Newspapers / North Carolina Catholic (Nazareth, … / June 16, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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OFFICIAL APPOINTMENTS , £ The following clergy appointments are announced by the Most Reverend Bishop through the Diocesan Chancery: Effective Wednesday, June 19, 1963: The Reverend James H. Tevlin is appointed Administra tor of Our Lady of the Highways Church, Thomasville, with residence at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, High Point. The Reverend Thomas F. Kerin is appointed Pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, Rocky Mount. The Reverend James R. Jones in residence at St. Agnes Church, Washington, and effective July 31, 1963, Pastor of Mother of Mercy Church in Washington, N.C. The Reverend Joseph Kerin is appointed Principal of Asheville Catholic High School. The Reverend Roderick B. O’Connor is appointed Super intendent of the Catholic Orphanage, Nazareth, and Ad ministrator of Cardinal Gibbons High School, Raleigh. The Reverend Albert J. Todd is appointed Pastor of /Dur Lady of Lourdes and St. Joseph’s Churches, Monroe. The Reverend Joseph Bumann is appointed Pastor of Our Lady of the Snows Church, Elizabethtown. The - Reverend Herman Bosschermuller is appointed Pastor of St. Charles Church, Ahoskie. The Reverend Donald F. Staib is appointed Assistant Pastor of St. Pius X Church, Greensboro. James E. McSweeney i Chancellor upreme Court \ction Likely Vithin 2 Weeks “Washington — (no — The I S. Supreme Court in all likeli ood will decide three major hurch-State cases either on Mon ay, June 17, or on Monday, June i. Two of the cases —- from Mary ind anc’ Pennsylvania — involve iible reading and recitation of the .ord’s Prayer in public schools. i The third case — from South 'arolina — focuses on whether a Seventh Day Adventist woman has ie right to receive state unem loyment compensation despite re using, because of her religious *liefs, to accept available work in Saturday. The Supreme Court, now head ng for its annual three-month lummer adjournment, has only iome dozen pending cases left to lecide. If it puts on % burst of dosing speed, it could settle these ® June 17. If not, it almost eer ily will close up shop on the 'ext “decision Monday,” June 24. Thus, it appears that the court See Supreme Court, page 6A THE SIX BISHOPS of the Province of Atlanta recently held their annual meeting at the Resi dence of Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan in Atlanta. Shown (from left to right) are Their Ex cellencies Francis F Reh (Charleston), Paul J. Hallinan (Atlanta), Thomas J McDonough Savannah), Joseph P. Hurley (St. Augustine), Coleman F. Carroll (Miami), and Vincent S. Waters (Raleigh). The 1964 meeting is scheduled to be held in Raleigh during the second week of Lent. Conclave to Elect Pope Will Begin on Wednesday VATICAN CITY — (Radio, NC) — The conclave of cardi nals to elect a successor to Pope John XXIII will begin at 6 p.m. on June 19 in the Vatican’s Sistine chapel. It is expected to be the largest conclave in the history of the Church, with 82 cardinals eligible to attend and vote. Microphones will be used for the first time at a conclave. ine aisune cnapei will be wired for sound in much the same way as the ecumenical council hall so that the cardinals and officials will not have to shout to be heard. The conclave date was set at Old Name Likely For New Pontiff VATICAN CITY _ (NC) — One of the first things the new pope who succeeds John XXIII will have to do, according to centur ies-old tradition, is to take a new name. Choices by the last 15 pon tiffs indicate that it probably will be Benedict, Clement, Gregory, John, Leo or Pius. No other names have been taken by popes for more than 200 years. Pope John was the first oontiff to use that name in more than six centuries. Although known as John XXIII, he was only the 21st legitimate pope of that name. The fact that there have been popes known by numerals higher than the number of pontiffs who have borne a given name is due mainly to the fact that some of the 37 antipopes — false claimants to the papacy — have taken the same name. Of the 260 popes since St. Peter more than half have been Known by one of a dozen names: Inno cent, Stephen, Boniface, Urban, Alexander and Adrian in addition to the six names listed above. the first general meeting of the cardinals following the death of Pope John. Church regulations re quire that a conclave open not less than 15 days and not more than 18 days after a pope’s death. Since the Pope died on June 3, the cardinals could have chosen any date between June 18 and 21 On the morning of June 19 prior to entering