News Scrapbook 1964-1967
':iturgy Procedure Changes· , -.tudied -=t 2 Seminars Her
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Patience, Charity Is Called for By Bishop Furey A major step toward development of the new liturgical celebration of the Mass was taken laat week In the Diocese of San Diego. In two seminars, each of several sessions, the changes In liturgical procedure were explained, discussed, and ana- lyzed for more than 4M priests In the jurisdiction. Most Rev. Francis J. Furey, Apostolic Admlnlatrator, presided and spoke at both seminars. Priests of R iverside and San Bernardino counties attended the first on Thursday, February 18. The second wa., conducted for the priests of Imperial and San Diego counties. Both were held in Alcala Park. Outlining the major purpose of the sonunara, BL,hop Furey said they were called to aid Implementation ot the directives of The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy. The Bishop explained that the real purpose of the Conatltutlon was to bring the whole Christian people Into full, active and Intelligent participation In divine worship. To Be Introduced March 7 Discussing the liturgical changes to be Introduced In cele- bration of the Holy Sacrifice the first Sunday of Lent, March 7, the Bishop again called for patience and charity In the effort to substitute the unfamiltar for the familiar. Very Rev. John R. Quinn, rector of Immaculat e Heart Major Seminary, stressed "the Importance of understanding the spirit behind the changes." He noted the emphasls placed on this ta.ct by both papal and conciliar documents. Calling attention to the elimination of featu r n the liturgy "which have become outmoded," Father Qu gabled the ecumenical council's decree: "The rates . hould M dis• tln !shed by a noble simplicity; they should be sh , clear, and unencumbered by useless repetitions; they should be within the people's power or comprehension, and normally should ,not require much explanation." last Gospel to Be Eliminated It Is for this reason, Father Quinn said, that the last Gospel, for example, Is to be eliminated. Previously this Gospel was said after the celebrant had announced that the Mass was ended and yet continued to read It and the Leonine prayers, he added. ' The speaker also stated that the celebrant no longer Is required "to do everything a.t Ma.ss." A Jector reads the I •· sons; the celebrant listens. The lector or the people may read or sing the Proper parts o! the Mass and the celebrant listens • . Citing the reasons for these directives, Father Quinn ~lated, that they are designed to show that each member of ~!;le :M~tleal Body of Christ "fulfills his own peculiar tunctlon" fpr fhe, benefit of all. At the same time, he added, they under- in c;:t),,. role of the ~P 1 Pbra nt as the president of the liturg,cal (Continued on Page S)
New liturgy Studied at Two Seminars (Continued from Page I) assembly and bring into relief ,his place as the mlnil!ter of Sacrifice." Very Rev, John E. Baer, rector of St. Francis Minor Seminary, El Cajon, said all of t lle--Sacraments, with the exception of Holy Orders, are to be administered In English. Discussing ..acred music, Father Baer outlined the in- structions of The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy. He said the implementation of these Instructions depends for the most part on the approval of the Bishop. The speaker also explained in detail the place of El)glish in the Sacra- ments, in the sacramentals and in Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament as well as new rubrics or ceremonies to be observed in their adminis- tration. In regard to the construc- tion of new churches, Father Baer stressed the points con- tained in "The Instruction for the Proper Implementation of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy." As to changes con- templated in existing churches "care should be exercised that the present architectural har- mony is not destroyed," he said. Msgr. Donald L. Doxie, - Bishop's secretary and vice chancellor, conducted a con- ference on the "Rubrics of the Ma.c.s.' 1 Msgr. Doxie cited the rules for the positions, standing, sitting or kneeling, to be used at Low Masses In which the vernacular is used. He also discussed general norms to be observed in recitation of prayers by priest and people. Here are the more impor- tant changes stressed at the seminars 1-The prayers at the foot of the altar have been short- enM The psalm which begins Judica me, Deus has been eliminated. 2 The la.st g o s p e 1 no longer will be said. Mass thus ends with the final blessing which tnke.s place just after the priest says to the people; Go, the Mass is ended. 3- The celebrant of the Mass ordinarily will preside over the service from his seat or bench In the sanctuary and will not be at the altar until the Offertory when the lit- urgy of the Eucharist begins. 4-Three of the public pray- ers hitherto said quietly will be sung or said aloud. They in- clude the prayer called the Secret Prayer at the Offer- tory, the Eucharistic Prayer and the prayer for deliverance from evil and for peace which now will be added to the Lord's Prayer. 5- The missal will remain In one place on the altar from the Offertory until the end of Mass. It will no longer be moved from right to left or left to rit;;tt as heretofore. A fmai sessio,i devoted to question~ and answers threw furtrer light on the liturgical changes, clarified the new ideas and set them in clearer context and proper dimension. Bishop Furey, in closing remarks, called attention to the reform envisioned by the ecumenical council. He said that it involves far more than new rites or rubrics and that these ,must be regarded as means to an end-the spiri- tual renewal of the people of God.
