Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 243, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 7, 1965 Page: 2 of 8
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BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM. TEXAS
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1965
Vatican Council Laid
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Reform Groundwork
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The Brenham Banner Press
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EDITORS NOTE: The Vati-
BEN r. BLANTON
JAMES E. BYRD
enical Council, which
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Editor Emeritus
MRS RUBY ROBERTSON
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reluctance to spread the war to
the vastness of China and in
North Viet Nam, at least
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place .and isthrifty.and.in- COURT SESSION
But whether or not compari
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Viet Nam Sign Posts
Found In Korea
forces crossed the 38th parallel
dividing North and South Korea
10 a. m
opinions
starting
they
had
siastic will of most of the 2.300
bishops who patiently endured
endless weeks of Latin debate
in order to cope with a cruelly
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and
the
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em-
U.S
United
inevitably will be
Korea
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provide sign posts
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Vast Scope
That’s not all the Council did,
but it's enough to indicate the
Dec. 7. 1925 — Burton News.
Tom Gantt, a prosperous
Negro farmer residing about
six miles north of Burton, has
marketed 11 bales of cotton, a
full crop for him. all the work
being done by himself, wife and
three children He owns his
7/
A
-ma
-----
ESS ASSOCIATION
■
F,
t
1
Office Manager and
Bookkeeper
dustrious In addition, it seem'
ed that luck was with him, for
it rained nowhere else and his
crop was just as good as in
years when there is no drouth
Many train loads of feed have
been received in Burton all
coming from out-of-state points
except hulls ad meal The
feed crops here were total
failures, and the fall crop of
email grain was lost because of
. wet weather. There was no hay
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n y e
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F
W I N N E R -2
a ce Dakugucac
S—tda* of the ",
Vocational Agriculture Teacher
Association of Texas e
1
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Service
FINKE
S Sgt Isidro Dela Rosa
local V S Army recruiter, an-
nounced that Weldon Finke, of
T506 S Church Street, enlisted
in the U.S. Army for a period
of three years Pvt, Finke chose
the supply field as his enlist-
ment option The nineteen year
old soldier attended Brenham
High School
1
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★ WASHINGTON COLUMN ★
__________________________________________E--------------------------------------------:____________________-
the Catholic Church
। ' Sidelights
B by Vern Sanford
3V
JOHN T. MUEGGE, Managing Editor
PEGGY WHITE, Advertising Director
CATHY COVEY, Reporter-Photogrepher
Enterea aa m.cona otnaa matter m Pont omc
Brenham. Texae under Act of Maroa % 1079
CORPORATE OfFICKRS _ w. a BlAnton, sr .
hairman ot the Board: Bea r Blanton, Prest-
ent and Treagurer: Carolyn W. Blanton, Vice-
Premdent ana Becretary.
ABC
, •Smm
t ..2
to come
"‘Did Somebody Whistle for Me?’’
ear
*£« EVELN FAT MAASS ...
MW A -5^^. HXATT-i, ”
RAfroNp",akiv*MNm
"gKo
ALntoD r. ..............
Uttar and -Publisher
I
KATY LEE MANN
"eg
-3N
Baytown Strongly protested
against the Board plan to al-
low more pollution in the mid-
Channel area above Baytown.
He fears fish kills which some-
times make living unbearable
in Baytown will continue when ,
rains wash slugs of polluted wa-
ter down ihe Channel.
But the Board unanimously
adopted its three-zone plan, ef-
fective immediately.
A seventh member was add-
ed to the Board by Connally’-*
selection of Howard Rose of
A related decree provided for that human authors may have
crossing 1
boundary
Whether
entered it
cast. and thV
church for
will he shaved
made in St.
Midland, his former admini-
strative assistant. He will repre-
sent the public.
