm ent at public school F r. Szarnicki. pastor, and Sister Pittsburgh. before being accepted at St. Anne, principal of St. Ignatius, Six of the la m ily s nine children I g n a t i u s . focused on their school's m ulti- attend St. Ignatius. Th e oldest son, Sister Anne said of the parents nationality m ake-up as the 18, is a Langley High School of the Indian children, "Th e y are National Conference of Catholic student and the youngest child is very satisfied, they feel their Bishops this week (Jan. 9-14) still at hom e. F r. Szarnicki said. children have accom plished a lot observed "National M igration The lam ily sullered m uch, in here. They are doing better here, W e e k both Laos and Thailand, and the both in their school w ork and in Pittsburgh's new Bishop, troubles continued in the U.S.. their acceptance as students." Anthony J. Bevilacqua, is according to Fr. Szarnicki The parents, both of the Hm ong 'chairm an of the Bishops' The children were taunted in and Indian children, place great Com m ittee on Migration and public school here because of their value on education, Sister Anne ¡Tourism , which sponsors the Oriental appearance and the explained They know the observance. fam ily sought help children m ust learn.”

J Bishop Bevilacqua has been The Sisters of the Holy Spirit The parents call and visit the •quoted as saying that the presence t form erly the H oly G host Sisters) school to make certain their from left: Rajdeep Sandhu, 11, Bhagdeep Sandhu, *bf m igrants and refugees poses a have long m aintained a special Sister Anne, principal of St. Ignatius School, children are com pleting their pauses to check on the work of children of three 14. and Shubha Venugopal, 10. Standing are ¡pastoral challenge lor "every bond of help and support for the w ork. "Th e y w ant them to study," Mandeep Sandhu, 12, and Harry Paul (Hardinger), jocal church as it responds to the Hm ong refugees here. Indian immigrant families. With her are, seated s h e a d d e d . 13. ■spiritual and social needs" ol such It was through an appeal by ¡ p e o p l e . Sister Jerom e at the Holy Spirit Fr. Szarnicki likes to tell the pupils that "w e are all children ol School sets reunions MIC DOC * At St. Ignatius School, six M otherhouse. to Sister Anne at St. those who cam e to the U.S. for «Hm ong children, m em bers of a Ignatius, that the plight of the freedom and happiness. W e all In conjunction w ith the 75th anniversary ol the For Professional •refugee fam ily that fled Laos, and la m ily cam e to the attention ol F r. Resurrection parish in Brookline, Resurrection w ant that." live children Irom India, S z a r n i c k i . School w ill hold a series of re unions lor students Tax Returns ¡representing three separate He feels the experience of who attended and teachers, priests and stall The six children began at St. im m igrant families, are among studying alongside children ol persons w ho served in the school. by Appointment Ignatius this fall. Th e y are: Choa, the 131 students in grades other backgrounds helps all the The reunions w ill include a 7 p.m . M ass and 13; Fu Sy, 12; K y. 10; M y Lai, 9; EAST HILLS - M cKEESPORT kindergarten through eight. students. "The children have social. Th e reunion schedule w ill be; 1910 to 1949 Juneu. 6: and Teng, 5. accepted them very w ell. They're classes on Ja n . 20 w ith a snow date of Ja n . 24. 1950 Carl A. Hendrickson, CPA Also, one and one-hall years ago aware there are others in the to 1959 classes on Feb. 3 w ith a snow date ol Feb. St. Ignatius sponsored the The parish Christian Mothers world besides Am ericans, he 7 1960 to 1969 classes on Feb. 17 w ith a snow date 672-2355 Konewka fam ily after they had also have helped, providing used a d d e d . of Ja n . 21: and classes from 1970 to the present on lied Poland Tw o ol the couple s clothing and household item s to SO UTH HILLS - M T. LEBANON three daughters attended St. the new fam ily. Sister Anne said M arch 2 with a snow date of M arch 6. To Sister Anne, w ho has w orked Fo r m ore inform ation, telephone John at 531- D. Patrick Donahoe, CPA Ignatius School and now are one benefactor left a shopping bag full of Christm as gifts lor the w ith the C hristian M others to help 5948 o r Je a n 563-3218. students at Canevin H igh School. meet the home needs of the 343-0773 lam ily at the school. Hm ong fam ily, "the people have The parish sponsored a second NORTH HILLS responded w ell." Polish fam ily, the W odeckis, this The