News Scrapbook 1962-1964

Million Gained • 1n Year 44,874,371 Catholics Listed NEJW y

• 1n U.S. .Mn ·s la offered

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chapels an lncr•a~e of • 8 plares whr1 e

San Diego. The directory h.-ts 244 members or th~ H1erarr'hy, an In- crease or seven !i\'e cardinals, 32 archb1ehops, and 207 bishop. . An increase of 788 in the clergy brings the totl\l of or- da ined priests to 57,328, the largest ever rec·orded. There are now 35,077 diocesan priests, an increas of 612, and 22.2!) I priests or religious communities, an Increase of 176 Lister! for the first time are 1,629 n ewly ordalned priests. Professed Religious personnel include 12,132 Brothc111, an increase o! 164., and 180,015 Sisters, an increase of 2.1161. The directory reports 16.930 parishes with rPsldent pa • tors, an increase of 140, and 515 parishes \\1ihout resident clergy -a record total of 17,445 Catholic parishes in the 50 States. Also !isled are 4,1194. missions, 1,502 stations and 12 076

or one m1lhon art, Chtcago, 2,317,700, Ntw York , 1,782.630; Boston, 1,767,274; Los Angeles, 1,532,411; Newark, 1,528.798 Detroit, 1.461,567, and Philadelphia, 1.309,308. Brooklyn continues as the largest diocese with a Ca tholk population of 1,576,073. Other dioceses with more than 500,000 are Pittsburgh, 910,655 ; Buffalo, 897,203; Cleveland, 853,148; Rockville Centre, 770,112; Trenton, 576.983, and Pro,1dence, 532,692. Five dioceses 1·eported no change in Catholic populations and 18 reflected decreases. Advance were reported by 123 Sees. 'The largest Increases have been noted in New York, 78.280; Brooklyn 72, 445; Pater- son. 59, 279; Los Angeles, M,003; Philadelphia, 45,683; Wash- ington, D.C., 42,281, and San Antonio, 42',271. Eight additional Sees recorded increases o! over 25,000, including the Dioce•e

in the 50 Un·ORI{ (NC) There now are 4 ,874,371 Catholics Directory, ited StntCll, according to the 1964 Official Ca thollc The tot 1 eludes all Ca repr ent a year's mcrea e or 1,026,433 and in- in the di 1 8th0 11cs in the armed forces at home and abroad. issued b; ~matie and other RerVJCes abroad, The directory just new total ! · J. l

regularly, A high of 14,370 separate educal1onal mstit ullona, 1811 e tabhshed during 196:l, include 112 diocesan seminaries, 459 religiou, communities' seminaries 01· novitiates and scholas• Ura ti's, 29:\ colleges and universities, 1,557 dioc1>san an d pansh high school•, 901 private high schools, 10,452 parish elementar ,v schools, a nd 4:;o pdvate elementary schools. There a,·e a lso 114 proterttw In ·tltutlons, with 17,443 youths in attendance. J!ull•Ume teac•hing stllffa of all educational instit utions under Catholic auspices increased by 7,789, to a record tota l or 191,125, comprising 11,697 priests 1,126 11<:holastics, 5,726 Brothers, 101, 4.H 8islers, And 68,135 lay teachers. There ll!'e 52 !ewer pliests 21 more scholastics, 264 more Broth ers. 2,008 more Sister•, and ll,4r>S more lay teachrrs t han a year a go.

THE

Pope ames Bishop Buddy SOUTHERN Pontifical Throne Assist~nt Golden Jubilee CROSS Polish Reds Put Curbs on Publication BERLIN (NC) The ruling Publlsh d Wnkly by The Diocese of San Diego, Calif. 3 by Pola nd ,s communi t gov- ~------=---=----------..::...:...___ .=:___::_ emment that will cut the lnttrod .,. S.cond Clan Mafltr al th Postoffict et $ 4 y I Son Diogo undtr 1h1 Act of March i , 1179 ear Y Vol. ll, No, 18 Thursday, April 30, 1964 From a - MISSION TOWER circulation of that country's leading Catholic publication by 25 per cent was made in retaliatlon tor critici:m of the go\'ernment by a Poll~h bi hop and the pubhcalion's editor, according to reports here. Early in Ap,11, •he gov- Fete Planned On August 5 Mo. t Rev. Char·les F . Buddy, Bishop of San Diego. hAS be.-n named an a••lstaot at the Pontifical Thronr, Most Rev. Fran<'is J, Furey, Apostolic Administrator, announced this week. The appointment was made by H i• Holiness, Pope Paul VI, who acted on the l'ecommendation of His Excellency Most Rev. Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the United St ate~ The appointment Is dated at Vatican City January 12, and Is signed by His Eminence, Amleto Cardinal Clcognani, Secre- tary of State to His HolineRs.

