John EckhuH I
Deep Meaning of 'Our Father'
"UNDERSTANDING
THE LORD'S PRAYER,"
by H. van de Bussche,
Sheed and Ward.
ROM the time we first
memorize the Lord's
prayer it is part of our
ives. It can remain the simple
Father of our childhood, or
it can take on depth and mean-
ing in ever increasing qantities
for our continuous enrichment.
It is up to us.
Father van de Bussche has
been a professor of the Bible
and theology, and is currently
president of the University Col-
ge of the Holy Ghost at Lou-
ain. It is not surprising, then,
that "Understanding the Lord's
Prayer is a scholarly work.
The commentary is based
on the version in Matthew.
The prayer is studied clause
clause, with constant ref.
erence to the rest of the Gos-
pel, for the Lord's Prayer is
surely a summation of the
Good News.
Surprising is the amount of
eschatological inference. The
Christian is constantly reminded
that he is in a state of becom-
ing. The Redemption has hap-
but the Kingdom is not
of this world.
In this context we gain new
insight into the phrase, "Thy
Kingdom come," and also the
following, "Thy Will be Done."
This is often spoken of and
used as a prayer of abandon-
ment to the Will of God, and in-
deed is admirable in this light.
owever, there is more.
Father van den' Bussche
hows that we also pray for
God's ultimate Will to be
done. The end of the world
should never frighten a Chris-
tian, as it is in reality the
fulfillment of all his hopes.
The following "on earth as it
is in Heaven" smoothly con-
By JOHN J. ECKHART
tinues the eschatological nature
of the petition.
From the Glory of God and
the hope for His second com-
ing, the prayer abruptly de-
scends to man's own needs.
Here we show our dependence
on the heavenly Father both for
our physical and spiritual well-
being -- our daily bread, and
deliverance from the evil one.
This book can be a rich source
of meditation to your prayers.
"MODERN CATE-
CHETICS," by G e r a r d
Sloyan, McMlllan, $5.95.
HE 1 i t t I e Baltimore
catechism has come in
for quite a lot of criticism
lately.
There are many who feel
that it is outmoded, and would
could there be really expert
coverage.
The general approach at the
beginning of the book explains
the place of the Liturgy, and
the Bible, etc., in instruction.
Following chapters are de-
voted to each age group from
kindergarten through college.
The psychological develop-
ment at each stage is studied,
and ideas presented on what the
child can assimilate, and how
best to introduce the informa-
tion.
There are, important chapters
on teaching public school chil-
d r e n, adolescent psychology,
and the way Christ taught.
"Modern Catechetics" should
be a boon for all teachers, and
a real "must" for the volun-
teers of the CCD.
--Dorothy Eckhart Smith
like to see a complete change
in teaching methods. Others 'Ch 11
feel that the traditional way of a enge'
instruction is best.
Before the reformation cate-
chetics was a neglected thing.
In fact, the religious illiteracy
of so many people made it
easy for them to be led down
strange new paths. The lead-
ers of the counter-reformation
recognized this and the im-
portance of Catholic educa-
tion received new impetus.
It has held its vital place in
the Church ever since.
In modern times, with new
knowledge of how the mind
works and develops the teach-
ing of Catholic truth can be
done with even greater effec-
tiveness, provided the teacher
has some knowledge of how and
when to present these truths.
It is in this field that "Mod-
ern Catechetics" shows its
value.
Each chapter was written by
a specialist in each particular
subject. The range of the book
is so large that in this way only
Feature Films On Television
Bellingham KING-'IV (NBC) Channel ,i
KVOS.TV Channel 12 KIRO-TV (CBS) Channel 7
Tacoma
Seattle KTNT-TV (CBS) Channel 11
KOMO.TV (ABC) Channel 4 KTVW-T Channel 13
MOTION PICTURE CLASSIFICATION BY NATIONAL
LEGION OF DECENCY: A-I--Morally Unobjectionable for
General Patronage; A-II--Morally Unobjectionable for Adults
Adolescents; A.lII--Morally Unobjectionable for Adults;
Objectionable in Part for All; C-Condemned;
SC--Separate Classification; NR--No Rating Available.