Vue children, delighted at Thomas R. Schwab past June and the fam ily includes FOR GROUP LEADERS ONLY the gilts, w ere able to enjoy a real It’a ABC travel's one young daughter. Christm as, Sister Anne said. "The ellect ol refugees and 761-4336 im m igrants on the parish has been Winter Carnival Travel Show l i e _ l The Vue lam ily is am ong the St. Ignatius took the Vue that it has opened our hearts and some 150 families of Hmong children in at no cost, but their we have becom e m ore Christ-like at Sheraton Inn-Greensburg descent who arrived through the presence did not add to expenses by finding out about those in need January 25 11 A.M. to 3 P.M. Kelugce Resettlem ent Program as the school's budget and and doing som ething to satisfy to settle in Pittsburgh alter they e Fra Admimon S P E C IA L e|MroductMn ol teaching loads had already been those needs." APPEARANCE 1084 Brw p Tours fled Com m unist Laos e F rs e Bm WE set, Fr. Szarnicki said. T rim portillan By Jot Migri •Banut It y w Fr. Szarnicki feels that the book it the ilw w The lam ily lives in Cralton and e fm F u i Booti» READ Though they are not Catholic, Church definitely must be • P r o « » is headed by Boua Vue w ho, at the involved in such w ork. "W ho else M r. and M rs. Vue and their eldest YOUR age ol 17, entered the arm y ol the son have begun taking weekly will help out? Definitely the CIA in Laos. According to Fr. Church m ust help. The Church has religion lessons w ith a S ister at the MAIL Szarnicki, Boua and his w ile Yia always taken cure of people in p a r i s h . Yang farm ed until lighting forced THI HOLT rATNIO'l MISSION *IO TO THI o » i i n t x i C M U a C H The Indian children are; need." he said. them to flee. Do you read ours? Our mail, that is... if C lll WELCOME so, you'll receive within the next few Bor In n TO days our Invitation to help the Holy M in a toli NEW Father helpthehelplessin dem erging FRIENDS FOR R ESERVATIONS 800-822-2108 countries. We are asking our friends to ANO renew their membership (and to enroll OLD their families and friends) in this Association. Look for the invitation. We hope you'll write promptly to say Yes.. Since we are the Holy Father's official mission-aid In the Near and (Earl (A* (Eulig, Middle East and Southern India, we are sending you his photograph with a list of the benefits he grants to members. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF In addition your membership offering helps Pope John Paul II himself in one HIS OFFICE. SPECIALIZING of his most ambitious and heartfelt IN AO ULT M EDICINE AT: works: The relief of hunger, disease, ignorance and poverty among the tragic population groups in the Near East. .. Just In case our invitation does 103 MAPLE AVENUE not reach you. the membership EDGEWOOD. PA.. 15218 offering for one year is only $5 per person. $10 for a family. The offering for perpetual membership is $25 per c a l l 2 4 1 - 5 5 4 4 person, $100 for a family FOR AN APPOINTMENT Evenings and Saturday Morning hours available Because Catholic Near East is our Holy LIVING CHRIST’S Father's own Mission Aid, were PA88DN WITH pleased to offer you an exclusive 4 1/2" JOHN PAUL II x 6 - 7 / 8 ” , 40-page booklet WAY OF THE CROSS - MEDITATIONS OF JOHN Thom as M ore C ollege should be PAUL II. It's beautifully illustrated in full color in cloisonne style plus photos AT THE TO P O F YO U R CHART... of scenes along the Via Dolorosa as they are today. Individual copies $1. Bulk quantities of 100 or more available at cost. Ideal for parishes, AND WE schools, societies! Please write for HAVE THE A p rices. i n n M Ignatius. They are, front from left: My Lai, 9, Wonder what dollars do in our 18 Fr. Zygmunt Szarnicki, pastor of St. Ignatius in countries? He re are some suggestions: Juneu, 6, Fr. Szarnicki, and Teng, 5. Rear, from Glendale, pays a visit to the parish school to talk left, are: Fu Sy. 12. Choa, 13, and Ky, 10. with children of the Vue family. The Hmong Minn □$10,000 helps build a complete refugee children began classes this fall at St. — Photos by John C. Keenan s b i b m u parish plant' (church, school, ft rftHRHi co n ven t rectory) In India this year. N am e it to r your favorite saint, in memory of your loved ones

