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The Morning News from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 2
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The Morning News from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 2

Publication:
The Morning Newsi
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i 2 Mantmf Nwt, Wiiwttiv Dal. Saturday, Auuit 19, 1M7 Conservatives lose announces major reform of the Curia Pope will meet for the first time next month-to help him in the running of the church. Several Catholic leaders in America hailed the papal action. "Most encouraging," said Archbishop Paul Hallinan of Atlanta. Bishop John J.

Dougherty, president of Seton Hall University in New Jersey, said the step would be "welcomed enthusiastically" in this country. His action on the plan is what "layman and priests all over the world'" have been "hoping the Holy Father would do," said the Rev. Thurston Davis, editor of the Catholic weekly, America. priests around the world, to provide a better picture of the state of the church. Pope Paul, a former archbishop of industrial Milan and an admirer of modern technology, first promised the reforms in an address to Curia officials in 1963, only three months after he succeeded the late Pope John XXIII.

His commission studied suggestions from the Ecumenical Council, theologists and Vatican officials right down the line to bishops. The iron grip of the Curia was relaxed when the Pope authorized a Synod of Bishops which officials within the Curia will be stopped. Internationalization of the Curia, meeting the demand of church liberals who have long criticized its tight Italian domination as a stumbling block toward progress. This move also reflects the Vatican's changing relationships with other nations, many of them Communist. Allowing the use of widely known modern languages in communications with the Holy See in place of the traditional Latin.

Modern languages are now used in the Mass. Formation of a statistical office, using data collected by affairs of the Holy See to administer the Vatican's vast financial empire, which is estimated to be worth as much as (IS billion. Three cardinals, a chief accountant, bookkeepers and clerical or lay experts will run the prefecture and draw up an annual budget for the Pope's approval. Other major provisions of the document, hotly contested by conservative powerholders, include: Cutting the terms of top Curia officials to five years together with the retirement of all these officials upon the death of a Pope. Automatic promotion of Compiled from Dispatches ROME Pope Paul VI sent a wind of change sweeping through the ancient administration of the Catholic Church yes- terday.

He announced a top-to-bottom reform of the Roman Curia, the conservative, predominantly Italian body that has run the church for centuries. The reforms will turn the Curia into something similar to a modern government cabinet. It will have a virtual prime minis-; ter and a finance ministry that, "for the first time, will draw up an annual budget and control all ed, but few expected them to be so drastic. The reforms were seen as clearing the decks for faster action on church and world problems in the jet age. Pope Paul announced his secretary of state, 84-year-old Am-leto Cardinal Cicopani, will have the additional title of papal secretary and expanded powers that will make him virtually both premier and foreign minister of the Vatican.

Observers predicted Cardinal Cicognani would soon be replaced by a younger man. The reforms will set up an entirely new office to be known as the prefecture of economic of the church's vast riches throughout the world. The reforms, the result of four years' work inspired by the Vatican Ecumenical Council, will take effect Jan. 1. They were detailed on an Latin document known as an apostolic constitution and titled "Regimini Eccle-siae Universae" (To the Government of the Universal Church).

The reforms, drawn up by a special commission headed at times by the Pope himself, were hammered through against the bitter opposition of old-line conservatives who control the Curia. They had been long await 2 named Syracuse police may ask Negro aid to pane 2 reported expelled by Russia on unrest From the Dover Bureau CAPE HENLOPEN Sen. Baton Rouge. In Syracuse, John F. O'Conner, worn in Thursday night as police chief, said he would follow the plan created in MOSCOW UP) Two American Jews have been expelled from Calvin R.