News Committee Meets
A .nine-member committee
studying the role of the press
in < ime and court news cover-
age' declared its opposition to
legislation that would restrict
stpries
, Lawmakers and news execu-
tives serve on committee set
up, by, last Legislature Group
selected Felix McKnight, Dallas
Times Herald editor, as chair-
man. . ’
McKnight said the Commit-
tee hopes to establish guideline's
to protect the rights of indivi-
duals named in court charges;
also to preserve freedom of the
press and to avoid a fight over
legislation
- Hard Viet Facts Give Lie
" To U.S. Policy Protesters
BY BRUCE BIOSSAT
Washington Correspondent
.Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
WASHINGTON NNEA)
wrought will be visibly immedi-
etly to the church's 590 million
members It will take many
years, in some cases, to
implement the broad charters
of reform which were laid down
bv the Council fathers.
But 'the die has now been
--g. otnee Manager and Bookkeeper
--Cleesined Averkting A reulation
. Prootreader. Wire News
--------------- - Teletypesetter Operator
----------------------perator
--—............................. News
.. -----—. Advertistng Make-Up
------—--.................. Uulity Prntr
----------------------------- Stereotyper
-------------— Anistant Stereotyper
—-- Intertype Operator
by the decisions
Peter's Basilica
SCHOLARSHIP—Tom Whitehead, Jr., President of
the Brenham Lions Club, awards a $100 Blinn Col-
lege scholarship to Sandra Jurries. Sandra is the
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Herbert W. Jurries She is
a sophomore Business Administration major-
intention of
Yalu River
Dec. 7. 1885 — The sale of
the Washington County Real
Estate and Building Associa-
tion's property will take place
at the court house today
The annual meeting of the
Brenham Bible society will b
held in the Presbyterian church
tonight. The address will be
delivered by Rev Dr Hunt, the
eloquent secretary of the
American Bible Society -
Cotton The market was
easier yesterday and about
l-8th lower on grades below
good middling
Grand Rally There was a
grand rally of the anti pi uhi
bitionists at the public square
on Tuesday night; the square
was illimuniated with torches
and bonfires A brass band was
in attendance Speeches
against prohibition were made
by Mr W W Searcy. Col
D. C. Giddings and Major .
Spann. By invitation F D Jo-
don spoke in favor of prohibi-
tion. after which Mr. W. W
Searcy proceeded to refute the
arguments made by Jodon.
R S Traver of Brenham
and W C. Cochran, of Bellville
have formed a law partnership
and about the 1st of January
next will open an office in
San Angelo. Tom Green county.
Curia Reform
The Council also called for
reform and internationalization
of the Roman Curia (which
the most revolutionary
taken by the Council,
a coup
arguments scheduled
Pope Paul has promised
advisors are operating with the
North Vietnamese should turn
out to be true, it would be a
reminder ffiat in Viet Nam Red
Chinese Leader Mao Tze-Tung
has a huge stake. To admit
defeat there would be to admit -
defeat of his whole theory of a
"peoples’ war.”
And whatever precautions the
U.S. takes, they may not be
enough.
THE AMERICAN CREEb
.... by wunam Tyler Page
bizaz Szarznamzin:
A many overetun statesi * perfect union, one end inseparebie, estAbliahea
upon thone principies or freedom equality, justtce, and humanity for
which American patriots sacrriced their Uvea and fortunes
I therefore believe it 18 my duty to my country to love It. to auppon
the. conattution. to obey ata lawa; 10 respeet ><* hag: and to defend it
egainat all enemtes
engineered bv a few hot-eyed
reformers. It represents the
considered judgment and enthu-
assurances that
States had no
CIRCULATIQN- Agente-w..H. Muske, Henry Dreschel, Hr* Mar-
Un Welbrock, Robert Ray Loenh, Rural Agent Monroe cknrmann
ORRESPONEITS--Mims Hilda Stegemont, Wahington: Mn Thelma
Routt rockett, Chawvu HUI. Judith Tanter, Bu:con; mm. g H Wike,
Lone Potnt-lnsyile: Mm Frank Bednar, Latium; Mra. Stove Kamas,
Welez: Mra M L Zwernemann. Carmine; MU ton Routt, Chappell HlU
¥ra Etta Sterling, Somerville. WUl Weerea, Burton Caesar Dutch" Hohn
lndependence; Mins Juns Fricke. Round Top: Mrs H W Smith, Lyon?