(Nots: The ratings listed below were those given the
original movies. Most films before being shown on tele-
vision art edited to con/arm to the television code and
to the individual stdtion's time schedule. For this reason,
objsctionablt p,rts contained in the original plot may be
deleted in the television version and thus the original
Ltgion rating may not be entirely correct.)
SATURDAY, JUNE 2:[
o:1! p.m.--KI aO.TV--$hanghal ........................................... NR
S:00 p.m.KTNT-TVmelazlng Sixes ...................................... A-I
5:00 p.m.--KING.TV--SPy Chasers ...................................... A.I
4:30 p.m.--KTVW.TV--L.awless Valley ................................... A-I
9:00 p.m.--KING.TVWhlte Witch Ooctnr .............................. A-I
I0:00 p.m,mKTNT-TV--Invlslble $trlgos .................................. A.II
11:0ep.m.--KVOS-TV--They Died With Their Boots On ......... , .... A-I
11:1 p.m.--KInO-TV--Souls At Sea .................................... A.II
11:00 p.m.--KlNG-TV--Cross Winds ...................................... A.It
11:00p.m.--KOMO,TV--Ambush At Clmarron Pass .................... A-I
SUNDAY, JUNE 23
12:{10 Noon.-KOMO-TV--Dlmples .......................................... A-I
|:30 p,m.--KVOS-TV--Cosh On Delivery ......... . ........................ n
t:30 p,m.--KIRO-TV--$orrowtul Jones .................................. A.II
3:t0 p.m.--KING-TV--Choolnte SQIdler ................ ,... .............. A-II
4:30 |.m.--KTVWFull Confession ...................................... A.II
4:$0 t,m.--KTNT.TV--Tortom and tho Green aerie|| .................. NR
i:00 hm.--KVOl.TV--Sombo, Lord et the Jungle ........................ NR
7:30 |.m.--KTNT.TVDestlnotlon Tokyo ....... . ........................ A-I
g:ee D.m.--KOMO-TV--The Deerllayer .................................. A.I
11:M I.m.--KING-TV--Tha First 100 Years .............. . ............. A-II
MONDAY, JUNE 24
9:30 a.m.--KOMO-TV--The Forgotten Woman .......................... A,II
10:00 a.m.--KTVW.TV--Condemned Women .............................. A-II
|:00 NOOn*-KTVW.TV--The ale Sttl .................................... A-II
2:00 p.m.--KTNT.TV--eack In Circulation ................ . ......... ...,A.II
S:30 |.m.--KING-TV--Haunted Honeymoon ............. . ................ A.I
|'ss P.m.--KVOe.Tv--Drongo ............................................ A-II
'/:30 ).m.--KING-TV--Frem Hell To Texas ........................... ...A-I
10:115 t.m.--KTNT.TV--The Great Garrick ................................ A-I
15:15 ).m.--KTVW-TV--Everybody's Doing It ............................ A-I
11"re .m.--KVOS,TV--Mr. Lucky ....................................... A.II
11:'t0 ).m.--KOMO.TV--Socret$ at the Lone Wolf . .......... . ............ A-I
1:00 a.m.--KTVW.TV--Look Whose Lauphlng .......................... A.I
TUESDAY, JUNE 25
9:30a.m.--KOMO.TV--She Gets Her Man .............................. A-I
lg:e0 a.m.--KTVW-TV--Mexlcan Spitfire Out West ...................... NR
I|:N NOOn--KTVW.TV--SOdmon's Territory .............................. A-I
|:e0 ).m.--KTNT-TV--The Groat Garrick .... ............... . .... . ..... A-I
S:30 Lm.KING.TV--Hell Below ........................................ NR
5:30 |.m.--KVOS-TV--$torm Over Tibet .................................. B
10:00 ).m.--KTVW-TV--The SI Street ......................... : ........ A-II
15:00 J.m.--KTNT.TV--Moke Your Own Bed ................................ n
11:eo J.m.--KVOS-TVThe Runaround .................................. A-II
11:30 ).m.--KOMO.TV--You're Telling Me .............................. A-II
I:00A.M.--KTVW-TVMexlcon Spitfire Sees A Ghost .... ............ A-II
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26
9'$0 a.m.--KOMO-TV--You're A Lucky Fellow Mr. Smith .............. e
15 N a.m.--KTVWCareer ................................................ A-I
?2:re NOOI'-KTVW, TV--Care Pree ........................... . ...... . ..... A.t
|'00 p.m.KTNT-?V--Moke Your Own Bed ............................ a
S:,10 p.m.--KINa-TVMeet The People .............................. .,A-H
$:35 P.m.--KVO$.TV--Tlmetable ......................................... A.II
6:30 p.m,KTVW-TV--My Pal Walt ........................................