McCullough, By United Press International in Painesville, Ohio, and James- burg, N.J. In Houston, the scene Syracuse new police chief of Wednesday Dight( planned to recruit Negro youths ati alarm fa ast nt to "counsel and guide the MM areiL their fellow youths and try to, Nationa, Guardsmen were D-Holloway Terrace, last night the, Soviet Union for criticizing said he has named two Senate1 Kremlin leadership pro Democrats to the governor's Arab policy, iniormed sources other cities of enlisting Negro youths to try to discourage violence. "These lads will be acting committee to investigate civil reported yesterday. prevent a third night of vio- called out -m Louisiana to pro-knce- tect protest marchers walking Sporadic racial violence flared'from Bogalusa to the capital at disorders. They identified one as Rabbi McCullough, president pro tem of the Senate, said he had Solomon Fremch of Mount Vernon, N.Y., but declined to identify the other man.

The sources said that, while selected Sens. Russell, D. F. Dineen and Herman M. Hollo- Hay Fever- (Ctntinuttf Frm Fint Pig) way both of Wilmington.

members of the police force," the new chief said. THE violence Thursday night and yesterday morning in Syracuse appeared to be easing off. Police fired warning shots and hurled tear gas to disperse roving bands of Negroes smashing windows and stoning cars. Five persons were slightly injured and at least 27 three of other Americans have been expelled from the Soviet Union, it McCullough said he tried to Forfeit long rides through was the first known time Amen ceptible to hay fever," Campana says. "I definitely feel that by the blooming countryside.

cans had been expelled on such contact Republican Sen. Ralph F. Keenan, also of Wilmington, grounds. regulation of your diet some relief can be gotten." Avoid the things other than pollen that cause him allergic reactions. but was unable to do so and thus was unable to select a Republi Hay fever, a term used specif Use air-conditioners, if they; them white were arrested.

ically for seasonal allergic phenomena, still is a medical mys THE sources said the Soviet government has not interfered with the flow of American Jewish visitors to Russia but that; can to represent the Senate. Both McCullough and Rep. seem to help. They can aid, Most were charged with viola- tery. Effectiveness of treatment, over-all comfort, which relieves' tions of the 10-hour curfew George C.

Hering III, and severity of symptons vary symptoms. clamped on the city Thursday. greatly. Consider using electrostatic R-Wilmington, speaker of the House, were to name two mem In Baton Rouge, Gov. precipitators, which consist of a John J.

Meheithen called out bers of the committee called for by the legislature two weeks as from Kid SgrM on a heating Unit 0T Atonal Guardsmen when asiae irom me comion oi me nnj nnar the cases of the two may be a warning against harsh or outspoken criticism of Kremlin policies by visitors. The cases were described as but both occurred recently in the Ukraine. -The rabbi reportedly had been vuv nouce wia rum remiorcemems patient, is the prevention ofpolIen ago. would be needed to provide ade asthma, according to Dr. Jack Gov.

Charles L. Terry Jr. is to Avoid hot, muggy C. Sallee, Wilmington allergist. quate protection for about 20 marchers approaching the city.

name the rest of the committee weather if possible. Avoid smoking and drinking from the fields of business, la They were due to arrive today visiting a Jewish community in "OF the roughly per cent of alcoholic beverages, which tendt0 try to present grievances to Kiev, capital of the Ukraine, bor, civil rights and the churches. to irritate mucous membranes. the population who have hay fever, 40 per cent will develop the governor. cot into trouble with the MAJOR allergies, those who will be bothered with Hering announced Thursday that he has named Reps.

Jacob Soviet authorities in the past 10 days. asthma at some time if their condition goes untreated, that is, BRICKS struck nolire cars without the injections known as W. Zimmerman, D-Dorer, and Raymond T. Evans, R-Wilmington, to represent the The other Jew, the sources said, was a member of a tourist group and he ran afoul of Soviet hyposensitization," he explains AP Wirptnlo allergies for long periods of an(j 10 Negroes were arrested on their lives, should not just wait suspicion of arson in a rash of to "outgrow" the condition. ires in Houston.