The fOl'lll!tl document of appointment will be repl'Odu<,ed in the original Latin and in an English translation in R •ouvenir program which will be publisher! on th<' ocrasion of Bi•hop Buddy'11 golden jubilee of hi• ordination to the sacred priest• hood. The jubilee fete will take place on Wednesday, A ugusl 5, the !ea.-t or Our Lady or the Snows. Mass of T~ank~.9iving Arranged A Solemn Pontifical Ma.·. of Thanksgivlng ls plannPd in the Immaculata, after whlcn a banquet will be held in F:I Cortez Hotel. Committees in charge of th<' celebration and other detail~ will be announ<·ed later. Educated in the parochial schools of his native St. Joseph, !>1o. at St. Benedicts College, Atchison, Kans., Si. Mary's Col• lege, Sl. !\lai-y's, Kan.. and -.i.t the North Ame.-lcan College, Rome, Charles Francis Buddy wa• orditined to thP saci·ed priesthood m Rome for his Diocese of Si, Joseph September 19, 1914 . He labo1·ed for 21 years as a curate. then as 1·ectol' of the cathedral In St. Joseph, where he served Mass as a boy. Term~ as Bishop's secretarv. <'hancellor, an d director or The Society for the Propagation or the Faith prepared the future Bishop fo1 the higher vocation m the San Diego diocese l e was consecrated the first Bishop of the Dioce~e of San Diego on December 21, 1936. And on February 3. 1937. In the newly designated St. Joseph's Cathedral, his solemn installation as ·san Diego's fil'st Bishop took place. On that date, the new Diocese of San Diego began. It had been carved from the old jut·isdiction of Los Angeles and San Diego by the Holy See July 11. 1936. On that historic day of February 3, 1937, 62 priests knelt before their new superior, paid their obeisances and promised loyal cooperation for the task ahead . They then served 51 pal'ishes and 53 missions scattered thl'Oughout the small rural and urban communities of San Diego, San Bernardino. Riverside, and Imperial counties. In the new diocese. 200 nuns and six pt•iesls conducted 15 elementary and five high schools, a college for student nu, ses, and a school of philosophy for Franciscan novkes. Impressive Figures Tell Growth The influx of the faithful from othe,· states. convetsion,, and natural incrPases ha\'e brought tlle Catholic population of the four counties from 80,000 in 1937 to more than 400 000 in 1964. They are served by more than 460 priests in ~ore than 160 parishes. Through the years, His Excellency kept step with the growth of a great diocese. Elementary and secondary schools were established, 8.8 were colleges, retreat houses, mo;,_asteries, hm1:es for the aged, a residence for working girls, hospitals, clmics, and camps and recreation centers fm· underprivileged youth. ' The University of San Diego crowns and completes the edifice Bishop Buddy has built through the years. It is the great symbol of his many outstanding achievements through the years. It_ is the great symbol of the great story of Bishop Charles Francis Buddy, the founding Bishop or the Diocese of Sitn Diego. 15 Due to Receive Sacred Heart Award Mother's Day, Sunday, May 10, Is the date selected for th e annual awards ceremony for Lay Apostles of t he Sa cred Heart. Medals a nd Certificates of awards will be confeITed on 15 ~ y Apostles by Most R ev. F ra ncis J. Furey, Apostolic Adm1mstrator.

