Eucharist Paper Seeks Comment
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LONDON (NC) - There has been confused reaction to the Anglican-Catholk "'Substantial agreement" on the doctrine of the Eucharist reached by an official Anglican-Catholic commission in Windsor, England, at the end of September and released .at the end of December.
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-St. Paul
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Fall River, Mass" Thurs., January 6, 1972 PRICE 10¢ Vol. 16, No.1 © 1972 The Anchor $4.00 per year
"• Marian Medal Award
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medal was performed by Bishop Connolly just a few days before he handed the leadership of the Diocese to Bishop Cronin. This year, Bishop Cronin will award the medal to 132 of the laity at a special ceremony on Sunday evening at 7:30, in the cathedral. ' . : ... '. -,.. '. . .., . Th~ee more' person's wiil' join the 129 announced last week.
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They are: Walter Gazda, 106 Whittenton Street, Taunton. Maurice A. Tavares, Baptist St., Mattapoisett. Claudio Alexandre, Rt. 6A, West Barnstable.
.St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall -River, will be the scene for the fifth Annual Conferral of the ( Marian Medal on some 132 • members of the Fall River Dio• cese. .• Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin 'o' will for the first time recognize the devotion and service to the Church by members of the'laity .-. from throughout the Diocese. ~. The. conferral of the Marian "'"... Medal was inaugurated by Most Rev. James L. Connolly while he :,' headed the Diocese of Fall River. .The last awarding of the ;.
Annual Charity BI:III In Final Prrepa rations
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Some commentators have doubts about the statement's meaning. Archbishop George Dwyer of Birmingham; England, expressed. gratitude toward the theologians but added "·it is not clear that full agreement has been reached. The statement is very much a theological docu. ment written in difficult theo10gica'1 language. Fo~ the ordinary man it raises almost as " many qqestions as it solves. It . may.be tJfaf atter:tptS-"atsucli.--a reconciliation shoUld be bypassed and instead that new formulas and expressions should be found. In fact, the authors of the statement have made a valiant effort to do this. But they will have to find simpler and clearer language if the people are to be convinced that Catholics and
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Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, Bishop of Fall River, has urged "every reasonable effort be made to celebrate the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity in each parish of lilt' diocese.". Traditionally' devoted to ecumenical observances of all types, the week extends from Tuesday, Jan. 18 to Tuesday, Jan. 25 inclusive. Attention has been focused on the pleas and guidelines for such celebrations on the universal level ~ prepared by the Holy See's special office for ecumen-
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Weddle to fight a bid now before the California Supreme Court to eliminate restrictions on abortion in the state health safety code.
Weddle and a new group called Nurses for Life have filed a friend of the court brief to defend the present law restricting performance of abortions to accredited hospitals. That law is being challenged by a Los Angeles physician seeking unrestricted abortions. Mrs. Patricia McGivern, who founded ,Nurses for Life, said: "We believe that if other members of our sex could witness an abortion, if they could see the drowning of the child in amniotic fluid, the experimentation on the living child, the disposal of the dismembered child, the emo, tionaI trauma of many women after the abortion, they would, hopefUlly not choose to exercise what they term their 'civil right' to an abortion."
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The Vatican Press Office views the statement strictly a's a "study document that commits for the time being only the members of the commission."1t said 'that the agreement "was not yet complete and that there are still essential points to be clarified. The central question of ministry of the Eucharist has not been touched on, since it will be the object of a special session of the mixed commission which is to take place in September, 1972." The commission statement says that: "Communion with Christ in the Eucharist presupposes His -true presence, effectively signified by the 'bread and wine which, in this mystery, become His Body and Bloood." "Christ is present and active, in various ways, in the entire Eucharistic celebration. It is the .. same Lord who t~rough the proTurn to Page SiX
Bishop Urges Celebration Of Christian Unity Week
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Mrs. James A. O'Brien of Fa I River, chairman of the preselltation committee has anno meed that presentees with thl:ir presenters are scheduled to m£et at 2:30 on Sunday afterno)n in the Lincoln Park ballro,)m for a rehearsal of the pr,$entation ceremonies. VIrs. Stanley Janick of Fall Ri/er, cha'irman of decorating conmittee for the Bishop's Ball, uqes all members of the Council of Catholic Women and Society of St. Vincent de Paul to be
,in London said that some' Catholic bishops regard certain press stories on the statement as misleading and that bishops of both Churches are still studying the conclusions of this group of theologians'.
'Nurses for',L,ife' Lash 'Abortion
Final preparations for the 17th AnllUal Bishop's Charity Ball will be launched Sunday when the decorating and presentees groups of the outstanding social affair of the Winter season meet on Sunday afternoon at the Lirlcoln Park Ballroom.
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The Catholic cochairman of the commission, Bishop Alan Clark of Northampton, Engfan.d, has pointed out that the document is the opinion of the 18 commission theologians, Catholic and Anglican, .and has not been ratified by the authorities of either Church. The Bishop himself believes that the agreement may contain many ambiguities. The Times of London said that the agreement wHl be seen by most people a'S "ambiguous on the controversial points. ': •. It . speaks in the broadest terms of the presence of Christ at the Eucharist."
Anglicans now share a common faith in the Eucharist." Most Anglican leaders have reacted in a very cautious way toward the statement. The Catholic Information Office
Weddle contends, in the brief, "that life begins at conception is not a religious belief but a medical fact." I
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kal activity-and by the diocesan statutes that implement such directives on the local diocesan level. A special respect and recognition of our separated· brethr.en is to be emphasizeQ by individuals and parishes, parochial and diocesan schools, local and regional CCD programs. Each parish is urged to plan and hold an ecumenical service and to invite non-Catholic clergy and faithful to participate. "It remains now," the Most Rev. Bishop stated, "for each and every Catholic to put into practice the inspired direction which has been provided. Suspicion and prejudice must be put aside. "Our youngsters, firm and full in their commitment to our Faith, must be instructed in the understanding of and compassion for those whose belief differs from our own." Materials suggesting various programs and parochial observances, especially prepared by ·the Graymoor Fathers, is being distributed throughout the diocese.
Bishop C~onin To Be Homilist Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, has accepted the invitation to deliver the homily at the episcopal ordination of the two newly appointed auxiliary bishops of Boston. ' Once an auxiliary bishop of Boston himself, the Fall River Ordinary will return to the Metropolitan See for the ordination of his successors. Appointed as aides to Archbishop Humberto S. Medeiros are: Bishop-Elect Lawrence J. Riley, pastor of Most Precious Blood Parish, Hyde Park, arid Bishop~Elect' Joseph F. Maguire, pastor of St. John the Baptist Parish, Quincy.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese. of F,Cl.II,Riy~r~:rhur~.,. .Jan. 6,1972 ',"
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Assess'es 1971
M.emphis May~r, Draft, Official Deny Intent to" Attack Bi~hop
NEW YORK (NC)-The World Council of Churches has had a greater impact on problems of MEMPHis (NC) - Both' the to notify the draft board that race discrimination than' any mayor of Memphis and the dep- Father Umphries is still a priest other world body, a!=cording to uty director of the Selective Ser- and t he clergyman exemption Dr. Eugene L. Smith, executive vice System for the state of will be restored. ' secretary of the Council's United ,Contacted later, Bishop Dozier Tennessee have denied any inStates branch. tent to attack Bishop Carroll T. said he had written to the draft In a year-end report, Smith Dozier of Memphis ,by the re-board on Oct. ,26 to inform them listed the council's aid to Mack" classification of a priest as I-A. that Father Umphries is still a African liberation .groups, as its Memphis draft board No. 83 priest. The pastoral letter was most important action, adding ,had switched the dassification issued Dec. 19 and Father Urn- , • that most- of the predominentiy of Father Joseph Umphries, prin- phries received' the reclassificawhite member churches which cipal of Bishop Byrne Cath9lic tion notice Dec. 23. ' ' originally opposed such aid M~' High School here, from 4-D, a , Asked about his own views on support it., clergyman's exemption, to I-A, the, Vietnam war, Loeb said, "No other world ,body in re" immediately available for induc- "The' no-win philosophy', that ,cent ,years has', spoken or acted tion, less than a week after started in Korea and went to ,'on the', race isSue', wit~ an imBishop Dozier i,ssued a pastoral . Vietnam, has lapped over : into pact equ!lLto that ,of, this World letter-calling for immediate with~ 'no-win against law and order, Council ac~ion," he stated. drawal of U. S. forces fr<~m ,drugs, pornography and other 'Smith also, commented on a Vietnam. ' ,things should be changed. This ,World Councll dE;!cision to help·: A spokesman for the local ' country should turn back to the raise funds, for a 'ministry to board said the,' reclassification, winning way that we were draft-age emigrants from the U.S. was made because it was decided ,taught, in all our churches and ' to Canada:' that Father Umphries' duties 'Schools in each instance includI were primarily educational rath~r -ing Vietnam." "The,· 'world Council of than religious. Churches is seeking to relate to "'It smacks of interference of Chicago See Issues society's, outcasts and' dropstate' and religion 'when they outs. Every, New :restliment , Financial, Rep,ort tell me who is a priest and who's standard makes it imperative ,not;;: said Bishop Dozier, main~ , CHICAGO (NC)-The Chicago for the' churcD to minister to tain'ing the board was trying to archdiocese, inc'luding all, its parU.S. draft-dodgers 'and desert" ,"strike back at me because of ishes and other diocesan institu~ ers in Canada who happen to be : FORi THE PRISONER ••• A VISIT AND A HAND:tions, spent $150,883,000 duririg my pastoral letter." ~HI\KE: Archbishop Humberto S,' Medeiros of Boston the most conspicuous 'dropDenying that there was any the fiscal year' which ended on outs' from the present establishintent to attack the bishop, Co\.' June 30; 1971, according to/a 16- spares a d<?pble handshake of friendship with a prisoner ' ment." William L. Wynn, deputy state page financial report' published at a Walpole, Massachusetts state prison. The prisoners, at t~e Massacpusetts Correcti.onal Institution presented the' Cancel Celebrations director of the Selective Service by the archdiocese. The cash expenditures were a Archbishop •with a, pectoral cross which hEl wore while System in Nashville, told NC MADRAS (NC)-Celebrations' News that the issuance of the comfortable $305,000 lower than t9u:ring the icell blocks. NC ]Photo; the 19,th centenary of the of recla,ssjfication notice after the the cash income for the year. death of St. Thomas the Apostle the report, published in But I I pastor,al letter was "a coinciII schedti'led here were almost all dence," and said the decision to ,booklet form, indicated that canceled because of the' India: reclassify the' priest ,may have without the sale of securities the , , Pakistan war. Ar~hbjshop Ray,archdiocese would pave shown occurred before the bishop is-, appa Arulappa of, Madras and cash deficit of over $1 million. , sued his letter. Mylapore said 'aU centennial' ab- , Retired ·Priest Works on Lifeot: Christ , Only"$64,360,OOO of the . i' "If I have my facts correctly, servances except a cultural prothe boards in Memphis were rou- $151,188,000 taken in by the I: In Verse gram have been canceled. The archdiocese 'during the year tinely reclassifying registrants," cultural prQgram, he said, will be Wynn said. ~'The registrant did came from contributions and beIWATERFOR,b (NC)-A retired' expects the final passages ,to held to .raise money for a nanot give sufficient information" quests by the 2.5 million Catho- priest here in IWisconsin has em- take about a year since "most ,tioool defense fund of the Indian to indicate he is s,tH! a priest, he Hcs to Chicago's 456 parishes. b~rkloo,o~ a ~onumental project.' of the things we know about ~ government. The celebrations 'The remainder came from a wide ~li! i8 writin~ ~he "Life of Christ" , Christ happened ill the last week said. were ,scheduled for Jan.' 7-9, variety of sources, ranging from In verse. 'No-Win' Philosophy , ,of His Hfe." 1972, and a papal legate was , SChool tuition and fees, through , '''[believe I' put in two full "We're not about to draft ' I Using biblical accounts' of have attended. Community Fund contributions days a week" ,on the project, exhim," Wynn said, pointing out to Catholic Charities, down, to pl~ied lFather Joseph Bier. "Most Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John that Father Umphriesis 29 and I as a guide, the priest-poet makes parish dances, cake sales, etc. of'the time I Iwork until I'm aidraft boards are not taking anyI ',comparisons between the four .col'lection basket, though The m?st dlizzy fr;qm the strain" to one older than' 26. ' it brought in less than half of achieve variety in rhyme."evangelists to keep his writing "I'm soNy this' happened," accurate. the an:hdiocese's cash, was the Wynn swid. FathE~r Bier!, who started the 'Iargest'single source of revenue prpjeot about, mid-September, ' He admits the biggest problem' "There's no cause for con•during the year. Second-largest al~o rec:ords hi~, writings on tape. is trying to maintain the cor· ~ern," Mayor Henry Loeb' of sourc~ of income was school revI rect meter because in writing Doane'Heal'Ames Memphis told NC News, adding Although he, has no real desire verse it's difficult to avoid repeenues (over' $27 million). Other INCO.pOIAnD that Bishop Dozier merely has significant revenue sources in- to. captalize ion the, venture, titious rhyme. Hill lines rhyme "FUNERAl cluded cemeteries ($12.8 mUlion), FathElr Bier believes the com- ei,ther consecutively ar alternateSERVICE investment income ($3.8 miUion) 'pl~ted work, IWhlich may, take I y. ··,Necrology 50,vlng All Faith. 51n<al926 and net proceeds from the sale another two y¢ars; would be ap- " He said that the Eight BeatiJAN. 7 of Securities ($1.49 million). ' prQpria1ie to leave as a legacy. So faI he hasl written some 50 tudes in the "Sermon on the 'Rev. Alfred R. Forni, Pastor, HYANNIS 775.0684 pages and estiml\tes the final Mount" were not too difficult, 1970, St. Francis of Assisi, New Wilmington Diocese South Yarmouth 398-2201 draft wall go o~er 300. but he believes a rhyming verBedford. ,Harwich Port 432-o$9~ I I ' ' s i o n of the Our Father will be a Reports Profit JAN. 8 . ~e, be?an:Yfth a three-page, problem, WILMINGTON (NC) - In a mtrCldu{~lOn, f9llowed by versi- , Rev. Alfred J .. Carrier, 1940, year when many U. S. dioceses fic~ti()n ,on' cr,'~~,tion, ',the a,ngels, Founder, St. James, Taunton. Rev. John Kel'ly, 1885, Found- are running at a, loss, the Wil- Adflm and Eve'l St. John the Bapmington diocese, has reported a 1Jist, the birth of Christ and sueer, St. Patrick, Fall River. Rev. Arthur C.' Lenaghan, profit. ceelding event~ in His life. At According to, a summary 'of ,this writing the author is work1944, Chaplain; United States fiscal 1971 finances published in ing: Oil the parahle of the ProcHArmy. the diocesan newspaper, Del- gal, Son. JAN. 10 , I, ' Rev. Jourdain Charron, O.P.,: marva Dialog, the see took in ~e plans to' ~onclude the work SERVING ALL FAITHS 1919, Dominican Priory, Fall $1,062,656; spent $991,754; and Wlith a detailed description of . I and death.• He was able to carry over $70,902 Chl't' River. Ifls s passlo?' Rev. George H. Flanagan, for fiscal 1972. The carryover 1938, Pastor, 'Immaculate Con- will resul~ in lower parish assess- I ~ ·'---""'!"!I, - - - - - . , - ,mellJts next year, Bishop Thomas ception, Fall River. J. Mardaga said. , 'JAN. 13 , Me.' The report covered only dioc'Rev. Emile' Plante, M.S., 1954, esan departments and programs. LaSa.'lette Seminary, Attleboro. Parochial schools are run by the Sumner James Waring, rnc./Thomas J. Ashton & S~n, Inc. Funeral Service .,~..,............""""".."""... ~~~'''~~~~~';''' .."....'''''''..''''''''''••_~ parishes which issue separate Edward IF. Carney CITY LOCATIONS Second Class Postage Paid' at Fall River, financial reports. Hospitals arid 549, Co,:,nty Street 178 Winter 51./466 North Main St., Fall River' Mass,' Published every Thursday at 410 other institution h' h Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass, 02722 b .. ,S W IC are run ,NoW' Bedford 999-6222 SUBURBAN LOCATION ' b~ the Cathol!c ,Press Ilf ~he Dio~ese of Fall 'y religiOUS orders are also 189 Gardners Neck Road, Swansea, S~rvinq the d~ea since ,1921 RIver, Subscroptlon proce by ma,l, postpaid fl'nanced and ted t I $4,00 per y e a r . , ,repor separa e y. , " I ' I
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THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 6, 1972
MaHtain Joins Litt'e Brothers Of ~esus " TOlJLOUSE (NC) - Jacques Marita\n, 89-year-old philosopher whose I publications include 27· books,ljoined ,the Religious congregation' of the Little Brothers of Jesus at Rangueil near here. . Maritain, a specialist in the philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas, isJ a professor emeritus of Prince~on University and was a visiting professor at Columbia Univer~ity. He was, Fren~h ambassador .to the Vatican from. 1945-48. Bor" in Paris Nov. 18, 1882, Marita/n earned degrees in philosophy and natural sciences at the University of Paris. H~ converted to Catholicism in 1906. He has lived in Toulou~e ,sin'ce 1961, the year after the death of l)is wire Raissa, whom he mar. ried i9 1904. FouJilded in 1933 by Father Voillaume in Algeria, the Little Brothdrs of Jesus take their inspiration from the writings of Father Charles Eugene de Fouc(luld, ,the French contemplative l1ermi~ who was killed in the Sahara in 1916. . AlI 'members are called BroPIers, but a few become priests f.)r liturgical purposes. They seek t) conform to the economic and social i milieu where they live. ~ tresslng manual labor among 'the working class, they live in communities of three to five members and work mostly in factories and fisheries or among· lepers and primitive peoples.
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First Full.Time Deacon Ordained
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SERRANS HOST SEMINARIANS: Bishop Cronin, third right, took advantage of the annual Seminarians' Night sponsored by the Fall River Serra Club and chatted wit~ the young men studying for service in the diocese. Left to ~ght: Jose~h Costa, Fall R.1Ver; Richard Roy, New Bedford; Bishop Connolly, guest; BIshop Cromn; John J. SullIvan, Serran president; William Freeman, Taunton.
Anglican Protests 'Israeli' Jerusalem
BALTIMORE (NC) - A 62year-old husband and father who skipped the regular diaconate training program has been or· dained a full-time deacon here. Thomas P. Plummer was ordained by Auxiliary Bishop T. Austin Murphy of Baltimore. Plummer works for the Balti-' more archdiocesan health affairs department on a full-time basis. A former insurance broker, Plummer holds every teaching certificate awarded by the archdiocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. He has completed the American Medical Associa· tion's chaplaincy program and has taken· religious studies in the Holy Land. He is a leader of the Cursillo movement here and is a Benedictine lay oblate of St. Anselm's Abbey in Washington, D.C. Baltimore archdiocesan off~ci~ als, citing Plummer's background, decided he was qualified for tIle diaconate without further training and proceeded to ordiliifhim. As a deacon, Plummer said he hopes to continue the extensive work in area nursing homes that has occupied him for 11 years. He has set, up religious services for Catholics and members of other faiths, conducted discussion groups, invited outside speakers, and kept records of Catholics living in those homes. He is believed to be the nation's first full-time deacon. Now he will be available 24 hours a day and will be provided with a, telephone answerJng service.