Police said 10 "They will always be poten- of the fires were confirmed tially allergic although they cases of arson. 0nlv one was House on the committee. Cubans release atomic engineer authorities about a month ago. "Most patients find that the injections relieve their symptoms in part during the first may change allergies," Sallee Neither man was arrested but each was escorted back to his year. Effectiveness generally'jays.

through the Windward Passage near Cuba his sailboat was boarded by armed Cuban fishermen and taken to Cuba where he Viet- Russ Bartell, a Miami nuclear engineer, ties up his sailboat at a Miami, dock yesterday after he was released by hotel. builds up from year to year," he Aside from major allergies, 50 says- per cent of the population will held under arrest for 24 days. sail was Cuban authorities. While trying to (Csntfnutd From Fint ftf) Antihistamines are a common Both were told, the account continued, that they had "made against the leadership" and were ordered to leave the ing south to the Demilitarized method of treatment. The cap sules and tablets do help many people.

According to Sallee, they Soviet Union. Zone. Yesterday's raids were the first since July 26 in which the Air Force's biggest bombers, the suffer from minor allergies at some time. According to Dr. Murray Albert of Brooklyn, there is little correlation between a pollen count and the severity of symptoms.

"There are innumberable fac serious. In Painesville, five Negro youths were charged with firing at a passing car, and fire suspected to have been set deliberately destroyed a lumber storage building. In Jamesbur'g, about 20 young Negroes smashed about 15 windows. The antipoverty agency of racially tense Newark, N.J., voted unanimously to ignore a federal request to oust a member who urged Negroes to "arm yourselves for the next should not be relied upon for The sources could not provide long-range benefit. "details of the remarks by the two men that reportedly Terry rips plans to dilute riot laws B52s, have bombed North Viet "YOU can actually get worse prompted the government namese soil, hitting targets in and just above the Demilitarized tors other than pollen concentra while you're Jeeling better," he says.

Zone, where the Communist buildup is reported densest. tion in the air that contribute to exposure at any a i 1 a time," he said. Doctors advise that the hay fever sufferer: IN related developments yes THE sources described the two cases as a reflection of the Kremlin's sensitivity to dangers terday: The St. Louis Post-Dispatch ing property, looting property of discontent spreading among Russia's 3 million Jews after the and shooting people. reported that "what is in effect a new peace offer" has been Arab-Israeli war.

BROILER ALL of the respectable transmitted to the United Nations by Communist North Viet Negroes in the state of Dela A New York conference on the status of Soviet Jews six days ago charged that the Kremlin had begun a cold war against ware and the respectable white nam and the Viet Cong. people support it (the riot- control bills) 100 per cent. the 15th annual Democratic Beach Jamboree here, Terry concentrated his speech on civil unrest and measures taken in Delaware to control it. Terry also heaped scorn on Republican Rep, Anthony J. Cic-ione of Elsmere, who had demanded that Terry provide state reimbursement to victims of the Elsmere flooding.

"ANY man who will try to make political hay out of the CHICKS Jews in Russia. But informed By LARRY K. MARTIN Dover Bureau Chief CAPE HENLOPEN Gov. Charles L. Terry Jr.

last night defended the riot-control laws he recommended, saying that "they don't hurt a decent, respectable person in the state Terry said legislators who desire to change the laws "had better have the votes to override a veto." Along with other speakers at "Who do those laws hurt? sources in Moscow said there was no evidence available to They don't hurt any decent, The newspaper said the offer was sent "with the knowledge and consent of both the government of North Vietnam and the National Liberation Front in South Vietnam." The report, by the paper's United Nations correspondent, said, "In the first instance, them to back up such a charge. respectable citizen in the state of Delaware. They only hurt The sources said there had been no link between treatment those who would hurt you, des troy you, burn you." of Soviet Jews and the govern ment's pro-Arab campaign. tragedy that occurred in Els The administrative assistant the United btates and the gov mere is not much of a man, to the state Democratic Com ernment of North Vietnam would Terry said. "Cicione tried to do LBJ- mittee, John F.