Duouesne univeRSiTv ramBURn»n® _ MSTrrUTE OF FOLK ARTS * □$1080 ($15 a month for six years) will DOTH WALTER w MOLAR Ondor You m ay know that Thomas FUTURE train a poor boy for the priesthood More College is nationally PRIESTS AND overseas. $300 ($12.50 a month for two presents recognized for academic excel- - SBTERS years) will train a native Sister. They lence That’s on record But you prob­ DIOCESE OF PITTSBURGH ably don't know about the "second- _ will write to you. H O L Y N A M E HUNGARIAN STATE family" atmosphere of our com pos Or its 320 acres of rolling hills, woods and ponds O r the rap­ "USE WHERE D Y ou r S trin g le s s G ift ($1.0 0 0 . $ 5 00, S O C I E T Y port out students have with the staff and faculty. HEEDED" $75. $50, $10, $5) equips the Holy FOLK ENSEMBLE Or the extensive financial aid programs available. IS SPONSORING A Father for mission emergencies But you con find out Easily. Just send lor our free record "STILL SEARCH­ Company o f 100 ING". and it'll give you all the details It’s done by our students for • BB our future students and they know what's important to you Mail D e e r ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $ . Holy Year in Rome | • D a n c e rs the coupon today so we can put Thomas More College on top of Mon «if nor Nolen: FOR______M arch 25 to April 2 • Chorus your chart. NAME______• Orchestra return coupbn 9 D A Y S ( I 077 w ith y o u r STREET______per person o ffe rin g A d c k m s______CITY______S TA TE . ______ZIP CODE______from Pittsburgh SYRIA MOSQUE I Trip includes Round trip air via Pan Am from« C ity ______- Z i p - T N I C A T H O L IC N M D C A S T W ELF A R E A S ■ O C I ATI O N Pittsburgh. 7 night accomodations at first class hotels I S a tu rd a y , Continental breakfast daily. Sightseeing tour of Rome I January, 28, 1984 P h o n e ( J Papal Audience Pilgrimage to Basilica of St. Pauls, St. 8 :0 0 P .M . N E A R E A S T In Mary Major, St John Latern, and St. Peter in Chains. A IIB High School Attended 2 taxes and gratuities A Visit to Florence is optional R MISSIONS m For Information, call Fathor Paul Yurko Yeor G r a d u a t e d ------Tickets S10, $9, $8 MSGR. JO HN G. NOLAN. National Secretary W rite : Catholic Near East W e l f a r e A s s o c I 266-4109 Available at Kaufmaan's and Tamburitxans 434-5185 Intended Major — - — . -...... ------— ...... 1011 First Avenue • New York, N.Y. 10022 Group Rales Availsbie Thomas More Cotoege/Creshriew Hills, Kentucky 41017 Telephone: 212/8261480 (606) 341-5800 or Travel Trend« 221-3000 Supported in p m by the Pa. Council am the Arts and W it 1 nun Penn Association IBHBBBBHflHBBBm BBI Around the diocese Pittsburgh Catholic, Friday. January 13, 1984 — Page 1*1

\PTG sets talk on stress Woodville benefactors Monroeville honor Scouting weekend The Parent-Teacher Guild of St. Louise de The St. Vincent DePaul Society sponsored its North American Martyrs parish in Monroeville Catholic Scouter Development, a spiritual and I Marillac School. Upper St. Clair, will present annual “ shoebox dance" at Woodville State will honor Bishop-Elect Adam J. Maida at an training program for Boy Scout leaders in the ( John Small who will discuss stress on Tuesday. Hospital in December to aid the many patients at 11:30 a.m. Mass on Sunday, Jan. 15. A reception diocese, will be conducted the weekend of Jan. 13- Jan. 17 at 7:30 p.m. The program will help parents the facility. will follow. 15 at St. Paul Seminary in Green Tree. identify stress in their lives, the causes of stress, Parish groups assisted in the work as all Bishop Maida will be installed as head o! the Registration is $25 and covers room, meals and j and ways to reduce or minimize the negative hospital areas were reached. The groups Green Bay, Wise., diocese on Jan. 25. use ol seminary facilities. To register contact the I effects of it. provided music, entertainment, food and gift The new bishop helped out at North American Diocesan Scouting Office in the Diocesan Small holds a bachelor of science degree from boxes for patients. Martyrs from 1966 to 1977, hearing confessions Building, 111 Blvd. ol the Allies, D ow n tow n Slippery Rock State University and a master ol In addition, numerous volunteer groups joined and offering Sunday Mass. Fr. Anthony DeLuca Pittsburgh, 15222 (456-3082) education degree from the University ol to help make Christmas meaningful for the is pastor, with Fr. James Merkel as assistant. Pittsburgh. He is a member of the adjunct faculty Woodville patients. of the Pennsylvania State University and is the knights to install officers principal in the Streams Elementary School in Quest program set Upper St. Clair. St. Vincent honor A brief business meeting will precede the The Pittsburgh Vocation Council will hold