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October 10, 1978 - Image 5

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1978-10-10

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The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 10, 1978-Page 5

FIRST BALLOTS CAST NEXT SUNDAY:
Cardinals predict 'easy' pope selection

VATICAN CITY (AP) - Roman
Catholic cardinals will cast their ballot
for a new pope next DSunday, the
Vatican announced yesterday. The
dean of the College of Cardinals;
reflecting widespread sentiment,
predicted the election will be brief and
easy.
The congragation of cardinals,
running the church in the period
between popes, decided that the 111
cardinal-electors will precede Sunday's
-conclave by jointly celebrating a Mass
in St. Peter's. Basilica on Saturday
morning, calling on the Holy Spirit to
help them elect a pope.
ON SATURDAY afternoon the
princes of the church will form a
procession and file into the
Renaissance splendor of the Sistine
Chapel, the door locking behind them.
They begin balloting the following
morning. -
The conclave procedure will largely
be a re-run of the one in August that
elected Albino Luciani, the humble son
of a bricklayer from the Italian Alps.
Pope John Paul I, the 263rd pope and
leader of the world's 700 million
Catholics, died of a heart attack Sept.28
after a reign of only 34 days.
On Sunday morning, the cardinals'
will celebrate Mass in the three chapels
in the conclave area, followed by two
rounds of voting and another two in the
afternoon. -The process will continue
until a new pope is chosen.. The election
requires a vote of two-thirds plus one.
THE STATEMENT by Cardinal
Carlo Confalonieri, in an interview with
the Rome newspaper I1 Tempo,
appeared to indicate that the cardinal-
electors have developed a consensus of
sorts on the kind of pope they are
seeking. Cardinal Leo Suenens of
Belgium-has also been quoted as saying
that he expects the voting to end in two
days.

The candinals have had ample time
to get to know each other since the
death of Pope Paul VI on Aug. 6. The
only first-time voter this time will be
Cardinal John Wright, the only,
American member of the Curia, the
church's central government. He
missed the last papal election because
of cataracy surgery in, the United
States.
Influential cardinals stressed over
the weekend that consideration of age
and health will be major factors in the
choice of the next pope. Others like
Confalonieri have said the next ope
should have a knowledge of world
affairs and diplomacy as well as the
fundamental pastoral quality of the late
pontiff.
THE "PASTORAL" cardinals - ones
with long service as bishops like Pope
John Paul I - most frequently
mentioned as possible papal candidates
are Salvatore Pappalardo of Palermo,
Sicily, Giuseppe Siri of Genoa and
Corrado Ursi of Naples.

Among the "Curia-oriented" names
most heard are Italian Cardinals Sergio
Pigedoli, Sebastiano Baggio, Pericle
Felice, Paolo Bertoli and Frenchman
Jean Villot.
Another possibility us Cardinal
Giovanni Benelli of Florence,
experienced in both pastoral and Curia
affairs.
Confaloniere is 85 and is barred along
with 15 other octogenarian cardinals
from taking part in the conclave.
None of the nine U.S. cardinals
in the conclave is given any
realistic chance of being elect-
ed.
If the cardinals should decide to
break a 500-year-old tradition and elect
a non-cardinal as pope, Archbishop
Alberto Ballestrero of Turin, a former
friar, is rated as a possible choice. He is
65, a respected theologian with a gift for
diplomacy.

Meanwhile, the Turin newspaper La
Stampa reported that the congregation
of cardinals had asked the Curia for
additional details on the death of John
Paul I.
But a Vatican spokesman, the Rev.
Romeo Panciroli, said he knew of no
such movement among the cardinals
and added that a death certificate,
signed by the pope's two doctors, has
been issued.
The Vatican said the 65-year-old pope
died of an acute heart attack. There has
been no independent statement by. the
pope's doctors.
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