Jersey Hiradó, 1964 (45. évfolyam, 3-39. szám)
1964-07-31 / 31. szám
1 July 31, 1964 union’s efforts to put a curb on pornography and obscenity, Mr. Becker said, but the August 16 meeting shows promise of arousing public opinion from one end of the state to the other to have something positive accomplished in the all-out fight against smut. Meanwhile, the newly appointed Public "Decency Committee of the State Council, Knights of Columbus, headed by George E. Emery of Colonia, is proceeding with its plans to meet with Governor Richard J. Hughes on getting action in the battle. Primary purpose of the new committee, named by State Deputy Stewart Sehoder Jr. of Edison, is to put the “perversion-forprofit industry out of business permanently,” Mr. Emery says. IL S. Aids Cuban Specialists WASHINGTON (NC) — The United States is extending financial aid to 370 Cuban refugees to [help them qualify as physicians, teachers and librarians in this country. The Office of Education, Department of Health, Education CRS-NCWC Resettles 45,000 Cuban Refugees MIAMI (NC)—More than 45,- 000 Cuban refugees have been resettled by Catholic Relief Services-National Catholic Welfare Conference since January, 1961, according to the Cuban Refugee Center here. BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS Daniel Brenna Jumhcd Obisudoh 340 Hamilton Ave. THREE SPACIOUS AIRCONDITIONED PARLORS AMPLE PARKING SPACE FREE USE OF PARLORS Tel. EX 3-2857 and Welfare, made available grants of $581,970 to seven colleges and universities under terms of the Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1962 to help the refugees. The Cubans were selected by the institutions from registration lists at the Cuban Refugee Center in their homeland. Some grants are for study programs for as short as eight weeks. Others cover this Summer and the 1964-1965 academic year which ends in September, 1965. Cubans selected are all proficient in English and have the equivalent of at least two years of college education. The additional study will qualify them to hold positions in this country in fields that require the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree. Most of them held professional positions in Cuba. Receives Perfect Average Miss Carol J. Pershelli, a junior at St. Francis College, Loretto, Pa., who is majoring in English, is on the dean’s list and received a perfect average (4.0) for the Spring semester. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Pershelli, 122 Bayard Street, Trenton. MARCH ALONG AUF DEUTSCH Authentic, stirring German marches, 10 records, 45 rpm, for only 2 dollars. First time offer. Cash, check or money order to: PR.EISBR.ECHER, Vienna 23., Kinskygasse 8, Austria. We pay return postage. Sorry, no COD’s. HARRISON INSURANCE AGENCY A Complete Insurance Service for Your Every Need Free Consultation on ALL Insurance Problems 619 Trenton Trust Building, Trenton, N. J. — EXport 2-2444 JAMES PERLINGIERO, Representative 457 Whittaker Avenue, Trenton, N. J. — Tel. EX 3-1838 SALAMANDRA LIQUOR STORE 900 CHESTNUT AVENUE — PHONE: 393-4040 — 393-4954 SALAMANDRA BRAND CALIFORNIA WINE VERMOUTH Burgundy, Zinfandel, Barberone, Chianti ^ ^ m *1.85 ^J.iosaiion Speaks to Bicycle Riders Text of Pope Paul’s Talk On the Value of Athletics VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI, recently addressing a special audience of bicycle riders participating in the annual “Tour of Italy” race, declared the Church admires sports ivhen they are accompanied by an exercise of moral forces which can make them a “magnificent personal discipline.” His Holiness held the audience in the San Damaso Courtyard of the Vatican, as the cyclists sat on special benches beneath the Papal balcony. The text of his discourse to the athletes follows: Dear riders of the Tour of Italy! And organizers, promoters, observers of the great bicycle race—all! We are happy and grateful for your visit! Yours is a stop over that reminds Us of the eager interest with which We, in Our childhood, followed the news of the Tour of Italy. It is a stop over that offers to Us the grateful opportunity, not only of recalling the famous names of the great competitors of past years, but of learning your names and of informing Ourselves as to the events of this always famous race! Furthermore, We are happy to be present at this Roman stop of yours for two other important reasons: in other words, to thus have new occasion to show Our interest in all people of tlie sports world and Our esteem for sports. It has been said at other times and in ample and authoritative discoursee, and We now repeat it, that: the Church sees in sports an exercise of the body and an exercise of the spirit; an exercise of physical education and an exercise of moral education; thus the Church admires, approves and encourages sport in its various forms, particularly in the systematic form, which should be the duty of all young people and intended for the harmonious development of the body and of its energies; also in the competitive form, likd your own, that extends to a point of effort and risk, provided that it is contained within limits such as not to harm the very aims of sport, encompassing the wholesomeness and beauty of physical life. The Church admires, approves and encourages sport all the more if the exercise of physical forces is accompanied by the exercise of moral forces, which can make of sport a magnificent personal discipline, a strict