THE ANCHORThurs., June 29, 1967
Now's' Time. for GardE~ner
Nun to Direct
To Move Spr;ng Bulbs
Child Centers
, ,. By JosellBllt aQd Mall'nllyn Roderick From time to time it maY' happen that you find your i3pl'ing bulbs dwindling in performance and feel that they Mould be moved or replenished. Tulips and daffodils be gin to dwindle after several yeaK"S in the same place and lIOOletimes benefit from b0
mg moved.. I move tulips after three of four yeaR'S in I!)roer to make room for il
"',
berry bushes show promise of
MIAMI (NC)-A nun who Yasi year was the center of a contro versy for wearing her religious habit while employed, by the federal government has been ap pointed to organize and direct new Child Opportunity Centers in Dade County. Sister Marie Infanta Gonzales, an Oblate Sister of' Providence of Baltimore, became the first member of a religious commu nity to se~ve as director of a fed eral anti-poverty project"' In Florida. tn June, '1966, she be came head of the Culmer Day Care Center, operated' in' the heart of this city's Negro district by the :E;coriomic Opporiunity Program, Inc. (EOPI). Later that month, members of the Dade County' anti-poverty
board and the Florida Chapter
of the American Civil Liberties Union charged that public funds were being used to "propagate m religious faith." But m court suit threatened by ACLU never ma terialized. The Office of Economic Op portunity in Washington, where Sister Marie Infanta organized and directed a Head Start schooJl in 1965, ruled last September that the nun could continue to weai." her religious hablt. Now the local EOPI office here has' announced that Sistei'" Marie Infanta has been assigned 16 plan and direct two new pre school child care centers in Na ranja and Homestead, about lIO miles south of here.
't1
an abundant crop. AU seems
right with the world, at least the worlc' of good eating. Rhubarb is one of the most [jOOd. time for moving bulbs. versatile of the spring plants, lIf y<\u, know where your bulbs 'delicious when teamed with are and· if their foliage hllO·· 'raisins or strawberries in a pie I:ipened sufficently so that llt, fsl· but equally good 'when all you !ready to be removed, it hi a 'do to it is stew it. One of our oimple matter to dig them up. favorite ways of cooking the ten They will remain relatively dor- der pink stalks of this plant is rnant until next Spring, so mov- by baking it in the form of Q rng them will have no effect on pudding. All one needs to do to tfueir perionnance.· The pro- turn out an aromatic dessert 02dure for caring and storing.iD this way is to layer one inch fAlimple and is as follows: pieces of rhubarb, sugar, and After digging the bulbs oot 02 bread crumbs (generously dotted the ground, give them a good with butter) in a buttered bak hosing to remove loose soil. Thitl dish, place it in a 375· oven foil' will also hopefully remove any- 40 minutes, pass the whipped grubs or insects clinging to them. 'cream and wait for the compli Then set them out in the SWlI. ments.
~r two or three days to dry. Raspberries are another bless ][f you are very efficient, you lng of the garden, but very few might label them according to of them' manage to find their ~lor or if you are intending ~ way into: the house. ChildreIm !Jet out a mixed planting, ~ust and berry bushes seem to have lhy them out in flats as you 11 magnetic attraction for on~ wash them. When the bulbs are another and during the berC1' thoroughly dry they should be season small heads can just be IIPrinkled with a fungicide and glimpsed between the canes and. lin insecticide In preparation for before the berries have a chance IItorage. Check over the indi- to announce their arrival in the Yidual bulbs for insect damage- garden,' small hands haw . . rot before storing and the job ~lanned: their departure. lis completed. This year I would like to be 11 In OnloD Sacks '"mean mother" long enough 1n Jr usually store my bulbs ftl woo a' couple of small baskets ~ion sacks, which I hang from into the kitchen and into a berC1' the rafters in the cellar, and X pie. The very first pie I ever have never bad 11 problem with attempted after I was married drying; but you may find it m«ma was a raspberry cream and both eonvenient to pack bulbs in iIoe and I thought it fit for the lllamp excelsior or sand. Person- gods. llUy, I think the less watel'-1he,. I'm sorry to say that over the are subjected to the better be- years I have misplaced the . .use of the danger of fungM recipe and I have yet to find .feetion. one as good as that very first Tbe bulbs may be planted 10 one. Of course it may have been the Fall just as tulips are usually the fun of making a pie for a new planted. I don't bother to sepa- husband may have made this IIOte the bulbUs, the small bulba recipe seem better than it actu .hich grow at the base of the aily was; I'll just have to keep lat"ge central bulb, but these looking until I come across it May be planted individually and again' and this time I can judge will eventually produce large its worth with a more jaundiced. Iulip bulbs; The flowers which Gye. . ~ult from these transplants are Whatever the fruit may be that !lever equal in size to the originall you favor, the season when ilt blooms butJf planted in out ~ can be ,picked fresh or bought . e way places they are charm- iresh is the time to enjoy it an log and worth saving. you can. Frozen and canned In the Kitehen varieties. m,ay ~ell have to serve The feeling of well being per- during wintry months, but theJ' liIleates the kitchen at this time ~ will never replace the thrilil of ~3r. As the garden harvest beeating your first strawberC7 m. lfi,ns, the larder seems to over- ,.June or your first raspberry ']a flow. In my refrigerator at this .July. IIlOment there reposes a full basThis is truly 1m old-fashioned! lEet of the largest plumpest shortcake recipe and one I keep .rawberries imaginable, jl:lSt coming back to J1lCI) matt~~r how :waiting to be crushed with sugar many othe~ I try. _d wedded with cake and cream IiTRAWBERRY SHOR~A.Jl(lI
lID order to become the tastiest IIbortcake possible.
