Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 250, Decatur, Adams County, 23 October 1963 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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Modern Languages In Prayer Approved
United Press International VATICAN CITY (UPD—Ecumenical Council fathers today overwhelmingly approved a proposal to let Roman Catholic bishops and priests say their daily prayers in their own language. i The proposal autnorlzes the bishop of any diocese to substitute modern languages for Latin in the breviary or divine office which catholic clergymen and religious must say daily. A council ~ press spokesman emphasized that the permission to use modern languages in the divine office must be granted by a bishop “in individual cases” and is supposed to be reserved for situations in which a particular priest has unusual difficulties praying in Latin. He said the text of the document stresses that Latin ordinarily will be maintained in the breviary and indicated that bishops were not expected to use their new authority to grant blanket dispensations for use of modern languages. The vote was 1.904 to 131, well above the necessary twothirds majority. It was the last and most important of 12 amendments to the fourth chapter of a liturgical reform document which the fathers have been considering on and off since the Ecumenical Council first convened in the fall of 1962. After the vote, the fathers continued debate on another document concerning the role of the laity in the Catholic Church. Archbishop Lawrence Shehan of Baltimore, Md., voicing the concern felt by many American bishops, urged deletion of one brief section of the document ■which he. said might be misconstrued as outlining a Catholic position on church-state relations. Archbishop Shehan spoke in the name of all of the bishops of the United States. He said they were disturbed by a random reference in the document on the laity of the“unfortunate” divisions between secular and religious society. U. S. bishops do not feel that this language was meant to condemn church - state separation, the Baltimore archbishop said, but they do fear it may be misinterpreted as doing so and they therefore want it deleted. He said the whole question of separation of church - state relations, which the American hierarchy strongly favors, is too important and too delicate a topic to be treated casually and should be retained for detailed discussion in a separate document later. The question of whether bishops and priests should be allowed to recite daily prayers in their native languages instead of Latin is as important to many of' them as having Mass in English is to countless American Catholics. The proposal on what language to use in prayers is contained in a document on the liturgy which council fathers debated last fall. The council had already approved eight amendments to the liturgy chapter, some of them shortening the time it takes to say these prayers daily. Bishops and priests, who are often pressed for time in administering busy ’ modern dioceses, must spend, about an hour a day saying the divine office in Latin. In a vote Tuesday, the council approved one amendment allowing them to choose whether they prefer to say other prayers in the mid-morning, at noon or in the mid-afternoon, instead of requiring them to pray at all three times. The amendments cut an estimated eight to 10 minutes from the daily prayers, but are designed not so much to shorten the breviary as to emphasized the morning and evening prayers which remain as they were.
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Slate Traffic Toll Pushed To 1,046 By United Press International The death of an elderly Princeton man pushed Indiana’s 1963 traffic fatality toll to at least 1,046 today compared with 943 a year ago. - Leslie Paterson, 86, died early ted ay in Gibson General Hospital at Princeton of injuries •sitfered a few hours earlier when he was-, hit by a car in a city street. The driver was identified as Betty McCandless, 48, Princeton. An elderly woman was killed Tuesday night in a flaming highway wrpek near Bloomington. Mrs. Ethel Pate, 71, Bloomington, a former school teacher, was trapped and burned to death when another car crashed into the rear of the car driven bv her husband, Orville, 71. Her husband was rushed to an Indianapolis hospital where he was reported in critical condition. Police said Pate had just pulled into Indiana 48 west of Bloomington when his car was rammed from the rear by -one driven by James Barr, 16, Bloomington. Pate’s car careened across the road into a ditch and burst into flames. Martha Ruth Ford, 47, Walkerton, died in a Fort Wayne hospital Tuesday of injuries suffered Sept. 28 tvhen she fell asleep at the wheel of her car on Indiana I near Redkey. Her car went out of control and struck a tree. At Jasper, Richard G. Keith 25, R. R. 1, Winslow, died Monday from injuries suffered Saturday in a two-car accident on Indiana 56 near Winslow. Kroqer Chairman On Trade Mission Joseph B. Hall, chairman of the board of the Kroger Co., has been selected to serve on a month-long consumer goods trade mission to Switzerland and Austria through Nov. 16, under sponsorship of the U.S. department of commerce. Hall is one of five U.S. businessmen who will serve on the mission to help expand exports of U.S. products. With two bureau of internal commerce officials, they will explore export opportunities for the United States in both countries for women’s and children's apparel, packaged foods, textiles and toweling, household appliances, sporting goods, furniture and other consumer items.