Rieley, called Terry's bills, "The toughest law mm be expected to reach some general agreement on ending the it, and I think he fell flat on his face." in the nation." He said Democrats could use passage of the (Continue Frem Flnt Pgc) war. "After that, the Hanoi govern The governor told the nearly free and fair elections" in South bills as campaign material next ment and representatives of the commander in other military to believe the moreland, U.S. Vietnam, and chiefs led him Vietnam. year. 500 Democrats that "your homes are at stake; your lives National Liberation Front, sta His tax increase bill is one are at stake" in the civil disor I favorable United States is in a WILMINGTON Mayor John of three methods by which he tioned in Hanoi, have agreed that an agreement for the future ders now rocking many Ameri hopes to meet the anticipated Babiarz told the group that he was sure state and Wilmington can cities- of South Vietnam could be nego tiated directly by the United handling of the tense Wilming Terry said, "I don't respect PRODUCTS i SIBX MITI'S States and the National Liberation Front." anyone" who would attempt to ton situation "will be recognized by the voters in November 1968 and will be reflected in the votes water down the anti-riot bills He then promised to veto any at the polls.

4 arrested in burglary attempts to amend the meaS' ures. THE bills passed Aug. 4 pro- He said that, "With the help of the governor, we have managed to come through so far this summer without too much diffi federal deficit; the others are budget cuts and reduced spending. He is concerned about the plight of the nation's farmers who face an increasingly tight squeeze between lower prices for their products and higher prices for their labor and machinery. He said he favored giving farmers the right of collective bargaining to reach a fair price for what they produce.

EXPANDING on Vietnam, Johnson said the enemy has been "less anxious to engage our troops in combat" because of growing losses. This, the President said, has been reflected in lower Ameri State Police arrested four Edge Moor youths yesterday in connection with a 3 a.m. bur culty." vide, among other things, mandatory three-year sentences for those convicted of destroying property during a state of emergency. Terry declared a state of glary at the Woolworth's depart position. The President said the lull In U.S.

air activity since the targets were hit near the Chinese border late last week is due to unfavorable weather and not to a change of strategy. QUESTIONED about the South Vietnamese elections, Johnson praised the young country for coming "so far so fast toward representative government" while fighting aggression. Asked about fears that the ruling military government in Saigon is rigging the elections to stay in power, Johnson promised that the United States is "doing all we can to assure orderly, free and fair elections," but that "this is a matter for the Vietnamese." Johnson expressed pleasure that South Vietnamese Chief of State Nguyen Van Thieu had said that, if elected president, he would seek peace talks with North Vietnam. State Democratic Chairman Alexis I. du Pont Bayard provided the only moment of levity in the evening of speech-making ment store in the Merchandise Mart on the Gov.

Printz Boule emergency in Wilmington the day the bills were passed and vard. when he compared Republicans has not lifted it. to the mosquitos that invaded David A. Hines, 18, of the unit block Stockwell Road, and the jamboree area. A multi-million dollar a year business for Delaware, the hatching and fattening of broiler chickens Is explored by News-Journal reporter R.

T. Zintl Jr. and staff photographer Ron Dubick in this Saturday's Evening Journal. This full-page feature story will give you a birds-eye view of an industry that produces 281 million broiler chickens each year on the Delmarva Peninsula. Head This Full-Page Feature Saturday in the EVENING lit JOURNAL Dclmarw's Largest, Best Read Daily Newspaper Attempts were made in each three juveniles were each charg house to remove the three-year ed with conspiracy and burglary "THEY are annoying, but not mandatory sentences, and sev fatal," Bayard said.

and released on $500 bail, pending a hearing in Superior Court eral legislators promised further can casualties. But he warned this situation was subject to change, depending on the attempts to try this fall. for Hines and hearings in juve nile court for the others. enemy's objectives. Other Delaware Democrats who spoke at the party included former Gov.

Elbert Carvel, "These are serious and troubled times," Terry said. "It is Johnson said he could not agree with those who claim the State police said a rock was thrown through a front window. Police said they did not have an not a question of civil rights- It former U.S. Rep. Harris McDowell Jr.

and former Audi tor Charles F. Moore. is a question of hoodlums taking war has reached a stalemate He said Gen. William C. West estimate of property damage over, destroying property, burn.

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Pages Available:
988,976
Years Available:
1880-1988