LONDON (NC) - Anglican lived for years as homeless refu- which are bound to contain the seed of future conflict. . Archbshop Michael Ramsey of gees. Canterbury protested what he 'Belongs to All Three' "The Old City of Jerusalem is called "insensitive" attempts to "The way to peace is not, to sacred to Jews, to Christians and rebuild Jerusalem as an Israeli dwell upon the past but to 'act to MO'slems. Each of these relicity. as justly as possible for the gions respects the devotiori to It can never ,be other than the future and to avoid actions Jerusalem felt by the others. oity of three great religions, he "It is a city which bel'ongs to said, and unless it remains so all three. And. the practical rec,prospects for Middle East peace Courts Wants Data ognition of this by whoever at will be severely,damaged. . On School Busing· ApprQve'Program any time rules or controls the "We know that the israeli city is essential for peace." KANSAS CITY (NC)-A fedFor Disadvantaged government is striving to pro- eral court here, taking under adPope Paul VI, in his Christmas . NEW YORK (NC)-A special vide good housing for the peomessage Dec. 23 to the cardinals visement a motion to dismiss a program to get disadvantaged ple," Archbishop Ramsey wrote suit related to busing children in in 'Rome and other Vatican offiShoes That Fit students through college here has . in his January newsletter. ' nonpublic schooIs, has ordered cials, repeated his previous apreported an 82 per cent success "It is, however, distressing in- both sides to provide more fac- peals for an international statute WEAR rate. deed that the building program tual data. ''THE FAMILY SHOE STORE" that would "do justice to the Conducted by Manhattan Col- of the present authorities is disThe court order involves a pluralistic and ... special charlege, the SEBCON (Southeast figuring the city and Us sur- suit by Urban Luetkemeyer, a acter of the Holy City and to Bronx Consortium) program ad- roundings in ways which wound businessman who has brought the rights of the various commumits men from predominantly the feelings of those who care action against the school district nities which are situated there 43 FOURTH STREET black or Spanish neighborhoods for its historic beauty and sug- in Centertown, Mo. and which look to it and come Fall River 678·5811 into their freshman year after a gest an insensitive attempt to Luetkemeyer wants the dis- ,to it as their spiritual center." period of intensive tutoring. The procla~m as an IsraeH city one 1:Utoring continues through the which can never be other than trict to provide transportation !!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111IIl1l1illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll11111111111III11111111111111111111111IIIIIIIIIII!S bachelor's degree, according to the city of three great religions for his children attending St. Martins Catholic school. The . and their peoples." . individual student needs. Following the Israeli occupa- court order for more data was Christian Brother Aquinas seen as an effort to speed up a Thomas, director of the program, tion of the Old City of Jerusalem decision. §! Franciscan Friars, 600 I?leasant St., New Bedford, Mass. §! :;aid that of the 96 young men a'f.ter the 1967 war, the governThe Centertown school district admitted to Manhattan since ment has been subsidizing the bus passes the area in which 3EBCON was founded in 1969, building of housing for Jews in Luetkemeyer's children live, and '19 are still at the college pursu- parts of the' city and its out- goes past St. Marilin's on its way ,ing a degree. Four are' doing skirts that are still claimed by . to Centertown school west of "dean's list" level work and the Arabs. Solemn Novena of Nine Thursdays Jefferson City. Step Toward Peace many may graduate in less than "Christians" Archbishop Ram:the planned five years, he said. Begins Thursday, January 13. s~y said, "must be concerned that the city should retain and Urges People Move be seen to the eye to retain that CHAPEL DEVOTIONS From Maj·or Cities : character. Unless it does, the 10:00 A.M.• 12:10 Noon· 5:10, 7 and 8 P.M. prospects for peace are severely GEELONG (NC)-Australians damaged. rhope that by caUing should move out of the major a halt to the building program __ = ==_ cities and form new communi- there may be one welcome step WARE- 9:45 A.M.-1250 on dial ties, Archbishop James R. Knox ,toward the peace of Jerusalem." of Melbourne said at the openHe said that it was not his §! WPLM- 9: 15 P.M.-1390 on dial §! ing of a new home for the aged purpose "to suggest the lines on E built by the St. Vincent de Paul which peace in tIle Middle East :"F;r"~"St~j:d;"b;;ki;t"~~d";;d~I:~;~d";;u~"~~;;'~"": Society. Overcrowding in' the might be secured." He said also = and address to : = cities is causing many problems, that he was not attempting"to ~ : REV. CORNELIUS F. KELLY, O.F.M. : ~ the archbishop said. evaluate past injustices in which ~ : Franciscan' Friars, Our Lady's Chapel ,: ~ He said the government should Christians as well as Jews and § : 600 Pleasant Street: is encourage tJrban decentraliza- Moslems have tIlrough tIle cen§! : New Bedford, Mass., 02740 _ §! tion. turies had their share. §! _ Name .. ,.. , , , ,.. , , , '.. _ §! Governments and people, he "There can be none of us who added, can do, much to see tl)at has not been moved by the suf§!: ,.,, ,," ,.. ,.. ", ....... , " .. " .... , :- = §! = - Street .. ,,,,.,.. ,.. ,,, ,.. ',, cities do not become huge con-· ferings of. the Jews in Europe in . MEMBER'Dle § : City, .. ,.. , ,.. ,.. , , , , Zip .. , ,.... _ § glomerations of high-rise build- .the past or by the more recent 11 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS IDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIII1I11111111111111111F. ings. , . 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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., . . . .Jan. .6, 1972
,C'riticism" Like ~harity, Should Begin at Home The entire front of the Christmas issue of. the Nqtional ' Catholic Reporter was given over to a drawing which.caricatured a nameless bishop all decked out in mitre and cope (presumably Pope Paul VI) impassively inhospitably :;;eeking out (between tp~ massive bronze doors of 'his tave Weigel, S.J., jointly drafted list or a code of these sooversized ,cathedral (presum- , acalled ecumenical virtues. High ably' S1. 'Peter's Basilica in at the 'top of the list, as I rememRome) and wordlessly tellingJoseph and Mary 'that there is no room for them in the inn (pre-
ber it, were charity, humility, forebearance and, above all, objective self-criticism. Perhaps a similar code designed for internal use is needed" at the present time - a 'set. of' ' By DIALOGUE ON "BECOMING": An audience of more than 100 nuns from seven U. S. standards or guidelines, against which we could at least begin to provinces iC?f, the School Sisters of St. Francis in, Milwaukee gathered at the motherhouse MSGR. measuI:e, in- 'evangelical terms,' of the ord~r in Wisconsin for a four~day- workshop. Rev. Peter Campbell, .S.J;,: left, andwhat it is we are trying to do, ' . GEORGE G. . . in the name of the aggiornamen.,' Rev, Edwin McMahon, S..1.,' right; co-authors of the book "Please .Touch", used insights to, within the Roman Catholic gained frqm theology and psychology to examine hoW' faith and prayer can be under:HIGGINS ct'lmmunity. . stood. NCi ;Photo. It's just possible that we mlimmwwt~ mi,ght discover, in the process, sumably the Vatican or possibly that some of the virtues which even the entire Catholic Church). we are at 'least trying to prac~" My good friends, the editors tice in' the ecumenical dialogue ALBANY I (NC) ~ Men must can easily sell soap, which is a argue about when, a baby is eliof the National Catholic Report- are, to some extent at least, beto, ~~op trying to. play secondary issl.\e," she said, "it gible, for death," ,she said. "I,earn er, undoubtedly meant well in ing violated within the family, She called for a "re-education God," actress Loretta Young should be able to convince peo' choosing this particular drawing so to speak. of our own Christian people ,as ple that life itself is the number 'said in an I interview" published as their 'way of conveying to Objective Criticism to the power and the truth of here. She d~scribed the current one issue." the,ir, readers the spirit of The raw materials for a sep- drive for permissive abortion A letter signed by Miss Young Christian principles ,which too ,Christmas 1971. arate Catholic supplement to the laws as an I ~ffort' to substitute has recently been sent out in a many have fallen away from and I must ask them, however, to " Brown-Weigel code of ecumen' forgive me for saying that, in my ical conduct are available, .at huma.n thinking for divine law. mass mailing soliciting funds for compromised." God's law "is, very .clear and , MillS Young, honorary chairjudgment, they made a very least in genera'" terms, in a numAmericans United for Life. distinct to an unbiased'hi.llrian, awkward and rather unfortunate ber of books published both be- inan of Americans United for The funds will be used for a decision in this regard. Far from fore and after Vatican II. For pfe, told T~~ Evangelist, Albany, nationwide campaign opposing mind," she said,"-thoushalt not capturing the spirit of Chi'istmas, present purposes, it will suffice ,diocesan nclwspaper, that she permissive abortion laws, includ- kill, either before or, afterbirth., they succeeded-unwittingly, I to mention only three of the has become, active in the 'anti- ing, possibly, False Pride "Telethon for am sure - in turning it upside other ones by, name:' "The *bort:lon morem~nt in the hope Life."AUL plans to establish a "It is obvious to me that t'odown or, at the very least, in Church anq the ,Ca;tholi.c ,a.nd the that her name, may' be helpful national : pregnancy counseling day's pro-abortion' law is' andistorNng it almost beyond rec- Spirit of Th~ Liturgy" by. the late thE~ cause{ ,"If a I fa~ous Dame service, including a 24-hour "life- other· one of thdse age-old traps ognition. line," free 'long-distance tele- ,,used by men to try to twist . Romano Guadini; "The· SplenThe traditional spirit of Christ- dour of, the Church," by Henri phone service for women in need. ,God's infinite mind to conform rnas-or so I have always been de Lubac, S.J.; and "True and tive c:ritic Qf Church practice~\ ,In some cities, AUL will coor- to man's finite mind . . . Until lead to believe-is one of humil- ,False Refoml in the Church" by are known to aU, sounds identi-' , dinate its effors with Birthright, we accept the fact that God is qa1'ly the saJP,e warning note in, ity and charity and, above all, Yves Congar, O.P. another agency acting to prevent indeed wiser thim man 'and rehis recent book "Hope is the sincer!! repentance for one's imAll of these volumes and Remedy." Q~oting St. Paul's let- abortions. In other cities, where tJ.lrn, to His laws, we'll continue, perfections, not for 'those of his others that could be cited, start , tel' to the Galatians, he points there are no Birthright centers, ,I'm ,afraid, in our false pride to neighbor. from the premise that the out that the virtues which distin- AUL will set up centers of its annihilate ourselves-one way or NCR's Christmas drawing, by Church, until the end of time, another." contrast" rather self-righteously , will always stand in need of re- guish true love from its coullter- own. 'Brutalized Consciences' sits in 'judgment on our neighbor fonn-arid therefore in need of feit!; are patience, kindness, ' ,'Paul VI (presumably as a symbol objective criticism. In the words g,oodness an1 :self-control. New Direct,or So far, Miss Young said, advoof the entire ecclesiastical Estab- of Father de Lubac, "There is no Criticisp1 Dangerous cates of permissive abortion laws WASHINGTON (NC)-George ,~n1ese attitudes or virtues, he' have had "more money to work lishment), and, by implication" question of blinding one's self L. Haithcock of Washington•. encourages the readers of NCR to inadequacies; those are al- SaYS,' "arecdrtspicuously absent with and more television ads." D. C., a 25-year veteran in the to go' and do likewise. ways only too real. ,Arid there in angry, bitt~r people and in in· , She urged "a continu~l barrage United Services Organization Wirth apologies for being so' ds no question of not feeling the s~itu~ti()nal crJtics, whether they of letters" as 'one method of op- (USO), has been named execublunt C!bout the matter, ~ must painfulness of them; indifference be theologia~s, canonists, bish- posing such laws;. tive director of the National say that, somehow or other, this can be much worse than excess ops, sllPeriorsl or infallible young Abortion advocates are people Catholic Community Service, a 91:ri~es me as being a rather Of old people ... It matters very with "brutalized consciences who member agency of the USO. of emotion." little, in these times of pOlariza.. pharasaical way of proclaiming Warning Note the good' news of salvation. ' tion (he cohdtides) whether one DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL-combine a life of Father de Lubac goes on to calls o:.'le's self a liberal or a conCharity, Humility Drayer and action. Brrngers of the Gospe' Messay, 'however, that "for every' sElrvative; wh~t truly matters is sage to souls everywhere by means of personal If the word "pharasaical" in oonstructive complaint and each 'whether we join the frustrated, contact; Pauline MisSlonarres labor 'In 30 Nations. this, context 'seems too severe clear-headed and fruitful analy- bi~ter and angry people or align Members witness to Christ in a unique mission,propagation of the printed Word of ';od. The (or, worse than that, too phara- sis there is, all too much excess ourselves witll the peaceful, kind, Sisters write. Illustrate print and bind their own saica'l in its, own way) let's just and recklessness ... There is all h9peful and joyful people of God oublications and diffuse them among people of , say that NCR's Christmas draw- too much purely negative criti- ..'. There is lei definite danger all creeds. races and cultures, Young girls. 14-23 ling suggests, to this writer at cism," and worse than that, too tHat criticism :w.ul become bitter 'nterested in this vital Mission may write to: , REV. MIJTHER, SUPERIOR '' least, that perhaps the time has little self-criticism. a~d frustrate<;l; when this hap50 ,St. Paul's Alre., Boston Mass. 02130 "Yet we are all men," he re- pens" nothing more can be come for all of us to reflect a little more profoundly on the minds us, "and there is none of learned." implications for the aggiorna~, us, bl,lt is aware of his own IA similar',4arning is to be mento o( the familiar parable of wretchedness and incapaCity: .. foj.mci in the :writings of Guarthe mote and the beam. So that there are scant grounds dip-i, Congar: and many otherAnother' way of' saying the for making exceptional cases of coptemporary authors too numer"same thing' is that' perhaps the ourselves, and none at all for ous to mentiqn. My purpose in 27 P~rk Stre~t, Attleboro, Mass. , ' time 'has 'come for those ,of us the withdrawal, implied in a ci#ng it here! ;is not to sit in ,who are all wrapP,ed in ,the grimly-judging eye." ph;arllsaical jtidgment on NCR, 278 Union Street, New Bedford, Mass.;'. aggiornamento to start practicing Father de Lubac concludes by but simplytQ: suggest, in the within our own reHgious' family saying that "We shall under- light of NCR's Christmas drawFIRST FEDERAl-SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ' the same ecumenical virtues that stand how a ,certain sort of self- ing, that if there was no room, we ,~re ,now trying to practice, criticism which' is always direc- . in th'e inn fori Joseph and Mary REGULAR SAVINGS 5% howeVer belatedly and however ted outward maybe' nothing on: Christmas qlorning, 1971, it ill imperfectly, in our dealings with more than the search for an alibi be\'looves any I of us to lay the 90 DAY NOTICE ACCOUNTS 5~% the members of other churches designed to enable us to dodge bl~me for this i:m Paul VI or any1 YR. CERTIFICATES MINIMUM $5,000 5%% or reldgious groups. the exami,nation of our con- one else so far as that's con2 YR. CERTIFICATES MINIMUM $10,000 6% ' While Vatican II was still in sciences:" cerned. In other words, criticism, progress, Dr. Robert McAfee Father Bernard Haring, C.SS.R., 1i~r (:h~~rity, s~puld propetly beDividend. Paid Quarterly Brown and the late Father Gus- ..... whose credentials ... as . an objec- gm at home.' i _ ._ ....t..-........... -. _ ...... __ .;.- ......... -J.....;.:............... .....,.... .::-:;..'_ :
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Archbish'op Says 'Par()chial School Plight Desperate HARTFORD ,(NC)-The finan~' situation of Catholic cshools in the Hartford archdiocese is desperate, Archbishop John' F; Whea)on told newsmen here. "Unless we get massive state or federal aid, we cannot continue with the broad-based school system we have had," he said following an address to local Rotary Club members. Archbishop Whealon . said, however, that the archdiocese would continue. its educational commitment. "There will be more academies and fewer parochial schools," he said. Asked about regional planning for parochial schools, he 'said it is being explored, "but won't do much good. Our high schools are in trouble and they are administered as regional schools." He also talked to newsmen about efforts by state legal officials to recapture funds given nonpublic schools under a Connecticut state aid law which was ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court last June. t Concern for Poor Saying that the state is now demanding full' repayment on the funds, the archbishop said: "We are now asking the state's attorney general to please tell us why the state is insisting on total recapture, so our attorneys can study .that reply. But we have not yet been favored with an answer. When a contract is terminated, there are normal allowances made for expenses incurred ·in good faith,", He also said that Connecticut Catholic Conference officials had urged Gov. Thomas J. Meskill's administration to restore proposed welfare cuts in the state's budget. "In the questio~ of priorities in the state budget, concern for the poor has to come high," he commented.
Learn$ in. Service to.Parish Community True Meaning of Priesthood BY PATRICIA McGOWAN
~ial
'Many A,re Shaken' In formal remarks to the Rotarians, Archbishop Whealon listed three goals of the Second Vatican Council: to modernize the Church, help bind divisions among Christians and offer the modern world some of the Church's wisdom. On the first two goals, he said the Church deserves "A" grades: But he gave the Church a failing grade on the third point-"not, however, because of lack of zeal or effort by the Church, but because of conditions of modern life since 1965," He cited "winds of, social change which have thrown up so much dust in people's eyes, they have not been able to see the personal, spiritual message of the Church," He ~aid this "confusion has led to abandonment of the faith on every hand. Many people are' shaken."
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The Parish Parade chairmen of parish or· are asked to submit" for' this column to The O. Box 7, ~all River
02722.
REV. MR. TIMOTHY GOLDRICK Rev. Mr. Goldrick said a major portion of his own Summer activity centered about Truesdale Hospital, where he brought Communion to patients and assisted Holy Name priests in care of the dying. "I would speak to the families of the dying' and do what I could
County
alone,"
Msgr.
Coady
sa~d.
Even under normal conditions, he said, there is an unemployment rate of 20 per cent to 25 per cent among Mexican-American migrant and seasonal farm workers in the area, .and the flooding of much farmland has caused this rate to soar. "Prospects are dim for getting in a winter crop," .he said. "Complicating matters further is the fact that at this point in tim~ virtJ.lally all of. the migrant families have returned from Msgr. Leo J. Coady of Wash- northern states to their homesington, disaster relief committee to face months of unemploychairman, said his group had re- ment.". . ceived a plea for aid from the f 'Brownsville diocese which is atMsgr. Coady reported that 0 WallacyCounty's total populatempting to provide forms of as-' tion. of 13,000, some 7,000 are sistance, such. as small house re7 now subsisting on U.S. Departpairs, furniture, food and utili- ment of .Agriculture surplus ties, not available from other re- commodities. He said the Red lief agencies. Cross, the Small Business AdThe request for financial as- ministration, Catholic Charities sistance was contained in a and the St. Vincent de Paul Somessage sent to all, bishops and ciety have also been active in dioaesan directors of Catholic relief efforts. Charities by Msgr. Coady. He urged that financial conHe said the message that three tributions to the Brownsville diof the four counties in the Lower ocese for forms of assistance not Rio Grande Valley have been de- now being provided by any other clared federal disaster areas. agency be sent to Bishop John J. "Several towns are partially un- Fitzpatrick of Brownsville, P.O. der water, as well as 40,000 Drawer 2279, Brownsville, Tex., acres of farmland in Wallacy 78520.
MELBOURNE (NC) - Anational seminar on' vocations here in Australi'a recomme.nded that a national survey be made to determine the public's attitude toward priests and Religious. The seminar recommended also that a fund be established to finance national television programs aimed at upgrading the images of priests and Religious.
Thurs., Jan. 6, 1972
Publicity ganizations news items Anchor, P.
