Priests Convene
At Goldsboro
GOLDSBORO — Priests of the
Goldsboro-Elizabeth City Deanery
met here last Monday, September
25, at 10:30 for their quarterly
clergy meeting. Topics of discus
sion included a thorough treatment
of rubrics for High Mass and an
afternoon session devoted to Civil
Defense.
Speakers on rubrics at the morn
ing session were Fathers Joseph F.
Bumann, Ahoslie; Moses Anderson,
Elizabeth City; Michael J. Mulkern,
Edenton; Thomas Colgan, P oanoke
Rapids; Bernardine B o u 1 a n d,
Farmville, and Joseph Waters,
Plymouth.
* Fr. Charles B. McLaughlin as
Civil Defense Clerical Head of the
Eastern Deanery plotted essential
preparatory work to be undertak
en regionally and by parish to set
up at least minimum defenses
against any national emergency.
Southern Pines
Continued from page 1A
The first day of the convention
will be filled with workshop ses
sions conducted by church and lay
leaders, held at St. Anthony’s
modern and beautiful school on
the church grounds. In its audi
torium at a morning session Sis
ter Miriam, O.R., the “Angel of
Miami,” will make an address, and
at an afternoon plenary session
Jose Ignacio Rivero, editor of Ha
vana’s courageous Diario de la
Marina, now being published in
exile in Miami, will be the speak
er.
A buffet luncheon will be held
at the school for the laity, while
Sisters will attend a special lun
cheon at the beautiful Mid Pines
Club across town. The clergy will
lunch at St. Michael’s Retreat
House on the grounds of St. Jos
eph of the Pines hospital.
Miss Pines Club, a famous re
sort hotel for 35 years, will be
the setting for the banquet Satur
day night, at which the Baroness
Maria Augusta von Trapp, mother
of the Trapp Family Singers, will
be the guest speaker.
Father Francis J. Smith, pastor
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spends $3 million a year on the
program to control foot-and-mouth
disease. A program to perfect the
rhythm method, which promises
much for the peace and happiness
of the world, surely should receive
as much Federal support,” he
wrote in Look.
Additionally, Father O’Brien
pointed out that such a program
would help reduce tension between
Protestants, Catholics and Jews
since effective birth control means
would remove the issue from pol
itics.
“Catholics, Protestants and Jews
are in agreement over the objec
tives of family planning, but disa
gree over the methods to be used,”
Father O’Brien stated, adding that
birth control should be taken “out
of politics, out of the field of civil
legislation,” and confined to “its
legitimate domain of conscience
and religion.”
of St. Anthony’s, is convention
chairman, assisted by Father Rich
ard Allen of Raleigh, director of
Confraternity of Christian Doc
trine.
To insure a warm welcome for
all attending, with arrangements
to meet their many needs, Martin
Niessner of St. Anthony’s parish,
a director of the NCCLA, has set
up a parishwide organization of
committee workers.
The Saturday luncheons and
Saturday night banquet (to be at
tended by the laity only) are in
the hands of local committees. For
Sunday breakfast and lunch, the
visitors will be on their own, with
numerous restaurants in the area
at their service.
From Malta To The World
VALLETTA, Malta — (NC) —
This tiny island is sending out its
young men to serve as missionaries
in other lands. Two seminarians
will be leaving after their ordina
tion soon for Argentina, respond
ing to a call by Bishop Juan Iriar
te of Reconquista. Two others are
going to Prato, Italy, where they
will be ordained and serve in that
priest-short diocese.
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GREENSBORO, *NORTH CAROLINA
Abbey College
Draws 300 From
Tar Heel State
Inaugurating the 86th academic
year, Belmont Abbey College en
rolled the largest freshman class in
its history. With 20 freshmen reg
istered and 100 additional resi
dence students, the total enroll
ment is nearing the 600 mark.
64 Catholic students from the
State, an 8% increase, are part of
the almost 300 North Carolina stu
dents enrolled this year. The larg
est single group of North Carolina
students is from Gaston County
and they are, in the main, com
muting. The Catholic students en
rolled represent a wide spread of
the State.
Catholic students , and their
homes are as follows:
George P. Leonard, Francis X. McNally,
Joseph G. O'Neill, Robert B. Steen, Carol
Ann Tesi, and Edward W. Zieverink, Jr.
of Charlotte; Thomas E. Baugh, Jr., Ben
jamin T. Green, Jr., Richard A. Landry,
and Edwina Claire Sabatini of Gastonia;
Francis B. Brake of Rocky Mount; Preston
L. McLaurin of Mt. Holly; Fr. Paschal A.
Morlino and Fr. Lawrence R. Willis of
Belmont Abbey; Alphonso Patrick, Jr. of
Salisbury; Michael E. Snyder of Albe
marle; John P. Sulek of Winston-Salem;
and William E. Tuller of East Flat Rock
are seniors and will be candidates for de
grees in June.