its The Knights ol Equity, Court 9, will install new program. Samuel A. Folby Sr.. assistant to the director of next Quest program on Saturday. Feb. 4 at Mount officers Sunday. Jun. 15. at 2 p.m. at the group s development at St. Vincent College for nine Nazareth Center ol the molherhouse of the Sisters headquarters at 533 E Ohio St., North Side. years since his retirement from the of the Holy Family, Bellevue, from 9:30 a.m. to Richard McEldowney ol Altoona, supreme vice Christian marriage series Addressograph Corp., will be honored at a 4:30 p.m. sir knight ol the national Knights ol Equity, will testimonial dinner Saturday, Jan. 14, at the Fr. Scott Seethaler, OFM Cap. will discuss officiate. The religious education office of St. Malachy college. The 6:30 p.m. dinner will be preceded by “ The Path to One’s Heart." Among the 17 new officers to be installed will be parish, Kenmawr, Kennedy Township, will hold a cash bar. Quest is designed for single adults, ages 18-35, Richard Cribbons as sir knight and John Nolan as an adult education series on Christian marriage. Folby retired from his who are considering a religious vocation. vice sir knight. Fr. Thomas R. Bartley is Programs scheduled are: “ Attitudes and position with the St. Vincent Participants should bring a lunch. The fee for the chaplain. Msgr. Charles O. Rice will speak. Marriage," to be conducted by Mike and Marlene development office effective day is $5. For further information or to register, Nikolich on Thursday, Jan. 19 from 7:30 to 8:30 Dec. 31. A 1938 graduate of St. contact Sister Karen Boros at 439-1354. * p.m.; "Commitment: In Friendship and Vincent Prep School, he has I N A L L Y! ioow — Marriage,” to be conducted by Patrick McNamee been an active member of the Hungarian ensemble A reliable, low cost PARISH M ANAGEM ENT on Wednesday, Jan. 25 from 7:30to8:30p.m.; and alumni council since 1950, SYSTEM designed especially for first time computer “Marriage, Divorce and Annulments," to be serving on all committees, as users Complete package includes the loi lowing The Hungarian State Folk Ensemble will features conducted by Fr. Lawrence DiNardo, vice chief chairman of the Annual perform Saturday. Jan. 28, at 8 p.m. in the Syria judge of the diocesan tribunal, on Thursday, Feb. Giving Program in 1971 and as Pariah Data System Mosque as part of the folk art series program ol 2 from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. president in 1972. He received • Mante I family census Wem Mn| the Duquesne University Tamburitzan Institute • Contribution Aaeatiai Costs are $2 per session per couple or $5 lor the the Letterman of Distinction Setae of Folk Arts. • hum Acorn nlirç Special series: and $1 for individuals per session. To Award in 1982. Folby also Through songs, music, dance and wearing register, contact the St. Malachy Religious founded one of the most Word Processing System traditional Hungarian costumes, the troupe Education Office at 771-7480. successful alumni programs, • M bMdM Ml frnSMI reflects the "soul, life, thinking and happiness” ol the Annual Golf Outing, in Electronic “What If" Spreadsheet Interim officers elected Folby 1956. the people. Tickets are $10, $9 and $8 and available through Correspondance Quality Printer Before moving to Latrobe in 1964, Folby and his Kaufmann’s or by calling 434-5185 On site Training The Northeast Italian Apostolate Conference, family were members ol St. Basil parish in founded three years ago to assist area dioceses in Carrick, where he was vice president ol the Credit Over 140 Installations Throughout the Country aiding Italian-speaking immigrants, has elected Union, member of the Holy Name Society, Carmelite novena To Arrange a onsite, no obligation demonstration of interim officers, following the resignation of its supervisor of the church credit committee, this exciting new affordable PARISH M ANAGEMENT founder and first president, Bishop Anthony J. member of the Ushers Club and secretary of the The Discalced Carmelite Nuns of Latrobe will SYSTEM please call Bevilaequa. church bowling league. conduct a novena in conjunction with the octave MICROMED DATA SYSTEMS, INC. Bishop Bevilaequa became ordinary of the Folby also served on the executive committee of Church Unity from Wednesday to Wednesday, Pittsburgh Diocese last month. for the fund drive for the new parish school. Jan. 18-25, during the daily 7 a.m. Mass in the ______4|1|2| I m'i1|°7Pi I I I I I I I Elected to succeed Bishop Bevilaequa