Texas ·Flood. Victims in Urgent Need of Financial Assistance WASHINGTON (NC) - Flood victims in Texas' Lower Rio Grande. Valley urgently need financial assistance, the National Catholic Disaster Relief Committee said in an appeal issued here.' Committee officials said that the current disaster is an after-' math of Hurricane Fern which struck the area in early September, causing torrential rains. Widespread unemployment has resulted because flood waters still cover extensive farmland areas there, the officials said.
Suggest Survey
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"I have 'Iearned here what it means to be a priest of Jesus Christ," That was the declaration of Rev. Mr. Timothy Goldrick as he preached for the last time to parishioners of Holy Name Church, Fall River. The young deacon, assigned since last Summer to Holy Name for pastoral experience, now returns to St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, for final studies preparatory to ordination in May. "Many people tell me that I'm crazy to want to be a priest in this day and age," he told the congregation, "but at Holy Name I have seen what the pastoral ministry involves. I've seen the priests here go out at 2 and 3 in the morning to give the Sacraments of the Sick toa dying Christian, I've seen the service they. give to this community. Now more than ever I know that I want to be a priest." Successful Program Rev. Mr. Goldrick said that the program for deacons sponsored by St. Mary's Seminary is considered very successful by seminary officials. Under it candidates for the priesthood spend six months working in a parish in their home diocese. Also a diocesan participant in the St. Mary's program is Rev. Mr. George Bellenoit, assigned to Sacred Heart parish, Fall River. Fall River seminarians at St. John's Seminary, Brighton, noted Rev. Mr. Goldrick, work in the diocese during the Summer, but assist in Boston parishes during the academic year. All area seminarians, he said, met once weekly during the past Summer at sessions directed by Rev. John: J. Smith, diocesan director of vocations.·
·THE ANCHOR-
for them while the priests gave the sacraments," he explaIned. He also did census work and some home visiting, he said. Outstanding Project -An outstanding project developed by Rev. Mr. Goldrick was an Advent pr<>gram for parish families, which sought by means of special liturgies and home observances to emphasize the spiritual aspect of Christmas. Nearly 30 families participated in the program. The deacon also worked with eighth graders at Holy Name School on a "short-term religious project," He said he couldn't get too deeply involved in school activities, knowing that he would be leaving the parish at the end of December. In his brief stay, however, the young seminarian made a measurahle impact on parish life. After his ordination in May he will return to Holy Name to ofifer Mass for his friends in the parish. It's safe to say there'll be an ovel"flow congregation for the occasion.
ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER Holy Rosary Sodality will meet at 2 Sunday afternoon, Jan. 9 for a prayer meeting, followed by a business session and social hour in the school hall. Also in the school will be a Men's Club meeting following 7 P.M. Mass Sunday. The Women's Guild will meet· Tuesday night, Jan. 11 in the church hall following 7:15 P.M. novena services. The Blessed Sacrament will be exposed from 8 A.M. to 9 A.M. Friday, Jan. 7, in observance of the First Friday. ST. ANNE, FALL RIVER Members will be elected to a newly created parish board of education following all Masses this weekend. OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, OSTERVILLE The Women',s Guild, under direction of Mrs. John Denmark, wiH sponsor a weekly card party at the Cenacle, Wianno Ave., Osterville. The event will be held at noon each Wednesday~ There will be no·' admission charge and refreshments will be served. OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL, NEW BEDFORD The parish PTA will meet Sunday, Jan. 9 in the school. First graders directed by Sister CeceHa, will entertain. Refreshments will be served. ST. STEPHEN, ATILEBORO The Women's Council will meet at 8 Monday night, Jan. 10, in the church hall. A business session presided over by Mrs. Rejeanne Marquis, president, will be followed by a spiritual program in charge of Mrs. Yvette Landry.
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Euchar·ist
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan: -6, 1972
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Resolutions The new year is not even a week' old' but already, in the lives of too many people, their New Y,ear's resolu~ions are old, not from being· worn out but from being untried. It might be a good thing if people took a second look at this time at. all the promises made so enthusiastically just a few days ago and decided to become more realistic in what they intend to do in this year that still stretches ahead. The theme should be that proposed by the Holy Father -peace. Maybe there is little that the average person can do to bring about peace on the global scale. But there is everything that can be done to bring about peace in one's own conscience. St. Thomas Aquinas defined peace as the tranquility of order, and if there is any disorder between ,a person and God, then there can be no genuine peace of con' science. Now is the time fpr a person to face his conscience, 'to,confront his own life, to call his predominant fault by, ,name, to understand that this is an obstacle to peace in his own life. It would be easy, of course, to choose some lesser fault and resolve to eliminate this but this would amount. playing games \yith, one's soul and trying to bribe God, let me keep the greater fault and I will give up the lesser. An extension of this resolution to bring more peace into one's own life is the effort to introduce a greater degree of peace into one's'family life. This'is often the real test of Christianity. It would seem comparatively easy to stand against a wall, and be ,shot by the enemies of Christ for the sake of the Lord. This would be a single, dramatic, glOriOlis act of martyrdom. But' how much harder to be - hurt' and not to hurt in return; to be downgraded arid not retort; to be the object of misunderstanding and not to lash back!· And :this is il situation ·that can' repeat itself many , times in the' average family--:..the interplay of different per"sonalities and ages. And it is in precisely this setting that the peace of Christ must reigp.:-the' consistent,~~ercise of kindness, of forgiveness, of concern. If ~ person tried to bring about a greater, degree of peace witpin Q,is own conscience and a-greater measure of peace into his own family circle, then this new year could truly be a yearof the tord'speace<
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. Continued' from Page' One. . claimed word invites His p~op~e to His 'table, who through His' ministers presides .at th~t table, " and who gives himself sacramentally· in body and blood of His, Paschal sacrifice. "The sacramental Body and I3Iood of the Savior are present as an offering to the ,believer I, awaiting His welcome."· . Chnist's presence in. the Eu· } charist "does' not depend.,on the' individual's faith in order, to be. the Lord's real' gift~f' himse~f to His Church~", ' I' The elements of the Eucharist "are not mere ~igns; _.~h.rist's I Body and Blood become really present and really given. aut ,: they are reaHy 'present and, really given in order that,'receiving them, believers may'be united ,in communion with" Christ the Lord." Through the' "conse~ratory "'" . prayer .... the bread 'and wine ,become the Body .and BI90d of Christ by the action of· the Holy Spirit, so, that in Cwnmunion we eat the flesh of Christ and· drink His blood." The joint Anglican-ciatholic commission was set up by Pope Paul VI and Anglican Archbishop Resoluition •72 Michael Ramsey of Canterbury i and began its work in JilD~ary, m[!':;l]:~[:$n~t~~@f:5:w~~i!t.rgm~t~r&~~~~~~~:;:mr~:@1W~~~~:J9 I' , , 1970. It now hopes that people will read the statemerit it has ,prepared and 'issued, and will feed back com~ents on i,t.
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S"rvey Conclusi'on
CCitholi~ ;School Students Found LI~ss Likely !: To Use Drugs '.P·ope "Urges Church, PHILADELJrHIA (NC) ~ Chil- "interviews with more than 6,- State .Collaborate .
dr'en who attend Catholic schools 000 of the 68,000 young men VATICAN CfIY (NC>-=Pope tend to use dr~gs less than other and. women' of high school and , Paul VI stres'sed the importance children, acco~ding to a study on "college age in the county. of a close colla,boration between drug a.1?use. c9nducted, !?y the While. the report found no Church and State for the service ,subUlrblin Montgomery county evidence "to indicate a signifi- of humanity at an audience in D~ug Commission. cant relationship between the the Vatican with Austrian Pres~ ,Five Cathdlic high schOols abuse of drugs and race,' sex, ident Franz Jonas. were among the 26 Montgomery ethnicity, parental education, size ~'Although the State and Cqunty high sthools participat- of .family, ordinate position of Church are each independent in ing :in the stUdy. The survey, sibling in family, and number of their own sphere, a·trusting' colcommissioned year ago by the parents at home," the survey laboration between the two inTen years ago, the then chairman of the Federal Com-' county's boar~ of corpmissioners, did: find that' drug abuse is di- stitutions can only ben!'lfit ,the people, who 'can then devel9p municatioris Commission, Newton N. Minow, was asked re{realed thatrhore than 20 per' rectly related, to: their own capacities,'" the Pope cent of the YOUhg people in Mont· The lack of family closeness about television's greatest problem. He 'answered, "If I - .. gornery Cou~ty' between the or family cohesiveness; the lack said.. were, asked to put my finger on TV's toughest problem ages of 14 and 25 are drug of .adherence. to a formal religiPresident Jonas had just conI II , . I'd put all four fingers, and my thumb,down on one spot- users" ,', ous attachment; peer group in- cluded a two-day state' yisit to teleVision for children and young people. In America to-The condusip,os were based on fIuence; discontent: with school; Italy. and had remaine.d .on ina boredom; influential relationships private capacity for .his visit to day children under 12 spend 70;000,000 hours a day watch. Ed'lucators' Honor' with siblings and close friends. the Vatican. ing television." , , 1 • Pope Paul praised Austria for Well, all this was ten years ago, and the hours have Religious Training' its great cultural contributions J~wish. So;c;:iety , . , increased and the, problem is still a problem.. . NEW YOR~' (NC)-The Jew'Commenting on the smaIler of the past and for its presentIn some areas the violence has .been toned. down. But ish, Chatauqua I,Societyreceived incidence of drug use among stu- day hosting of importani.. interthere has been an increa~e, in other dangers-the ridicule, a speCial 'plaque and citation dents, in ·Catholic high schools; national meetings and, confermore subtle now, of 'ethical values; the flaunting, as enter- from th,e National Catholic Edu- Fred .Streit, Ii representative of ences aimed at the progress of '. humanity: tainment, .of .the vulgar and the course; the endless and cart:lonal Ass~iation in tribute 'Seientific Resources, Inc.-Huto ,the societY''ll1 eUorts ,to fund man Systems Institute-the New tireless diSCUSSIons; in the name of openness, and freedom, ecumE:nical eddcation. Top Jersey firm which (:onducted the Bishops of the mos't perverted types of. behavior.. ' . ~ather Michabl P. Walsh, pres- research, stated: 1971 Newsmakers It is' not that thes'e things not reillities. They are. ident of Fordnam University, "We found in the cour:se of TORONTO (NCr-The. CanaI . I But the handling of them seems' to' convey aU too often presented the plaque ·to Morton our survey that the Catholic dian" bishops .~~re :riamect thE} society's ohan- high' school. students . have , a cblintry',s ,top )"n:ewsmakers of that these are the normal, that these sholild'be acceptable L. :Kemper,. significantly ,lower incidence of 1971 by the editorial staff of cell:or, at a di~rler here. " types of action...' marijuana and LSD. use than in the Canadian Register. ' 'Chatauqua 'is the' educational And a steady fare of this on television' is' surely' a the public high schools. There ,proJect of the I;National FederaTlie bishops' were named; the, danger to the children' watching and 'drinking it all' in tiOI~ oJ Temple ,Brotherhoods, an is a difference--why" we don't staff said, because of their proand having their minds and attitudes molded: accordingly. affiliate of the I Union' of Amer· know. We found that th9se stu- nounced openness and dialogue iciui Hebrew Congregations, the dents concerned with. living up, to with every branch of the Catholic national body' bf Reform Juda- their religious training had a Church in Canada. significantly lower percentage of ism. ' : In 1971, the staf.f said, the use,'! It, assigns 6do rabbis to leebishops explicitly opened themI The survey did find, however, selves to suggestions and ideas ture on reques~' at l;olleges. and ChurClh camps, gives books to that there i.s little difference be· from large groupings in the libraries, and produces motion tween the abuse of drugs among Church in Canada. . OFFIClALNEVi'SPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF'FALL' RIVER pkthres on, '~riiversal Jewish Catholic youth who attend pubIn an effort to improve. com..Published weekly bX The Cat,ho'lic Press'ot" the Dioc:~se of Fall 'River ethiCal themes for public service lic schools as opposed to non- munications even more, the staff ,410 Higliland Avenue' ,. .,' Catholic youth who attend pub- added, the bishops open~, portele-irisi'.on and gtOup showings. Fall River, Mass'. 02722 675-7151 ' L~st Yllar the llfOCiety filled reo lic schools. tion'S of their last semi-linnual . PUBLISHER;··,., The study data confirmed, ac- meeting to the press so..: that quests for rabb,is to lecture at Most Rev. Daniel A: .Cronin, 'D.O., S.T,D. 182 ,C~.tholic colleges. This year cording to Streit, that when re- . Catholics would know not only GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER thesoc.iety pla~~ to endow 48 ligious tradition and adherence what the bishops .decide4~ but Rev~ Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Di'iscoli accrPctit~~ coursrs in Judaism to church· life decJreases, drug how they arrived at theii.:·dedsions: -'.' ...._. .'. . .. at OaUlohc coll~ges.._.. , ., ' "abuse increases.- , , ,,,~e~,!_.~e!~;::F~J!"!il~e,L .:~ .. :-"'_2':.' ~~;~~..=..!:.",,~.~...L · ,~ . . ·.a·- c'- .:,~"
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THE ANCHOR7 Judge Dismisses Thurs., Jan. 6, 1972 Great Religions Portrayed 'on Medals Danbury Prison Inmates' Suit Catholic Medallion Depicts Mary, Peter and Paul Brother Stresses HARTFORD (NC)-A suit filed Black Leadershi'p NEW YORK (NC) - Ecumen-
by an anti-war priest, Josephite Fa,ther Philip Berrigan, and 10 other inmates against Danbury federal prison officials was dismis~e;J here. U.S. District Court Judge M. Joseph Blumenfeld refused to re.::ognize the inmates' charge that their constitutional rights were violated by the prison of~ ficials during a four-week hung~r strike last August. "Without speculating about , the plaintiffs' motives," the judge n led, "the prison authorities c(luld not sit, idly by while the plaintiffs, in a headlong rush toward martyrdom, revelled in their self-inflicted risk to their health." Father Philip Berrigan, and Jesuit Father his brother, Daniel Berrigan, are serving sentences at Danbury for burning 'draft card records. The Jesuit priest was not a part of the suit. In a 32-page decision rejecting the plaintiffs' numerous complaints, Judge' Blumenfeld ,said Danbury officials acted according to law in transferring the inmates to another prison after the hunger, strike started. Ruling that the plaintiffs had not exhausted all administrative remedies, the judge dismissed charges concerning the placement of inmates in segregated confinement and the withholdiug of good time for possible parJle. . The inmates said they participated in the hunger strike and work stoppage,' 'and distributed leil.flets'to focus at'tention6n their plight as "political pris~n ers." They also protested United States' military involvement- in Indochina and the parole sys~ tem. Four days after the hunger strike began Aug. 6, the inmates were placed in segregated confinement. The following day they were transferred for a brief stay to the Springfield Medical Center for federal' prisoners in Missouri. Father Daniel Berrigan, who was denied a parole last July from a three' year sentence, has been granted a new hearing on Jan. 26. The parole board has said it is considering the Jesuit's case, based on new information, . in.eluding the priest's health.
ical activities appear in unusual places these days, including a large city-lighted studio loft on New York's West Side. Here sculptor Ralph Menconi is working on a series of medals commemorating the world's great religions. The artist has a long and prestigious number of commissions for medals, medallions, tablets and plaques to his ,credit. The Presidential Series, The: Signers of The Declaration of Independence, Robert Fulton 'and Winston Churchill.are but a 'few. To their designer and scupltor each was interesting; each, important. However,' the' 'current series offers not only '·a· 'chance to do "fairly good" ,scuipture, ' but it's also a chance, he said, ';to break down all, the fragmentation and to bring people together." Ten medals designed and sculptured by Ralph Menconi will be issued each year until the series is completed. Besides the Roman Catholic' those already issued are the Methodist and Jewish religions. The Buddhist medal is in the process. In all of them the talented touch of 'the sculptor brings alive the history and symbolism of the various faiths. And so metallic art joins the other art forms, education and religion to encourage the investigation, understanding and appreciation of other religions.
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/ ECUMENICAL 'SCULPTOR: Ralph Menconi, with Catholic medal in rear, has sculpted such work for other major religions. NC Photo.
The artist, who is also rein the 'first century; The symbols also SllOW the form !Jf' an anchor, nowned as the "Sculptor of PresThe' Roman Catholic medal a favorite expression of' St. Paul, idents," spoke appreCiatively of which was issued recently, shows who spoke of "the anchor of the help he received from the international advisory commission St. Peter on the obverse side. faith." and the consultants to the serEaCh medal has a distinctive The reverse side shows the quotation from Scripture establish- patina or finish chosen by Men- ies. The permanent chairman is ing his primacy and location at coni as most appropriate for the ,the Rev. Dr. David Poling, noted Rome; the' symb~ic keys of the subject matter and design. The Protestant churchman. All those kingdom; and the Vatican. The ,purple patina used in the bronze invited to serve accepted willingplace of St. Paul and his mission- Roman Catholic medal repre- ly. And, Menconi said, it is not ary journeys, are also portrayed sents a primary color of the just a superficial involvement· , on the reverse, as are the words, Church. The medal is also of" "they really help.'" "Mater Ecclesiae" in reference fered in pure silver with an anBisho'p Fulton J. Sheen, a to the place and honor given tique oxidized finish and gold member of .the advisory commisfilled with a' 24-karet gold filled sion, was the consultant on the Mary. The cross and two fish on the finish limited to 500 serially Catholic medal. Other members obverse are from the drawings numbered ,pieces. include the Rev. Dr. Billy Grain a catacomb at Domitilla, repham, evangelist, and the Rev. Research resenting the first sYmbol used Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, minRalph Menconi who' sees "the ister and author. David Ben Guby the underground Christians strength of religion" in all the rion, former Israeli premier, and medals is the so~ of a sculptor. Says Single Church ,After graduation from Hamilton Dr. Charles Malik, Lebanese dipCollege Establishes College, Yale•University and the lomat, are consultants. Pretense of Unity Deve'lopment Office SEVENAGE (NC) - A pl"iest National Academy of Design he ROME (NC) - The North who has served 13 yeius in this served his apprenticeship with American College here has es- town 30 miles north of London his father. The elder Menconi tablished a development office has' launched a campaign to did the Mary Baker Eddy MeONE STOP with Father Roger C. Roensch block plans to build here the morial in 1917., SHOPPING CENTER S,culptor Menconi is an organof the Milwaukee archdiocese as first church in Britain serving its head. Anglicans, Methodists, and Ro- ized worker spending three days • Television • Grocery Father Roensch, 29, has head- "man Catholics. The whole proj- a week in his New York City • Appliances • Furniture 'ed the American Bishops' Office ect, he contends, is "merely a studio and the other days work104 Allen St., New Bedford ing at home in the country. for U.S. Visitors to the Vatican pretense of unity." "When you work for yourself,' 997-9354 since 1970. He has also served Father Straub said he will . as spiritual adviser to the grad- campaign to get Catholic author- you've got to be organized," he ate house of the North 'Amer- ities to change their mind and said. And he likes New York. "I ican College. The college edu- to build a separate church for see people here, I, get inspiration. CONRAD SEGUIN cates U.S. priests and seminar- Catholics in this town, not'ed for ' from all the activity and I do ians. its ecumenical activities~' He my research here." BODY COMPANY As d'irector of development said he completely disassociates .Bish,op Sheen Aluminum or Steel and assistant to Bishop James A. himself from the project, due to 944 County Street Lots of research and reading Hickey,. rector of the college, start April, and said he wants NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Father Roensch will maintain' to make his disapproval public. of backgorund material go into , 992-6618 contacts with U.S. dioceses and "All honest Roman Catho- each project. Looking around priestly formation personnel to lics," he said, "know that there the large studio with plaster provide information about the can never be unity between models linging the wans, he said, various programs of the North church and, others until such "I've done all these to do this American College. He will also time as others accept all the es- one," indicating the great reli· assist Bishop Hickey in inter- sential beliefs and practices of gions series. "It ta~es 30 years viewing prospective candidates. ' the ~oman Chur<$.',: '"', 'I.. " ....... for five mim~t«:$,.:',. ". ~,. '.'. '., " . ..,
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CORREIA & SONS
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WASHINGTON (NC)-"If the Church is to be relevant to the black community, it has to have black leadership there," said Marist Brother Joseph C. Hager. appointed last month to fill the newly created post of executive director of the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus. Brother Hager told NC News the job involves "acting as a liaison between the hierarchy and black priests and Brothers in the United States, as well as the black lay community. It will entail a great many projects that we, the black clergy, find effective in helping to solve the religious and socio-economic problems of the black community." He said in an interview that· the black caucus is seeking to • put "more emphasis on action: than rhetoric. We are developing a series of workshops to im; prove the e~pertise of the black clergy in the areas of pastoral counselling, community organization, educational development plan's, and liturgy, adapting ritual and music to the black expel"ience," he said.