College for
Men
PRI " officer and professor of En - he college. College WorksH p Plans Completed Plan; have been completed for the College Workshop to be staged at 7 :30 p.m. Wednesday, • [arch 10, for high school stude!lts and their parents by the linlversity of an Diego College for .Men, Very Rev. John Paul Cadden, coll e presi- d•n t nnouneed. 1 Cleveland of native A Father Blrkley s granted ; Bachelor of Arts degree In philosophy from St. Joseph's College, Rensselaer, Ind., in 1947. He did post-graduate work at both Ohio State Uni- versity and the University of Notre Dame and was granted a Master of Arts degree In English from the latter instl- tution in 1951. Parker, who will speak on admission requirements, is a native San Diegan and a mem- ber of Our Lady of Sacred parish. He received his M.A. Parker registered the first 39 students at the College for Men. He has been admissions • officer since January, 1956, and Is an associate professor of English. Since 1956 Parker has been appointed five times to serve on the financial needs analysis team of the California State Schoj,a.rship Com m Issi on, whlch annually gives t.000 , to en tering freshmen .State of California. and A.B. degrees at San Diego State College. The workshop. which will b held in ~fore Hall, is open their parents regardless of whether or not the students attend a seek admission to the College for M The program wlll include discu ions of admission re- qulrerr nts, fmanctal aids, and tte ln'lportance of a Catholic r. &h r education. Speakers will be l\Iost Rev. Francis J Furey, Apostolic Administrator and chancellcr of the University of San Diego; Rev. James I. Birkley, academic dean of the College for Men and Irving W. Parker, dean of admissions and records. Their talks will be followed ",thout charge to all high school tudents and Catholic chocl or Intend to question and ansV:-er by a period. Members of the College for Men faculty and administra- lion will be available for ind' vidual discussions during the sccial hour that will follow. Bishop Furey will dls ss the importance of a Ca c higher education. His Exce - !ency i well known In educa- tion circles, having served as president of a Philadelphia college and as rector of the seminary there before his appc,ntment as Apostolic Ad- ministrator of the Diocese of San Diego. Father Birkley will speak. on "Fin ncial Aida. • Father Bil·klcy Ill also financial aids ( C: ontlnued on Page 3) I /uso Nine Rips ~e;J,!!'« 1~-tJ pounded out 12 hits yesterday I to rout Cal Western, 10-2, in a baseball game at MCRD's Beeson Field. Tom Stephenson scattered five Westerner hits and breezed to the victory as the Toreros wrapped up the game with a five-run uprising in the fourth · inning. Alby Bushong's two-run home run in fourth spoiled Stephen- son's bid for shutout. Ron Cady al o had a 111.0-run homer for USD, which is now· 4-5 for the season. The defeat left Cal Western a 2-2. . MCRD Nine Routs Toreros, 13-0 Cliff Pishi!1n collected three ·iugles and a double in five trips and drove in three runs to pace ~1CRD f.o its 18th victory against only two defeats in a 13-0 rout of University of San Diego at Bee- son Field yesterday. The Marines battered four, Torero hurlers for 14 safeties and put the game on ice with a six-run sixth inning. MCRD plays at San Diego State ,today at 3 p:ib. USO 000 000 000- 0 3 5 MCRO .. . .. 003 006 lJx-13 14 I Barry, Stevenson (6), Vogel isl, Ahern °s":r~~~;r c~f~~dg~~~rd. 8 ; J~hn- ' Aztec Golfers Rip USO, 53-1 San Diego State's golf team·, averaging 70 strokes per man, yesterday bombed the Universi- ty of San Diego, 53-1, to chalk upl it's 10th straight victory without a defeat. Three Aztec divot diggers posted 69 at the Bonita Golf Club. They were Gary Kline, Ernie Hauser and Mark Schmid\. Alan Campbell had a' 70 and John Wilson and Joe Byrom posted 72s. (S~}ir dit~~i~~I/St~~~a f,~)~o~~~P Mr'~!t 1~t'miJt1i.s9)Err~b$}H°cf~1~r o~e:> Ou~~~k (83)-Mlke Galichn1k (79). 18•0; John WI~ son (71)--Joe Byrom (72) SOS, def. Bil ~chohafner (88)-Bob Woods (89), 18-0 Stud nts and th lr parents will have an opportunity to explore these an{\ other prolr !ems at 7 :30 p.m., tnrch 10, when the Colle e !or Men epon ors a College Workshop tn More Hall on the A la Park campus, ltather Cadd n said. Open to All The worksh0p Ill open with- out charge to all high school s or whether or not th students attend a Catho- r tndtoeck The ev nlng's progr m will lnclud dlseusslons or ndmls- lon requirements, flnanc al tds, nnd the ,mpor nee or a Catholl't: higher educ lion. Speaker will be ost Rev. F rancls J. Furey, apostolic admlnl. trator and chancellor or the umverslty Rev. James I. Blrklcy