as He and his wife Mary have five children: John, monastery chapel. Sunday Mass is at 8 a.m. and president was New York in Harrisburg: Samuel A. Jr. in N. Tonawanda, benediction is every Sunday at 5 p.m. E/S (S/B (Si la ta / B ® ® (EJB) (BJB GB/S @ Ji Anthony Mestice. Newark Auxiliary Bishop N.Y.; Mary Frances Woodall in Elizabethtown, Those wishing to share in the novena but unable Si WE OFFER A WONDERFUL ARRAY OF Dominic Marconi has been elected interim vice Pa.: Kathleen DiSalvo in Plum Boro; and to attend may send their petitions to the president. Patricia, a student at St. Vincent College. Carmelite Monastery. R.D. 6. Box 28, Latrobe, Other officers and staff remain the same: He is the son of Mary Folby of Latrobe and the Pa. 15650. AMPSHADBS a Msgr. William Genuario, vicar general of late John Folby. Bridgeport, is secretary-treasurer; at-large He also is a member of the B.P.O.E. Lodge 907 g members include Fr. Michael Farano, chancellor in Latrobe, in addition to being active in many Alcoholism panel M i IK wr raj ol Albany, and Fr. Joseph Cogo, CS. executive community and civic affairs. director of the American Committee on Italian @ St. John Hospital Treatment Center, 3530 / ) IL L A A M M P P S S H H A J D E S © Migration. 2 students honored Fleming Ave.. Brighton Heights, will host a panel FrsdlhCk IIS Fr. Nicholas DiMarzio of Catholic Community [cl of personnel workers speaking on alcoholism 257 N Craig St Oakland rjj Services in Newark is executive director, with Fr. Two Quigley High School students took first Tuesday, Jan. 17, at 9 a.m. Speaking will be Jim Walter Tonelotto, CS. as associate executive place awards in separate local competitions. McDonald ol Mellon Bank, Eike Morren ol Alcoa, 81-1414 (S director. Questions on the organization mpy be Junior Roberto Ceccarelli, the son of Mr. and James McGrady of Conrail and Bruce Mockridge Qjsü/is/ssrsts/sgjs (£/?£] (S/9D (S/S fifl addressed to Fr. Tonelotto at Northeast Italian Mrs. Amerigo Ceccearelli of Aliquippa, received of Human Affairs. For information call Jim Apostolate Conference, c/o Catholic Community first place in Beaver County Veterans of Foreign Vernarsky, 734-1010. Services, One Sumner Ave., Newark, N.J., 07104. Wars Voice of Democracy competition. His essay Phone number is (201) 482-0100. "M y Role in Upholding the Constitution" also LENZNER TRAVEL received second place in the VOA’s Beaver- Alumni luncheon Communications talks Butler-Lawrenee County District. This is the FLORIDA SPECIALS second consectutive year that a Quigley student Pittsburgh Pirate manager Chuck Tanner will Fee luring has won the Beaver County award. Aux. Bishop Anthony Bosco, chairman of the be the speaker at the Duquesne University Senior Alex Miller, the son of Mr. and Mrs. THE NEW EPCOT CENTER Catholic Communications Foundation, has Downtown Alumni luncheon to be held on Ronald Miller of Beaver, was awarded a $50 U.S. announced that two workshops will be sponsored Tuesday, Jan. 17 at the Allegheny Club, Three DISNEY WORLD/ST. AUGUSTINE Savings Bond lor hissilksereen print. "Sailboat." by the foundation to train diocesan Rivers Stadium, North Side. Cash bar begins at Your Choice o l detos The print was chosen by a popular vote of the communications workers. 11:30 a.m. and the luncheon follows at noon. February 11-19 works entered in a competition sponsored by the They are set for May 6-11 at the Passionist Tickets are $10 per person and the deadline for February 18-26 Beaver Valley Floral Shop in conjunction with its Retreat House in St. Louis and at Tulane reservations is Friday, Jan. 13. For reservations, March 3-11 recent open house. University in New Orleans June 3-14. For telephone 434-6209. March 5-13 applications for either session write the Catholic March 24-AprU 1 Communications Foundation, P.O. Box 198. Carlsbad, Calif. 92008. BEFORE YOU BLOW CALL US FIRST! SILIANOFF COST <299 asm w w pp Freshman test INCLUDES Transportation. 8 nights lodging, admission (o YOUR STACK...CALL 0. L. Richie, Painting 833-0237 Epcot Center/Disney World (3 day pass) guided tour ol SI RAY ADENOUR STAINED GLASS Augustine and 1 dinner A placement test for prospective freshmen for Interior. Exterior. Commorciol. 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= X K ^ — «SS Page 12 — Pittsburgh Catholic. Friday, January i j, two« IR lgB W M

Movie review 'S ilkwood: ’ a com pelling adult film

