Newspapers / North Carolina Catholic (Nazareth, … / May 23, 1965, edition 1 / Page 1
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JHortf) Carolina Catfjoltc Edition of Our Sunday Visitor Subscription $4.00 Copy 10c Volume LIV May 23, 1965 No. 4 RALEIGH, N.C. P-O. Box 9503 r FATHER KENNETH R. PARKER Fathers Cintula and Parker Two Will Be Ordained in Wilmington on Thursday Two young men will be ordained to the priesthood for the Diocese of Raleigh by Bishop Vincent S. Waters at 10:30 Ascension Thrusday morning (May 27) at St. Mary’s Church, Wilmington, North Carolina. Father Francis M. Cintula is a native of Cleveland Ohio. The son of the late Ignatius R. Cintula and the late Anna M. Cintula, he was educated at SS.Cyril & Methodius Elemenary School, Lakewood, Ohio, and at the Lakewood High School. Having attended Don Bosco College in Newton, New Jersey, and Wadhams Hall, in Ogdensburg, New York, he entered St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, Maryland, where he completed his courses in philosophy and theol ogy. Father Cintula will offer his first Solemn High Mass at SS. Cyril & Methodius Church, Lakewood, Ohio at 12:15 on Sunday, May 30. The assistant priest will be Father Stephen S. Radecky of the Lakewood parish. Father James H. McHugh, of Annunciation Church, Have lock, N.C., will be the deacon of the Mass, and Father Joseph A. Bataya, ol fc>t. Joseph s JS.ensington, Pa., will be the subdeacon. Rt. Rev. Monsignor Francis J. Dubosh, also of SS. Cyril & Methodius Parish, will be the preacher at the Solemn Mass. A reception will be held in the School Auditorium at 4:15 Sun day afternoon. Father Kenneth R. Parker is the son Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Parker, of Mobile, Alabama. Having completed his early education at Catholic Schools, he became a member of the faculty at Murphy Public High School, Mobile, where he taught bourses in Business Law and General Business. Father Parker studied for the Catholic For eign Mission Society (Maryknoll) for four years before coming to the Diocese of Raleigh six years ago. Bishop Waters assigned him to St. Mary’s Seminary in St. Mary’s, Kentucky, and upon completion of his philosophical courses there, he was enrolled in Mt. St. Mary’s Seminary, Emmitsburg, Maryland, where he recently completed his course in theology. Father Parker will offer his first Solemn High Mass at 11:00 Pentecost Sunday morning (June 6) at St. Mary’s Church, Mobile Al FATHER FRANCIS M. CINTULA abama. The pastor of St. Mary’s, Monsignor Thomas M. Cullen, P.A., V.G., will be the arch priest, and Father Thomas J. Cullen, rector of the Cathedral, will be the deacon. Father David Sullivan, pastor of Holy Family Parish, Mobile, (where the Parker family now resides) will be the subdeacon, and Father Oscar H. Lipscomb, Vocation Director and Acting Chan cellor of the Mobile Birmingham Diocese will preach. Other ministers at Father Parker’s Solemn Mass will be Father Oliver E. Adams, who will be Master of Ceremonies, and Paul J. Parker, a first cousin of the newly ordained and a sem inarian for the Mobile-Birmingham Diocese, who will be an acolyte. Father Parker will give his first priestly blessing at a reception at St. Mary’s from 3:30 until 5:00 in the afternoon. Ministers at the Mass of Ordination in Wilm ington on Ascension Thursday will include Father Charles O’Connor, pastor of St. Mary’s Wilmington, as archdeacon, and Fathers Al bert Todd and Gerald Lewis as masters of cere monies. Father Walter Sullivan, of St. Joan of Arc parish, West Asheville, will preach. Editors Stress Need of Dialogue within Church NEW YORK — Church authori ties must encourage intelligent and responsible participation by the faithful in the Church’s develop ment and growth, a bishop said here. And, added an editor, this can be accomplished largely through the development of public opinion within the Church by the Catholic press. Both Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, N.H., and Father Roberto Tucci, S.J., editor of Rome’s Civilta Cattolica, spoke (May 18) at one session of the 7th World Congress of the Catholic Press on “The Relationship of Freedom and Authority.” The con gress incorporated the 55th an nual national convention of the Catholic Press Association of the U.S. and Canada. NEARLY 800 representatives of the Catholic press in the United States, Europe and elsewhere at tended the congress, whose theme was “Truth in the Pursuit of Liber ty.” Both Bishop Primeau and Fa ther Tucci, who was detained in Rome, but whose paper was read to delegates, mentioned “tension” in the Church today between au thority and freedom. But both also said such tension is nearly inevitable in times of re view, renewal and reform. They stressed the need for dialogue be tween those in authority and their followers, noting this appeal in the Constitution on the Church adopted ny the Second Vatican Council: “The laity . . . should openly re veal to them (their pastors) their needs and desires with that free worn and confidence which is fit ting for children of God and broth in Christ. They are, by reason °f the knowledge, competence or outstariding ability which they may possess, permitted and sometimes even obliged to express their opin ions on those things which concern the good of the Church.” In his address, Bishop Primeau See Dialogue, page 5A Book Award Winners for Catholic Interest Announced at CPA Meet New York — (NC) — Seven books published in 1964 were hon ored as Catholic books award win ners here by the Catholic Press Association. The annual awards luncheon (May 20) was a highlight of the 55th annual CPA convention held jointly with the 7th World Con gress of the Catholic Press here. From 190 entries submitted in the competition the panel of judges selected the seven books as the best examples of books of PRAYER OF THE FAITHFUL is sung by Monsignor Lawrence C. Newman during the Jubilee Mass on the tweni;y-fifth anniversary of his ordination. Present in the sanctuary for the Mass on the first Sunday of May were Bishops Vincent S. Waters and J. Lennox Federal. The Holy Child Church, Shrine of the Infant of Prague, built by Monsignor Newman, was completed in 1963, and the stained glass was installed last spring. (Ad ditional photograph by Griffith of New Riv er will be found on page six.) Catholic interest in the seven award categories. . The winners and their categories: • Fiction: “Things As They Are” by Paul Horgan, published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Inc., New York. • Biography: “Priest and Work er: The Autobiography of Henri Perrin,” translation and forward in troduction by Bernard Wall, pub lished by Holt, Rinehart and Win ston, New York. • Spirituality: “The Eternal Year” by Father Karl Rahner, S.J., published by Helicon Press, Inc., Baltimore, Md. • Christian Living: “That Man Is You” by Louis Evely, published by the Newman Press., Westmin ster, Md. • Scripture and Theology: “Structures of the Church” by Fa ther Hans Kueng, S.J., published by Thomas Nelson., New York. • Youth: “And Young Men Shall See Visions” by Andrew Greeley, published by Sheed and Ward., New York. • General non-fiction: “The Fu ture of Man” by Father Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, S.J., publish ed by Harper and Row., New York. REQUIEM His Excellency, Bishop Vincent S. Waters, offered Requiem Mass for his aunt, Mrs. Catherine Craddock, on Friday, May 14, at 9:30 a.m. in the Church of St. Andrew, Roanoke, Virginia. Mrs. Craddock succumbed at her home on Tuesday evening.
North Carolina Catholic (Nazareth, N.C.)
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May 23, 1965, edition 1
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