\ 'e rejoice with )lo t Rev. Charles F. Buddy, Bishop of 'an Diego, on hi elevation to the po t of A i tant at the Pontifical Throne. His T:xr Heney': election for such honor: by His oline , Pope Paul Vl, i clue recognition of his great achievem nt ince hi installation as fir t Bi hop of he Dioce e of. an Diego in February 1937. He nursed the new jurisdiction in its weak and tender years: he tenrled it · growth; he met and over- <'ame the rlifficulties incident to development; he arcepted the challenl!e pre·ented by the constant in- flux of new l'ommu111cants from other states. And he met it suce fully. Whcre\er a parish wa needed, there it was erected. \\'her \'er the atholic education of children called for a parochial . chool or a center for religious education, th re it wa provided. Wherever the under- privileged, the sick, and the needv suffered, there the effort wa~ made to alleviate their lot. Th Dioce e of San Diego began with onh· 50 pad. he in 937. Toclay it has more than IGO. The multiph ·at1on of elementary schools from 15 in 1937 to rnure than 80 today attest the rlevelopment in Cath- olic education. The prie t and Jar catechists en- gagerl in the field of religiou. education at centers in citie and cattcrerl communitie~ throughout the dio- <'e. e inrlicat the care gh·en to all the lambs of the flock. Perh, p the Bi. hop's greatest achievement i the t:niver it}'. of San Diego. It crowns and completes the educat10nal erlifi<-e he has built. )Iajor anrl minor seminaries opened in the for- ties enabled His Excellency to provide pt'iests for parochial \\ol'k, for education and for chaplaincies in the many institution!, he has founded . These seminar- ies, in short, contributed greatly to the increa:e in the number of prie1'ts from 62 in 1937 to more than 160 today. Ho pita] . clinic• . depa1tments of so<"ial welfare, <'lub. and camps the Bishop instituted for the phy- . ical and general welfare of his flock. • 'ow tl!e Holy See has duly recognized the labors of uan Diego' founding Bi. hop. And with The South- ern ro . the entire diocese rejoices. Worthy of honor is he whom the king has a mind to honor. • • * • Pope Paul VI has a'sured the world that it "can legitimately expect" a statement on religious freedom from the Seronc\ Vatican Council. The council's declaration, he said, "will be of far- leaching importance not only for the Church but for all tho.' e-and thev are innumerable-who feel them- aelve affected b ; an authorized declaration on this aubject.'' The Pope'· prediction came at the end of a speech ( Continued on Page 4) -------- --=--'------'----- I

ernment ordered a eut m the new,print allocat10n for Tv- godnik Powszechny wluch will force a drop In circula- tion from -10,000 to 30,000. Even the 40.000 figure was less than half of the review's potential circulation. Although the htgh intellec- tual level of Tygodn1ck Pow- szechny's articles would have kept it from achlevmg mass 1 circulation, an observer of Pol i.sh pre!s affairs rmlcl r e- cently that it could easily mainta in a circulation of 100,- 000 I! given adequate n ews- print. l etter Cited The government decreed the cut, reports her e stat e partly beeau •c or lettlc'r written by Auxillary Bishop Zygmunt Choromansk 1 of Warsaw secreta ry of the Polish Bi.shops' Conference, t o a Catholic mcmbE"r o! the Polish Sejm (P arliamentl ·aying tha t the Church would not take part in celebra tions to mark the 20th ann.versar:v of communist rule in P oland. Bishop Choroman ki said the Church would ot partici- pate beca u e the 20 years of Red rnle has been a t ragedy for the nation's Catholics, and also because it had been ex- cluded from annlver,arv cele- brations by the government, since authontte:-. "are not ea~er to have good reIat ,ons with the Church" The Bishop also listed the va rious meth- ods by which the communLsts have persecuted the Church in Poland. Statement Signed Another reason for the re- gime's retaliation, reports say, is the fact that the edi• tor Of Tygodnik Powszechny, Jerzy Turowicz. wa., one of 34 Polish intellectuals who signed a statement criticizing the government's 1·e.strictions on the pre. s. A frequent con- tributor to the Catholic week- ly, Stefan Kisielewski, was another signer. The protest stated. T he reduction of the allo- cation of paper for the print- ing of books and newspapers and the tightening of press censorship create a situation which threatens the develop- ment of the nation's culture. The undersigned b e I i e v e that the expression of gen- uine public opinion, the right to criticize, to discuss freely and to have access to un- biased information are all in- dispensable elements of pl'Og- ress Changes Demanded "Therefore, moved by our social conscience, we demand that changes be introduced ln the cultural policy of the Polish state which will be in accordance with the s pi r j t of the rights guaranteed by its Constitution and will pro- mote the nittion's welfare" Although the government did not acknowledge reeeipt or the statement, Re\'ere re- strictions have been placed on the activities of all .-ign- ers. 'I'hey are not permitted lo speak on the radio, their passports have been taken away, and their \\Tilings are being sharply censored Recollection Day CHULA VISTA A Dav of Recollediou for pne t of the South Bay DP1tnr1· will be held Monday .;Jay 4 D ;;m• mng a IO a .m. m Precious BJoo(I ChUl'Ch here.