"S ilk w o o d : " An ABC Motion Many viewers will be shocked at Readers’ comments Pictures presentation of a Mike this true story, and many will find Nichols film. the handling of this sensitive Meryl Streep Keren Silkwood material offensive. While it is a Kurt Russell Drew Stevens superb motion picture, it is C h e r ...... Dolly Pelliker FR. PETER recommended with extreme HORTON —'W — 7 By JAMES BREIG horror associated with a nuclear war...I believe Written by Nora Ephron and Alice caution. At the risk of incurring a lot of "enough the movie opened the eyes of people who took Arlen/produced by Mike Nichols Mike Nichols' direction is strong already" from you. I would like to return once nuclear war for granted.” and Michael Hausman/executive and effective. He captures the again to "The Day After," ABC's film about a • From a New York woman: "Frankly, I was producers Buzz Hirsch and Larry horrors of contamination, the nuclear attack on the U.S. In a recent column, I so disgusted with the family plots that framed the Cano/directed by Mike Nichols/ mystery of radiation and the movie that my attention was distracted from the released through Twentieth frustrations and fears of those who invited readers to let me know what they thought Century Fox/Rated R/A-lll. ol the TV movie shown in November — and a missile issue which the extensive publicity and understanding lover. Cher is a work in this field. His cast By FR. PETER HORTON number of you took me up on the offer. warnings claimed that the movie would pleasant and remarkable surprise responds beautifully to his work, So now I would like to share those thoughts. address.” It seems impossible that ten as Dolly, the girlfriend with and the screenplay is an artistic While I am thinking of it, I wish readers who write A group of high school students in years have passed since her lesbian tendencies, a fascinating achievement of the highest form. to me would put their return addresses on the Pennsysl vania wrote to me about The Day picture was flashed across and brilliant portrayal. "Silkwood" is indeed a compelling letters. I get several letters a month I cannot After.” Here are some of their comments: television and the covers of news piece of film entertainment, but it respond to because the writers have failed to let • "The movie wasn't scary or even mildly magazines. Reporters and "Silkwood" is definitely adult in is an adult film in nature and me know where they live. terrifying...To me the movie was nothing lobbyists felt she was a martyr for nature with strong language and subject matter. Yet, though it is Often, I can answer their question, respond to special." — Garret. the cause while management strong sexual situations and adult in nature, "Silkwood" is a their criticism or reply in some other way, but • "I am 15 and very informed about nuclear regarded her as a thorn in their nuances. For this reason, it is line film, a masterpiece of must rely on telepathy. (I will not on this occasion missiles. But seeing it made me feel dil terently as side. Becoming a union leader for rated À-III by the United States documentary suspense, human go into some of the handwriting I receive. Trying if it didn't register when I was told about it — her fellow workers, she won only Catholic Conference. While it is an fraility and courage with three to decipher names and addresses on some ol the Vickie. alienation. To those who cared in excellent film, it is not a film for spectacular performances in the mail is like decoding the Rosetta Stone.) • "It wasn't the graphic violence ol people Washington, she was their all audiences. hands ol a brilliant director. Enough about my mail woes. Here are your dying (that should have bothered people): it was heroine. Tragically, she met with thoughts on "The Day A fter:" how quickly and how defenseless people death in a suspicious car accident. • From a man in Indiana: "It contributed were...People looked at the movie the wrong Traces of alcohol and tranquili­ Local TV, radio zer were found in her blood, but nothing positive toward answering the question, way" — John. TELEVISION PROGRAMS the supposed documentary ‘How do we prevent a nuclear holocaust?'...