Members of the junior class are Den
nis D. Corrigan, Robert E. Finley, Peter
A. Foley, Ernest A. Gospard, Robert F.
Holthaus, and Donald C. Miller of Char
lotte; Brenda E. Gillespie, Frank E. Parker,
Jr., and Maurice J. Walsh, III, of Gas
tonia; Patritia Ann Brutko of Shelby;
Brenda R. Bundy of Dallas; Edward P.
Johnson of Statesville; W. Dallas Stanley
of Concord; and Henry W. Underhill of
Wendell.
Enrolled as sophomores are William R.
Bernich, Jr., William L. Beskie, Charles
W. Dorr, III, John T. Johnson, George E.
Lund, III, James D. Sturdivant, John J.
Sthramm, Jr., Philip M. Seneker, and T.
Brian Tisdall of Charlotte; Cash W. Hag- ;
gerty, Jr. of Rock Mount; Robert J.
Lechleider of Winston-Salem; Franklin D.
Mack of Mooresville; Charles F. Powers,
III of Raleigh; and Nicholas E. Vlaservich
of Gastonia.
Beginning their college career as fresh
men at the Abbey are George T. Balog,
Victor C. Donati, Jr., William R. Fisher,
Frederick J. Ghirardini, Ronald W. Sporn,
and Michael J. Watermeier of Charlotte;
Harry H. Cosgrove of Old Fort; Russell
J. Daughtry of Raleigh; Roger L. Estridge,
Jr., of Mt. Holly; S. Kermit Heim, Jr. of
Matthews; W. Michael Jarecki of Gra
ham; Arnold W. Pruitt of Elkin: John J.
Prushinski, Jr. of Taylorsville; Carol A.
Kuykendall of Gastonia; Nicholas P.
Stragand of Durham; Jerome R. Vincent
of Swannanoa; and David V. Wheeler of
Belmont.
The cosmopolitan nature of the
Abbey student body is reflected in
the national and international com
plex which includes 64 from New
York; 33 from New Jersey; 24
from Florida; 12 from Washington,
D.C.; 65 from Virginia; 12 from
Georgia; with 21 other states repre
sented and six foreign countries,
Panama, Cuba, China, Mexico,
Hong Kong, and Jamaica, W.I.
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Cardinal Bea Promises
Wide Appeal For Unity
BERN, Switzerland — (NC) —
The Church will have the courage
to drop what is outmoded where
ever possible if it serves the cause
of Christian unity, the Vatican’s
spokeman on religious reunion has
declared here.
Augustin Cardinal Bea, head of
the preparatory Secretariat for
Christian Unity for the forthcom
ing Vatican Council, made this
statement before an audience that
included Swiss President Friedrich
T. Wahlen, and other top officials
of Church and government. The
Cardinal is touring this country to
talk on the ecumenical council and
its relation to the unity problem.
Cardinal Bea explained again, as
he has before in articles and ad
dresses, that the upcoming Vatican
Council is not an “ecumenical”
meeting in the Protestant sens*
and thus will not directly takeun
the unity question. But he said the
council will definitely promote the
spirit of union.
“Dogmatic principles will not be
discussed,” the Cardinal stressed
“since articles of faith cannot bej
altered . . . and the road leading'5
toward a peaceful meeting between
Rome and Wittenberg (a Protes
tant center) cannot be shortened
by inadmissible concessions.”
Discussions between theologians
have already clarified many misun
derstandings that block the road to
unity, the Cardinal reported. He
promised that the council would
clarify still others as it makes
clear true Catholic teaching on the
Scriptures and in the fields of
canon law, liturgy and worship.
Reunion
Continued from page 1A
and its resultant challenge to
Rome’s position of primacy.
He continued: “We arrive, there
fore, through an imperceptible and
irremediable procedure, to the full
expression of the political confu
sion which sees the primacy of the
Supreme Pontiff subject to the
fates of the Roman Empire ... a
cry of indignation and a protest
rose in the East when Pope Leo
II brought back life to the Holy
Roman Empire, placing the im
perial crown on the head of
Charlemagne . . . and similarly
other historical events, such as the
Crusades and the capture of Con
stantinople, have always been con
sidered in the East as offenses
committed by a sacred authority
which it no longer recognized . .
The causes of the schism could
not be placed entirely at the feet
of the churchmen and statesmen
of the East, he said, and contin
ued:
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“The great discrepancies ol
ethnics and character, the differ
ent mentalities and traditions, the
heterogeneous condition of the
cultures and civilizations of the
Christian people and the rapid
pace of their progress toward the
Faith all made a single language
impossible and made equally dif
ficult a single form for the per
sonal and official expressions of
worship, thus leading to different
rites that followed more or less the
geography of the patriarchates..^ I
But it was Rome, he added,
which from the beginning supplied
authority and unity. He said: ‘It
can be stated, therefore, on the
basis of a documented historical
judgment, that the Church would
not have survived without the
Apostolic See nor could the East
have drawn from these crystal
clear sources of spiritual life from
which we still draw today.
“The words of the Patriarch
Ignatius respond therefore to
reality. In a letter to Pope Nicho
las (860) he expressed a like con
viction: ‘There are many doctors
for the maladies of the body, but
there is only one for the Mystics*
Body of Christ which is the
Church, and that is the Pope . ..’
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