Jersey Hiradó, 1964 (45. évfolyam, 3-39. szám)

1964-09-25 / 39. szám

September 25, 1964 5 BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL GUIDE BARBERO BAKERY, INC. WHOLESALE & RETAIL The Finest Baked Goods for Over 35 Years BREAD, ROLLS WEDDING, BIRTHDAY & SPECIAL OCCASION CAKES AND COOKIES 61 Conrad St., Cor. Anderson - Tel. 396-9704 - Ample Parking BARTOLINI LIQUOR STORE “Where You Get Your Money’s Worth” Cor. Chambers St. & Morris Ave. Phone: EXport 3-79S1 Columbus Realty & Mortgage Co. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE RAY BONANNI, Realtor 524 HAMILTON AVENUE EXport 6-8157 Italian-American Sportsmen’s Club Banquets, Dinners, Weddings — Public Dining Room For Reservations Call . . . 585-8588 BENIGNO (Billy) ROSSI, Mgr. Kuser Road, Trenton 90, N. J. BERNARD W. LEAMMARI, Inc. REAL ESTATE — INSURANCE — MORTGAGES 900 SOUTH CLINTON AVENUE EXport 3-4252 PIHTINALLI REALTY CO. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 953 PRINCETON AVE., TRENTON, N. J. OWen 5-8501 TRENTON WINE COMPANY "FIOR Dl CALIFORNIA" 171 WASHINGTON STREET Phone: OWen 5-6463 MUST BUY NEW BUS TO TRANSPORT CATHOLIC CHILDREN TO SCHOOL BOURBON, MO. — Population 800 -1% Catholic 40 children enrolled in Catholic School MISSIONARY — FORMER TRENTONIAN Working in Midwest — Sorely Needs Your Help YOU CAN HELP US GET THE NEW BUS BY Sending ALL TRADE STAMPS To: Father John B. DeAngelis Box 38, Bourbon, Mo. Father DeAngelis attended grade school at Immaculate Concep­tion and St. Joachim’s in Trenton; Seton Hall University and Darlington Seminary. Sanhican Savings & Loan Assn. Mortgage Loans — Construction Loans Account Loans — Home Improvement Loans 4 tori CURRENT ANNUAL DIVIDEND /0 COMPOUNDED SEMI ANNUALLY 900 S. Clinton Ave., Trenton, N. J. EX 3-4254 ‘Time’ Article ‘Caricatures’ Cardinal BOSTON (NC)—The Pilot, of­ficial newspaper of the Boston Archdiocese, has described the Time magazine article on Richard Cardinal Cushing as being “only the merest caricature” of the Car­dinal and “badly out of focus.” The newspaper charged in an editorial that some statements in the article were factually untrue, such as placing the mitered Car­dinal in a Boston tavern. Further­more, the newspaper said Time failed to capture the complex per­sonality of the Boston Archbishop, and- it stated: “A portrait without dimension presents a personality without meaning; what could have been in­spiration, ends in travesty.” The editorial declared that the renewal of the American Church was described by the magazine as if Americans were changing basic Church doctrines and were chal­lenging the teaching authority of the Church. “To link the name of Boston’s Cardinal to an ersatz renewal is bad reporting and offensive in its implications,” it said. NOTRE DAME, Ind. (NC) — Bishop John J. Wright of Pitts­burgh has charged that a Time magazine article on the Catholic Church in America was guilty of a “cruel caricature” by picturing a group of young people “sitting around and talking about birth control.” Bishop Wright said that much of the article in the magazine, fea­turing Boston’s Richard Cardinal Cushing on its cover, was accurate. But the “posed picture of Catho­lic Malthusians” was a “grotesque misrepresentation of the thrilling realities that really challenge our generation and Holy Church,” he said. The Pittsburgh Bishop addressed 4,200 delegates at the 21st national convention of the Catholic Stu­dents’ Mission Crusade, held at Notre Dame University. He said the delegates themselves repre­sented a far more accurate picture of Catholic life in the United States. “It is not out of temptations to Malthusian defeatism that is com­ing the renewal of the world,” he said. “It is out of the passion for life-giving, love-fired work of the type being done by young people in the Papal Volunteers, and tho Peace Corps. . . .” Race Issue Seen Crucial for Labor WASHINGTON (NC)—Organ­ized labor today is “on the spot” as far as the race issue is con­cerned, Msgr. George G. Higgins, director of the National Catholic Welfare Conference’s Social Ac­tion Department, said here. Many labor leaders, Msgr. Hig­gins said, “have yet to grasp the depth and the passion of the pres­ent racial crisis. As a result there is, unfortunately, a growing rift between organized labor and the Negro community.” The NCWC official spoke at the annual Labor Day Mass of the Washington Arch­diocese. Archbishop Patrick A. O’Boyle of Washington presided at the celebration in the Shrine of the Sacred Heart. Following the Mass Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz placed a wreath at a statue of James Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore in a park in front of the church. He also gave a brief address. While calling the race issue “the most serious problem” fac­ing organized labor today, Msgr. Higgins at the same time defend­ed labor against the charges of many of its critics. In particular he replied to the charge of “a sense of complacency and a lack of missionary zeal on the part of labor’s top manage­ment” which he said had been leveled by some members of the “liberal establishment.” “Perhaps there is something to be said for this point of view,” he said, “but some of its critics are really baiting the la­bor movement instead of criticiz­ing it constructively. And some of them . . . are not keeping up with their homework and in fact don’t even seem to be