10:00 P.m,--KTVW.TVCrack Up ................................... . .... A.II
10:30 p.m.--KTNT.TV--The Rensgados .................................... A-II
11:80 p.m.--KVOIbTV--Pursued .............................. . ....... , .... A-tl
11:30 p,m,KOMO.TV--ForbJdden Valley ........................ .. ...... A-I
1:00 a.m.KTVW.TVRepent At Leisure .............................. A-H
THUR$OAY, JUNE 27
:50 a.m.--KOMO.TVHello Annapolis .................................. A-I
10:00 a.m.KTVW-TV--We're On The Jury .............................. A-I
12: Noon---KTVW-TV--The rig Street .................................. A-II
2:00 p.m.KTNT-'rVThe Renegades .................................. A-II
3:30 p.m.KINO.TVForty lithe Mothers ............................ A-ll
5:$0 g.m.--KVOS.TV$erpent Of the Nile ................................ E
6:$0 P.m.KIRO.TV--Swlrl Of Glory .................................... NR
15:00 p.m.--KTVW.TV--Every Girl Should Be Married .................. A-II
10:M p.m,--KTNT-TV--Ood's Country and the Woman .................. A-I
11:00 p.m,KVO$.'rV--Let's Make Up .................................. A-II
11:30 p,m.KOMO.TV--She Married An Artist .......................... A-H
1|:30 P.m.KVW.TV--$oldler nnd the lady .... ........................ A.II
FRIDAY,'JUNE 28
9:30 a.m..--KOMO-TV--Sweetheart at the Campus ...................... A-I
I0:00 a.m.--KTVW.TV--The Truth About Murder ........................ A-el
12:00 Nonn--KTVW.TVCrack Up ........................................ A.II
2:00 3.m.--KTNT-TVGod's Country and the Woman .................. A.1
3:30 .m.KING.TVOf Human Hearts ................................ A-I
5:30 3.m.KVOS.TV--Caff at the Wild .................................. NR
6:0 Y.m.--KTVW.TV--Syevfa Scarlets ...................................... S
ln: ).m.--KrVW.TV--Leopord Man .................................... A-II
10:30 ).m.KTNT.TVI Was Money's Dnuble ............................ A-I
11:00 p.m.KVOS,TVJohnny Apollo ...................................... O
11:30 P,m.KOMO.TV--Americon Guerilla In the Philippines ...* ...... A-II
1:00 o.m,--KTVW.TVChlno Sky ........................................ A-II
Thll Review IS 5gonsered by
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A pllmlont shopping atmosphere with a select
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To Discuss
Race Issues
A special treatment of racial
problems will be presented by
"Challenge," the KOMO tele-
vision and radio program Sun.
days, June 23 and 30.
Two taped programs have
been preempted so that the
churchmen-panelists of the
three major faiths can discuss
on June 23 the basis of the
racial problem with reference
to the recent Seattle Confer-
ence on Religion and Race and
on June 30 the examination of
and detail of the problems in
the areas of housing and em-
ployment.