into conclave, the car dinals will get a formal reminder of the solemnity and weight of the duty they are to ’undertake. At a Mass of the Holy Spirit in St. Peter’s basilica, Msgr. Amleto Tondini, Secretary of Briefs to Princes — that is, the official translator of Latin documents at the Vatican — will preach to the cardinals on the election. THE CARDINALS’ first meet ing also decided that the “novem diale,” the official nine days of mourning for the late Pope, was to begin on June 7, the day after his entombment in St. Peter’s crypt, and run through June 17. Two first class feasts — Trinity Sunday (June 9) and Corpus Christi (June 13) — were not in cluded in the mourning period. Masses on the first six of the nine days were offered by mem bers of the papal chapel, the group that officially attend the p'ope at certain solemn functions such as consistories. The last three Masses, the most solemn, will be celebrated by cardinals. The final Mass will be a state occasion attended by representa tives from various nations. The OLDEST CARDINAL — Fran cesco Cardinal Morano, just turned 91, will be the oldest Cardinal to enter the con clave to select a successor to Pope John XXIII. A native of Naples, he has served the Vatican for 63 years and is now a member of the Sacred Congregations of Sacramental Discipline and of the Aposto lic Signature. eulogy will be delivered by Msgr. Giuseppe Del Ton, Secretary of Latin Letters. THE FIRST MEETING was pre sided over by Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, Dean of the College of Cardinals. It was attended by all cardinals of the Roman curia — the Church’s central administra tive staff at the Vatican — ex cept Francesco Cardinal Braeci and Carlo Cardinal Chiarlo. Also present were two noncurial cardi nals: Achille Cardinal Lienart, Bishop, of Lille, France, and Al fonso Cardinal Castaldo, Archbish op of Naples. Assisting the cardinals at their first meeting of the so-called in See Conclave, page 8A Look to Pope's Coals Rather Than Tomb, Cardinal Urges MILAN, ITALM—(NC)—Catho lics should not look back to the person who was Pope John XXIII “but toward the horizon which he opened before the Church and his tory,” Giovanni Cardinal Montini declared during a Requiem Mass here. The Cardinal Archbishop of Milan told 30,000 people (June 7): “Should we wish to keep our eyes fixed on the tomb which is now sealed, we could speak of what he has left us, which that tomb cannot hold; of the spirit which he instilled into our age, which death cannot suffocate, and we would be obliged to predict the future which springs forth from him, rather than describe his past.” The cardinal said that Pope John “outlined certain paths which it will not only be wise to remem ber but to follow.” He added: “Can we turn aside from the path he opened so boldly to future reli gious history, that of the universal ity of the Catholic faith? That of Roman ecumenism?” Cardinal Montini said that “Pope John personified and expressed this essential characteristic of the Catholic Church in such a way that it brought forth latent energies in both the internal and external movement of the Church itself.” He explained that the late Pope “added to the heart and the work of the internal ecumenism, exter nal ecumenism, for a twofold pur pose: to reunite the many sepa rated Christian Factions within the organic unity of faith and of char ity of the Mother Church — the One, Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church — and to work for the most stable spreading of peace among nations and social classes — of civilized peace throughout the world.” Humphrey Hails Creation Of New Race Committee WASHINGTON — (NC) — Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minne sota has hailed the creation of an interreligious committee on race relations here as an event of “im mense significance” for the whole country. Humphrey, in a Senate speech (June 6), said the committee, whose chairman is Archbishop Pat rick A. O’Boyle of Washington, should serve as a model for Church leaders elsewhere. “The religious and spiritual lead ers in every city and town should immediately establish similar in terreligious committees if they do not already exist,” he said. “Surely the religious leaders face a historic challenge in re awakening the America conscience to the immorality of racial discri mination. “Ultimately the only lasting solu tion to the evils of racial prejudice and bias can be found through na tional acceptance of the moral ob ligations involved.”
North Carolina Catholic (Nazareth, N.C.)
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June 16, 1963, edition 1
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