reading the big print in labor’s current policy statements.” Msgr. Higgins said much of the criticism that labor has lost the zip it had in the 30’s and 40’s is “rather sentimental in nature.” Even “the most romantic and nostalgic of the old timers,” he said, realize that “a union can’t live indefinitely in an atmosphere of crisis and struggle. They also know that sooner or later a union has to put aside the easy-going carelessness of adolescence and get down to the serious business for which it was established.” As for the charge that U. S. organized labor lacks a “consis­tent philosophy,” Msgr. Higgins re­plied: “Its activities compare favor­ably with those carried on by the labor movements of other countries or in other periods in its own history, and the demands for wage guarantees and union pressure for a variety of fringe benefits in American industry show more novelty and imagina­tion than the plans and pro­grams of labor organizations anywhere else in the world.” The social action leader said that while it is appropriate to re­mind labor periodically of its du­ties and responsibilities, “it is also necessary to remind employ­ers, editors, and whomever else it may concern that unions are not only legitimate but necessary and indeed absolutely indispensable in our type of industrial society.” While most American employers would admit that unions are “here to stay,” he said, “too few Ameri­cans in all walks of life are will­ing to go the whole way and to take the unconditional and un­qualified position that secure and stable unions are an essential and indispensable prerequisite of a sound social order.” “Until this principle is more or less universally taken for granted as a self-evident truth, labor and management will spend too much time and energy sparring with one another—time and energy which they ought to devote to carrying out the demands which social jus­tice makes on both of them,” Msgr. Higgins said. State Police Set Entrance Examinations WEST TRENTON—Col. Dom­inic R. Capello, commandant of the State Police, has announced entrance examinations for the de­partment will be held next Tues­day and October 27 at five loca­tions in the state. Col. Capello emphasized the fact that no prior application is required to take the written tests. Candidates for the State Police must be citizens of the United States and preferably a resident of New Jersey; not less than 21 or more than 34 years of age as of March 14, 1965; at least five feet, eight inches tall and a mini­mum of 150 pounds in weight. He must have normal hearing in both ears and 20/30 vision with­out glasses. All candidates must be free of all physical defects and must be of good reputation and sound moral character. Each applicant must have a driver’s license. The examination on both dates will be given at 7 p.m. at St. Jo­seph’s School, Hammonton; Tren­ton Central High School; Assump­tion School, Morristown; Wood­­row Wilson High School, Clifton, and Sayreville War Memorial High School. Starting salary for a trooper is $4,988 plus $1,272 maintenance allowance per year. Increments of $249 are granted annually until the maximum of $6,482, plus the maintenance allowance, is reached 88 Students in New Class At St. Francis Eighty-eight young women be­gan the 27-month course yesterday in the St. Francis Hospital School of Nursing, Trenton, the second of the intensive-study classes at the school. The first will be grad­uated November 15. Sister Marian Therese, O.S.F., school director, announced the group reported Wednesday and, after orientation, started their studies yesterday. They will assist at a Mass in honor of the Holy Spirit this morning. At the same time, Sister Marian Therese announced the appoint­ment of five new faculty mem­bers. Robert Pluta, pharmacist, will teach chemistry; Miss Mary Ann Searano, microbiology; Mrs. Marion B. Miller, medical-surgi­cal nursing; Mrs. Joan O’Leary, pediatric nursing, and Mrs. Phyl­lis Spitz, who is returning, pedi­atric nursing. Sister Marian Therese an­nounced also that Miss Joan To­bin, who has been in charge of the pediatric section of the School of Nursing, entered the novitiate of the Sisters of St. Francis of Glen Riddle, Pa., on Tuesday. She is a graduate of Villa Victoria Academy and Georgetown Uni­versity. Graymoor Friary Bus Trip Oei. 4 Miss Susana E, Mayer, 211 Mor­ris Avenue, Trenton, is accepting reservations for a bus trip Octo­ber 4 to the home of the Fran­ciscan Friars of the Atonement, Graymoor, Garrison, N.Y. Pro­ceeds of the trip will be for the Poor Clare Nuns of St. Clare’s Monastery, Bordentown. Reservations will be accepted until September 20 either at the monastery or by contacting Miss Mayer, 394-1285. The bus will leave October 4 at 7 a.m. from Immaculate Concep­tion Church, Trenton. Cuban Bishop Resigns CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) - Pope Paul VI has accepted the res ignation of -Bishop Carlos Rii Angles of Camaguey in Cuba an. has appointed Cuban-born Auxil iary Bishop Adolfo Rodrique Herrera of Camaguey to take hi place. Bishop Riu Angles, a native o Spain, has been named Titula Bishop of Lari Castellum. Bishop Rodriquez, born Apri 9, 1924, studied in the seminarie in Camaguey, Santiago and Ha vana in Cuba and Comillas i: Spain. He was ordained in 194 and was named Auxiliary Bisho on May 27, 1963.

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