The program, which includes
Rev. William Treacy, director
of the Catholic Information
Center, is telecast at 6 p.m.
on Channel Four and heard at
10:30 p.m. over Radio KOMO
(1000 kc.).
Legion Of
Decency
First-Run Movies
Showing In Seattle
A-t--Jason and the Argonauts.
Other Movies
Currently Showing
A-I--My Slx Loves, The Nutty Pro-
fessor, Invasion of the Star Creatures,
How the West Was Won, Tommy and
the Doctor, Phantom Planet, Miracle
of the White Stoillons, Papa's Delicate
Condition.
A.|--Werewolf In A Girls' Dormitory,
Lawrence of Arabia, Days of Wine and
Roses, Yellow Canary, Call Me Bwana,
Mutiny on the Bounty, The Birds, The
Lion, The Hook.
A-3-.-Corrldorg at Blood, Two For the
Seesaw, Love Is O Ball, Winter Light,
Rto Bravo.
a--island at Love, Marines Let's Go.
SATURDAY, JUNE 22
2:00 p.m., InslSht, KOMO-TV, Chun.
nil 4.
The Rev. EHwood Kleser, C.S.P.,
I$ host tar ths. series of snclol and
splrffuaJ dramas starring such not-
ables as Raymond Massey, Jane
Wyman and irene Dunne.
The first program, "The Agitator"
finds two men, one a communist
(played by Ed Seley) and one a
Chrlstion (Brian Kelth) in violent con.
fffct over the control of an Amerfcea
Iobor union during the 1930's.
SUNDAY, JUNE 23
7:4S a.m,, Hour of St. Francll, K XA.
Radio (770 kc.)
The booutlful and true story of
Lourdes will be presented.
I:00 a.mv Lamp Unto My Feet, KIRO.
TV, Channel ?.
"Cantana de San Juan," first choral
work by the Catalan composer Carlos
surlnach, will have Its premiere today.
The cantata was written in honor of
San Juan, patron saint of Puerto RIco.
It tells the story of St. John the Sop-
fist as revealed In the Gospels. The
choir of the Church of Our Saviour
In New York will perform the werk.
9:15 a.m., Sacred Heart Prosram,
KIRO-TV, Channel 7.
"The Problem Of Loss" Is fed0y'g
topic. The speaker Is Rev. Walter d.
Burghardt, S J., of Woodstock COIIOBI,
Md.
2:0q p.m., DtrIcflene Llb KOMO.TV,
Channel 4.
"The Children's Choice," • photo.
assay on the life of the Nesro In the
North, will be lien. Author of the
esly Is Dennis Clar, former executive
director of the Catholic Interracial
Council of New York.
i'00 .m., ChattlnSo, KOMO-TV, C/IW
nel 4.
"It All Starts at Home" Says Roy.
William Treaty, Dr. Lynn Carson and
Rabbi Raphael Levlne, panelists, as
they discuss their own childhood and
the Influence their homellfe had on
setting standards and directing their
lives.
7:15 p.m., Sacred Heart Program,
KTVW-TV, Channel 13.
The Ray. William J. DrlscolL S.J.
of Battlmore speaks on '*Preyer at
Its Best," the fourth In • titles in.
titled "A United World."
7:30 p.m., Hour at St. Pronels, KTVW.
TV, Channel 13.
"The Man Who Has Everything" IS
the story of a unsung hero, the lay
brother in a religious order, his work
and how he chose this way of life.
Elroy (Crazy Legs) Hirsch hesfl.
Charity Towards Others
If your underlying motivation
is a deep love for people, you
will be powered by the divine
fire that warms but does not
destroy. And ynu will come to
a better understanding of St.
John's words:
"Perfect love casts out
fear." (1 John 4:18)
Future of Church in U.S.
