What was in the news  on January 22, 1965?
		    Pope asks for patience with liturgy changes, a call for  immigration reform and a petition to explore the ordination of women 
		    
By Brandon A. Evans
		    This week, we continue to examine what was going on in the Church and the world 50 years ago as seen through the pages of The Criterion.
           Here are some of the items found in the January 22, 1965, issue of The Criterion:
          
            - Pope asks  patience with liturgy changes
              
                - “VATICAN  CITY—Pope Paul VI, addressing pilgrims at his midweek general audience,  admonished the Catholic faithful to be ‘docile and have trust’ in adjusting to  the new changes in the mass requiring more active lay participation. He  reminded them that the changes, set forth in the Constitution on the Liturgy  approved by the Second Vatican Council, would become fully effective on March  7, the first Sunday of Lent. ‘We must all,’ the Pope said, ‘modify the mental  habits we have formed concerning the sacred ceremony to be simply a performance  of outward rites and that in practice no more was required than a passive and  distracted attendance.’ ”
 
              
             
            - 
            Quota  system opposed: Catholic leaders urge immigration reforms
              
                - “WASHINGTON—Two  of the nation’s chief Catholic spokesmen in immigration affairs lined up behind  President Johnson’s program for sweeping overhaul of the country’s immigration  laws. Bruce M. Mohler, director, Immigration Department, National Catholic  Welfare Conference, said the national origins quota system ‘long since has  become outdated.’ Elimination of the system is the heart of the President’s  program.”
 
              
             
            - 
            Clergy  shortage answer? Why shouldn’t women receive Holy Orders
              
                - “NEW YORK—‘Tradition is not an insuperable obstacle even in the Catholic Church’ and ‘it  seems inevitable that the question of the ordination of women in the Catholic  Church will be raised sooner or later.’ … ‘One can only hope,’ [Mary Daly in The Commonweal] wrote, ‘that it will be given fair  consideration and that those who are too prone to give specious arguments will  think seriously of all that is involved. In an age in which there is a crying  need for priests in many countries, it is possible that the exclusion of women  from Orders will have tragic consequences. In any case, the ambiguity  concerning the status of Catholic womenan ambiguity concerning the status of  Catholic womenan ambiguity in which anachronistic ideas and practices meet  modern realities in head-on collisioncannot continue without increasing harm  to women as persons and to the Church as a society.’ ”
 
              
             
            - 
            Cardinal  Gerlier dies at 85
 
            - 
            Bishop John  Carberry named to Columbus see
 
            - 
            Experiment  with nuns’ habits to end in June
 
            - 
            Central  purchasing plan being studied
 
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            Vatican  paper backs ‘new look’ for nuns
 
            - 
            Episcopal  choristers slate demonstration
 
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            Belgian  experiment: Week-end activities in the parishes part of updated seminary format
 
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            Don’t be  hasty in judging Pope, observer advises Protestants
 
            - 
            Voice  concern over commission on marriage
 
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            Magazine  sues bishop, diocesan newspaper
 
            - 
            Spanish  approved in Mexico Masses
 
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            Protestant  prayer set for Masses for Unity Octave
 
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            Bishop-elect  couldn’t prove his ordination
 
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            Discuss  plans to popularize Bible-reading
 
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            Sees peril  in trend to common worship
 
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            Archdiocesan  TV station approve
 
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              ‘Catechetical  crisis’ is seen by lay editor
 
            - 
            Ethiopian  Conference is cancelled
 
            - 
            Urge  admission of Red China
 
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            Stage is  ready for Style Show this Sunday
 
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            Nuns donate  rings to poor
 
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            Bribed away  from religion
 
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            Ecumenism  is seen as ‘everybody’s job’
 
            - 
            President’s  critics draw prelate’s fire
 
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            Early  action pledged on aid to education
 
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            Raps press  on coverage of council
 
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            Change  urged in law on school attendance
 
            - 
            Pope shows  trust in UN
 
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              ‘Non-Catholic  Rome’: Council of Churches headquarters is center of world-wide dialogue
 
            - 
            Stresses  need to base devotion to Mary on sound theology
 
            - 
            Farm labor  crisis aired for Senate
 
            - 
            Marian  expanding Evening Division
 
            - 
            Diocesan  school post to layman
 
            - 
            Peace medal  goes to Bishop Wright
 
          
(Read all of these stories from our January 22, 1965, issue by logging on to our special archives.) †