HIGH HO. ·oR BE;>;TOWED--Pope Paul , ~ has be,to\\ed a high J1onor on :!llo,t Re,·. Charles Frunl'i, Buddy, founding Bi~hop of the Dioce~e of an Diego, in naming him an A,,1,tant at lhl' Pontlfll-al Throne. The honor comes on the ew of the golden jub!IPe c•elebration of Hi, Excelli-ncr', ordination to the sacred prie,thl)od. The jubilee will be marked by a. So!Pmn Mass of Thank,gi,·ing and a. banquet in El Cortez Hotel on AuJrUst 5. Hi, EX<'t>llent')' \Ill~ ordainP

ROME (NCJ - Individuals receiving Communion from now on are to take part personally in the prayers during distribu- tion of Eucharist. according to a new decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites. I - The decree, dated Ap1il 25, abolishes the prayer the priest traditionally bas said while distributing sacramental hosts: "Corpus Domini nostri Jesu Christi custodiat anrman tuam in ,itarn aeternam. Amen." ("l\fay the Body of Our Lord Jesus Christ preserve your soul to life e\'erlasting. Amen.") In its place the Congregation of Rites, with the approval of Pope Paul, ha..s decreed that priests will now :;ay only the words "Corpus Christi" "Body of Christ") and that each per~on receiving Commuruon will respond "Amen." A second decree of the Congregation of Rites, bearing the same date, provides for the insertion in the Divine Praises, recited mainly at the end of the ceremony of Benediction, the invocation "Blessed be the Holy Spirit, the Paraclete." Used by Christ in several instances in the New Testament, the word "Paraclete" comes from a Greek word meaning one who is called, an advocate. The prayer is to be inserted in the Oi\'ine Praises after the invocation "Blessed be Jesus in the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar " A Vatican press bt:.lletm said the Congregation's decree al- tering the formula for the distribution of Communion was authorized by Pope Paul in response to many requests. The press bulletin noted that this newly authorized formula was in use in the Church in the 14th century, and is stil! in use today m the Ambrosian Rite, a Latin rite differing slightly from the Roman and used mainly in the Pope's former Archdio• ce.se of Milan. The bulletin said inclusion of the Holy Spirit in the Di- vine Praises was also a result of many requests, and it was noted that the Divine Praises had been composed originally as a prayer of reparation against blasphemies. -- _____________ , Nine Candles to Burn For Iron Curtain Countries

A Greek O1thodox priest has been expelled from his pal'ish in communist Bulgaria and "lnterned in an other place of residence," accord- Ing to Radio Free Europe News Servile, because of at- tacks against him by the government-controlled press. Father Konstantin D I mi- trov Spassov wa.~ pastor of a parish in suburban Sofia Attacks Begin Attacks against him began in the Mai ch issue of Ve- cherni Novini, Bulgarian com- munist party n e w s p a p e r, which c h a r g e d that "this seemingly meek priest has a bitter hatred for the people's rule smouldering in his soul and it frequently brPaks out between prayers." The paper said that "for years on end," Father Spas- sov ''slandered" the st a t e, prophesied the ''last days of the people's democratic rule . . . showered the most in- credible abuse upon the state and party institutions •.. ut- tered rev o It in g attacks against the constructh·c toil of the people, and • p re ad slanderous r u mo rs without being punishl'd " Demand Made ,vilh th ·se rha, ges mem- bers of the "I<' a th e r I a n d Front" organization m Father Sp a s so,·• s parish c·alled a meeting at which propagan- dist Kiri! Doychev pr·esented charges against Father Spas- sov 0th er denunr·1altons fol- lowed, and on March 24, \ <'· cherni Novini reported, "The working people .• . unani- mous])· demand thRt the piwst hr 1111fr-rl('l,~d a d rle- pnved of his I ight of rn.,1- de11c11 1n So!la.."