By MOST REVEREND FULTON J. SHEEN
HE future of the Church in the United
.0
States within the next 50 years 's
this: either we will be the Church of the
Poor or we will be the "poor" Church! By
the poor we mean principally the two-thirds
of the world's people who earn less than $100
a year; the 800 dioceses in Africa, Asia and
Oceania which have less than $25,000 a year
to build schools, churches and chapels. Either
they will partake of our blessings or we will
be the "poor" Church spoken of in the Apo-
calypse, which had much gold but little spirit.
When we say the Church of the Poor, what
do we mean? Must we do without our million
dollar churches and libraries, our autos, our
television sets? No! Do we mean that we
should be more generous on "Mission Sunday"?
No! How our pastors would camplain if they
were only allowed one collection a year and
it averaged out to 27 cents each, which is the
average, annual per capila donation of U. S.
Catholics to the Holy Father for all of his
Missions. Lepers need sulfone every week, not
once a year! "Mission Sunday" should be done
away with as a once-a-year pittance. The Church
in the U. S. should substitute a "Mission Mon-
day," a "Mission Tuesday," a "Mission Wed-
nesday," a "Mission Everyday."
We Catholics will become the Church of
the Poor only by sharing, as God ordered:
"When thou reapest the crops on Shy land,
do not raze all to the level of the ground,
or pick up the scattered ears; do not hoard
up the clusters or the grapes that have
fallen. Leave something for poor men and
wanderers to glean; remember what God you
worship." (Lev. 19:9-10). We will be the
Church of the Poor not by putting a few
dimes in a collection, but by sharing every
blessing with the poor. Few of us have fields
where we can leave sheaves or vineyards
where wo can leave clusters, but we have
pay envelopes, income on stocks and bonds,
interest, gifts and, in the case of children,
spending money. We should share each of
these "harvests" with the poor. For three
times God repeats this law, the last time
saying: "/f a sheath lies in the fields for-
gotten, do not go back for it; leave it for the
alien (the non-Jew), the orphan and the
widow, so the Lord thy God will prosper all
thy undertakings" (Deut. H:19).
Will God bless us for putting up a field
house that costs two million dollars and not
giving $1,000 of that to the Holy Father to
build a hut for the Eucharistic Lord in Ghana?
Obviously, no Is it permissible for us to put
up a rectory that costs $250,000? Certainly,
if it be needed! But not if we do not leave a
sheaf of $2,500 to buy sulfone for the lepers
in Thailand. The hungry, the ingnorant, the
lepers must share our every blessing. The
"alien" is etitled, the Word of God tells us,
to a sheaf of our profits in business, medicine,
law; to a cluster of our clipped coupons; to our
"windfalls." And how can we reach the "alien"
and the poor outside the U. S.? Through the
one arm the Holy Father has in the U. S. to
gather sheaves and clusters for them, and that
is The Society for the Propagation of the Faith.
God has made us prosperous. Let us
thank Him! But let us not think we are
satisfying our debt to the poor of the world
by giving the Holy Father the equivalent of
the price of a pack of cigarettes a year. As
Catholics we need not "give," because that
is voluntary. We must "share," because that
is the Divine Mandate. Each starving Catholic
is a cell in our body; each hungry non-
Cntholio is like food not yet assimilated into
our body. Either we will be the Church of
the Poor or will be the "poor" Church. God
grant that we may be the Church of the
Poor! Start now by sharing, by sending
something to the Holy Father each month
through his Society for the Propagation of
the Faith.
God love you to all who answer this
plea and make ours the Church o[ the
Poor!
Cut out this column, pin your saerifices to
tt and mail it to Most Roy. Fulton J. Sheen,
National Director of the Society for the Propa-
gation of the Faith, t. Sth Ave., New York
1, N. Y., or your Archdiocesan Director, Rev.
Stephen Szeman, 07 Terry Avenue, Seattle 4.
Now It's Russian 00N00oman!
(Continued from Page I)
vance stories. If Valentina
had been killed, she would
have been just another Rus-
sian who disappeared, and
Ludmilla would have gone up
the next time.