Schedule Institutes In Arizona, Kansas NEW YORK (NC)-Regional multi-media communications institutes, sPQ/lsored by the United States Catholic Conference's communications department, have been set early next year in Phoenix, Ariz., and Kansas City, Kan. ' The Franciscan Renewal Center in Phoenix is the site of the first of the two upcoming institutes to be held March 6-10, 1972. The Kansas institute is set for April 3-7, and will be held at Kansas City's TWA Training Center, a recently completed $10 million structure which houses its own Tv studio. Both programs are open to diocesan and religious communications personnel" newspaper editors, bishops, public relations and information staff of Catholic hospitals and other institutions, and other interested persons.
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. THE ANCHOR...,.f:)iocese' of .Fall River~ Thurs~, Jan. 6, 1971,
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,In,exp,ensi;ve Extras Add Spa.rkl,e to Wardro,be' Things are looking up; girls! The younger designers have discovered that their youthful, buying audience'does not want to pay all outQoors for its clothes. People, want fashion but they want it ata reasonable price. That.,doesn't mean that those of us who . like our clothes a bit more or two really good outfits each sophisticated won't have to season (you know, the kind that every time you put them on you pay through the nose for really feel great in) and then fillthat sophistication unless we either learn to sew or shop the tl@J.m'®:ffi7XllWll'fMi1:D
By
MARILYN RODERICK
ing in with less expensive or sale items. Good stores have good sales and specialty snops ani the spots where real buys can be picked up. Even in January: start considering the freshness of plaid cotton or taffeta skirts; a midi skirt, again in a light wear fabric that can travel into Spring, or one of the season spanning knits we all find indispensable.
as Robin is bused to
Quick Buying sales, but what it does m.ean is that if we wish to fill out our 'wardrobes with low-priced extras we'll find them available and very fashionable. With the first wave of resort styles hitting the stores we're getting a .preview of what to expect when se set out to buy our Spring and Summer fashions. Also these early previews, moderately pri~ed: will help keep' our wardrobe 'out of the Winter doldrums. A kicky blouse or even a bright silk -dress looks marvelous on a dreary New England Winter, day when our own flowers are hidden under an accumulation of ice, dirty slush and Winter debris. See~sucker:
for Spring ,
One of the 'nice things abC?ut the fashion extras with the low price tag is that they are available to the busy woman who can't spend her days shopping leisurely but instead is forced to shop on lunch hours or in the evening. A good wool outfit or a special. occasion dress requires time. and patience· to shop for 'but the inexpensive extras can be picked 'up on,a whim, bought on an impulse or whipped up overnight on your sewing machine. , (One of the most attractive outfits that I viewed all holiday season was a striking,- black and white plaid skirt trimmed with, black fringe worn by Mrs. Daniel Bogan of St. Joseph's parish in Fall River. Jean doesn't lay any" claims to being a great seamstress but with the help of a' couple of good friends she did create a skirt that was handsome as well as creative.) Fashion takes thought and while young designers and creative manufacturers are making style extras available to us, it's up to us to use them, correctly.
Seersucker will, be the fabric for Spring, just as' taffeta .and . velvet ruled the 'Winter market. Blazers: long "skirts and eVEm longer dresses will ,adopt this fabric as their own. Style has no price tag' for the coming fashions and you'll find yourself feeling as fashionable in a $30 dress as in a $200 designer's creation. Whil~ investing in a good sea" sonal 'wardrobe is an expensive ' Ohio. Approves Parent proposition' initially, the inexReim bursement PIan , pensive, 'extras can add a great COLUMBUS (NC)-Parents of deal. As I have often mentioned nonpublic school students will in the column, I like to buy one get back part of the money they spend oil their' children's educa'-, Notre [?ame\ University tion under a new aid program approved here by the Ohio GenOffici"cilly Co-Ed eral Assembly. . , NOTRE - DAME (NC), - The "I am delighted that this new • University of Notte Dame .will, legislative assistance is directed admit women directly to its un- to pupils and parents rather dergraduate program this Fall than churches," said" David J. 'for the first time." Young, legal counsel for the Plans to merge Notre Dame Ohio, Cathlic Conference: "This with all-women, St. Mary's Col- fortifies the constitutionality of lege were called' off indefinitely the aid and gives aaded impetus Nov. 30, but officials, announced to parental rights in education." student exchange programs and ''I- think it's' great," added other collaboration between the James Grit, Ohio representative' two institutions would be con-, of 'the Christian Ref9rmed tinued." , 'Schools. "I compliment the legisAlso announced was' Notre lature on their action and their Dame's willingness to grant eli- continued recognition of' the gible St. Mary's students degrees value of nonpublic education to in at least two Notre Dame the people ,of this State." schools-.;...business ,and engineerThe new aid progra~ provides " ing. for payments of up to $45 per A Notre Dame spokesman said 'nonpublic sc;hool child twice an- , when plans for unifying the two' nually. To be eligible for the payschools were announced last ments......made through local pubMay, Notre Dame officials had lic school districts-parents,must told St. Mary's "that even if \ye pay at least that much per couldn't agree to unification pro- semester for each child enrolled ce.9HrA~~ ,~r~<;~,~~n~M· ~'~"~O. ~o-~~.':. )~, .,\,P~~~P~~Jt,s..,~f~C?''1I._:.,! .. ~"'A',"'"
UkrciJ'ini:an 'Rite Reduces Number of. Holy pays i JPHILADELJ1HIA (NC) - The Ukrainian-rite 'Catholic archdiod~se of Philadelphia has reduced the number' of holy days 011 which its members must attend I Mass. ' , ~nle number'lof obligatory holy dkys was redJi:ed "in an attempt mal;te the Ukrainian Catholic ChUirch more 'meaningful and acc~ssible," 'ArHlbishop Ambrose S~nysbyn of I I Philadelphia ex·, ,I
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social and economic conditions, wb~k and life styles 0ir the faithf41: and ... dispensations already in force" dictated tlie need for c~ange, he added. I
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Aid Mother Teresa's I ,I "'ew York' Work !NEW YORKi (NC) - Mother Teresa of Calcutta has a group ofl American "co-workers" now to support the work of her oroer's newly established mission in Harlem. ' '. . Mrs. Warren Kump of Minneap~ltis, chairwoman of the United States Co-Workers of Mother Tetes1a, led a g~oup of American wqmen to NeW York to confer with two members of the Indian mi~si()nary tearit, Sisters Andrea an~ Sophia, a,~olit how they can best help with financial and spi~it1Jal aid. . ·he group plkns to putout a new-sletter describing Mother Teresa'si work and urgin'g people to i read a biotraphy of the famo,us nun wri~ten by Malcolm Ml.\ggeridge. ' MothE~r Teresa's sari-clad Missiohal'ies of Charity work only with the poorest of the poor. Fo~nded in CaJcutta in 1950, the¥ now number 700 sisters in 38 IIndia;n cities; with teams on four continents.'" Membership in thei Co-Workers is ecumenical d t .. an I o;pen 0 ~n:rone. 1
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The reduced ,list is in accord- those of the Circumcision, Epiphance with the Ukrainian-ri.te any, Annunciation, Easter" AsArchiepiscopal Synod. and has cension, Pentecost, Dormition, the blessing of the Holy See, Immaculate Conception, ChristArchbishop' Senyshyn said. . mas and all Sundays of the year. 'The new oblig<lltory feasts lm~ On alI other, feasts, however, it is stilt necessary Jor the pastor to celebrate the Divine Liturgy ,Life in Concentration and preach the word of God, even though the faithful are not Camp Film Praised HOLLYWOOD (N.C) - "One , bound~ in conscience to particiday 'in the Life of Ivan Deniso- pate. The faithful~are bound ~o vich," the f\irst fUm ever based abstain from all unnecessary on 'a novel by Nobel Prize win- labor on the obligatory feasts. , The new obligatory holy days £1er Alexander Solzenitsyn, has won an award from the Interna- are effective Jan; 1 in the Ukrainian-rite Philadelphia archtionall Catholic Film Office. An internationall jury singled eparchy, Which includes about, .out the film for the "serious and half a minion Catholics. objective manner in which the film succeeds in making the viewer live through the cruelty of the situation in which prisoners of a concentration camp find themselves.~' Est. 1897 The office gave the film its Builders Supplies Annual Grand Award for 1971 2343 Purchase Street ' shortly after the film opened in New Bedford ,the United States to critical ac996·5661 cla~m. It wilI open' in London this month. The picture was filmed on 10oation in Ruros, Norway, and UP DATED EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM Was produced' by the Americanf IMEL Y RELIGIOUS FORMAliON operated Group W Films in association with Leonte1s Productions, England, and Norsk Fiims, Nor~RlaR way. BQotheQ o~ PQlest
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., "HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 6, 1972
.. It Wa·sa Ve1ry 'G1oo;d Year For Col,u,mnist' 5 . Family
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By now I've broken all my New Year's Resolutions. Somehow the things I'd like to do, and the things that actually happen never seem to match. So I'll try to live this coming year one day at a time, making the best of ea('~.. opportunity. And inAnother learned to crochet, steEld of planning what will happen, let me reflect on and is making a scarf for herI hope winter is longer than what good happened last itself.takes her to get the scarf year.
By
MARY CARSON
To quote an old line, "You know those eight kids I have .. well seven of them didn't break a leg." And we got a dishwasher. It's .over-flown the coop (more accurately the sink and the connecting hoses) several times. But that did help clean the kitchen floor. And we got a new heating system. That's kind of a mixed blessing. We really didn't want a new heating system, but the old one gave up and drained all the water out of all the radiators in the house and dumped it on the cellar floor. But at least it cleaned out the radiators. And we have such nice hot water these days. . That episode brought a deep appreciation to the kids. A week without hot water or heat and they got to know what good is. They had to heat pot after pot of water for baths, and lug them upstairs. Now, just being able to turn on a faucet and fill a tub they regard as the 'eighth wonder of the world. Everyone Passed The were other blessings last year. The little ones all passed their exams. The high school boys passed their exams. . The oldest boy passed his colleg~ entrance exam. . Our car even passed inspection . . . though I don't know why. It must have had a deaf inspection agent. But then it never makes those funny noises . . . .except when I'm driving it. One of my daughters learned to sew. She completed a whole skir': without my having to help her with it.
long enough . . . so she gets to wear it this year. One of the boys got a learner's permit to drive. Though I have some doubts about the stability of my nerves wlHle he's learning, I can still remember the thrill when I got my permit. (For the .life of me, I can't see why I thought it was such fun driving. I hate it now. But my children remind me that there weren't so many cars in those days, I just had to watch out for the horses and wagons.) . One of the girls had the "second lead" in the class play, and .did a beautiful job. She remembered all her lines . . . and her cues. But her big thrill came when some of the boys said she was good. That's high praise at 11 years of age. Something Special I'm sure many. of you have similar little things that happened last year ... little things that make the everyday joy of life. But something else happened. Though it is not something often experienced, I'm sure you can share with me in thanking God. One youngest daughter has had a problem with her heart since birth. After examining her, the doctor was reasonably sure it was a hole between the ventricles. Much more extensive testing was necessary, but it would require hospitalization, and. a relati~ely difficult procedure. But the baby, at that time, was too weak for it. And so it was post'poned, under the condition that I would bring her back regularly so the doctor could observe any changes in her condition. As we finished last year, there was a change. The hole had com· pletely closed. Her h~art was sound. Only one Surgeon touched it. It was a very good year.
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Nuns, Gamblers Linked In Court Cases
WASHINGTON (NC) - Two nuns are linked with men allegedly involved with illegal' gambling in cases which the U. S. Supreme Court has agreed to Chancellor to Become hear. The link is that in both cases the defendants charge that Missioner in Af rica evidence against them was iIlegSANTA ROSA (NC) - The ally obtained through wiretapchancellor of the Santa Rosa dio- ping. cese wiil leave in early 1972 to The two nuns are Sister Jogues become a missionary in Africa, Egan and Sister Ann Elizabeth Bishop Mark J. Hurley announc- Walsh, both of whom refused to ed. testify before a federal grand Msgr. John Brenkle will serve jury in Harrisburg, Pa., which for two years in the archdiocese was investigating an alleged of Kasama, Zambia, headed by conspiracy to kidnap presidenArchbishop Clemens Chabukas-. tial aide Henry Kissinger and . ansha. blow up federal heating facilities Ordained a priest in San Fran- in Washington, D.C. cisco in 1958, Msgr. Brenkle reThe other case involves two ceived a doctorate in canon law . men who refused to testify befrom Catholic University of fore a grand jury investigating America .four years later. He be- gambling in California on' the came chancellor at Santa Rosa grounds that they were overheard in 1967. Pope Paul named. him a in wiretaps- of a third party's mono ~ig, n,o"r•. ,.t.Jl,~v'~~'!1e. • •Ye,a,r,.,'. . .. : .teleohone. , . . . . ',',',' ""', ''''f''', ~ ~ " • " .. " "f., . • ",_'t.'t.,,'.'I.I/.'l!" I.,·.'i 1_'V:l' \I.'t'.v.v.·~t; .I'~ ....
ST. NICHOLAS LIVES AGAIN: Bishop Cronin visited the children of St. Mary's Home, New Bedford and dUring his visit reflected the acts of the fourth century bishop, the patron of children, by distributing gifts to the residents. Assisting were left to right, standing: Rev.' William W. NQrton, director of the home; Sr. Mary Louise, OSF, Sr. Marie Dennis, OSF, superior; Sr. Marie Lawrence, OSF. The children concluded the visit with a skit echoing the Franciscan Spirit of Christmas.
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NEW YORK (NC)-John Gioi'dano is not a man who gives up easy. . He had met someone he wanted to marry. The whole thing was simple and direct. One day while strolling through the grounds of the Marble Hill project in the Bronx he stopped to talk with a lady he found "nice and sweet." They spent a few minutes together. on a park bench. Then she left to do some shopping. No names were exchanged. Later, Giordano tnought to himself, "Why riot ask her to marry me. Both of us are alone." A fair question. But he didn't know where she lived. His eyes roamed the cluster of 17-story buildings making up the project. "Somewhere in there," he said to himself.. So lie set out to find her and for the next month he traced down leads, asking others in the. project if they knew her. Finally, one day he happened to knock on the door of Clara Arrandale O'Connell. When she opened the door, he lit up. .unfortunately, Clara didn't. "Yes?" came the cool question. "I want to marry you," said the voice, full of bravado. "Who are you?" Marble Hill has had. more' than ,-its share of muggers, although Giordano is not the type you'd expect to see in a line-up. "The man on the bench," he answered. "What bench?" she asked. "Don't you remember," he said, feeling somewhat shattered. "We talked about the weather . . . about being alone and ..." "Oh! now I remember. You w~~~'" .to. '. ~~J,}'~,,'~~~;)Y~!l~'(, I~~ .
have to think it over. Come in so I can get a good look at you." . Make Concessions Evidently, Giordano passed the test, and the two became the oldest couple to ever marry in the New York archdiocese. Fifty friends attended the ceremony, performed by Msgr. John Doherty at St. John's Church in Kingsbridge. Mrs. Giordano is a spunky 86. John-she married a younger man-is 81. But everything is not perfect. John wanted to marry an Italian girl who could cook pasta. But tea-and-crumpets Clara, born
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Council. Supports Religion Courses .In Public Schools WASHINGTON (NC) - Convincing the public that courses on religion are an essential part of every school curriculum is a major task of the newly formed National Council on Religion and Public Educatlion. But Father William J. Tobin, acting director of the National Center of Religious EducationConfraternity of Christian Doctrine here, said the council would also ~'encourage the preparation of -teachers for the task" and work to improve the quality of course material available. "If we could create the same sense of urgency that resuUed in the preparation or: curriculum materials and courses on black studies while at the same time countering the haste and public fears that arose in sex education programs, we would be moving in the right direction," the priest said.. Father Tobin was named to an 1~:member steering committee estab\lished at the recent New York meeting where officials of 40 / educational and religious bodies vQJed unanimously to form the religion council. Two Basic Ways Final formation of the council depends on approval by the constituents of groups at the founding meeting. ' . , Father Laurence Murphy, director of .the U. S. Catholic Conference (USCC) higher education division, and Mrs. Louise Des Marais' of the National Council . of Catholic Laity, are the two other Oathplic representatives on the council steering committee. Father Tobin said those attending the meeting discussed the two basic' ways of teaching about religion in public schools -separate courses in religion and "the wholistic approach" of explorin~ the religious themes in art, history and other areas of study. 'Presented Objectively' Prayer in public 'schools has been outlawed 'since the U. S. .. Supreme Court's Schempp decision in 1963. But the court also said nothing in its decision "indicates that. . . study of the Bible or of religion, whim presented objectively as part of a secular program of education, may not be effected consistent with the First Amendment." The fledgling council; which marks the first national attempt to establish an interfaith and interdisciplinary group backing in' public. religion courses 'schools, un$lerscored the court's comment in the council's proposed statement of purpose. The statement said those joining the council consider religion "a constitutionally acceptable and educationally appropriate part of a secular program of public education." '.