Carolyn Vaughan, Auatin and Johnnon City; Mrs, Jennte King, Dime Bot
A radical revision of Catholic
relations with other religions
was decreed in three different
documents of major impor-
would have
not the U.N.
undertake at .once),
powered national
conferences, 'such — ...
National Catholic Welfare Con- |
orders before
An,
the changes it
already announced that
first session wilL be held
1967.
week of
for the
the Pope in the responsibility
for governing the whole church.
The Council’s document was
at pains to reaffirm the Pope's
supremacy; and to make clear
that the authority of the
bishops was to be exercised
only in conjunction with and
never apart from the Pope But
the door was opened to future
decentralization of power
preserve a government in
and to provide the
December session. The justices
have been in recess almost two
weeks writing opinions and
were expected to announce
several.
knows no such degree- intervention.
But whether or not compari If reports that Red Chinese
the United States conscientious-
ly avoided an attack on Chinese
electric power plants just
across the Yalu River.
And despite the growing
presence of regular units of the
North Vietnamese forces in the
south, the U.S. similarly so far
has avoided the industrial
complex centered around Hanoi
and its South China Sea port of
Haiphong.
• The Viet Cong, those hera’ldcd promoters of good will
among the South Vietnamese peasantry, have killed or kid.
nd in naped upwards of 20,000 South Vietnamese village chiefs
it. to teachers, medical and agricultural helpers and youth leaders
being. •40 destroy the working fabric of the land they seek to win
------L mild soercion. or outright, systematic terror, the entire enter-—
prise has strong marks of a "contrived revolution ”
Without some support from the South Vietnamese Le
effort at conquest might speedily have faded But there is
every evidence, from the public avowals of Ho Chi Minh and
his-military leaders, that the effort would have been made
in.any event , Ho declared his intent before he had the faint-
Si denevhatcsortaof government/Saigon would build after
produced, all hay being shipped
in.
The Christian church has re-
cently bought a new piano.
Though this church has no
resident pastor the Sunday
School is large- and flourish-
ing
Mr and Mrs Edwin Toellner
are rejoicing over the birth of. a
fine, little son. and are receiving
congratulations of numerous
friends.
The protesters against U.S. policy in Viet Nam, having
marched again, are learning once more that the country pays
attention to their exhibitions but not to their arguments.
When you get past the pure pacifists and those who would
want the United States to lose any war to the Communists,
you find always this one core idea in the objectors’ argu-
ments: __ •
The South Vietnamese people are engaged in a civil war,
a popular uprising, against the Saigon government and we are -
"immorally” intervening t try to block this "revolution.’
There are many reasons why most Americans decline to
take this notion seriously. Some of them:
• The protesters' contention ignores the fact that the war
in South Viet Nam was begun by elite, hard-core Communist
guerrillas "left over" from the French-Indochina war, who
acted on signal from Hanoi in 1957 and used weapons hidden
at the close of that earlier war three years before.
• Hanoi gave quick notice that the signal would be forth,
coming, announcing publicly in the immediate aftermath of
the 1954 Geneva Accords that the Reds would not rest until
all Viet Nam was under Hanoi management.
• The careful historians of Viet Nam indicate that at least
two full divisional staffs of North Vietnamese regulars were
infiltrated south in the years 1959 to 1963, to co-ordinate and
guide Viet Cong guerrilla operations.
• The National Liberation Front, proclaimed Dec. 20 I960,
is patently a Hanoi facade, so lightly regarded by Red leader \
Ho Chi Minh that no more than 30 of the 82 Front posts have
ever been filled
To insist, as the protesters do, that we must negotiate with
the Front is to argue that we must deal with Hanoi as it
wears two different faces.
• The kindly North Vietnamese, who so often are rep-
resented by the protesters as offering the suffering South
Vietnamese people marvelous programs of reform, are esti-
mated by one cautious historian to have executed 50 000
North Vietnamese peasants and sent another 100 000 to
forced labor camps in pursuing land reform
is a subject that can be argued
tb this day.