Despite what they say, not
all Russian space flights are
successful. Adlai E. Stevenson,
chief United States delegate to
the UN, complained in a letter
to that organization that the
Russians are not reporting all
space flights as they promised
in an agreement last year.
We know that there have been
six space flights that got into
earth orbit from the Soviet
Union and that were not re-
ported, said Mr. Stevenson.
There was one flight last Au-
gust, two in September, and
one in the months of October,
November and January.
Some experts believe that
these flights were the first
stages in attempled deep
probe shots toward Mars,
Venus and the moon, that fiz-
zled after they got into earth
orbit. Russian secrecy being
what it is, we'll probably
never know. The original Lad.
mills may still be in orbit up
there some place.
Meanwhile, of course, the
United States is periodically
giving the UN complete reports
of our space experiments.
than the ones you buy in a $4.95
fireworks kit, hasn't discour-
aged the people who see omens
of a great change for the better
in any kind of Red cooperation.
European Orbit
Tomorrow (Saturday), Presi-
dent John Kennedy will leave
Washington for a 10.day trip to
Europe. He plans to visit West
Germany, Ireland, England and
Italy.
In Germany he is scheduled
to visit West Berlin and the
wll. He is expected to put in a
good word for the proposed
multilateral force of 200 atomic-
tipped missiles on surface ships
manned by mixed crews when
he talks to Chancellor Aden-
nauer. So far the Germany gov-
ernment has not waxed too
enthusiastic about the plan.
Next he will visit Ireland
and the home of his ancestors.
this will probably be the most
enjoyable part of the trip for
the chief executive.
When the President lands in
Britain and confers with the
Prime Minister he will be talk-
ing to a man who has slipped
so far in public esteem that
even some of his own party
members refused to back him
in a vote of confidence.
The trouble is called the
Profumo affair. It started with
hide the scandal along with in-
dications that there may have
been security leaks to Red espi-
onage agents have mushroomed
it in political import to where
it will probably mean the defeat
of the Conservative Party at
the next general election.
Right now the Conservative
Party is looking around for a
man to replace the present
Prime Minister.
If the Labor Party wins the
next general election, it will
probably mean a softening in
the British stand against Com.
munism.
Memo
TO THE SUPREME COURT:
God is not a dropout; you
expelled Him.
Readers
Write
Editor, The Progress:
I am in receipt of a copy of
your newspaper dated May 24,
1903. It has been brought to my
attention that on Page Six there-
of there is a picture of a mere.
her of this department, taken
while on duty at the Mary's Day
ceremonies.
We are always pleased to
have our' officers receive good
,,r;ay, Juge 21 1963 THE PR, ORESS--5
Ground Rules For
In-Laws To Follow
By REV. WALTIR IMBIORSKI
Family Life Dlroetor, Archdiocese ¢4 Cklcao
Guest Columnist for Rev, John L. Thomm S.J.
My wise and I are in our middle 40's and our daugh-
ter ,is getting married in two months. The young man she
has chosen is nice enough, but she is our only girl and we
have been very close and are concerned. Any suggestions
/or us future in.laws?
AM pleased that you and your wife are trying to
think through this new relationship you will have
with your daughter and her husband. It is a sign
of mature parental concern.
Reduced to its parts, the in-law problem is two-fold:
A) definite interference by the parents, and B) an excessive
dependence of the couple on their parents.
Knowing that you love your daughter very much and that
losing her will be something of a wrench, let's consider a few
practical ideas you might mediate upon. We will call them
cautions for in-laws. "
(1) Criticizing: Some parents find fault with everything the
young couple does, from the typeface on the wedding invitation
to the middle name of the first grandson.
Young couples need encouragement and tolerance. They are
iust learning. They don't have your experience and perspective.
They will probably m/ke mistakes. They will certainly do things
differently, but this is part of their great adventure.
(2) Clinging: Watch out for too-frequent phone calls to 3oe,
or visits to Susie, or setting up patterns when they simply "have
to" spend every second Sunday and all the holidays at your house.