training for social contacts, founded on respect for one’s own word and that of others, a principle of social cohesion which at present succeeds in establishing friendly relations even in the international field. All of this demands that sport be idealized by principles and rules such as infuse vigor and nobility, as you do; principles and rules that exclude the excesses of risk and passion both as regards the athletes and the public who watch them and become excited during their competitive events. How could We not recall1 with immense sorrow the recent and most grievous events of Lima? Let us see to it that they many never happen again in any part of the world and in any branch of sport. We are therefore the more pleased with your bicycle race which, among others, holds the merit of knowing how. to excite immense enthusiasm and to contain it at the same time in the manner of good civil education. There is, however, another reason which makes Our greeting joyful; and it is particularly the very one that brings you here. The sense of this visit to the Pope is an intuition which you bear in the depth of your souls perhaps without knowing how to express it; that is, an intuition that sport, besides being a sensitive and experimental reality, is the symbol of a spiritual reality, that constitutes the hidden, though essential thread of our life. Life is an effort, life is a contest, life is a risk, life is a race, life is hope toward a goal; that transcends the scene of common experience that the soul perceives and religion presents to us. And you, coming to the Pope, perhaps unconsciously but surely, because you wish to, raise your spirits toward these supreme aims of life, that find a splendid image in your, sports test; and, by your presence, you express a desire, a prayer, to be capable, to be worthy not only of representing but of attaining that final goal which is the true and final destiny of life. Wonderful, dear sons! You so think, you so desire, you eo pray in your heart! Our paternal blessing-goes out to you! Pontifical Mass Set For Scout Jamboree VALLEY FORGE, Pa. (NC) — Archbishop John P. Cody of New Orleans, episcopal chairman of the NCWC Youth Department, will offer a Pontifical Low Mass here July 19 during the sixth National Scouting Jamboree. Bishop William G. Connare of Greensburg, episcopal moderator of the Catholic Committee on Scouting, will preach at the Mass. The jamboree will be held July 17 to 23 and more than 52,000 scouts are expected. More than 30 priest-chaplains of Catholicsponsored troops will be in attendance. AUSTRIAN COMMEMORATIVE COINS Five immortal composers— Strauss, Mozart, Beethoven, Wagner and Verdi — in 22 gramm gold and 16 gramm silver. An official series minted by the Austrian treasury. Special offer: gold coins 50 dollars apiece, silver, 10 dollars each. Ideal gift for the coin collector or music lover. Send cash, check or money order, specifying which composer desired to: VERSAND-QUELLE, Vienna, Stammersdorferstrasse 133, Austria. Prompt delivery guaranteed, all postage paid. Sorry, no COD’s. King’s to Play Rider Five WILKES-BARRE, Pa. — King’s College will play a 22-game schedule during the 1964-1965 basketball season, according to Fr. James F. Boyle, C.S.C., moderator of athletics. The Monarchs, who were 11-13 Rare Bibles Presented To Library WASHINGTON (NC) — The first Bible in German, printed in Augsburg about 1475, and a Latin Bible printed in Venice in 1476 are the two oldest in a collection of more than 700 rare books presented to the Library of Congress. The books were given to the library by Lessing J. Rosenwald of Jenkintown, Pa., as an addition to its Rosenwald Collection which he established in 1943. They bring to more than 2,200 the number of titles in the collection. The new gift of 700 titles is valued at about $1,000,000, while the entire collection is thought to be worth between $3,000,000 and $5,000,000. last year, expect to have a strong team next season with most of the starting lineup returning intact. King’s . finished in a second place tie in the Middle Eastern College Athletic Association and should make a good ibid for loop honors. Coach Bob McGrane’s Monarchs will be led by Tom Hamm of Williamsport, a 6-3 junior;’who made the' ECAC small college All East team as a sophomore and who set a new season reeord.-for a soph at King’s. 'New teams on the schedule of the Kingsmen are Adelphi of Long Island and Rider College of Trenton. Support Our Advertisers State-wide Anti-Smut Meeting in Trenton NEW BRUNSWICK — More than a thousand men - from every parish in New Jersey — are expected to tur out for-a state-wide meeting August 16 to put into motio a campaign to curb pornography and obscenity. Called b the Coordinating Committee of the Holy Name Societie of New Jersey, the rally will-*— • __ _ ■ _ an j. _ i „ L. „ School, Trenton. Kenneth J. Becker of MetUchen, appointed general chairman of the campaign session by Edward J. A. Fahey of Belmar, coordinating committee chairman, led a discussion of plans for the meeting before the executive board of the Diocesan Union of Holy Name Societies last night in St. Peter’s Rectory here. Mr. Becker, who is communications chairman of the board, told his associates that cooperation is forthcoming from the Holy Name Society men of the Archdiocese of Newark as well as from the Dioceses of Paterson and Camden. Many programs have been held in the nast decade in the diocesan