- • "The most shocking event to come out ol this Channel 4 Directions 6:30 a.m. Sunday Unless we obtain God's help, I believe that my movie is not the strong emotions of fear or other evidence of deceptive and Channel 2 For Our Times 6 a.m. Sunday children will suffer more than the Japanese predicted psychological problems: it s the lack ol criminal practices, which she was Channel 11 Mass for shut-ins 6:30 a.m. Sunday people suffered at the end of World War II...The emotion. I myself had no strong feelings...We are ready to deliver to the New York Channel 9 Glory of God" Sunday, noon Times, was not found in the car. Fr. Manning 1:30 p.m. Saturday best hope we have is prayer." (so) constantly bombarded with wars in Channel 40 Never was it determined that her Channel 40 "Cram u of Tu rth " 2 p.m.. Saturday • From a woman in Texas: "Its advertising Lebanon, Beirut, etc. that we have become (Fr. Vincent Miceli) was overblown. What the film showed was not immune to it all" — unsigned. death was anything more than accidental, but the plant, in which Channel 40 The Glory of God 6 p.m. Tuesday nearly us serious as what we already know about • -I am 15 and I received information irom she worked, suspiciously closed a Channel 23 To Teach as 9 a.m. Sunday the results ol a nuclear strike... I am in favor ol a the program that I was not aware ol belore. But it Jesus Did few years after. This is the nuclear freeze while a gradual disarmament did not scare me that much. It did make me 1 p.m. Sunday mystery of Karen Silkwood. takes place." wonder about the luture and it did give me (Aux. Bishop Bosco) • From a woman in Massachusetts: "Too concern for nuclear power although it did not give 6 p.m. Sunday much hullaballoo was made over that picture. It me a growing fear. I'm just going to live lile as it Mike Nichols has returned as midnight comes and try to change only the things I can" — director and producer of one of the 9 a.m. Mon — Fri. wasn't any worse than what I had already 1 p.m. Mon — Fri. pictured il a nuclear bomb was dropped. And il Duane. most important films ol the new y ea r.' Silkwood'' is his attempt to 7 p.m. Mon. — Fri. one is dropped I'm not clogging up roads trying to • " i would much rather live under Communist midnight get anywhere. I'm going to sit on my front porch suppressiosn than have the world around me convey the enigma of this young 8:30 a.m. Saturday and breathe deeply...Personally, I think the U.S. destroyed. Any life is the most important thing. carefree soul who went Irom 12:30 p.m. Saturday needs to be armed and ready. Who can trust the There is always hope for an enlightenment.. .Sim­ worker to negotiator, from 6 p.m. Saturday employee to union activist. shifty Russians anyway?" ply to blow up the world because we are midnight • From a reader in New York: "My husband supporting truth and the American way is Working for a Kerr-McGee Channel 68 Cable-LINE 8 p.m. daily and I watched it with our 11-year-old son and it ridiculous" — Lisa. plutonium plant in Oklahoma, she (series on labor) Thanks to all for taking time to write. began to notice dangerous safety was worthwhile for all of us. He wasn’t upset by it RADIO PROGRAMS (Two January specials on CBS to look for: violations, deceptions and or left with feelings ol despair and hopelessness. Sunday. 6 p.m. "Burnett Discovers Domingo" on Friday, Jan. criminal activities at the hands ol WPNT-FM 93 Sacred Heart Our kids are watching 10 times worse than this on Program TV during early evening hours and weekends 27, in which Carol Burnett and Plácido Domingo the management. Standing up for her rights and WNUF-FM 100.7 Mass Sunday. 11 a.m. (cartoons, MTV, 'Madam's Place')." team up, and on Tuesday, Jan. 31, "The Master ol Croatian Program Sunday 12:30 p.m. the rights of her co-workers, she W ESA 94 • Front a Pennsylvania man: "It stayed Ballantree," starring Richard Thomas, Michael W TA E 1250 Mass Sunday. 8 a.m. within TV violence limits but still showed the York and John Gielgud.) became a woman with a cause, a K D K A 1020 Amplify Sunday, 6 p.m. cause that might have been W'PIT-FM 101.5 Kosary Daily 7 p.m. ultimately responsible for her W ED O 810 Catholic Perspective 4:30 - 5 Sunday death. (F r. Paul W'ickens) Media notebook Though the film, "Silkwood", W ED O 810 Alive to the Spirit Sunday. 2 p.m. hints at the possible conspiracy, (Fr. Ed Bunchek capturing all the suspense and W ED O 810 To Teach as 2:30 p.m. Film s touch sensitive subjects danger behind it, the film offers no Jesus Did answers to the mystery. What (Aux. Bishop Bosco) Lift Your Heart Monday through makes the film so good are the W EDO 810 By MICHAEL GALLAGHER ing account ol a heroic mother's are likely to be that much more riveting and compelling perfor­ receptive to the idea of, say, a Friday 9:15 a.m. NEW YORK (NC) — Now that attempts to cope with the terrible mances given by the excellent Saturday. 