(3) Clearing paths: Some parents try to cushion their children
against every possible hardship. Running to them with check-
book drawn and pen ready may simply make them confused and
dependent.
It is hard for a father to face the fact that his daughter
prefers some other person; that she doesn't need him, her own
father, any more. Faced with this, some parents try again to
make themselves important, or even indispensable to their
children.
(4) Choosing sides: Let's face it, there is no young man
good enough for your daughter but when quarrels and problems
come remember your child could be wrong. As an in-law, your
concern should be for the good of fthe marriage and not merely
for "my" son or "ny ' dadgllter.
(5) Competing: Sometimes both sets of in-laws vie for the
young couples' attention and affection. They get into a psycho-
logical struggle to see who can give the more expensive gift or
the more pointless luxury.
Get to know your son-in.law's parents, They may not be your
kind of people; they may be from a different social stratum, a
different national background but they produced the things in
"Joe" that your daughter loves. Another challenge to your
maturity is setting up communication, even friendship, with his
parents.
(0) Child Raising: When grandchildren begin,, to arrive, they
bring fresh challengei With" them: Remember you are grand-
parents, not parents. Grandparents, "grateful they have seen
"their children's children" arn notorious spoilers. Months of
patient training and obedience can be demolished by n two.hour
visit to grandpa's.
It can get so, Susie dreads her mother's coming, because she
knows when mother is gone she faces a complete over.haul on
her children.
But grandparents have a great deal to give children -- a
sense of the past, a history and tradition of the family, and even
of the city and town in which they live. They can in effect
bestow a relationship with a mature adult who loves them nnd
is yet not primarily an authority image.
(7) Ground Rules: In-laws can be imposed upon too, and if
they are not prudent, some will find themselves placed in a role
of nightly baby-sitters or handy finance companies. Remember
even as you grow older in your marriage, you still have re.
sponsibilities to each other as a couple and to your role in work
life and community life.
It might be a good idea to define clearly for the young
couple just when you are available to help them (emergency
situations, aside of course), nnd what kind of notice you will need.
It's better to talk •some of these things out than to grow
resentful.
One of the most profound aspeets of parental love is its
sacrificial character -- the fact thlt your children will never
totally reciprocate to you personally for all the things you have
bestowed upon them. It is n law of life that they take the
wonderful things they have received from you nnd give them
to their own children and so on from generation to generation.
Finally, the parents who let go of their children are the
ones most likely to get them back, that is, the parents who realize
their child is now an adulL
The parents who are willing to treat them as equals, as
people with wisdom, experience and a sense of responsibility,
are most likely to :be visited, appreciated and loved on a new
publicity and wish to thank you level by their married children, in return.
Poland and Czecboslovakia, a moral lapse on the part of a for this'particular picture.
however, have been sending in cabinet member who tried to
reports and this gladdens some lie bis way out of his difficul- the Washington State Patrol can LUM
people s hearts. The fact that ties.
be of assistance, please do not MADISO BE
neither of these Communist Apparent attempts on the part hesitate to call upon us.
states has any rockets bigger of the Conservative Party to I ROY A, BETLACH, • Palmf|, tlmb•r lad Hardware • I
t S hedl I
Washington State Patrol, 2021 E. Madison- EAst 2-8080
" Lay Retrea € u • ....
IIII I
The Palisades Visifation Refreat
"'"""") (""''"'" A SYMBOL OF RESPECT
June 2S-SO
St. Mary's Centralia Our Lady, Star of the Sea,
St. Joseph, Chehalis Bremerton
St. Joseph, Ferndale St. Francos Cabrini, Tacoma
St. Mary, Kelso
St. Joseph, Pe Ell
Immaculate Conception, Seattle
,luly S.7
No Retreat Special Retreat
One is superb !
Some ports
are good...
PRODUCED AND BOTTLED BY MONT LA ,,%ALLE VINEYARD NAP&
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