The event will be held In St. Joseph's Cnthedral. The ceremony will begin at 10 a.m. with Holy Mass coram Pontlfice. Music will be rend- ered by the seminarian choir of the Sons of ihe Sacred Heart from the House of S tudies 011 the Alcala Park campus. A noon luncheon will fol- low in the Cathedral Audi- torium. R eservation may be made on or before May 2 for the northem deaneries with l\11-s. B. V. Mcsweeney 10160 Saratoga Ave., Mont- clair I NA 6-4515) and for I.he southern deanet1t's with Mrs. Forrest L. Buller, 71 4 9 Eldridge SL. San Diego 20 l .JUnipe, :l-0765) . H1ghlighli11g the lunch~on will be a panel diH('us,;ion rondm•ted by Re,·. Francis Larkin, SS, nat1011al director fo1· the Lay Apostolate of the Sacred Heart, & nd Rt. Rev. M~gr. Fianklln ~•. Hmd, di· rector of the organiY,at10n for the diocese. The r,ay Apostles of t lw Sac1·,•d Heart ts l\ll oq;aniza- tion founded unrler the a us- p1res of the Din<·esan Councll ot Ca~hollG Women in April,

1960. Directed by Msgr. Hurd, the objectives of the Apostles are to promote the E ntht one- ment of the Sacred Heart, Night Adut·ation, and the Apostleship of Pl'ayer in the home. The awat·ds are being pre - sented for zealous promotion of this devotion. Mrs. Buller Is th e executive chairman for the southern d ea n er I es a nd Mrs Mc- sweeney ls co-chairma'n for the northern deaneries. Mrs. Buller has announced t he awards to the following; Oceanside Deanery Mu,. Charlotte Freeman, Ocean- side; Al Miller, San Luis Rey, and Kempton Benedict, Sa n Clemente. • San Diego Deanery M1·s. .John F. Thibault, Mrs. Sal- vatore T arrantino. both o! Sau Diego, and Miss Elsie !<'arcs, Sprin!l Valley. Ac-cording lo Mrs. Mc- Swet·ncy those in the noith- ern de fl n e r i e lo r-eceive awards Rl'e. .•e•dies U•an<'r\ \1r;,;. Ray111m1L Soto, Needles, and (Continued o.n Pa&• SJ

VlEN,'A (NCI N,ne can· • dles rept esenting <'omnmn ~t- ruled countries wtll burn in the Austrinn national :..lallan sh r In e al 11ariazell, when Mass is C'elebrated l\fay 3 by Stefan \\'ysz~•nskl P1·imale of Poland. F.ach of the nme l'andles has been donat d by one of the nine p10vmces of Austria, and represents one of the Red-ruled countries of ~ast- ern Europe Poland, Czerho- slovakia, Rumania, H1:ngar), Bul,:;-ana Lith1 ania Estonia and Latvm ThH l'andlt' [or Poland \'a donated by the city ot Vienna.

After thP Mass, at which Ca rd i n a I Wyszynski will preach. a no\'ena of special prayers to Our Lady, :Mother of the Slavic Nations, will , begin. Invited by the Austl'ian Catholic Youth Association, the Primate of Poland will arnve here May 1 as the guest of Franziskus Cardinal KnPilig of Vienna. He will of- fer 11ass the same ewnmg 111 St. Stephen's C'athedtnl hei e for the Yir•nna P<>hsh colony, and is s<·hedulP

F MILV RF,CHVED I ;TQ OHUROH - "And ~line Know I~" hN-am" a n·n.Uty for m pmhf," of th~ John \\'psll'y Hunt filmllJ II th l'y nnt' rt•c·t'h Pd Into the ('hurr h on Good Sh~phl'rd Sunda> , \Jiril I~. h,r lll'V, ~.1h1 nrd \\ht'! n, S,J, (U\ tor of Christ lhP- Kini;- 1.arbh. Godpar~nt ,Hrl' \I r. a nd ,tr, . ,lohn I.ut.e. 'ho.-n attn lh• rltr, art>. le ft to right top ro11 , Hunt , l 'a lher belan , Mr • Hunl and .\lrs, l,td

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