Clarifies Stand -On'Tax Credits
THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 6, - 1972
Eagerness
, Enthusiasm is at the bottom 'Of all progress. With it there is acco,mplishment. .Without '. it there are only alibis. "":"Henry Ford
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WASHINGTON (NC) - U:S. Education Commissioner. Sidney P. Marland Jr., "has never pre- . sumed to speak for the (Nixon) • administration" on the issue of tax credits for education costs, a spokesman for the commissioner said here. At an' Office of' Education news confer~nce 1a'st month, Ma~land had predicted that the OE would favor increasing the "child benefit", form of aid-ed-' ucational services to childrenrather than backing tax credits. 'He added, however, that this was his '''quick impulse" an4 that an official position on tax credits "should await -an' administration voice going out of the -'~. on President's ~Commission School Finance" -:.. the govern: ment body exploring various ......* • ~'~' . ' school aid options. . i',~;;~~j~ .. , . '" ,:,11.:",,", # , At their recent Fall ~eeting, MAKE PROFESSION AT EP)[PHAl'lYl: Epiphany candles became profession candles the nation's bisbops passed a for four new nuns in Los Angeles when ~hey formally pronounced their religious vows "Statement on Paret:ttal Rights as Sisters of St. Joseph of Carqondelet on the day 'Of the selection, .the Feast of Epiphany. and the Free' Exercise of Reli-· which said government The four nuns composed their lown cerempny to the theme of the Epiphany Mass. They gion,". "plain'ly . has an obligation in are from left: Sister Jean Annette; Sister 'Mary Catherine, Sister Joan Michelle, and Sis- justice to make diose accOmmoter Elaine. NC ·Photo. dations necessary to secure parental rights in education,': . "In order to exercise this"right today," the bishops said, "parents need and are entitled to a All of the bishop's living ex- young people do. For instance, measure of economic help - a SPOKANE (NC)-fie works' in an almost ostentatious white pense:. are ~aid by his $97 a he rejects current economic and share of th'e tax dollars they . social standards. "It is too clear pay." marble and glass chancery build- rhonth Socia(Security check. Th~ tax cre,dit would allow ing, but at night Bishop Bernard In an interview, Bishop Topel -as many youths point out-. that we profess Christianity, but parents to substract some educa.J. Topel goes home to a racially s,aid that the imposing chancery tional expenses from their final integrated, low-income neighbor- J:)uilding wher:e he works "err).- do not ,live it." hood on Spokane's south side. "The time has come when we income tax assessment. Several ban'asses" him. "iBut we needed a new build- should ask oUll'selves if we nonpublic school officials qU,esThe 68-year-old bishop, spiritual- leader of 13 counties in ing a.nd this one (previously Christians have a right-no mat- tioned whether Marland's pi'es~ eastern Washington, has attract- dwned by ~n insurance com- ter what our we.alth,....to live in conference statement represented national attention to his proj- pany) was cheaper than con- affluence, even in an average ed current Administration thinkin need. 'ing on the feasibHity of: tax are struct:ng a: new one," he ex- way, when .others 'ects of concern for the poor. , I ' To do so is certainly not show- .credits. p,lained. ' One such project is the prelIt is ing the sign of discipleship. ate's own life-style. He sold the Reiec~ Standards not proving by our actions the Church Attendance Spokane mansion provided by ! He insisted that "the Church, true reality of Christ and His the Church as his residence and ' High in Pcinama gave the money to programs for ~ust 'become the visible sign to teaching." PANAMA CITY (NC)-Figures' the needy. He now raises his apd for the ppor. And while he What Chri:;t Wants released here by the Center for own vegetables, cooks his meals should be concerned about the Bishop Topel, head of. the dio- Social and Religious Research and washes his own clothes in materially poor, we must not a small frame house that cost forget the spiritually and emo- cese of Spokane for 15 y'ears, show that about 86 per cent of said he gained the courage to professed Catholics in Panama him $4,000. What he saves by tionally poor/t he added. , A friend to. youth, the bishop follow his new style of living p'ractice their religion. -eating less expensive meals, he after receiving spiritual guidance s~id he often sees things as gives. to the poor. Panama, with more than 1.4 on a retreat. "I think it is what million people, has 1.33 million Christ wants me to do," he said. Catholics, of whom 1.15 million SE~e "It is of the utmost imporpractice their religion, the center tance; it is crucial that Chris- reported. Of 'the 265 priests tend- tians must· show the 'sign of dis- ing to them, 44 are Panamanians, HOLLYWOOD (NC) - Execu- t~e :family. FOms will be gettin~ cipleship more than we have in 221 are foreign-born. tives of three major studios said a)Vay from nudity and pornog" the past. Much more. There has The figures incluae Catholics here that excessive sex, violence raphy. The industry has had it been, some progress made in the living in the Canal Zone, most and nudity are going to disap- and the public has had it." deepening concern-and in our of whom are from the United pear from movies because the . Herb Jaffe, United Artists vic¢ sense of responsibility - for States. public and theater owners are p~esj[dent, said': "There is going others who are in need," he sick and tired of it. .. tq be a marked departure from- said. They agreed sex and violence tqe kinds of films we have seen. "We are to have Christian MO~lle are bad for business and the in- Tfe major co~panies are going compassion for them and their . dustry has got to get out of the to get away from sex and vio. needs. The need may be unemIlehce. Those aren't the films of ployment, loneliness, sickness, red and back into the black~ Over 35 Years Douglas Netter, executive vice lasting value~ I'm talking in lack of food and clothing, disof Satisfied Service 'president of MGM, said: '''It's tehns of re-release, television crimination, education, peace. If Reg. Master Plumb'er 7023 I I " aqd whatever forms pay Tv we' are to be truly Christians, the very obvious from the reaction JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. , needs of others must bring a reof the public and theater own~ might take," 806 NO. MAIN STREET sponse from us. A big, generous, ers, that they are sick and tired Terry Semel, director of do. Fall River 675.7497 of excessive violence, excessive mestic sales from Cinema Center, sacrificial response." I , sex, nudity and profanity." sa,id: "Our ph;ilosophy has been Netter was one of the major to try to get I entertaining films ELECTRICAL executives polled by Daily Vari- le~ming toward adventure, comContractors edy, a<:tion. P~ople lean toward ety. th~~;e [flore. The trend has defiIrving Levin, president of NationaI GeneraI, said: "As far as nitIy rE~turned i toward entertain. OIL • we're concerned, we have not ing films." been involved with nudity or X[The executIves commented '.rated pictures, if for no, other that there seemed to be little or reason than television residual nq interest remaining in films on vaIues ,down the road. We want contemporary social issues race to keep pictures as family-like problems, coll¢ge, revolution and South • Sea Streets as possible. We prefer to distrib- drpgs. The public, they con944 County St. ute films that play to a wider cluded, is fed up with these Hyannis Tel. 49·81 . New . Bedford . audience-to more members of themes.
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, Daily Newspaper Lauds Church's Housing Pledge
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THE ANCHOR-, Jan. 6, 1972
Thu~.,
. ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)A pledge by the Rockville Centre diocese to reserve 40 ,acres of Church-owned land for lowincc:~1e housing has been praised by an infiue!1tial Long Island daily newspaper. The diocesan action shamed public officials in -I,.ong Island, according to an editorial in Newsday, because a non-governmental institution- has now made "most important commitment... in many years to the correction of a public problem." The paper stated that in terms of mora'! leadership "this "40acre gesture is worth 40-square miles of political promises." It added that "the Church's .example. should help some, Long Islanders restore their own perspectives" on the importance of people over property values and tax rates. Just how the diocese will make the land available-and where -is still to be worked out, said Msgr. Henry J. Reel, chairman of the diocesan Task Force on Pov- , ANNUAL OLD WORLD EPIPHANY PROCESSION: On the Solemnity of the Epipherty, Race and Allied Problems. Has Bishop's Support any, the Puerto Rican community annually celebrates with an Old World procession of "We ,don't want to impose the Magi through the streets of North Philadelphia to the Casa del Carmen, a settlement this on a community, but rath" er hope a community will, come house operated by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. NC Photo. to us," he said, adding that "many sites are available and are being studied." He said the housing pledge has Father St. Pierre ran on a platWASHINGTON (NC) - Oblate auxiliary chaplain at the Stra"the complete and' absolute co- Father Roland H. St. Pierre be- tegic Air Command (SAC) Air form which called for reform of operation" of Bishop Walter P. gins the new year as mayor of Force base and conducts retreats the political machinery which, he Kellenberg of Rockville Centre. Plattsburgh, N.Y., as the result He 'was inaugurated mayor Jan. said, was geared to patronage Msgr. Reed said the diocese of his landslide November elec- 1. jobs and had bogged down bewould depend on a non-profit tion victory in which he picked , Patronage Jobs cause of petty bickering within organization to build the low- up nearly 69 per cent of the "My priestly functions will Plattsburgh's Common Council. and-middle income housing on vote. Right as Citizen stay intact right down the line," the reserved Church land. Plattsburgh is about 67 per Father St. Pierre's victory es- said Father St. Pierre, who dis"We're fortunate," he said. tablished several firsts: He is agrees with critics who say cent Catholic, but Father St. "We have the land, federal funds said to be the only priest in priests face a conflict of interest Pierre said he received solid supare available for construction the United States now holding when they hold public office port from non-Catholic voters. and a vast amount of expertise office as mayor. He is the first while trying to carry out their He said there was never any is available to the diocese. And Republican to be elected Platts- ministry. question in the minds of the we have the word of the bishop burgh mayor in 22 years and "There are ~oral issues in- voters that he could represent that he will back us to the brings into office the first Re- volved in everything," Father all the city's people. hilt." Only once, during a television publican administration in 33 St. Pierre told NC News Service during a visit here. "If we priests interview, was he challenged on years. Catholics in Media ,Father St. Pierre is a former do not concern ourselves with whether he could properly repreForm Organization. Democrat who switched to the justice and charity, then I don't sent Plattsburgh. "I reminded LITTLE ROCK (NC)-Plims Republican ,party. He is pastor think we are fulfilling our priest- him (the interviewer) that I had are underway here in Arkansas of St. Peter's Church in Platts- ly mission. If that mission hap- the right as a citizen of this to launch a state-wide Catholic burgh, chaplajn of the Sacred pens to be in politics, then let it country and as a resident of this city to offer my services to Communications Society, in an Heart Nursing Hime for the aged, be in politics." the people," Father St. Pierre attempt to offset what its sponsaid. sors feel are shortcomings in the Father St. Pierre, 45, was born general mass media. in Fitchburgh, Mass. His parMore than llO Catholics who ents were of French-Cimadian Human Development Gives' $508,951 work in news, broadcasting, pub- . ancestry. He speaks fluent Iishing, advertising and public In Anti-P'overty Grants French. He said that being birelations throughout Arkansas lingual is a decide"d advantage WASHINGTON (NC)-Grants program of youth leadership have been invited to a Jan. 14 meeting in Hot Springs, where totaling hal.f-million dollars from training and development among for him since Plattsburgh, on the shores of Lake Champlain, caters the Arkansas Press Association the U.S. bishops' 1970 Campaign Spanish-speakers. is simultaneously holding its for Human Development were Other' grants ranged from to Canadian tourists who are atWinter convention. announced here by Chioago's black lung research among Ken- tracted to Plattsburgh's sandy "Formation of a Catholic AuxiHlM"Y Bishop Michael R. tucky coal miners to expansion beach. Montreal is only 60 miles Communications Society is a Dempsey, the campaign's na- of services at a senior citizens' away from Plattsburgh, Father completely new concept for tional director.' cooperative in Detroit. seeking to ameliorate shortcomThat makes' almost $7 million One $5,000 grant went to the Pierre pointed out. "I intend to ings in the mass media by work- so far distributed fro1J1 the 1970 Tioga County Council of do a lot of public relations for ing from within," William W. anti-poverty campaign. Churches in Owego, N. Y., to Plattsburgh," he said referring The $508,957 just announced provide legal aid to the poor to a plan to increase Canadian O'Donnell, managing editor of tourism into the city. The Guardian, said in his dioc- was divided into 33 separate there. esan newspaper in a story about grants, mostly in California, A $30,000 grant was made to (photo on Page 17) New York and Texas. Thirteen the Commission for Mexicanthe plan. "The new concept derives from of the grants went to Mexican- American Affairs in San Anto- ;"~I"""":"""H""""T"""·""""the widely held belief that, if American projects; six to rural n'io, Tex., which will sponsor a there are shortcomings in the projects, or programs affecting community organization program : SHEET METAL : media, they are reflections of Appalachian miners; three to for needy Chicanos. J. TESER, Prop. , shortcomings in those employed American Indian programs and The 1970 campaign' brought a , in these fields, and the most ef- two grants went to programs de- total of $8.5 million, the largest : RESIDENTIAL : fective way to counteract them veloping better housing for the sum ever raised by the American : INDUSTRIAL : Catho~ic Church in a single colis to help individual workers rec- poor. : COMMERCIAL: The largest single grant of lec1Jion. Results of the '1971 cam- , 253 Cedar St., New Bedford' ognize their moral and ethical obligations and their responsibil- $45,000 was awarded to the paign collection, held Nov. 21, , 993-3222 , ity to be professionaly apostolic.!' ~Q,uipos Unidos in NeYf y?~~, ~ "are still being tabulated. ., " , ... ... ,.':
Oblate Pastor Takes Office as Mayor
From 1970 Campaign
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Archbishop Asks Prison Reform BOSTON (NC) - Archbishop Humberto S. Medeiros has called for a c.oncerned public to support meaningful legislative proposals for prison reform. The Boston archbishop warned that "apathetic unconcern or timid misgivings" could undermine the "sincerest efforts at making needed changes" in penal institutions in a Christmas pastoral letter. The pastoral emphasized that "basic to all efforts for penal reform is a real~zation of the worth and dignity of every human being, however obscured it may have become through circumstances, weakness or even deliberate malice." Archbishop Medeiros noted that with the harsh realization of the weaknesses and failures of the nation's penal systems "there is developing a dangerous and pessimistic atmosphere of distrust, fear and discouragement, 'both inside and outside of jails." Warning that there is 00 "simple solution to the need of immediate penal reform," the archbishop said that "'there will be no real progress and very little change in an atmosphere wltich is oharged Wiith mistrust, ignorance and some irresponsible accusations." He emphasized, however, that "a competent and concerned legislature" advised by experts in the correctional field "and r~ spon-sive to enlightened and responsible suggestions of prisoners will effectively provide the changes in law that prison reo form so desperately needs."
Basis for Progress BRUSSELS (NC) - With a declaration of joint recognition of each other's Baptism, Belgian Catholics and Protestants com· ' pleted their first major ecumenical step and have laid the basis for further progress. The declaration was made by Cardinal Leo Suenens of Malines-Brussels fQr the Catholics and by representatives of four Protestant groups: the Protestant Church of Belgium, the Reformed Church of Belgium (French-speaking), the Reformed Church of Belgium (Flemish-speaking) and the German-speaking Evangelical Community in Belgium.
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College' President Says Buckley Distorts Reasons for Change,.
THE ANCHOR:""'Oiocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan.· 6, 1972 •
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I·t's· Time£. Parents Insisted On Adult··Centered Homes!'
NEW YORK (NC) - Sacred year where Manh'a-ttanville is Heart, Sister Elizabeth McCor- concerned" and, for that much. mack, president of Manhattan·' money, nowadays, you, can just ville College, has accused Wil- coexist with a little cockcrowA mother-panelist on teenage drug problems was liam F. Buckley Jr., conservative 1ng." asked if she saw a well-publicized television documentary columnist and magazine editor,' Search for Truth on drugs in her area. "No," she confessed. "I didn't. I want· of distorting the reasons for In her letter, Sister .Elzaoeth ed to ,but that was when the kids wanted to watch their Manhattanville's change from a said, "I strongly believe that a , denominational to a non-denomi- "college committed to the expanshows, and we have only one national college. sion of the mind cannot be be it. Pouting isn't hard on the television." So she didn't get In a letter to the edUor ap- closed,... In the search for ears. to see it. She didn't give any pearing in the Dec. 18 issue of truth, is an imperative that I don't question whether deindication that there was an mocracy can work, in the home The New Yorker Mag~zine, Sis- every door', be opened, every alternative, that the kids might as much, as if it .should work. ter Elizabeth said Manhattan· road explored, no path barr~d. forego their show so she could Does the parents' role lie in ,abo ville had changed in orde.r to be Sectarian ,education, hy definibetter' able to educate ilts stu- tion, does not meet this need, dicating leadership in the bask dents. "Mr. Buckley errs," she "The church-affiliated college unit of society? I don't think so. said, "when he implies that Man- -Catholic, fvndamentalist, or Someone has to rule. If the parhattanville changed in 'order to 'any other _ however much it. ents don't, the children will and . By NEW SMA K E R : Kurt become eligible for state aid." may succeed in teaching its stuthey have no, qualifications' for so. Parents have (01: doing Waldheim, an Austrian CathIn an article in the Aug. 21 dents -to think, will also be DOLORES should have)' the qualifications olic and a member of A~s issue of The New Yorker, Buck· ,tempted, to' a greater or lesser for running a family: love, faith, tria's delegation to every ses- ley said that research for a TV degree, to instruct its students , . CURRAN judgment, past experience as Program on which he inter- in the, particular tenets of i~s children, perseverance, humor sion, of the UN General As- viewed Sister Elizabeth suggest- religious faith.~', sembly sirtce 1955, is now' ed that she "was perhaps neces~nd goais. Sister 'EHzabeth went on to If children are running the the new secretary general of sarily driven" to favoring some- say, "The changes in the college , home, 'i.e.; deciding the television the Unitec;li Nations, succed- thing other than "palpably Cath- over the last few years have see one which was important to , schedule, questioning every rule, olic higher' education" by the been' instituted beCause Manhlh. her panel appearance. And no- dictating the menus, bestowing ing U Thant. NC Photo. Blaine Amedmenrt to New York tanville had to go in new direc. body in the au<iience question- approval or contempt upon every State',s constitution. The amena- ,tions if it was to continue to i ed either her reasoning or the parental',' decision,' making the ment says that no sta·te aid can make a signi~icant contributi9i1 I: 5 possibility that parents' acqui- decisions parents should be makgo to a religious college. ' t o the educational community. escence and the drug thing might ing, and' otherwise turning the , "How does one cope .with I The changes ~at did take place have' anything in common. home into a child-centered rather /that," Buckley BISked, "and qual- ,prior to the Bundy legistatiori, as WASHINGTON (NC)Pe~ce Much has been written about than adult-centered home, what. the tyranny of children today incentive have they for getting "wollld be tile greatest Christmas ify for the, subventions available instruments of a larger educabut much of it is unfair. Chil- an eventual home of their own? present in the world," President from the state to any nonreli- tiorial purpose, made it possible :Nixon said, as he received the giOliS college-X number of dol- dn the long run for the college dren can't be blamed for parents What burning ,desire 'for inde· te"t of Pope Paul's 1972 World }oars per degree granted? Why, to' apply for state' aid with ,per. who are too insecure to say, pendence will drive them to ,seek Day of Peace message from unstress. religion to the point of fect legitimacy." "Look, this is your family, mayIn a one-senrtence Latin reply out their own cave? They've exArchbishop ,Luigi Raimondi, ap- satisfying the educational aube, but it's my home..When· you thorities that yours is not a reo ,to Sister Elizabeth's letter perienced aH that as children. ostolic delegate in the United grow. up, you can set up any ligious college :in ~ny meaning~ Buckley said: "Radix omnium kind of home with' any rules you The basic drive which forces States. At a brief presentation in the ful sense. It CI)mes to over a 'malorum cupiditas' est (Desire want' to, but every man has a most adults out· of the nest to right to his home, including us." set up housekeeping is dulled. President's bffiice in the White hundred thousand dollars per for money is the root of all evils.)" After all this, rationalization House, NiXOn told the archbishop Is Dad Afraid ? for being a dictato'ril!-l parent, I'll "We get a' lot of messages in Personnel Officers These words sound harsh but add that adults have a right to here that are controversial, but Holy War they don't have to be said, mere- an adult home ,occasionally. I there is no controversy about Form OrgCllnization If ever there was a holy war, ly implied. When the toddler love my children but after 8 this one." BOSTON (NC)-An organizait was that which saved our lib· first decides' he wants daddy's P.M. it gets harder. Then I want The President said that 19'72 tion for persons involved in I 'chair, daddy has a choice of to discuss things fre,~ly with my "in the field of foreign affairs Church personnel work has been erties ~nd gave us independence. -Thomas Jefferson evicting him or ignoring him. It's husband without little ears could be a great step forward. established' and is now making not a matter of which choice . around. I want to be ,able to We believe it, will be a great step plans fora first national, meetdad makes at the given time as snicker or exclaim at, something forward." 'fng, Fr. Paul A. White, personnel much as whether or not dad is on television withou.t being The theme of the Pope's 1,400- director of the Boston archdioafraid to evict the child. asked, "Wha's that mean?" I word message is a phrase cese said here. Father. White is If he is afraid, he will be want to be able to read without adapted fro~ Isaiah 32: 17-"If the chairman of the steering' afraid later on to face the rock background noise. I want, in you want peace, work for jus· committee which is working to music showdown, reaping loss of short, some privacy away from tice." Pope Paul who first desig- set up the new organization. hearing 'and loss of serenity in my children. nated Jan. 1 as World Day of Stin formally unnamed, the or"Serving the Community his home rather than telling his Pe'lce in' 1~68, delivered the ganization has adopted as a in Room Everyone junior high ·age son, "Look, you message on that day. Since .1873" working title Society of Church can listen. to that music if you Personnel Administrators. So we have a rule here that Cities Service Petroleum like, but we don't enjoy it, so every child is in his room at' 8 J olpanese' Send Aid . Membership in the SCPAwill Products either listen to it at a reasonable P.M., not in bed, but in his room. be open ~'to those charged with volume or in your room." If the, :,He may read; do homework, lis- Tc) Seattle Jobless the responsibility to advise and son chooses to pout awhile,so ten to his radio, clean his drawSEATTLE '(NC) - A church- assist Ordinaries and religious Gasolene & Diesel Fuels , el's (he hasn't yet) or go 'to bed !1ponsored 'program which dis- superiors regarding personnel Fuel Oils 'but he stays in his room. Besides -tributes free food in this city administration," according to a Pressmen's Strike Liquified Pe!roleum Gas by the steerstatement drawn up giving 'us privacy, we think Where U11~mployment ranks Quic~ly Settled there's a positive value in teach- highest in the nation, is getting ing committee. Stewart-Warner Winkler Father White explained that HUNTINGTON (NC)-A strike ing children to be by themselves help from itsi friends-not ArnerHeating & Cooling" "personnel" in this statement' at Our Sunday Visitor's (OSV) occasionally. ' iean but Japanese. Installations . plant 'involving 200' pressmen In addition, we don't vote on ' lhe foteign aid is coming from and in the society's tentative here in Indiana was quickly re- cereals, hours, allowances; rules 'Seattle's "sister city" of Kobe, title refers specifical.Jy'to priests , solved through compromise on or behavior. We don't apologize Japan, which shipped 1,000 and Religious, not to the lay em24-Hour Burner Service both sides. for making a rule or for correct~ . pounds of 'canned food and rice ployees who selve dioceses or 448 BROADWAY, TAUNTON religious orders in jobs that A statement was issued joint- 1ng a child. We do give children noodles to the jobless' poor. ly by the OSV management and choices within our range of de· . :"I 1;hink i~ I is rather sad that range from bus-driving and garAttleboro - No. Attleboro Local 411 of the Interna,tional cisions .(you can wear your red We have to 'reach out to other dening to bookkeeping and-Taunion· Pressmen and Assistants Union dress, blue dress, brown dres,s cou:ntfies to help our unem- teaching. , announcing that agreement had or pink dress-no slacks today) , played at a .t,ime when we are been reached and the strike set- and we' do give them more 'supposedly 'oile of the wealthiest tled. decision~making powers yearly. countries in the world," said a The agreement includes a I'm soI'ry that mother-panelist staff member at Neighbors in two-year contract, with a' re- didn't hear her television pro- Need, the food bank program opening clause next year for gram but I~m sonier that she was sponsored by' hoth Christian and wages, and fringes, excluding afraid to assert her position as ,non·Christian churches in Seatpensions.'The statement said the an adult in an adult home.' A tle. at ;, union reduced its wage demands parent doesn't have to be a ty"Our state' legislators have so that the company could agree rant to have a decent home life ,worked very, very hard trying . .. to add the' Pressmen Union's but he doesn't have to be afraid to get 'aid for ,us, but the rest of pensjon pla~ in addition to' the either. I'd like tothink there are the country, has apparently benefits that union workers, are a lot of parents who are neither turned a deaf ear to our plight." already receiving under the OSV because it's nice to have com- added Victoria Snowden, Neigh,115 WILUAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. pension plan.' , ,.., ','. r pany. ., ,•.••.. ". ,'.bors! liecmtary.
