News in Brief Red Paper Mourns Bishop SANTIAGO, Chile— (NC)—El Siglo, communist daily here, featured a picture of Bishop Manuel Lar rain of Talca on its front page the day after his fatal car crash, and hailed him as “one of the most brilliant figures of the Chilean clergy.” The paper made special note of Bishop Larrain’s active dedication to the work of agrarian reform and of organizing farm workers. L'Osservatore Laments Bombing VATICAN CITY — (NC) — L’Osservatore Ro mano, Vatican City daily newspaper, has expressed feelings of grief and worry over the U.S. bombing of Hanoi. “News such as this cannot be received ( without grief and also not without worry. In harmony with the paternal and often heartbroken appeals which in these days have been voiced on the sorrows of the world, we renew also our wish that finally there can be realized conditions favorable for sincere negotia tions which, under the protection of liberty, may be the guarantee of peace and prosperity for the yiet namese peoples and for the entire human family. Hungarian Lutherans Cannot Share Mixed Ceremony BUDAPEST — (RNS) — Pastors of the Evan gelical (Lutheran) Church in Hungary have been forbidden by their bishops to pronounce a blessing on any couple in a mixed marriage performed in a Roman Catholic church by a priest. A pastoral letter from bishops of the Evangeli cal Church also took sharp issue with other provi sions of the recent Vatican instructions regarding mixed marriages, which the letter described as “the semblance rather than the reality” of ecumenical rapproachement In particular, the bishops objected to the Cath olic stipulation that children of the mixed marriage be reared in the Catholic faith. Instead, the Lutheran leaders called for an agreement for a mixed marriage in which male chil dren follow the religion of their father and girls follow that of the mother. Vatican-Tito Sign Pact VATICAN CITY — (NC) — A representative of the Holy See and the Socialist Republic of Yugo slavia have signed an agreement healing a 14-year old diplomatic rupture and pledging both parties to seek appropriate solutions to problems of common interest The agreement, which was signed in Belgrade, U J June 25, stipulates that official representatives of the two parties are to be exchanged to facilitate this new relationship. Clergy in Politics HARRISBURG, Pa. — (RNS) — Employment of ministers in political campaigns drew criticism from the Philadelphia Inquirer after Milton J. Shapp, who won the Democratic nomination for Governor, reported payments of more than $5,000 to seven clergymen employed to solicit vote support. “There is something distasteful about candidates for public office hiring ministers to help solicit votes,” an Inquirer editorial said. Hoover in Church Window WASHINGTON, DC. — (RNS) — A new Meth odist church in Washington has dedicated a 22-foot by 33-foot faceted glass window to J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Capitol Hill Methodist church, consecrated by Bishop John Wesley Lord of the Washington Area of The Methodist Church was erected on the site of the house in which Mr. Hoover was born, just four blocks from the Capitol. “The J. Edgar Hoover Window,” as it is known, has as its theme, “Statesmanship Through the Chris tian Virtues.” Rev. E. Van Antwerp-Rector DETROIT — (RNS) — The Very Rev. Eugene I. Van Antwerp, S.S., a native of Detroit, has been named rector of St. John’s Provincial Seminary in suburban Plymouth, major theological seminary for the five Catholic dioceses of Michigan. Son of the late Eugene I. Van Antwerp, Sr., former Mayor and City Councilman of Detroit, the new rector was awarded the Purple Heart for wounds suffered as a Marine Corps chaplain during the invasion of Inchon, Korea. Glenmary Seminary Closed ST. MEINRAD, Ind. — (NC) — Theological students of the Glenmary Home Missioners, Cin cinnati, will transfer to St. Meinrad’s Seminary school of theology here next September. The transfer decision was made after a study commission of the Glenmary Home Missioners had reviewed the seminary education of its students. The commission concluded the Benedictine seminary here is better equipped for the education of the theological students, ten of whom will inaugurate the program in September under supervision of two Glenmary priests. IVVWVpilVIl ■ I«IU For Father Monk Raleigh — A reception in honor of Father Ralph Monk, newly ap pointed assistant pastor at the Ca thedral parish and the mission of St. Mary’s in Garner and St. Mich ael’s, Cary, was held Sunday in the Cathedral parish hall. Cathe dral pastor Msgr. John Roueche and Father Robert Lawson, as sistant pastor and a large group of parishioners were in attend ance. Mrs. Sue Mohan and Mrs. Nancy Sheridan headed the com mittee for the reception honoring Father Monk. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Mcfall's DRUG COMPANY ETHICAL TO PROFESSIONS OF MEDICINE AND PHARMACY 1610 MADISON AVENUE GREENSBORO. NORTH CAROLINA SUNSET HILLS 2A NORTH CAROLINA CATHOLIC Edition of Our Sunday Visitor July 10, 1966 PERMANENT DEACON. ReVi Michael James Naisbitt, 27 has been ordained a perman ent deacon in the diocese of Bunbury, Western Australia. Deacon Naisbitt serves as a secretary to Bishop Launce lot J. Goody of Bunbury, and assists him at Mass, at other functions and on Confirma tion tours. Deacon Naisbitt may in the future continue his studies for the priesthood, but for the present, he says, “I only want to become a good and effec tive deacon.” He feels that there is a definite place in the work of the Church for permanent deacons, and that there are many jobs to be done that do not require the special training of priests or the labor of those who have received the priesthood. Religious Obedience Must Be Studied Style Outmoded' - Sr. Marie S.N.D. ST. LOUIS — (RNS) — Relig ious orders will become sanctu aries for the “despondents” — those incapable of facing today’s world — if religious who are to work with modem men do not be come “modem in every aspect of their dedicated lives,” a Roman Catholic nun said here. Sister Marie Augusta Neal, S. N.D., chairman of the Emmanuel College department of sociology, told delegates to the Institute on Religious Life in the Modem World that many orders “urgent ly need” reform because they have become so stylized that they fail to fulfill the real needs of other people. “When adults begin name call ing and refusing to speak to each other, closing their eyes literally to the problems that their roles demand they face,” she said, “it is time to remember that our in ter-personal relations are far too immature to handle the sophisti cated problems which face us in a rapidly changing, constantly con verging, modern industrial soci ety. “When these adults are mem bers of religious orders of men I and women, it is time to admit honestly that ways of community life are outmoded because they break down in the face of the daily crises that mark an era of rapid change which we must ac cept as our era or be responsible for the destruction of a society.” Sister Marie Augusta said one j idea which needs reexamination “is the way obedience has been taught and practiced in many re ligious orders.” The religious community, she said, has taken on the style of bureaucracy in its own form of operation while retaining the old matriarchal-patriarchal patterns of peasant days. “One of the most delicate ques tions for reconsideration for adult community living,” she said, “is the form which command-obedi ence and affection relations should take.” Pepsi-Cola ~toJ