academic dean of the College for M , and Irv- ing W. Parker, dean. o! ad- missions nd records. Question Period The r pre•entatlons will be followed by a que lion and an w r period, In addition, Fath r Cadden ld, members o! the College for Men faculty 1md administration w I l l be ava,lable for Individual dis- t,u Ions during th e social hour that follows. "We hope that all those who are interested in admls- alon to any college will !eel free to attend this work hop nn•I avail hem lvea of the opportunity to ha v their own qu sttons an.wered," he td. regardl TOREROS BRtEZE, 10-2 USD, Marines, Griffins Triumph University of San Diego, Mar-1nipped Oc_ean~ide-~arlsbad, 3-2, ine Corps Recruit Depot and on the Hehx High field. . I Tom Stephenson limited the Grossmont College posted base- Westerners to five hits while his ball victories yesterday. teammates broke lose for five USD took the easy way 10 _ runs in the four~h inning to give ' l;1rn a good cushion. 2 over Cal Western at Beeson Ron Cady hit a two-run homer Field. .MCRD traveled to Ingle- for the Toreros. Alby Bushong wood t ek t 5 4 d . . rapped a two-run homer in the 0 e ou a · ec1S1on fourth for the Westerners. over Loyola and Grossmont Ashford Falls 12 oints Shy Of USO Mark Cliff Ashford. a 6-3 forward from Detroit, led the final Uni- versity of San Diego basketball statistics in six departments and missed equalling a season I record by only 12 points. Ashford led the Toreros to a ' 15-11 record with 49-1 points. He· / had a 19-point average, 174 field goals, 146 free throws, a .753 free throw percentage and 197 re- bounds. Ashford, however, failed to match the season mark of 506 points set in 1961 by Jim Flem- ing. Senior guard and team cap- tain Lymond Williams scored 114 of 226 field goal attempts / for a 50.4 per cent accuracy, best in nine years of Torero basketball. As a team, the Toreros set a school record in number of wins (15) and field goal percentage (41.5(. C.Ashford ,~ l!ti 't;4 lf, ~;-~ L. WUliom • 226 111 156 93 339 13.0 Bicker.staff 211 '6 91 135 202 7.8 Fay m 21 39 106 161 1., Mayer 188 29 133 195 7.S Yavorsky 102 19 1 22 1ClS 6.6 M. Tei5mann 60 1, 21 35 60 5.o VerJasky 60 1? 19 3' n 4.2 PrlCf" 79 21 34 66 n 3.S Ferrtt 28 t 11 12 31 1.9 Malerich 24 , n 20 18 1.6 Kullber; 33 7 14 .ca 29 1., Woidowskl 2 O o 1 2 O.J Zuoan TPam RPb!und0s 1/6 • 1 2 0 ·3 USO TOTALS 1617 4 • 7 678 1089 1,a, ,If! 0-0 TOTALS llff~ 1120 1788 u·s .Mar~ Herrenbrnck's p,i n chi ~m~le m the last of the ~~venth mnmg gave the University• of : San Diego a 4-3 second game11 I victory and a split with Whittier . yesterday in a doubleheader atj' Mesa College. The visiting Poets took t h el opening game. 8-6, mi the strength of five-run uprismu m tht top of the ninth. "' I The single by Herrenbruck . only a freshman, followed ; leadoff trip:e by Ron Cady and ' a pair of intentional walks with none out in the seventh. I It made a winning pitcher out of USD's Bob Ahern who turned in his second straight two-hit effort for the Toreros. A_hern . struck out six but was v1ct1m1zed by s O m e shoddy support. Whittier put together t w 0 walks and four straight hits in ' the final inning of the fir, game to battle from two run , behind. The spilt left USD with a 3-( record for the season. The Tor I eros face Cal Western TucsdaJ l at MCRD's Bi,eson Field. . wt, . CFrr$.t Game) US.ither . ooo 030 005-1 , u l 100 011 001--4 11 erg on, Colburn (7) and Waters ~~Ji~: VJ~el W(9), leohenson 0) one . -cs::~ J~~e)Sth, two o Whittler 020 OOJ IJ-J 2 USO · 001 110 1- • 9 WDL!d ey, Skin~,. (6)~ Coluburn (71 an ~:~r;~ c'tfClune 16), Ahern ond Grte Frank Cooper knocked in four of MCRD's five runs against Loyola. The Marines face Pep~ perdine Friday at Beeson Field: ) Tom Lean drove in three runs , and pitched a seven-hitter for I 5 Grossmont. Scores: I I USD 001 502 10~10 12 2 , Cal Western 000 200 001>- 2 s 1 Stephenson end RJelley: Allen 5(:hriv. e @r C •,, Grosch (6), Bushong (7) and Matt~rshaw. HR-Cody {S~), 4'th, one r ~"~ld'shong _c:~), 41h,o3one Peps Conquer USO Nine, 6-5 Pepperdine College pushed over a run in the top of the ninth inn.ng yesterday and es- caped with. a 6-5 victory over the University of San Diego at Wells Park. USD rallied for two runs m the bottom of the ninth but failed to get the tying run off starter Jim Aversa as the To- :eros suffered their sixth defeat m 10 starts. J'm Sewart·got three hits for Pepperdine including a two-run homer while Avera helped his own cause with a double and single Pti:ioerdfne USD 022 000 101-, 11 4 010 002 002-HH and Prlci,; A"1ern, Vogel (9) - OnAdversa (P) 3rd, one HR·Seword Retlltv f
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