At any rate it has been a
decisive factor in the decision
to limit the war against North
Viet Nam to the air and to
keep U.S. war planes at a safe
distance from North Viet
Nam’s border with Red China.
In the' Korean War, despite
the presence of $00,000 Chinese
"volunteers” in North Korea,
AUSTIN — Fate of Texas’ 63
year-old poll tax as a voting re-
quirement rests in the. hands of
a three-judge federal court.
They heard four hours of argu-
ments here last week in an
historic case to abolish the 1
levy.
Judges announced that no im-
mediate ruling would be made
They advised Texans who want
to be .eligible to vote, next'year
to pay the 51 75 fee before’ the
tanuary .31 deadline
in frequent, questions during
the arguments, the. judges indi-
cated concern ver several com-
plex legal •.points
Circuit Judge JhnR Brown
repeatedly speculated on the
court's earlier pesitien, in-as-
sessing an apparently unsup
ported congressional finding in
the 1965 voting rights act. that
the Texas levy discriminates
against Negroes
"How do we go about review-
ing the basis for a congression-
al finding ‛ Brown wondered
aloud Or des the case come
to us as though Congress had
not made these findings’ This
is a very unusual point of law.”
Texas Atty • Gen. Waggoner
Carr maintained that. Congress
had made its finding "without
so much as a scintilla of evi-
dense " He pointed out that
U S Atty Gen Nicholas Katzen-
bach himself had testified be-'
fore a Senate committee
that he had no complaints of vo-
ter discrimination in this state.
Katzenbach later filed the
suit under terms of the voting
rights act
US JusHee Department----
Atty. Stephen J Pollak acknow-
' ledging that there is no overt
refusal to give Texas Negroes
voting rights, argued that due
to basically-inferior education,
income of Negroes is lower and
Bv LOUIS CASSELS
UP! Religion Editor
The Vatican Ecumenical
Council was the most signifi-
cant religious event of this
century.
It laid the groundwork for
changes in the Roman Catholic
Church as far-reaching as any
sought by Martin Luther at the
time of the Protestant Refor-
mation.
As a result of this historic
four year summit conference of
bishops from every nation, the
world’s largest, religious body
will:
-Conduct its worship servi-
escih new ways.
—Decentralize its form of
government.
—Radically revise its attitude
toward other religions.
—Give greater prominence to
the Bible as a sourcebook of
Ee
1 '
began on Oct. 1 1, 1962, will
come to a close Wednesday.
Dec. 1. In the following
dispatch, UPI Religion Editor
Louis Cassels analyzes the
achievements of this historic
meeting and its impact on the
world of religion.
erred in some non-essential
details, and that they some-
times used iterarv forms such
as poetry, parable and myth,
whigh were never meant to be
"read as literal history.
The lone range effects of the
new catholic emphasis on the
Bible are impossible to calcu-
late Rut one prominent Catho-
her theotoglan, Fr Gr e gory
Baum, predicts that the ulti-
mate influence of this do-
cument will he greater than
that of any other action taken
by the council,
Red China
Korean War
entered the
Dec. 7, IMS - Cpl.’and Mrs.
Alfred C Landua of Brenham
became the parents of a son at
the Sarah B Milroy Memorial
Hospital Sunday. The baby, who
has been named Kenneth
Alfred, weighed six pounds and
ten ounces.
Cecil E. Koon has returned to
his home from the St Francis
Hospital and is now rapidly re-
cuperatjng after an attack of
bronchial pneumonia Though
able to leave the hospital he is
Mill confined to his bed and will
be kept at home for another
week.