10 a.m. bilateral freeze on nuclear W E D O 810 Say Yes to Life the December film rush is over, aftermath of nuclear war and cast. (Fr. Tom Smith) and it's possible for the harried "Under Fire’s" wholehearted weapons and that much more Meryl Streep is superb as Karen W ED O 810 Byzantine Catholic Sunday. 9 a.m. critic to draw a breath, it s time embrace of the Sandinista dubious about the wisdom ol Silkwood, the ex-common law Liturgy tor modestly profound reflections revolution against Somoza in deploying Pershing II and cruise wife, who left her husband and her W ED O 810 Kosary Sunday noon Nicaragua have inescapable missiles in Europe. No, Mass (Fr. Pat Jones) Sunday. 3:30 p.m. on 1983. Let me offer one: I think children, the woman with a live-in W ED O 810 political implications. "Testament" may not be political, WEDO 810 Catholic Update Sunday. 4 p.m. that the most noteworthy lover and a homosexual best In the first case, audiences who may not be controversial in itseil, (Fr. Pat Jones) development in American popular friend. Kurt Russell offers the have empathized with a mother but, as the saying goes, if one says W AKO 540 Mass from St. Sunday noon entertainment in the past year most sensitive performance of his watching her children die one by "A ," one must say "B ." Patrick. Canonsburg was a willingness to get into career as Drew Stevens, the politically sensitive areas. one from the effects of radiation As for "Under Fire," its This year came "Testament sickness — a mother, not depiction of two American und "Under Fire." incidentally, magnificently correspondents so moved by the "Testament's" stark, harrow- portrayed by Jane Alexander — heroism of the rebels that they aid the Sandinistas by photographing a recently slain guerrilla leader as Movie ratings though he were still alive and sending back a false report to the The classifications for the Chariots of Fire, A-I (Recommended) media they work for may seem to moral suitability of films are present a problem more in the determined by the United I Ought to be in Pictures, A-II 4939 BUTTERMKILK HOLLOW ROAD Kiss Me Goodbye, A-III area of journalistic ethics than States Catholic Conference's political controversy. WEST MIFFLIN, PA. 15122 Department ol Communica­ Quest for Fire, O Threshold, A-II Its implications, however, tions obviously go beyond that. For the Movies at area theaters: Valley Girl. O basic thrust of "Under Fire" R icci Sue Fashions is The Big Chill, A-III might easily lead the average pleased to present our new Christine, O moviegoer to start wondering how |),C. Cab, O the good guys of 1979 could have so uniform line. Gorky Park. A-IV swiftly turned into the bad guys of It is one of the most popular The Grey Fox, A-III a A-1, General patronage, a A-II, Adults and adoles­ 1983. styles in use and we make them The Keep, O Nor was it a matter ol theatrical cents, in a wide variety of colors to The Man Who Loved Women, films alone. Made-lor-television O a A 111, Adults, suit you. a A-IV, Adults with reserva­ movies suddenly developed a The Return ol the Jedi, A-Il pronounced bite in 1983. We make a complete range of Sear face, O tions. An A-IV elassilieation is given to certain tilms which, The Day Alter," ABC’s sizes-slim, regular and half­ Silkwood, A-III protests to the contrary Sudden Impact, O while not morally offensive in sizes. themselves, require caution notwithstanding, is a political film Terms ol Endearment. A-III which appeals primarily to the JUMPERS To Be or Not To Be, A-II and some analysis and explanation as a protection to fear and self-interest of Gradas 1-3 $15.50 Two oi a Kind. A-III Americans. Not so "Choices ol the Grad** 4-6 $16.50 Uncommon Valor, A-III the uninlormed against wrong interpretations and false Heart," which NBC broadcast on Yentl. A-III the evening of Dec. 5. conclusions, SKIRTS a O, Morally offensive. "Choices of the Heart,’ the Movies on Home Box Office: story of Jean Donovan, who with Grad#* 7-8 $17.50 Airplane 11: The Sequel, O The word "Recommended" in parenthesis is inserted her three brave companions gave Annie, A-I behind the titles of those films her life for the poor of El Salvador, Why pay more for tha tame or Best Friends, A-III makes its appeal rather to the which merit such a designation. similar garment. We use only tha Cat People, O conscience of Americans. finest quality materials and workmanship anywhere.

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