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THe ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 6, 1912
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Seventeenth Annual
BISHOp·S C·HARITY BALL HONORING
Most Reverend DANIEL~ A.
CRONIN ·S.T.D.
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Bishop Cronin Examines a Project in the Arts and Crafts Department of the St. Vincent de Paul Overnight Camp, One of the Beneficiaries of the Bishop's Ball.
FOR THE BENEFIT OF
FRIDAY ·'EVENING
Underprivileged and ExoeptilQnal Children
JANUARY 14
8 P.M. ...- 1.A.M.
Art· Perry and His Orchestra (COCKTAIL LOUNGE) 9 'P.M. -
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Meyer Davis and His Orchestra '(MAIN BALLROOM)
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LINCOLN PARK BALLROOM Auspices of THE .SOCIETY OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL AND THE DIOCESAN COUNCIL OF CATHOLIC WOMEN
This Message Spo";sored by the Following Indiyiduals and Business Concerns In The Diocese of Fall River Cape Cod and The Islands
DURO FINISHING CORP. TOM ELLISON BASS RIVER SAVINGS BANK QUALITY MEN'S APPAREL Fall River THE EXTERMINATOR CO. ANN DALE PRODUCTS, INC. FALL RIVER ELECTRIC LIGHT CO. FALL' RIVER TRAVEL BUREAU ~HI~'I,~,~,,:,!,~TERIALS,. ~,~C;:~ ':' , ', •. '.:,,'. ' ,GLQBE ~~~F.A~WRING CO.
MASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS MacKENZIE AND WINSLOW, INC. R. A. McWHIRR COMPANY SOBILOFF BROTHERS ,.STERLINGBEVERAGES, INC.
New Bedford PAUL G. CLEARY & CO., IN,C. GEORGE O'HARA CHEVROLET, INC. STAR STORE
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese' of F~n River--Thurs., Jan'. 6, 1972 ,
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And Can Expect Irate 'Mail By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick Just before the New Year the Fall River City, Council pa:sed an ordinance requiring owners to keep dogs, on leashes. This has brought forth a nu'mber of complaints of unfairness, including a picketing of City Hall by thr:e young dog enthusiasts. Aside from the fact that I doubt that and cards occupied many of our the 'ordinance will ever be evenings. If game titles ,are any indicaenforced effectively, I salute tion of the interests of the pubthe City Council. I am sure that most gardeners would clap their hands in glee' over the prospect 'of dog-free gardens. Personally I would look forward to the day when I could cut 'my grass without having to sidestep ',an!;l sweep'up dog leav" ings at ,every other step. I have. often said' that my lawn' :was particularly attractive to d9g s , and I do not retract that now. As far as the garden.in general is concerned, my, garden suffers , 'trom more damage from dogs than from children. On, hot dry days it' was the rule rather than the 'exception to find a dog burrowing in the begonias and. in other shady spots. Last Summer I had a small azalea destroyed by a" dog who was rooting aroulld in the garden. -All in all I personally would love to see an effective dog leash law in operation. Will Mean Little
lie, this year everyone ,is either historical minded, ecology' bent or hockey oriented., "Jason is probably one of the very small minority of boys in the city who didn't get an ,electric hockey game for, Christmas - instead Santa brought,him a soccer game ,very'!!imilarto the ones in Portugal (there these machines ta'ke the pla~e of our pinball machines)., ' Except for the fact that it's going to take,me until February to find a place" for all their games, I find many of them as much fun as the children do. One of the nicest things about holiday cooking is that you dis· cover a few new recipes' in the flurry of preparing for holiday guests. This recipe will 'have to top the list of confections that I prepared for this hi:>lidaYseason. Sour Cream Pastries , 1 cup butter or margarine
2 <;ups ~ifted flour I believe most dog lovers do' 1 beaten egg yol~ train their dogs and keep them y:! cup dairy ,I'our cream y:! ,'cup aprfcot" pres~rve; in bounds anyway. For these , y:! cup flaked coconut people a leash law means very I,4 cup finely chopped' pecans little. For the others it means granulated sugar that they will have to take dog ownership seriously and train and 1) Cut' butter or margarine care for their dogs, If ~ dog is , int9 flour till mixture rese~bles worth owning, it is 'worth caring fine crumbs. ,2)' Combine the' egg yolk, SOUI' for, not at someone else's expense and annoyance, but at the .' cream and blend into flour mix·, expense, and care of its owner.' ture until well' blended. Chill So to the City Council of Fall doug in refrig several hours or River,:' the members of which ; ,overnight. I left my dough for have been inundated by com- a couple of days before I got: plaints and phone calls" I, say a chance to, roil out and "bake it and it didn't s'eem any the Bravo:" , worse foc the extra chilling. In the Kitchen 3) Divide dough into four I've seen the USA whh Jason, equaf portions, keeping each part refrigerated until ready to e~ll(ii'ed wildilfe preserve's with Melissa,had my handwriting an- use. 4) Roll each paN to a 10 inch alyzed by'Meryl, and been beatcircle (or as near to that size as en at soccer by Joe-all in the' course of on'e evening. This year' possible) Spread 'with 2 Tableat the Rodericks was game year. spoons of the apricot preserve, sprinkle with 2 ·Tablespoons of Perhaps it's because the' chilthe coconut and 1 Tablespoon dren, are getting older and their , of the nuts. Cut each circle into games more sophisticated (one 12 pie shaped wedges. does get tired of Candyland), or 5) Sta'rting from wide end perhaps it's just that this year roll each wedge into a crescent. toy manufacturers created more Sprinkle with a 'little granulated interesting games. but whatever sugar and place on an ungreased the reason I have found that cookie scheet.Bake· in a 350 0 playing these games can be both oven' for ,20 minutes or, until fun and 'relaxing. lightly browned. 'Remove 'from sheet; coolon rack. Still Popular This is a great dough to keep When I was young Monopoly in the refrigerator to roll and was the big thing (the originator bake when unexpected 'company of this game must have been arrives. This would also be great , very' creativ.e because my chil- with a jam filling. dren 'love it today, just as much as I did when I was their age) • f and many a Summer we carried' Layman Named my Monopoly game from one CINCINNATI (NC)-A layman yard to another with one single has been named the first comgame going on for days. Chinese munications vicar of the CincinCheckers ,and the Game of India nati archdiocese. He is Daniel J, (Parchesi) were, two other heavy Kane, who has been assistant favorites with those who were, executive secretary of' the archyoung in the thirties and early diocesan Pastoral Council' and forties and because television ,the archdiocesan Council of the wu' in' its "'iJ:'lflint "'stages,' games' • 'laity. • ..•• - ., . ~. 0'
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TINY CHURCH: In modern downtown Athens, Greece, this ,tiny church, perhaps the smallest in the world, has been surrounded by a large' shopping center: Despite the fact that it is dwarfed and often hidden from view by the six story building for which it acts , as (;ornerstone, the Church of Divine Power often attracts local inhabitants .for a' moi merit of prayer to and from their day's work. NC Photo. '
Rail'road 'Cha'pel" Cell r Attracts Tourists NEVADA CITY (NC)-It may .be the only one of its kind in the world---a railroad chapel Car. Built in 1[914 by Barney' and Smith, builders of railroad pUllman cars, 'the Chapel Car St. Pa,ul was donated to the Catholie- Church Extension Society by Peter Kuntz of Dayton, Ohio. The purpose of the chapel car ,was to look up and encourage ,those th04sands of Catholics 'who were, at the time, scattered along the rrtiles of railroad li{les in the Uriit~d States in isolated small communities without a church, ,Through t~e eff.orts of the many chap!ams u~lng the car, ,a grE~a.t nUD1ber of,churches were Ibuilt In rur~l areas, whene the 'small percelltage' of CathoUcs took courage after they saw and experiepced the efforts the Church was, making on their behalf. Dedicated in 1915 Chapel Car St. Paul is all,steel, 84 fe~t long, with a seat· :ing capacit~ ~of 70. The altar, ale 't;u' rail, pe~s, confessional and organ are made of native WOOd, the trimming$ of ,Cuban rna· hogany. In addition to the com· pletely furnished chapel which occupies over' half the car, there is a livingtbom for the chap,lain, two 'sle~ping rooms, a shower-bath, and la kitchen complete with stove ~nd utensils. The first 'mission for the car, after its dedication by Cardinal Gibbon!, in 1915, was the pttle I
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ST. ANNE CREDIT UNION !.j
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43 RODNEY FRENCH BLVQ. NEAR COVE RD. NEW BEDFORD All Your Monej llisured Aplnst Loss AI/ personal' Loans Life Insuted Hilma Martilies on Ea.y Terms Slleclal DeposIts Double at Death Blink In Porson or by Mill Wit/come Into Our. Credit Union Family
town of Bunkie, La. For the town's 15 Catholics"Passion Sun~ day, March 21, 1915 was a memorable day. And since that time, the wanderings of the car am?ng the railroads and hamlets of the United States·, reads like roman·, tic history; from mission-to mis·, sion it went. By 1925, all of the sO\lthem half of the United States had been' visited and for several .... years Chapel Car' St. Paul was used in missions in, Oklahoma. Acquired by Restorer' But modem transportation and communication finally caught up with the car. Most rural Catholics p'referred to drive to a larger city, and the
Anlone'S'. Fenor Jr.' , DISPENSING OPTICIAN , Complete Optical Service .'. . 197 Bank St. (Comer Purchase) Fall River Tel. 678-0412
Hours: 9 - 5 Mon. - Fri. Sat. 9 - .2 Friday Eves by Appt. Closed Wed.
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F.' I.. COLLINS it SONS., INCORPORATED 1937 o
GE:NERAL .CONTRACTORS arid ENGINEERS JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., Prel. Re!~istered Civil and Structural Engineer
Member National Society Professional Engineers
O,pen Daily' 9am-2 pm Fri. 6-8 pnl , , -+Parklng-
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CLOS~D
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rail lines to small towns became fewer and more difficult to trijvel. The last ,use of the car was on the, Bhickfoot Indian Reser-, vation near' Browning, Mont. ,about 19~3., Finally,., the Church" deeded' Chapel Car St,' Paul to .the . Great Northern Railway, to' be dismantled and scrapped. But' the car was, acqUired, by noted restorer and Old West historian Charles Bovey, who preserved the car on ,his own'tracks here in Nevada 'City,' Mont. Today, . it is 'stiil possible to see imd walkthrough Chapel C,ar St. Paul and Catholics from all over the :world have visited the car that' once visited them.
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FRANCIS L. COLLINS, JR., Trea~. THOMAS K. COLLINS" Secy.'
AC,ADEMY BUILDING '
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C.hristian~M~st '.~eek
THE ANCI:IOR-Dio~ese of Fqll River-Thurs., Jan. 6, 19n
Committee Names New Members
Justice for Minorities
WASHINGTON (NC) - Four new members have been named to the United States Catholic Conference's committee on social development, the USCC Social Development Department announced. Appointed to terms of three years each were: Sister M. Celine Vasquez of Los Angeles, of the Sisters - of Social Service, who' has worked widely with neighborhood settlement projects and
For the theme of the fifth annual celebration of peace, for 1972, Pope Paul VI chose an Isaian formula: "If you' want peace, work for justice." Working for justice is Christians' work, but it is new ground for many people of the Church. The Campaign, for Human Develop- bout with worldwide poverty. ment, initiated by the Ameri- The culture of poverty in the S. is only' a' scale model of .can Bishops in 1969, provides U. the global problem. Out 'there an excellent ground breaker. Two features make' it so.
By JAMES R. JENNINGS
The first is the decision by the American hJerarchy to work' for justice by causing social change. The Campaign is not a palliative; there is no place in it for band-a'ids, handouts, or collection dr,ives for discarded clothing. It is not involved in acts of charity; other Church agenoies aptly administer, the emergency relief programs. The resolution passed by the bishops in 1969, which led to the Campaign, stated: "l1here is an eV'ident- need for funds designated to be used for organized groups of white and minority poor to develop economic strength and political power' in their own commun'ities." A neW source of private funding was necessary becaus~ these powerless, groups do not have access to government and foundation money~ In pursuing justice, the Campaign acts as a catalyst for presently dependent persons to collectivize their energies and .thereby become decision-makers in their own affairs. Middle Class Aid Needed l1he second notable feature of the Campaign is that its success is dependent upon its ability to educate those persons witlh power concerning the social injustices which oppr.E;)ss groups, of powerless people in, America. Because financial support for ,the program is dependent upon the contributions of white, middle class, suburban Catholics, it must bring these, persons into an empathetic relationship with groups whicp are powerless and in need of resources. It is in this dyoamic-affluent American Catholics relating to powerless Americans and called to respond in justice to their needs-that the Campaign has a valuable potential for involving Americans in workiJlg for justice. < The Oampaign seeks to liberate the one fifth of the American.. people who are trapped. in what· the Holy. Father calls l'the hellish oircle of poverty." If we succeed in this experiment in the United States, however, it will
in what.is' sometimes called the Th,ird World the poor number not thousands, but millions in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. 'It is because of the remarkable similarity between the U. S. poor and the poor of the Third World that the Campaign can ultimately have an international impact. For t:!he most .part, due to a compHcated array of factors-historical, climatic", political, ' social, economic ....:... the people of the Third World ,have not made a significant entry into the modern era. An es'sential ingredient for them to make the leap is a large influx of capital into their economies. It is precisely here that the rich nations of. the northern half of· the globe, especiaHy the United 'States, can make a contribution. The parallel in the United States is obvious. Within our nation, there are sectors of underdeveloped "nations"-AfroAmericans, Appalachians, Ameroican Indians, Mexican-Americans. Again for a number of reasons, they have been denied the benefits of Ameriean ,affluence. If they are to enter the mainstream of American affluence, they will need large quantities of finan.oial assistance from rich, white U. S. citizens. ,Poor Won't Wait As tensions mount over domestoic problems, simplistic answers to global misery are sometimes heard: "Let the poor of the world 'wait. We've got to solve our domestic problems first." Only a strange, myopic Vlision of this small planet would suggest that the poor "out there" will wait. . l1he dialectical tensions are always present: riches and selfdetermination ~s. po\terty. and alienation: -The desire to control their own 'community's deveiopment' is', not uniquely Black American; 'it is' also' Latin ~nd Asian. U. S. 'black nationals, in' ,their pursuit of justice demand repal'ations, as do Chileans s~eking to nationalize their il\dustries. Attempts by minority groups in the United States to achieve 'self-determination by' casting of~ white domination are not too dissimilar 'from Vietnamese efforts for more than 25 • years to' overcome the domina.. tion of France, J'apan and, most recently, the United States. '. .Americans face a choice be'tween two options. The closed . option ..requires armed forces to '
support law and, order and stability-local police and malitia only be the first round in the 'on the urban scene; troops and armaments on the international Senate Suggestion' level. The other option, the open OCEANSIDE (NC) ,-- The San one, requires that we have the Diego diocesan priests' senate courage to promote indigenous unanimously recommended that community development, here a Mexican-American be named and there, and that we deto replace departing Auxiliary emphasize our militia-orientation Bishop John R. Quinn. The and transfer sizable quantities of southern California diocese has capital resources to the undera sizeable Mexican-American developed nations, both here and ,r,<>pulation. out there. v
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FIRST: Sr. Mary of the Trinity, the former Mary Maselli of California, was the o~ly American Carthusian nun in the world until two weeks ago when a second American joined' the order. Her life consists of silen<;e, no social life, one meal a day and no more than three 'hours of unbroken sleep any night of her life as a member of the monastery of St. Francis in Turin, It~ly. NC Photo.