Mr. and Mrs Fred E. Seale
Sr. of Chappell Hill announce
the engagement of their daugh
ter, Roberta Neil to James
Douglas Tipton of Cameron
The wedding will be an event of
late December •
Sgt Warren H Menk son of
Mr. and Mrs. J. R Menk of
1104 West 4th St. Brenham ha*
been honorably discharged from
the AAF at the Separation
Center at Ellington Field and
is here with his wife, and their
son Robert Thomas Menk
—Cpl. Oliver B Stark who----
arrived recently on an emer-
gency furlough from Tacoma
Wash, because of the death of
-his mother, Mrs. Emma Stark
of Burton will return within
the next few days to McChord
Field. Tacoma. Wash.-
scope of its
there ate so far seem mostly
coincidental
The Korean War eventually
employed more th ail 2.8 million
Americans in the Army “alone.
In that war, troops of 15 other
nations fought alongside the
Americans and the South
Koreans I
As of today, it is estimated
that US ground forces in
South Visit Nam will fotal.
something over 200 000 by the
end of this year Although
conceivably that number could
double by the end of another
year, the commitment so far is
less than a tenth that of Korea
Comparisons between 1 wars
are difficult because a bullet
kills just as surely whether the
action be large or small And
the sorrow among those left by
thr - man......who— dies tikewise
Both can be laid to a
since the late Pone John XXIII.
called the Council to order on
Oct. 11. 1962. .
Some catholic traditionalists,
who preferred the old ways,
are appalled bv the whole
business Their viewpoint was
vigorously - represented in the
.Council by a small but
determined minoirity, of ronser-
vative bishop* who fhade up in
parliamentary skill what they
lacked in, voting power
Temporary DisiTusionment
THeir maneuvers succeeded
on manv occasions in postpon-
ing action on Important do-
cuments. This led to premature
gloom-mongering by disappoint-
ed liberals and, particularly at
the close of the 1964 session,
gave rise to a widespread
public impression that the
Council was foundering on the
rocks of conservative intriansi-
gance.
Nothing could be further
from the truth. The key fact
about the Council, from the day
it opened until the day it closed
was the overwhelming size of
the majority committed to
Pope John’s program til renew
al and reform. On the crucial
votes, the majority for "aggior
namento" (an Italian word
meaning "u pdatin g") was
usually-in the neighborhood of
80 to 90 per cent.
So • this revolution in what
was for centuries a staid and
change-resistant institution can-
The first fruit of their labor
was a sweeping reform in
catholic liturgical practice*
The Council father* decreed
that public worship wax hence
forth to be conducted in the
language of the people instead
of Latin so members of the
congregation could be active
participants rather than silent
spectators. Provision was made
for revising tffe order of the
mss, purifying it of medieval
’ accretions and redundancies,
and placing more emphasis on
sermons, scripture reading and
hymn singing. in order to make
the whole service more mean-
ingful, to the laity.
L Shifts in Power
Next, the Council turned its
attention to the task of
redefining the power structure
of the church, and correcting
the ne-sided emphasis on
papal supremacy which result
ed from the uncompleted work
of the Vatican Council of 1870
The corrective which which
the Council adopted was the
"Doctrine of Collegiality"
which asserts that all bishops,
by God-given right rather than
doctrine.
Accord new dignity
A
N
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
It was on Nov. 26, just 15
years ago that Red Chinese
force* poured across the Yalu
River into North Korea and
sent more than 100,000 United
Nations troops reeling south-
ward in apparently disastrous
defeat.
When the Chinese struck, the
U.N. force* under Gen Douglas
MacArthur virtually had de-
stroyed the Communist North
Korean army and already there
was elated talk of "home by
Christmas." -
Chinese intervention pro-
longed the war at least two and
a half years.
"nis is not to suggest that
similar intervention is im-
minent now.in the current anti-
Communist war in Viet Nam.
Events of that other Novem-
ber are recalled because as the
ferocity of the Viet Nam
conflict increases, comparisons
the tax, therefore, falls heavier
on them.
One judged wondered, perhaps
hopefully, if the U.S. Supreme
Court might rule on, some of the
questions submitted tn an ear-
lier Virginia case before federal
judges in Texas have to kind
down their decision
. Hearing here was the first of
four cases brought by the jus-
tice department, under congres-
sional direction, to challenge
poll tax validity head-on. thers
will be held in Mississippi on
Dec 10: Alabama on Dec. 20;
and Virginia on Jan 17.
