THE GUARDIAN, FEBRUARY 4, 1972 PAGE 9
s/dent Issues Report
CYO Seeks Comments
For Sta00e Convention
t)e Rock -- Suggestions and
aSms concerning the forth-
ng state CYO convention,
cers for the convention,
Deed amendments to the
constitution, and activities
te Past year are welcomed,
Miss Jane Nahlen,
ident of the Diocese of
e track CYO.
L
ass Nahlen made the
inaent in preparing for the
e Cyo convention to be held
L 5-7 in West Memphis.
["= at the convention is
F Tomorrow Depends on
l Today. ,,
s Nahlen said names of
sed convention speakers.
na Wood, Archdiocese of
York C₯O president;
Ernest Larsen, author of
Old Plastic Jesus"; and
Tom Byrne, of the
;e of Houston. Other
ted names are welcome,
0 President noted.
eStions on all matters
ue sent to the CYO office,
Tyler, Little Rock, Ark.
Two Search programs, No. 8
and No. 9, have been conducted
with Search No. 10 and No. 11
scheduled for February and
March, respectively. Also 15
youths and adult advisors were
instrumental in helping the
Birmingham, Ala., CYO begin a
Search program in its diocese.
The Little Rock CYO
collected $1,844.88 for the Alsac
Christmas Carol project to aid
St. Jude's Children's Hospital in
Memphis. The program got its
impetus at a July CYO region
meeting in Birmingham which
state officers and Father
Joseph L. Pallo, diocean youth
director, attended.
The Brinkley CYO colleted
the largest amount, $417, for the
Alsac Christmas Carol project.
Other outstanding efforts were
$447 by Carlisle and Hazen in an
ecumenical effort with the
Methodist Youth group of
Hazen. St. Anne's CYO of N.
Little Rock collected $200.
Last Nov. 21 the Greater
Little Rock CYO Deanery
hosted an ecumenical
organization, Arkansas Youth
Ministry, the theme of which
was "Our Environment-What
on Earth Can You Do About
It?"
In the way of conventions, 100
diocean CYO members at-
tended the Region IV Con-
vention in Memphis last June at
which the Jonesboro CYO
presented "I Am Scared." The
state officers at the July Bir-
mingham meeting helped
promote the successful can-
didacy of their candidate, Abe
Malouf of Natchez-Jackson,
Miss., for national vice
president.
Through the contributions of
the Knights of Columbus and
the Catholic Daughters of
America and Fun Day at St.
John's Catholic Center on Oct.
3, funds were raised to send the
state officers to the national
CYO Convention in Washington,
D. C. All told, 27 CYO members
and adult advisors from
Arkansas attended.
Rector President
Father James C. Boulware,
Jr., O.S.B., has been named
rector-president of St.
Joseph's Seminary College
at St. Benedict, La., effective
this coming June 1, the
seminary's board of trustees
has announced. He succeeds
Father Marian Larmann,
O.S.B., who will return to
full-time teaching at the
seminary. St. Joseph's is a
Provincial seminary serving
the eight Catholic dioceses in
the ecclesiastical Province
of New Orleans, of which the
Diocese of Little Rock is one.
High-Rise Apartment
Gets 2 Priest Team
Brooklyn, N.Y. (NC) -- Two
Brooklyn priests will become
equal partners of an ex-
perimental team ministry to
serve the needs of Catholic
families who wilt move into a
new 803-unit high-rise
cooperative in the spring.
The team approach is seen by
Brooklyn's Bishop Francis J.
Mugavero, who approved it, and
the diocesan Priests' Senate,
vhich originated the proposal,
as a way to ease problems of an
overcrowded parish and give
two younger priests pastoral
responsibility in a diocese
where pastorates are accorded
priests only after many years'
service.
The team members are
Father Edward J. Kiernan, 43, a
parish priest, and Father Ed-
ward V. Wetterer, 32, a chaplain
at Pratt Institute.
Jesuits Gain More
Freedom in Poland
Rome (NC) -- Jesuits working
in Poland said they feel a
"cautious optimism" for the
future of their mission in that
Communist-ruled country and
reported that they "enjoy
considerable freedom" at
present.