fll ra Jfe F ‘VW" 1 ! m IMK> SPHERE OF USEFULNESS—Something new for transporting heavy semiliquids is this aluminum, truck-mounted sphere, as developed by a Madrid, Spain, manufacturer. It will for example, carry over 9 cubic yards of cement, which is emptied under air pressure. Weight capacity: a little over 18,000 pounds.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Hospital Head At State Convention Hospital administrator and Mrs. - Thurman Drew left this morning to attend the 42nd annual convention of the Indiana hospital association at French Lick Oct. 23-25. Sen. R. Vance Hartke- will address the administrators on the tc.pic of “Current Status anti future outlook for the federal health care package.” Senator Hartke will elaborate on how existing and proposed federal health care programs will effect hospitals and the general public. Other speakers will be Kenneth Williamson, director, Washington service bureau of the American hospital association, Washington, D. C.; Donald E. Wood, president of the Indiana state medical association, * Indianapolis; Andrew Pattullo, director, division of hospitals, W. K. Kellogg foundation, Battle Creek, Mich.; Jerome Pollacq, executive director, New York labor and management council, New York; James M. Ensign, director of professional relations, Blue Cross Hospital association, Chicago, 111. Jack A. L. Hahn, executive director of Methodist hospital of Indianapolis, will retire as president of the association and presi-dent-elect. Sister Mary, administrator of St. John's Hickey memorial hospital, Anderson, will be installed as new president. Hospital administrators from Indiana have elected Sister Mary as president of the Indiana hospital association for the current year. Sister Mary has been administrator of St. John’s Hickey memorial hospital, Andersoon, since 1958. Other administrators elected to offices are president-elect, Arthur S. Malasto, administrator of Porter memorial hospital, Valparaiso, vice president, Emery K Zimmerman, administrator of Elkhart general hospital, Elkhart, treasurer, Edmund J. Shea, administrator of the Indiana university medical center, Indianapolis. Sister Mary, with the assistance of the officers, will develop, coordinate and promote the Indiana hospital association’s program for the coming year. Sliqht Increase In Jobless Pay Claims The Fort Wayne office of the Indiana employment security division reported today that there were a total of 56 claims for unemployment compensation during the week ending October 19. Twenty- seven of these were new claims’ and 29 were continued claims. Last week there were 54 claims —six new and 48 continued. One year ago there were 18 new claims and 49 continued claims for a total of 67 continued claims. Two years ago there were 144 claims. Nine of these were new claims, 78 were continued, four were new for extended coverage and 53 were continued for extended coverage.
Negro Leaders Await Action By Birmingham BIRMINGHAMA, Ala. (UPI) —Negro leaders, denying they had backed down from an ultimatum, settled back today and waited for Birmingham to integrate its police force within “a reasonable length of time.” If Negro policemen are not hired within this period, “we will have to demonstrate,” integration leader Martin Luther King Jr., said Tuesday. But he did not set a deadline. Two weeks ago, King gave the city until Tuesday to hire 25 Negro policemen or face a renewal of racial demonstrations that brought mass arrests last spring. The city council Tuesday rejected the demand, stating such employment is governed by civil service regulations which have no racial restrictions. “I have no intention of trying to circumvent (civil service) laws for any reason or under any pressure,” said Mayor Albert Boutwell. The city council adopted a report by its Public Safety Committee calling King’s demand “arrogant and unrealistic.” The council flatly refused to hire Negro policemen “as a matter of special privilege.” King, after meeting more than five hours with other Negro leaders here, withdrew the demand. “There is a strong indication (city officials) are going to hire Negro policemen soon,” he said. “If they need a little face-sav-ing way out, we will give them the opportunity by withdrawing our deadline.” Other racial developments: CHICAGO—AImost a quartermillion Negro children boycotted schools Tuesday in a massive show of opposition to school , segregation. Some of the demonstrators were nursery school toddlers ranging in age from two to five. ATLANTA—The U.S. sth Circuit Court of Appeals Tuesday I ordered an indefinite stSy of I Louisiana state court proceedings against the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) which is conducting a desegregation campaign in Clintoln, La. The order also stayed contempt proceedins against 26 CORE members charged with illegal picketing there. TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Student leaders at predominantly Negro Florida A&M College threatened mass protests unless the school reinstates two students it expelled for participating in boisterous racial demonstrations. Seek Voting Place For City Precinct The Adams county commissioners have as yet been unable to secure a polling place for city election precinct 1-D. The former polling place for this district was the Psi Ote trading post, but members have reported that the store is now overstocked with furniture and will be too crowded to use for the election. The commissioners were checking on other possible sites today. Elderly Brazil Man Is Burned Fatally BRAZIL, Ind. (UPI) — Richard Lee Richter, .81, was burned fatally Tuesday when his clothing caught fire while he was burning leaves at his home. Richter’s wife, Emma, heard his cries for help and attempted to smother the flames with her apron. Shen then raced to the house for a rug but said he was dead when she returned. DeLeon Appears In Circuit Court Here ' Alfredo DeLeon was arraigned in the Adams circuit court this miming before Judge Myles F. Parrish. DeLeon, who is charged with first and second degree burglary and grand larceny,., was advised of his rights by Judge Parrish and given further time in which to enter a plea to the charges. He was recently returned to Decatur from Chicago .where he had been apprehended by F. 8.1. authorities on a fugitive warrant after a break-in at a home near Monroe some time ago. Monroe Lions Mark 10th Anniversary The tenth anniversary meeting of the Monroe Lions .club will be held Saturday evening at 6:30. Special recognition will be given to charter members during the meeting. The evening has also been designated as lady’s night. Jack Underwood, of radio station WOWO, will be the speaker. Members of the Decatur Lions club, which was the sponsor club for the Monroe group, have been invited to the meeting.
* . DEMONSTRATION FIELD — The field of Ed Affolder, across from the Home Dairy plant south of Berne, is being used as a limestone demonstration for eastern Indiana, according ‘to Cliff Spies, extension agronomist. This is part of a state wide demonstration program being sponsored jointly by the research committee of the Indiana limestone producers association nad the cooperative extension service of Purdue University and Adams county. Four rates of limestone were applied on the Affolder field—2, 4, 6 and 8 ton per acre. The field will continue in the regular cropping system used on the farm. Yields and other mea urements will be taken for a period of several years. Assisting in the selection of a demonst-ation field for eastern Indiana were Karch Stone Co. of Bryant, May Stone and Sand Inc., of Fort Wayne, and members of the Indi ana'limestone producers association. Results from this demonstration will'be used by other members of the association and also by agricultural agencies including the extension service, Vo-Ag and S.C.S.—(Photo by Mac Lean)
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