Pollution Program
Gov John Connally has ad-
vised John Gardner, U.S Sec-
retaryol Health. Education and
Welfare, that Texas plans to
< ontrol pollution on its streams
and in its coastal waters.
Such a certification is re-
quired by the new federal law
aimed at stopping pollution of
public waters throughout the
. United States if states fail to
get pollution control programs
in operation by June 30, 1967.
then Uncle Sam will take over
and adopt its own programs
and rules.
Connally’s" formal certifica-
tion came at the Texas Water
Pollution Control took its big-
gest step yet it adopted rules
and standards for discharges
of municipal and industrial
waste into the Houston Ship
Channel Industry spokesmen
at the public hearing estimated
Ship Channel industry will have
to spend betwee n 450 million
and 4100 million for treatment
facilities to meet these stan-
dard --------:--.
Even then, Joe G. Moore Jr.,
Chairman of the Board, esti-
mated that the new require-
ments would eliminate only half
the pollution in the Channel.
Mayor Seaborn Cravey of
I j
The Breaham Banner.Pres was eetabitshea as the Weekiy Southern Ban-
zer.—4 red hot Democratie Jwnai - on January 1. 1866; enlarged to ■
dany newspaper Janunry 1, 1576, pubiishea for 41 roars by 1 G . Unkin.
, Aean of Texan Journalism, gho was one or the ounaera nt the Texne
Prens Amsoclation tn IMS President U ism Published every afternoon
f ' ???* Sazurdazaand Sunday st 223 East Main Street, Brenhnin, Texas. Tele-
V H OD • VK 0*3063 .
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•I'BBC MU111OW RATES: Deltverea to the home by nrler in Brenham
one.mont..21.25: one xear. 112.00; By man to Washington and adjotmnc
ountes S’?, per year. Austin. Brazor, Burienon, Colorado, Fayett, rmes,
1ee and.Walier countiee): to other section ia Texas $12.00 per year, out of
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ion.o.. "ay.person..firm or corporation appearing in the columns of the
Bainner -PE Ma will be Eiadiz and promptly corrected when ths article in
suestion is called to the attention at the zannagement $
importance to the laity.
—Overhaul it* seminaries to
insure better selection and
preparation of priest*.
—Put nuns into modern
dress.
Catholic* to establish warm
new ties of cooperation, friend-
ship and dialogue with their
"separated brethren” of other
Christian churches
The second recognizes the
spiritual value* inherent in non-
Christian religions, end particu-
larly the "common" patrimony"
which Christian* share with
Jews. It also repudiates any
notion that Jews are under a
divisine curse because of the
crucifixion of Jesus, and
decries all form* of anti-
Semitism
Religious Liberty Affirmed
The third document, in many
ereation of a pew
"Synod of Bishops" or Episco-
pal Senate, which will include
representatives of all national
hierarchies and will he rather
like a little ecumenical council
This body will meet in Rome at
the call of the Pope to advise
and consult with him on major
policy decisions. The Pope has
JO
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court meets today (at
y W . - ,
- ' —
ference in the United States, to I
deal with many questions
hitherto referred to Rome ‘ .
more more more 4
These, actien-,en futts
implemented; will mean, grea- I
Ker local Autonomy and will
give non-Italian Catholics a
bigger voice in the church’s
affairs than they’Ve had in the
past
believing that religious liberty
is a God-ordained human right
which is not to be contravened
by any government or institu-
tion.
Protestant observers, who
attended all sessions of the
Council, were delighted with
the religious liberty declara-
tion.
They also were pleased with
a Council document which
accords to the Bible as much
reference and authority as
Luther ever did This document
urges Bible reading by Catho-
I lies: encourages Catholic scho-
lars to employ modem method*
of biblical studv, including form
criticism; and affirm* the
reliability of the biblical rec ord
in term* which leave the door
' enen for the acknowledgment
Upcoming Pages
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Blanton, Ben F. & Muegge, John T. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 243, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 7, 1965, newspaper, December 7, 1965; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1578526/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.