These comments and a
number of statistics were
gathered from information
given at a recent meeting of
major Jesuit superiors from
European Communist areas
here.
A news release issued Jan. 27
by the world headquarters of
the Society of Jesus said that
"Jesuits working in Poland
report they enjoy considerable
freedom under the Communist
regime there and are able to
carry out their apostolic work
with notable success."
According to the Polish
Jesuits, the Church in Poland is
permitted to own churches,
seminaries and parish houses,
although the number of chur-
ches are insufficient. The report
said they "hope they will be
permitted to build more" in the
future.
There are 564 Jesuits in
Poland. The societ)i conducts a
faculty of philosophy in Cracow
and one of theology in Warsaw.
They also are on the teaching
staff of the Academy of Catholic
Theology, an institute under the
Polish bishops that is finan-
cially supported by the
government.
The report said that
"religious and priestly
vocations flourish in Poland."
During 1971, 551 men entered
seminaries, bringing the over-
all total of seminarians to 3,097.
The Jesuits also reported that
numerous missions and retreats
are held in Poland. In the
Warsaw province of the Society
of Jesus alone, 25 Jesuit priests
have been assigned to the work.
The Jesuit news release
concluded, "There is cautious
optimism among Jesuits in
Poland that this positive
evolution will continue to in-
clude the Church so that it can
exercise its mission with
maximum liberty."
SERVING THE POOR
IN THE MISSIONS IS AN
EXPENSIVE BUSINESS.
FR. JOHN MANCHINO
KNOWS. SERVING THE
MEXICAN POOR IS HIS
CHOSEN APOSTOLATE. BUT HE CAN'T
DO IT ALONE. HE AND HIS "FLOCK"
NEED YOUR HELP.
P lease Help.., Make Checks Payable To:
Father John M anchino
Diocesan Special Mission Fund
Post Office Box 301
North Little Rock, Arkansas 72115
(CONTRIBUTIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE)
.[thev Past year' Miss NahlenwOcYo,s hedeanerieSa nd thr Activist Bishops Dies
,,h beetv
[th Deaner he FOre In Colombia Air Crash
,tion oz Miss Becky All ,
a ther Richard Davis, ana
t Springs Deanery under
,rection of Miss Kathy Buenaventura, Colombia Many of the Golconda priests
t Sherman Brown and (NC) -- Bishop Gerado Valencia have been arrested and jailed
;r Tom Keller. Brinkley of Buenaventura has been for actively supporting the poor
L rganized its CYO. And receiving more praise for his in protests over housing and
I! and Marche have campaign for social justice farmlands. Bishop Valencia
. c Cy O programs after his death than he ever did himself was harassed here and
tq
I; nag the progress report, during the diffucult years he led during trips abroad for his
2 ahlen reported on the the Golconda movement for stand on social justice.
g: arch program, the Alsac economic, political and social The group urged a boycott of
e .aas Carol project, reforms, the 1970 presidential elections.
[:" leal involvement, and The bishop died Jan. 21 along "The arrangement between
ot d and national con- with four missionaries and 30 the two major parties of con-
mms held during the year. passengers and crew members servatives and liberals to
when their airplane crashed in a alternate in power does not have
storm about 100 miles from the support of the people,"
R here. Bishop Valencia said at that
ending Bishop Valencia spearheaded time. "It only serves to
Th efforts by 50 priests to organize strengthen the present alliance
e Guardian a reform campaign in of political and economic
Colombia, which they launched power. '
[IEPS A CATHOLIC in December 1968 after a After Bishop Valencia's
ORMED meeting at the mountain resort death, President Misael ,
of Golconda. Pastrana Borrero called the
bishop "a noble figure of the
Church and a courageous in-
terpreter of the demands of
social justice on behalf of the
P?r, ch°?theervedxeetmhli:;
devotion. -
! ",..- '1 I Newspapers of beth the right
[ 1llllrl t=Fm, t I I i hal I and left published editorials and
",, m:uN II ula$. IIe I comments praising Bishop
aRU g ..... I I Valencia and his work.
' ,ucxurlng LO. I ] llinCf I Bishop Valencia was well
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THIS WEEK
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