Urges Education Voucher Plan INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-If parents could freely choose tneir chHdren's schools, inferior schools would go out of business, an Indiana educator and state legislator said here. Robart L. Jones of. Butler University, an Indiana state representative, said in a radio interview that' a voucher plan in which the state would reimburse parents for educational expenses would introduce, competition between schools. He said he was confident that the Jndiana legislature would'pass such a voucher ;>lan. He explained that the plan would introduce the free enterprise concept into education, which, ,he added, is ,"a place it' , has never been 'before." "What we are saying," he declared, "is that there are some schools that are good and some that are bad, and in the private market place the latter schools would go out of existence because 'customer complaints sim.. ply wouldn't put up with them."
CY 0 Federation Publishes Annual
the Catholic Youth Organization; Sister Thomas More, a Franciscan who is professor of history at Holy Family College in Manitowoc, Wis., and is on the board of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference; Mrs~ Nancy Fischer, an education graduate of Seattle University who has been active in campus student service work; and Paul V. O'Hara, executive director of the Nebraska Catholic Conference.
LIKE A TWO-SIDED MIRROR An anniversary is like a two-sided mirror. In one side we see the past; in the other side the future; and in both, a reflection of' ourselves. This year-1972-we are happy to be celebrating the 150th Anniversary of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith. As we begin this anniversary year, we invite you to look with us to the past with gratitude, while always looking to the future with renewed hope and dedication. Looking into our "two-sided mirror" we,can see as far back as 1822 to the traditionally Christian world of Europe, then emerging from 25 years of war and revolution. We see the 19th century mission-Church struggling in the new, and often hostile, lands of Asia, Africa, and in the new world of America. Into this pictur~,) came a young woman, named Pauline Jaricot, living and working among the poor working classes of Lyon, France. Pauline was deeply concerned with the plight of the Church's missionaries, whose service to the world, she realized, was so viUl~ ~d so needful of help. Moved by her own strong faith, Pauline gathered a group of ten people toget:her who, in turn would each seek out tien people. Each "member" pledged to pray daily and sacrifice one franc a week for the poorest missionaries of the world. She called her organization the "Association for the Propagation of the Faith." We can see through the years that followed, that Pauline's 'Association rapidly spread throughout France and into all of Europe. We can see the Mission-Church taking on new life among the most underdeveloped peoples; we can see the Faith planted and nurtured in the newly settled territories of America, thanks to' the support--generatlon after generation~f members of this Association. We can see Pauline's dream come true 50 years ago; when in 1922, Pope Pius XI made Pauline's Association his own by raising it to the Pontifcial Soci~ty for the Propagation of the Faith, making it the instrument for the universal Church's Missionary activity. Through the years, then, to the present day, we have seen the Church, the missions, and the needs of the world's poor change and grow. We have seen the Catholic' Laity become rightfully involved in the life and work of God's People, the Church, and we have seen the members of the Society each year giving witness to their Faith in meeting the urgent needs of their own times. In the future side of our mirror we see millions of people suffering ... we see the Third World of today. We also see more missionaries than' ever before, serving in every corner of our world--depending more than ever before, on the love and support of their fellow Christians. . We hope YOU are present this year in our "anniversary mirror," and will make each month a celebration of your faith' and love for God • • • and others'. • . for your Church. Please begin this month by clipping the coupon below and sending your generous "anniversary gift" for your Church's ,. missions today.
WASHINGTON '(Nt) - ' The National CYO Federation has published 'its 1971 '''Catholic SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society : Youth Work Arll1ual'j featuring ~ for the Propagation of the Faith. Please cut out this column : a series of articles' on the reli- : , gious revival among young peo- _ and send your offerin~ to Reverend MonsiRnor Edward T. O'Meara, National Director, Dept. C., 366 Fifth Ave, New : : ple today. York, N.Y. 10001 or directly to your local Diocesan Director. : "Although no one, movement, : : The Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine : trend or fad discussed in these' artioles involves a majority of : 368 North Main Street : young people, together they' : Fall River, Massachusetts 02720 : point to a religious revival which is spontaneous, unorganized ... _ N.AME , , " _ _ , the material which 'follows de- I scribes what is happening, theo- : ADDRESS :.................................... : l'izes why, and offer ~suggestions on how we can respond," ac, CITY STATE. ZIP............ , cording to the publication's : Jan. 6, 1972 : foreword. , .~'~"'~'~'-'~-"~---'~~'~~~~~~~~~'~~~"'-~'~.~~ -""'-"""'~~~~~~~~~,~~""~~~,~~"~"~~~,~~,
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", 1:6.' THE ANCHOR--Oiocese of; F6J1'River--l'hurs., Jon;'6, ,1972:: ,
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Many adult Catholics today ,fectionate glances and words not have new questions about the only pQint to love, which in it~ meaning of' the sacraments, 'in self is visible, but they foster their lives-new questions aris-. that love. A national flag is not· orily a sign, that patriotic sentiing olit of new experiences. ' , We ~ were . ra,ised to have it' ments exist; it also very effec,'", \'~', , l " . . ,I: great confidenc:e .in' the sacraments as actions that are always . worth, while. They produce results because they are the 'acBy , tions' of Jesus Christ hi~self.' But in what w,ay are they the MONIKA' ./ actions of Jesus ChrIst? " .BELLWIG You may remember the old catechism' definition. ,Sacraments are signs that point to an invisBy ibl~ reality bey'ond themselves. We pass through water, we tJively fosters those sentiments, FR. CARL J. break and share bread,' we Jay as do the national anU1em 'and PFEIFER, ,S.J. hands on someone, we anoint, national celebrations Hke Thanksand all this can be clearly' seen.' giving and the inauguration, of a Someone be<~mes 'a member President. ' of .our community, of faith, we The Catholic understanding of renew and deepen the commit- ChrIstian faith is, .and has ,alThe visual message is clear with-, ment that makes us one in ways been, very emphatic about out any words. The priest is doOhrist, a man is chosen by God this "sacramental" aspect of huing just what J,esus did, bringing for a special task, ,someone is man life and human society. But healing to the sick. More, than spiritually strenglJhened. These ,we added something more spethat is suggested. It is' Jesus'who happenings a.re real, like the first cific when we spoke of Sacrais actually br:inging healing in list, but in themselves they are ments with a capital letter. They both scenes, that 'of the miracunot seen. lous cure of the bind man, and have the pOwer to bring about Sacraments, the definition therea!}ity of, whkh they are that 'of the· sacrnmental anointcontinues, are signs that not signs because they have their ing of the sick man. only points to a reality beyond origin in Jesus Christ-because Si~teen centuries ago, St. Authemselves, but actuaHy bring. it tlley are the acts of the Risen gustine, ,referring to Baptism' about. This is not exolusively Christ.,. ' rather' than anointing, of the The guiding Church true of sacmments, but is quite i ' I' For most of us, when,-we .' sick, formUlla~ed the .insight suglearned this as children, it was gested by the visual images on is Christ hiplself who baptizes." i Chu:i'Ch's Sacraments. "By his common in life. Sacramental Signs not very important. WheJ;l We It is interesting to find Au- I power he iiS' present in the sacthat page. fJis words seem surKissing and embracing andaf-! Turn to Page Eighteen prisingly fr~s'heven afiter so gustine's words repeal1ed in the l ram~nts, sol that: when a rrtan many centuries. "When a, man Second Vatican Council's discus- "baptizes it :is really Christ himbaptizes," Augustine wrote,' "it sion of Christ's role in' the I self :who J>aptizes" (Liturgy, 7). " , The VatiCan's General Cate: <:t\etical Di~Jctory (now available I in an official English translation) : urges that this tl'aditional under. "Slmiinary professors ..told ·me. ' Urgy, 'which' counts. Consider , standing'oi'i the sac~aments be to smrt nothing new during my , incorporated into catechetlcal first year as pastor of a parish. these illustrative items (there Jesus said to the paralyzed "My blood which will be shed are others): . , instluction.: :,"In' ,reality. 'it is But I look at the fast 1ll0ving, man "Your sins are forgiven" fur many so' that sins may be , Qociasional sermons are acI, Christ who! baptizes. It is not so rapidly changing world outside , companied 'by visuals, guitar (Mark 2, 5). The bystanders were "forgiven" (Matt. '26, 28). Risen, I muoh a man who celebrates the this chureh and feel we justean't shocked: '''Who can forgive sins he had sent them to preach "forEuclrarist *~ Christ himself ... wait that long. We have to keep music, and community singing. but God alone?" '~Mark 2, 7).. given'ess· of sins in my name" , TIle sacramental action is, in the 'up with the developments in life An approving parishioner inJesus' ailswered with a 'miracle (Luke 24, 47). It was the perfect , first' place, Ithe action of Christ" around us." , m:'11M'illJ~Mit' ", ' of healing: "That you may know·' climax to, the life of' him who (55). II , Tall, talented Father -'Adam \, that the Son of Man has power had always been "the friend of I . HeaIing Ministry Smalley greeted parishioners of on earth to forgive sins... arise' publicans and sinners" ,(M~tt. 11, I Simply st*ted this, means that By St. Michael's Church in Central 1 and walk!" (Mark 2, -9). Only 19), who "ate with sinners" I in lfue sacrament of Penance, Square, New York with these God, could forgive sins. But (Mark 2, 16), and who said "I , have not come to call the 'Jesus is pr¢~ent to forgive us as words when he preached his ,iFR. JOSEPH M. ~i!~mlfi!ID1lmt~t~r~m :he: fprgave !Magdalene, Peter, or introductory homily. Two decrighteous, ,but sinners" (Mark 2, i CHAMPLIN ! the adulterous woman. He is 17). ades ago the energeti<t priest :pres'ent in the Eucharist provid- played outstanding collegiate Act asClirist Acted . ;iog nourishrnent to us as he fed By But his followers soon realized :the discipleS: at the Last Supper. basketbal'l; now he 'picks at a U'mlNWfum&illlti1llmM'" that, if they were' going to :Ins saving'llictivity is as present guitar, spurs on congregationai' stalled behirid the main altar a FR. ,QUENTIN preach forgiveness in his riame,' to tIS in B~ptism 'as it' was on singing and shepherds souls in this relatively small 'rura'l-subur- la~t~e stctrreet~ for thi:5' p~rpose . I, M'atnmony . "QUESNELL, S~J. they would have to act as he had :'(~Ai 1V'ary,IW as at ban commun't' WI a ac lve covermg rnpes acted. ,If they were going to 'Oan;i, in Confirmation as trUly •• 1 y. which easily puB back when the '' ,', make, the wond believe in God~s 'as at Pente¢pst. His healing min- , Area. vlsltom who come to". situation dictates. forgiveness, they' would have to, :istr)" is· continued in, the Sadra- worship at the tiny (280 capac- ' 'Professional ritilsicians' and whell Jesus forgives, God for': snow GOd's forg~veness in their ,ment of 'Anointing of the 'ity) church probably ex~ect a guest choirs invited to st. Migives., . own lives, making God's forgive- . Sick, whH~; his preaohing and homey, country .sort of htur~, chaei's for sPecial events: These Men saw this in Jesus and . ness, visible, ,as Christ has done. lead,ership, is in a particular way b.ut hardly ~nyt~mg.very so~hls- add solemnity, set' standardl;l, remembered ,it" as one 'of the "Forgive, on!! another, as God ~ experienced! through Holy Orders. beat.ed or Imagmatlve 01' chal- and widen the people's vis~on of most striking' facts about him. has forgiven, you in Christ" : The insight into ChrisVsac- le~gmg. They walkaway .sur- what might be possible. I When Jesus forgave, they'could (Eph. '4, 32). i'the Lord has for- i tivit:y in pnsed, .even stu:nned. O~e th.mks Recitation of a rosary decade !Church's sacraments I', see how' God forgave. They given you; now you must do the I, does, not i~ply that He is Mt ~f earlier ske~tlcs who mqulred, on an October Sunday as a: rewrote: "God was in Christ, rec- same" (Col. 3, 13f.). . Could anythmg good come out flective prayer during the period 'active as 'Well in other momel1ts And they might have to go to ' ! of human :l~fe-healing, 'forgiv- of Nazareth?" , , oncHing 'the world to himself" for thanksgiving after Commu(2 Cor. 5, 19). "God has shown the extremes that' Christ did: I ing, freeing; ;comforting, nourishCommitment nion. His love, for us; it was while we "If your 'brother ~ins against you :ing. Rather! the sacraments point Congregation 'singing of most The fact is" extremely good were sinners that Christ died seven times in one day, and each I to his pres~nce with us every- things have been' coming out of acclamations. at Mass '(e.g., be,for us" (Romans 5; 8). He had time he comes to you saying: 'I' whelre. Jesus truly forgives Centra,l Square. Morever, Father 'fore the gospel, after the consedied, pra}"ing "Father" forgive repent,' you must forgive him" whe:n a hUsband forgives his Smalley and his, worship team cration, prior to the Our Fatner). ' (Luke 17, 3f.). "Then Peter came :wiiIe and she him after a, fight. 'are p,roving in the process it's ,Father Smalley has found ilfter them" (Luke 23, 34).' His disciples remembered that, to Jesus and asked: 'Lord how :He :neals;.t:P:rough' the sensitive, not the SiZE! of a parish that more than a year's experience during their last meal together, many times can my broth~rsin sk'illM fing~rs of a surgeon, ,or matters; it is the commitment of in this parish of 350 families he ,~ad. o,ffere~, t.h·~P:1 :,the, wine: Turn to page Seventeen 'Turn t~ Page Nineteen Turn to Page Eighteen priest and people to quality lit- ,' A recently published catechetieal teXtbook nas a page I find hauntingly hard to forget. A contemporary photograph is simply juxtaposed with an ancient art ,masterpiece. The photo shows the hand of a priest reaching down to anoint with oil th~ eye ofa sick man lying in bed. The art masterpiece depicts Jesus touching the eye of a blind man.
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A SUlrprise Out in the Country
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Fr. Greeley's 'Jesus Myth' Prompts Thought, Action
tHE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 6, 1972
Forgiveness
I don't think there is an Andrew Greeley cookbook -yet. It will probably come. For this Chicago priest, who is also' a social scientist, has written on a daunting range of subjects. His latest book is The Jesus Myth (Double, day, 277 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. $5.95), and did not enunciate specif.ic reguit is one of his better efforts. lations, and is riot properly When he speaks of "the thought of as an ethical teacher. I
Jesus myth," he does not mean that Jesus is legendary or ficn5l~*;wu
By
RT. REV. MSGR. JOHN S.
KENNEDY .ml$'~~
titious. He is using "myth" in the special sense of a symbolic story which demonstrates "the inner meaning of the universe and of human life." In another place, he says that by "myth" he means "an event that represents a greater event." His book is offered as a set of reflections on "the religious symbolism of Jesus." He does not represent himself as a Scripture scholar, nor does he .claim any originality for the ideas which he sets out. , Rather, he has done a considerable amount of reading in the field of Scriptural' scholarship, 'and his book is studded with borrowings and direct quotations from other .books. Religion is a basic meaning system, providing an answer to the fundamental and final questions concerning human existence. Such a set of basic meanings is found in Jesus, one that is both timeless and ever timely. And this, Father Greeley, maintains, stands forth more strikingly when one prescinds from the theological problems and concerns of primitive 'Christianity. Elements of Message Jesus is unique. He was linked to no cultural epoch. He rejected all the religious categories of his time. He avoided all titles. In his simple independence and absolute integr,ity, he was a threat to everybody. His message was uncomplicated and incisive. Its elements, according to Father Greeley were these: (1) that the kingdom of God is at hand, hence men must change their way of life; (2) that the day of salvation has begun; (3) that the great sign of these is God's loving mercy; (4) that the kingdom will triumph, come what may; (5) that the Good News must impel us to rejoice. In expanding on these propositions, Father Greeley attempts to show their pertinence to the crucial questions of human life in every age. Their principal disclosure, immeasurably reassuring, is in their answer to men's puz-' zlement ,as to whether reality is essentially gracious or malign. In Jesus, it is shown to be marvelously gracious. ,Amen, Abba What does Jesus demand in ,response? A complete conversion, a total transformation. He '..I ....
Rather, he called for a radical choice, which would 'change one's whole viewpoint and mode of living. If we were sure of only two words uttered by Jesus, amen and abba, we would have the essence of his message, says Father Greeley. "For the word amen indicates he was one who preached on his own authority, and the word abba indicates that he was one who claimed the most intimate of connections with God, his Father." The term abba, applied to God the Father, is one of startling familiarity. Not only does Jesus use it, but he encourages his followers to do so, thus acknowledging a relationship of love which is proof against despair and productive of inexhaustible joy. Extension of Service
When a_man accepts that re'lationship and acts in the light of it, his life will exemplify all the qualities which are proposed in the sermon on the Mount, "a qualitatively new and different attJitude." , The man so changed will give himself to service: first, service of God; secondly the ser:vice of spreac!ing the Good News of God's love. "'J1he extension of :this service to include a vast multitude of service activities to op.e's fellowman is certainly not invalid," Father Greeley declares~ But he insists tJhat路 activities of that sort cannot substitute for what is primary, and cannot be truly Christian if they' are given precedence. In th~s connection, he is critical of those whom he sees as making such a mistake: for example, the people 'who say that Jesus was a political revolutionary, hence that advocacy of poUtical revolution is an authentic way of proclaiming the Gospel. Key Challenge <)
"What they are speaking of," he says severly, "is a Jesus created out of their own fantasy to help them evade the challenge of the New Testament ... They may be admirable and virtuous human beings. They are not disciples of Jesus ... For a Christian, personality growth and social reform are a consequence of the fundamental commitment to the Good News of the kingdom." He asks, "Are we prepared to believe that God intervened in history in the person of Jesus?" And are we prepared to believe ,that in the death and resurrection of Jesus "the kingdom was vindicated ... and will be fulfilled for all of us?" This is the key . challenge. Father Greeley urges us to stop fussing and fuming about imperfections in the Church, and to see her, for all the faults of her members of whatever degree, as "the only institution in the world' that even claims to be continuing the proclamation of
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OBLATE PASTOR NOW MAYOR: Oblate Father Roland H. St. Pierre is the newly路 elected Mayor of Platts~ burgh, New York. Father St. Pierre established several firsts. He is the first Catholic priest to be elected mayor of -any city. He is the first Republican to be elected Mayor of Plattsburgh in 22 years. NC Photo. (Story on Page 11.)
Approve Statement on Environment WASHINGTON (NC) - Environmental questions and some of the suggested answers "raise serious moral implications for individuals, organizations, and the local, national, and international communities," ~ccording IlIIlIlIlIlllllllltllllllllllll,UlIlllIIlIllIIlIIlIllllllllllllllIIllllllllIUlUllm"""""Umllllll!lllll .
the' Good News and to be anticipating the fulfillment of the wedding banquet. Enthusiastic Excess This book has its faui>ts. It is repetitious. Often it is more emphatic, even vehement, than lucid. It tends to enthusiastic excess. It has some dreadful ineptitudes and infelicities of style. In spots, it seems to be hastily, carelessly written. Scholars will undoubtedly find in it defects which elude the rude reviewer. Nonetheless, it stirs one up and prompts one to take thought and action. The author pronounces it a "dialogue in two directions." "On the 'one hand," he says, "I am speaking to those who ... turn away from the very fundamental simple message of Good News that Jesus proclaimed, to concern themselves with theological detalils, organizational structures, or historical verifications. "On the' other hand, I am engaged with, or perhaps against, those who attempt to reduce the Gospel to a program for radical political action." Let both groups, and all others, take note -and take aim.
to a brief statement llpproved by the Catholic bishops of the United States at their Fall meeting here. Prepar~d by the Department of Social Development, U. S. Catholic ,Conference, the statement said that the bishops 'hope to p'roduce'路a document later "as the basis for instructions, liturgical expression and action, in the whole question of applying moral principles to the environment."