! cups flour '
Along with the berries, m,. ~ cup sugar "
.-oler contains a large water
4 teaspooN! ba'kmg powdel!' -.e!on llnd a smaller but equally ~ teaspoon salt tasty honeydew. The rhubarb ~ % teaspoon'nubneg ll&ill sending forth its red lh cup butter *eaked' shoots and the ra~ 1 egg,well beaten 1f.l cup milk 1) Sift together the ftOlJllI', BenediCtine Sisters sugar, baking powder, salt and Adopt New Habit nutmeg. 2) Cut in the butter, using 11 J:i:LIZABETH (NC)-The Ben pastry blender, until it is illl very ~ietine Sisters of Elizabeth have ltIdopted a new simplified habit. small particles. 3) Add, the beaten egg and According to Mother Cornelilll, t!i).S.B., the use. of the habit !s milk and· stir just until blended. 4) Turn batter into a well ~tional and it is being worn buttered· pie plate or iron skillet ~perimentally for the first yell!!' (if you have one) and bake in Q l§;y the New ;Jersey nuns. The new habit is easieli' 00 450° oven for 15 mintes. Ii) Split the shortcake as soon lIlUlintain and eliminates ple~ta as removed from the oven and iIIDd flowing sleeves. A turban .bich sits back off the forehead butter each layer. Place togethei!' Itas been substituted for the old with strawberriell crushed witlhi. Daead-piece and veil, and flbe 'sugar and· toppetU' with r.»M :whipped "eam., ~e.v hal beoA modWeQ,
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Dew supply of bulbs. This b a
1 I I
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SPECIAL FACULTY: Brother Louis Spinata of the Sons of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (Verona Fathers) dis tributes Holy Communion, because there are not enough priests to serve the many Catholics ~n the diocese of Bujumbura, Burundi, Africa NC Photo.
Asks Best Teachers Prelate Says Most Personable E~ective In Religious ~nstrudion Classes
MILWAUKEE (NC)-A priest mvolved in youth work suggested here that' school principals reserve their most personable teachers for religion teaching. The reason for this, said Msgi'. Alexander O. Sigur, is that the person of the educator inspires faith in the young. "We communicate by signs, symbols, selves," Msgr. Sigur stated. "Youtbknows this: 'What you are shouts so loudly that I cannot hear what you are teaching or preaching.' Man iii man's only way to God." Msgr. Sigur told a study con-' ference of Catholic secondary school administrators at Mar..; queUe University here that he spoke from 15 years' experience as director of the Newman cen:" ter at the University of Southwestern Louisiana. The administrators came from 35 states and the District of Columbia. He said that a good religiQUS educator is one who is understanding, patient, inquiring, personally involved, evangeli cally simple, and who vibrates
with enthusiasm for Christ and
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His message. Moreover, he is not afraid of the questions and uncertainties his students express, Msgr. Si gur said. Nor is he ll'fraid to ex Pi'ess his own uncertainties. As a community, classmates in religion open up to one another and search, with a "let's go to gether" technique, the priest stated. , Msgr. Sigur said religion is a "dirty word" to the "betrayed many" who criticize high school religion courses for their repeti tion, "particularly rote, without redeeming insight or relevance," and 'for conveying the notion of religion as rigor rather than of 'Christianity as' a liberating and .loving 'experience. "iJ:igh' school religi()fi needs aggiomamentofor the- yoUng who need their Christ incarnate where they are-not :In books, buildings or in bigness," Msgr. Sigur said. "If He Is a person, then they can love Him who is love."
Confirmation Numbers Suprise Czech Reds VIENNA (NC) - Communist authorities in Czechoslovaki11 have been amazed by the great numbers of young people who have taken advantage of a recent relaxation by the government pennitting Confirmation cere monies. News coming out of Czecho slovakia reports that childretl and young people by the thou s~nds have presented themseivel for Confirmation depite the su& tained efforts at atheistic instrue tion in the schools and youth organizations. It has also been learned thi:ti the seminary at Nitra has been given permission to accept new candidates for the priesthood. Forty .candidates, including some of older age, have applied for' entrance to the seminary but only three have been permit~ to enter.
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:GRACIA I
BROS.~
Cross Diocesan Lines 1l'G Give Sacraments
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Excavating
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Contractors
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NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Bish @y;)s of the province of New Or leans, which besides Louisiana also includes parts of Arkansas,
,Alabama and Mississippi, have
given pennission for priests of
the New Orleans archdiocese to
preach and administer the sac
rament of Penance in their dio
lOOses.
Archbishop Philip M.' Hannan
oi New Orleans has gra'nted a
similar privHege" within the
boundaries of his see to diocesan.
and Religious 'priests from other
dioceses in the' province.
Included in the- province of
New Orleans are the ,dioceses of' Baton Rouge, La.; Lafayette, La.;
Alexandria, La.; Little Rock,
Ark.; Natchez~Jackson, Miss.;
and Mobile-Birmingham; Ala..
as well as the New Orleans arch diocese.
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