The "disregard of a healthful environment" in the United States "has now reached the point where it not only should but must be halted," the statement said. But it warned that some suggested. solutions "can produce difficulties greater than those sought to be removed."
Continued from Page Sixteen against me, and I have to forgive him? Seven times?' 'No, not seven times,' answered Jesus, 'but seventy times seven' " (Matt. 18, 21f.). Men would believe in forgiveness only if they could experience forgiveness. God's forgive~ ness could not be preached except by people who were willing to forgive as Christ had forgiven. Only men who experienced forgiveness could believe inforgiveness, This is true even. of ourselves. Christ's Teachings To help us remember this, -Jesus taught us to pray every day: "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us" (Matt. 6, 12). He even taught us: "If you forgive others the wrongs they have" done you, your father in heaven will forgive you. But if you do .. not forgive others, then your father in heaven will not forgive you the wrongs you have done" (Matt. 6, 14): Sign to World' In the story of the two servants, he let the master say "I forgave you the whole amount . you owed me. You should have had mercy on your fellowservant, just as I had mercy on you" (Matt. 18, 34f.). And when the master punished the unforgiving servant, J~sus commented: "That is how' my Father in heaven will treat you if you do not forgive every one of you his brother from his heart" (Matt. 18, '35). . , "If you forgive men's sins, then they are forgiven. If you do not forgive them, then they are not forgiven" (John 20, 23). "What you keep bound on eartl~ wHi be kept bound in heaven. What you set free on earth will be set free in heaven. Wherever two or three of you on earth agree about anythng you pray for, it willi be done for you by, my Father in heaven" (Matt. 18, l8f.). But if the two or th.ree, the community of believers, do agree to forgive, the world will know that God forgives. For "where two or three are gathered togeth- ' er in my name, I am there in their midst" (~att. 18, 20). The community of believers, the Church, has practiced for> giveness in Christ's name over many centuries and in many different ways, but always as a sign to the. world which can open men's hearts to God's forgiving love.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of. Fall ,River':"Thurs" Jan. 6, 1972
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'Hits 'Wills'-, Patent Bigotry :Against ',Powerful Ethni'cs' Columnist Gary Wills' continues to be ,the "Hammer, of Ethnics." The latest manifestation of his' crusade to, see that the ethnics pick up the t~b for the costs of integration is ~n attack on ~'ethnic study" programs in American' colleges. It's all right- and ' . d h' hI 'rt ' f government funds Will be.cut off. mdee ",lg y:V1 uous or Such agencies can insist t~at colthe' colleges to have, black, leges must hire, blacks and studies but it is "chauvinis- women-regardless of talent or 0 ' . "
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tic" to have' Irish studies and competency-but no one is sug"nonsensEf'to have "southern o~ ,gesting that, there is an obvious, eastern European studies." , ,shortage ,of, ethnics on the colThe purpose of such program lEige faculties :and ,especiillly on the elite' faculties.' , The truth is that the univer· sities have been discriminating against possible ethnic faculty By members for years-with subtle, careful, perhaps unconscio,us bias, but with bias nevertheless. REV. The government assumes that , ANDREW' M.t::::' the absence of blacks and . THE SPIRIT UVES ON: Cardinal Ter¢nce, Cooke, Archbishop ,of New York,. gives women is a prima facie proof of, gifts to Anib children at the Pontifical Mission Oi'phanag~ in Bethlehem on. _Chns~mas .' GREELEY discriminwtion, but there is no day. The spirit of Christmas lives in the eyes o.f these, c~ildren ~eyond Chnstmas day such assumption about Poles itself. This waS o~e of many stops on Cardinal Cooke s tour. NC Photo. and Italians: ,Indeed, if ,one raises the' is to "feign impartiality," to " "placate opposition to black question. one is frequently ,told studies" and to give ,,'more pow· that the southern and 'easter~ Continued from Page Sixteen action of ours--a place for us do for others' what he. did. He er to peOple with power." The Europeans have not yet produced arguments against such pro· the kind of scholars that merit reflect on it as adults, it be- to meet him, reaching across said whenever. we did this, he himself would be working in the grams are "not abstract acad~m university appointment. Comes crudlil. The, reaiity to barriers of space and time. Ability Is Criterion Entering, into his death, and, world, affecting everything that ic ones, but those based on slm· · which the sacraments point is My own personal feeling is onE! that se~ms more and more, knowing ,that his followers did men do and experience, bringing pIe deCency." that appointments should be impossible in the light of our not understand what he was about the reign of God among . Pluralism for Blacks based on ability, not 'race, na¢xperience .ofl the world and so- about, Jesus cel,eobrated the sol- men in publk and priVate life, Jot is against simple decency tionality or sex. Only in cases emn liberation fe'ast of Israel. He but quietly like" leavejl in for a Pole to wish'to understan'd· where ability is relatively equal Ciety. That reality is the reconinvited them tlien and there to dough. oili.ation of man to God, of men his own heritage;· it is chauvinis- should other factors come into share his action, and told them The reality of the reign of God tic nonsense for a Pole or an consideration. To discriminate am:mg themselves, of mankind. to go on doing it when he would , growing among men is in its~lf with the material universe, of Italian to suggest ·that there is against a white man because he no longer be living among them. not visible, but to those who himself. , I . something in their own tradition is white and a man is as immoral each man with When we look about us at the Action of Christ truly participate, the Eucharist 'that the rest of American society as to discriminate ~gainst a ,Each ~- time they did it they and other sacramental celebrllmight profit from knowing; it is Ma'ck or a woman because of . 'fVOl~ld as it re'ally'is, we see men in grave dOllbt about the exis- were to try to meet him by try- tions become signs of the action immoral to provide places in the sex or skin color. tence of God· and the. meaning ,ing to see what he saw, want. of Jesus 'Christ in the secular curriculum for studying the dif-' Once the criterion of ability ferent 'components that ,have is abandoned, then appointment ¢f Hie. We: isee mankind torn what he wanted for -the world, world. gone into the American heritage. and promotion (in any job) be- apart by wars, radal str.ife, ecoIf there is to be pluralism at comes a matter of political pres- 'nomic injustice, many kinds of all in American society, it is to sure and a new spoils system hahed and m~strust. We see , be plura'lism for bla'cks and for will 'emerge that will make the that we have ,not overcome can· Continued from Page Sixteen gregation in "God Bless America" no one else. Every other group conflicts, tension and hatred in der 01' earthq~akes or famine or to begin the liturgy. A diversified S~turday night should assimilate without pro-. society worse rather than better. death, We see a 'great deal of, that, these work best for beginmental iUnes~, many suicides, ning community song. They can and Sunday program of Masses test. The' blacks because they But the present pressure to are "without power" are to be hire a black or a woman':'" reo mUGh loneliness and anxiety and be quickly learned, easily memo- always with music, but accomrized and hence require no books. panied by organ at one Mass, a 'encouraged not .to assimilate. gardless of ability-hits the eth· ~ense of pers6nral depreciation; , If' the Eucli~r,ist were no mote leanets or distracting, participa- capella at another, and with_ That a n.ewspaper, syndicate will nics particularly hard. Th~y have tion aids. many instruments (guitar, f.~ute, ,circulate such patent bigotry is just reached that position in so· than an encbun'ter' group, or , discussion oia good sermon-if simply astonishing. Speei,al Celebration trumpet, drums, banjo, bass' viociety where many of them are And it will come as a surprise moving into the academic world. it depended for its effects enlin) at a third. - A Memorial Day celebration How successful has this ento the Pole's· and the Italians to They have been taught that tirelly on wh~i we bring to it out learn that they have such great ability is the criterion for being of ou;:' own iHves-it could not to underscore our Christian con· thusiastic, "we can't wait" appower in Amet:ican society. That hired in that world. They know possibly brirtg about the four· .cept of praying for the dead, proach been? How weI'! accepted they have somewhat - though that at least in theory it was the fold reconciliation to which it Slides depicted the revised Cath- by the people of St. Michael's? ,perhaps not very muoh-more ,criterion ,for previous groups · points, Our re~ources are simply olic funeral rite with its strong , C~ucial questions; of course. not adequate 'to it, and as adults emphasis on Jesus' paschal mys,One man stalked out ,with his pow~r than black is true, but which inade it into the academy. we know that. tery, and our personal ,resilrrec- family, muttering "I didn't bring then blacks have more power Pompous Foolishness 'But we bring more: We bring than American Indians. ,By such Now they ,find out that when to it the full force of the life tion. While, participants medi- my children to Mass" to watch tated on the death ,and joy of movies." But such irrirtation ,pecufiar standards of wllat gets they arrive on the scene, the Re~urrection of departed ones, a bugler played seems an exception, n~t the rule; death and ' 'I into' the college curriculum, rules have changed-and in such 'and Sioux studies. should go in and a way that they can't. possibly Jesus Ohrist_ :We are able to do taps. ,general . attendance remains this because 'he himself offered black studies should go out. Thirty 'pictures of local land-' about the some and overall figfi,t ,in under the new, rules. No us this action of his to be an marks (photography by the pas- ures are ever 'slightly on the inSubtle Bias' 'one wants a F'olish or Irish male tor) during a JuKy 4 service to' crea'se. Many" too, have exThere are no federal busy- professor around; and, indeed, if give parishioners close·to-ho~e pressed their absolute delight Se4i'k Direct Voice one should hire such a person, bodies going, from campus to reasons why we should be grate-, with Fath~~ Smalley's forward campus suggeSting that if more one migh~ very well have the In Choosing Bishop ful for freedom on this holiday. thinking efforts. And, for the federal government on one's Poles and ItaHans are not hired, OKLAHOMA CITY (NC) -- A lector recited the Declaration most innovative liturgy at 10:00 neck screaming di'scrimination. These'are the people that Gary Priests and laity of the Oklahom!l of Independence and led the con- ~:M., it's standing room only. L'ittle Progress' Wills thinks have so much pow- City-TUlsa d~qcese should have EAST ORANGE (NC)-Repre- er and who are chauvinistic for a direct voice' in the selection sentatives of the Newark arch- wanting opportunities to study of their bishop, the 200-member diocesan Board of Education and their own heritages. These are Diocesan Council said in a resothe' -Lay' :,Faculty Association, the people' who are lacking in lution adopted iat a meeting here. I, . . I h claiming ,to represent teachers "simple decency.'" Indeed. "The resolutIOn lOVO ves t e . INIDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC in archdiocesan regional high But one. thing' lias to be said · spirit of Vatican II because it schools, have been meeting 'at for Mr. Wills. It' takes a long allows the, people to participate" ieast weeki y since September in time for most national columnists in Church decision·making, coman effort to, reach agreement on to reach the level of pompous ·mented FathetlJames A. Greiner, a contract. Msgr., William J. foolishness aohieved by such the <:ouncil's Jxecutive secretary: Da'ly, newly appointed schoQl masters as Roscoe Drummond, Establishd in 1967, the Diocessuperintendent, told the board at Arthur Krock or the, Alsops. Mr. an Council is a consultive body~ a meeting, here that there has - Wills has dorie it quickly -in- Itl includes ele~ted lay represen~ , 312 Hillman !»freef ' 997·9162 New Bedford, been lit,tle progress in the talks. deed, almost effortlessly. tatives and priests. ' .'.~j~'';''J .~4..1~.i .~l,~.. ~.;.~r. #·····~···················~~~~~t···~8~~~~.~~~~«.~~~ ~-: i~'~~-=!d:.:':':-':=~~~_"!:-~-t~~ ..:~..":"'.:.::::.~ ";_~.":..~_!~t~-!.!_ "'_~.,:,-.",:,.,,:,_~_~_,!,_~."L~' ~ -: .-.::. :::"'-::..."-::;. ~~~~~ "
Sacraments: Acts of .Christ
A Surprise Out -in -the Country
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ANDERSON & OLSEN ,
HEATING·PIPING .and AIIR CONDITIQNING CONTRACTORS
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THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 6, 1972
SCHOOLBOY SPORTS
Acts of Christ Continued from Page Sixteen the understanding and skilled listening of a psychiatrist. He feeds the' hungry from the fam-· ily kitchen and the Red Cross. He freeS' people whenever men and women grapple for the rightful exercise of their God-given rights. Contacts But, like the two disciples on the road to Emmaus (Lk 24: 13-35), -we may faU to recognize the presence 'of Jesus even though he walks with us. We may easily go from morning to night with hardly a thought of Jesus Christ, not recognizing the ricl1er meaning of our daily lives a's they are touched by ,hiS pres- , ence. '
IN THE DIOCESE By PETER 1. BARTEK
Norton Hip Coach I
Full Slate of League Games On Schoolboy Hoop Agenda League games will highlight the scholastic schoolboy basketball schedule commencing this week and continuing ,. through to the conclusion of the 1972 hoop season. Basketball fans from Cape Cod to the Attleboros are in for an" other exciting Winter of high The Fall Riverites will host school basketball. Plenty of Taunton tomorrow night. Coach action will be forthcoming as Bob Ready's Taunton Tigers the "pre-season favorites" have surp~ised many people in battle for the respective league championships, and the privilege of representing their league in post-season tournament competition. In the large school Bristol' County League a multi-team .race for league laurels is anticipated. Durfee High of Fall River has been very impressive in non, league games, rolling to a 5·0 record against ,formidable opponents. The Hilltoppers who undel' Coach Skip Karam won the Rogers High Christmas Tournament in convincing fashion appear ready for league play.
early season ,games and could be a real test ~or, Durfee. , Elsewhere in, County contests slated for tomorrow, New Bedford Vocational will be at Dartmouth' to play Bishop Stang. Voke has not shown well to date and should provide Httle competition for Coach John, O'Brien's Spartans. In two big County.games New Bedford wi'll meet Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro and Msgr. Coyle-Bishbp Cassidy of Taunton will travel to Attleboro to engage Coach Jim Cassidy's Bombardiers.
Cape Opponents Set Sights on Barnstable' Feehan is off to their best of many Conference followers. start ever, winning four straight The Red Raiders defeated a non-loop contests. If the Gerry good Holy Family High of New Cunniff coached Shamrocks hope Bedford and the, Narragansett to contend for circuit honors, 'League in pre-season tournament they will have to come up with action and then beat a strong a strong effort against powerful Somerset five to complete prepNew Bedford. New Bedford has aration for league action. been tabbed the team to beat. The Capeway Conference alAcrosstown both Attleboro ways produces tight pennant and Coyle will strive to prove races. A:ll loop teams know th,at they are worthy title contenders. Barnsta'ble is rated at the top Although the season has only of pre-season polls. They wiJl all begun, this game is a must win ' be gunning for the Red Raiders contest for both clubs, as they hopef,ul of dethroning the demust stay close to favorites fending titleists. Durfee, New Bedford and Stang. A full complement of games In 'Capeway Conference com- is scheduled in the smaller school petition BarnslJable will play Cape and Islands League for Lawrence High in Falmouth, Fl'iday. Bourne is at Dennis-Yarmouth Sandwich is at Provincetown, and Wareham at Fair-haven to- Nauset ,at Chatham, Martha's morrow.' Vineyard at Harwich and Upper Barnstable, unbeaten to date, Cape Regional Vocational at has already made believers out Nantucket.
North Attleboro in Hockomock, Title Race Holy Family, Bishop Connolly a few of its problems. The Red High of Fall River and Somerset Rocketeers suffered through a are expected to challenge for the poor non-league schedule losing Narry League championship. AI- ,three straight and then rebound. though beaten by Barnstable ear- ed to win their first two loop lier th~s Winter, Holy Family games. holds a ~light edge in wha~ cou~d Coach Ken Pickering's charges be ~ five team champIOnship 'hope to better their 15-5 mark race. of a year ago and qualify for the The three contenders should' Tech tournament. But the road hare little difficulty winning to- will not be an easy o~e for the morrow night when they face Rocketeers as they battle Hockthree of the weak~r ~lubs in the omock League favorites Sharon ,league. Holy Family IS at West- and Canton for the top positions port, Somerset will play Diman in the league standings. . . Regio'nal Vocational in Fall 'River and Bishop Connolly will Mansfield ,a~d Oli;er A:m~ of host Seekonk. Case High of Easton, th~ dloc~se s other two Swansea will meet Old Roches- representatives. 10 the Hockotel' Regional in Mattapoisett in mock loop, do not appear to have a battle of darkhorse contenders. the depth to seriously challenge In the northern sector of the the likes of Sharon. Oliver Ames diocese Norton will travel to is rated a darkhorse. Norfolk for, a Tri-Valley League On Saturday night North will be at Foxboro, Oliver Ames will game against the Aggies.· North Attleboro, off to a rocky be in Canton and Mansfield start this season, appears to be travels to Sharon for big league on its way _to straightening out games. I
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Hopefully through the sacraments, moments e~plicitly recalling to our minds and 'hearts his presence, we may ,become more sensitive to his activity throughout our experience. Like . the disciples sitting at table in the Emmaus inn, we may come to recognize him "in the preak- ' ing of the bread" and then come to realize that he was with us a~l along. FIRST BLACK PERMANENT DEACON: In the Detroit The sacraments are special Archdiocese, Rev. Mr. Allen McNeeley was ordained in moments of contact with Christ, ceremonies presided over by Auxiliary Bishop Thomas J. moments that may make his Gumbleton at St. Bernard's Catholic Church. The Rev. Mr. presence more visible and tangi- ' Ordinary experience reveals Allen is shown above with his wife during the ceremoni~s. ble. the importance of such special, Entering the diaconate will not change his role as director symbolic, moments in every relaof the St. Bernard Community School. NC Photo. tionship. A, hand on another's shoulder may express and renew an abiding sense of confidence in another. A meal shared may deepen an existing bond of fellowship. With Mother pn Green Bay Catholic Women Rate 'Mother's Day we celebrate her Lawrence Welk Show Best presence and care experienced throughout the year. monitor TV shows and commerGREEN BAY (NC)-Catholic women here rated Lawrence cials and make their views It is encouraging to find so Welk and Dean Martin as the known. rich and traditional an under'best and the worst, respectively, Alma Herger, director of or- standing of Sacraments in conof the television shows they ganization services for the na- temporary religion texts and watch The ratings were com· tional council in Washington, programs. How much can be piled from results of a "Look- said the Wisconsin poll showed' communicated through two Listen Poll" conducted by the that "resolutions aren't just a visual images - a photo of a diocesan Council of Catholic bunch of pious words. People priest anointing a sick man, and Women. Results will be sent to take them -seriously and do - an art representation of Jesus the Federa:t Communications something." healing a blind man! Commission, the American She added that Green Bay Counciil for Better Broadcasting, Least of Evils council members' TV preferences and others, officials said. Democracy is the worst form show they have "deep social The top five programs were concern. They are alive and with of government except all others. Lawrence Welk, AliI in the Fam- it." -Winston Churt:hill ily, WBAY News (a local news program), Hip Wilson, and Room 222, in that order. Among • the top 25 per cent were the Today Show, Mary Tyler Moore; ROUTE 28, DENNISPORT Man and City, Partridge Famiily, Plenty of Boots for Entire Family Marcus Welby, amI the Sacred Heart Hour. Waterproof Fleece Lined Dress
Look.Listen Poll'
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BOOT TOWN" U.S.A.
The Dean Martin and LaughIn shows occupied the bottom of the list with Mission Impossible, the Dating Game, HeeHaw, As the World Turns, and The New'lyweds just above them. Hovering .in ,the middle were Daniel Boone, Billy Graham and Face the Nation. Mr. Robert Skarban, who ran the polll, said the diocesan council has done similar polls for severaJ years. Catholic men have been asked to participate, and this year non-Catholic friends were also invited to fill out the forms, she said. The National Council of Catholic Women passed, a resolution at its 1970 national Convention recommending' that members
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