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CELEBRATE JUBIJ...EE WITH :MORE ROOMS FOR GUESTS: Left: Sr. Marie Vianney, left, mother superior of Sacred Heart Home, New Bed ford, studies 'plans with Sr. St. Ida, treasurer, for the new $1,000,000 wing at the home. Center: The new four-story wing stretches from Cottage St.,
The
ANCHOR
fa~~ River, Masso o Thursdayo Jan. 12:, VoL 11,
INiGo
2
@ 1967
The Anchor
i 961
$4.00 per Yea. PRICE lac
foreground, along Austin St., to meet the north wing of the building ex tending along Au~tin St. £I'om Summer St. Right: Sr. Therel!la Bergeron. left, and Sr. Marie Marguerite, nurses at the home, "Inspect" the con stt'uctionsite.
New Bedford Nuns Mark Golden Jubilee With Expansion of Home for Aged By Patricia li'rancis When the Sisters of Charity of Quebec, who operate Sacred ,Heart Home in New Bedford, celebrate the golden jubilee of their arrival in New Bedford next October, they hope the. focal poillt of their jubilee celebration will be formal dedication of the new "al most $1,000,000" wing at the home. Contruction of the new wing at. Austin and Cottage Streets began in July and Mother Marie and Sister St. sheaf of applications in a folder tentative completion date is next September. The new Ida, treasurer of the Sacred and sighed, thinking about the Home Corporation, are elderly people looking for ill four-story wing will include Heart "hopeful" the new wing will be place to spend the last days oJ:
100 rooms, including "at least 84 bedrooms," Sister Marie Vianney, mother superior, says. A kitchen, lounge and utility rooms will be located on each· floor and a new 325-seat auditori um will be located in the basement of the wing, along with a . 'tnhen for serving snacks.
a
ready for occupaney in early Fall. "Hopefully': construction will be finished in September," Mother Superior says. She hopes so because "we have such a big waiting list." She ruffled t1uo'Jgh a thick
their lives. The Sisters of Charity, Sister Claire O'Brien explains, arrived in New Bedford on Oct. 5, 1917, . and lived in St. Anthony House, a small house at the corner of Austin and Summer Stl·eets. Turn to Page Thirteen
Vatican Limits Home Masses; Music
DioceSOl1
Bishop Discusses Enlar'ging Policy
Mentally-Retarded W crk
It has been the official of the Diocese of Fall policy In his remarks last evening to the several thousand River to permit and even persons attending the Annual Bishop's Chai.'ity Ball at .encourage the offering of Lincoln Park, the Most Reverend· Bishop emphasized how Mass in private homes-but al much good has been dOJ'le in the Diocese of Fall River by ways and carefully within and fdle annual meetings of according to liturgical legisla foundation for lasting friend tion and never in the sense de ~lI."iends from all classes and ship." plored in the latest dit'ective by ueeds who sponsor and at Enlarging on his promise of Holy See. tend the Charity Ball which expanding the field of care for theReferring to the offering of INpports the Bishop's work on behalf of mentally retarded CIlhil d reno . "Getting to know one another lJiways means a great deal and appreciating what each does for Ii common purpose forms a fine
More Than 5,000 lEnjoy Bishop's Charity BaU Laity from the width and breath of the diocese dem ~nstrated their enthusiastic ~pproval of the diocesan ex (Ceptional children's program 'When more than 5,000 jammed !':he Lincoln Park ballroom in lJJiartmouth last night for the 112th annual Bishop's Charity ~.
Bishop Connolly ,is especially llPpreciative of the response to :ether with priests and lay com Iaittees which labored diligently Tum ~ Paa;e Five
the mentally retarded, the Bish Mass in private homes as "a op said: "While in Washington splendid demonstration of pas for the Bishop's Meeting last toral concern for the bed-ridden November, I contacted govern who may have been denied the ment officials to discuss possi privilege of assisting at Mass bilities, under go vel' n men t . over a long period of time," the Health Services legislation pass Most Reverend Bishop-as long ed in October of 1963, and now as two years ago (Jan. 25, 1965) I have a whole dossier of docu -recommended "that more of ments dealing with the Govern this be done whenever and ment's interest in-and possib~l wherever the requirements of ity of funds !for-the mentally Canon 822 and Article 7 of Pas retarded. We have two more re torale Munus (1963) can be ob ligious communities committed served." to this work. They are already Under such circumstances, the getting special training to quali provisions of this canon and ar fy in the field of education for ticle may be summarized as fol the mentally and the emotionally lows: Mass is to be offered on a retarded. portable altar, in a becoming "Surveys are presently being place,' never a bedroom, with made in the New Bedford, Taun proper permissions. ton, Attleboro and Cape areas To facilitate this pastoral ac to determine areas of greatest tion toward the sick, and in a need. Choice of the communities few other specified and individ to benefit will depend largely ual circumstances, the Most Rev erend. Bishop has had prepared OD consideration of where the for his priests Antimensia (spe greater need lies, or where ade quate provision has not been cial corporals to replace the made for the care and education heavy and cumb.ersome altar of these wonderful children who stones) and made them available to all. Tum to Page Eighteeu
Hits Private Initiative Two agencies of the Vatican have issued a repetition of St. Paul's Epistle to the Corinthians prohibiting the intimate ties between the Mass and "agapes" or family meals. In the famous epistle, St. Paul chided the Corinthians for their drunkenness and gluttony 0rt such occasions well intentioned-of such mani and advised that they eat festations and where they see a to repress abuses, to pre their meals before they come need, vent any initiative not author
together for the Eucharistic cel ebration. In the past week's Vatican di rective, unauthorized liturgical experiments were deplored, es pecially those coupling the cele bration of Mass with "family Eucharistic banqu~lts" in private homes. The; declaration was published jointly by the Congregation of Rites of the Roman Curia and the Commission for Implement ing the Vatican Council's Con stitution on the Liturgy. It "urgently invites Ordinaries, . both Local and Religious, to watch over the correct applica tion of the liturgical constitution, to admonish with kindness and firmness the promoters-even if
f~~[fjJ Dfl1ltfelr'vQ®'W':§
~©[j' JJe~Mit Hmg~ Rev. John G. Cornellier, S.J., principal of the Bishop Connolly High School, Fall River, has anounced that in terviews will be conducted on three Saturdays, Jan. 14, 21 and 28 Turn to Page Thirteen
ized and guided by the hierarchy, and to promote zealously the true liturgical renewal desired by the council so that this un derstanding may be carried on without deviations and bear the fruits of Christian life which the Church expects of it." The document specifically condemns "'family eucharistic banquets' celebrated in private Turn to Page Six
Christian Unity
Programs Set In Daocese Christian Hope, livimz an~ dynamic, witnessed in every sector of life by every Chris tian worthy of the name, is the keynote of the 1967 Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Throughout the Diocese, vari ous programs will be initiated by Christiqns to reflect concern for the prayer of Christ "that all may be one." If all Christians can pray together, they will not be separated from one another. Turn to Page Twenty
'2
Mri. 'Stanton's Requiem Friday
,~HE ANCHOR-Diocese of F,.,II River-Thurs., Jan. 12,1961'
A'Solemn High Mass of Requi= em will'be offered Friday morn ing at 1'0 o'clock in St. Joseph"m Church, Taunton, for the repolro c({ the soul of Mrs. Daniel Ii. (Dorothy Lynch) Stanton, t.lw mother of Very Rev. Robert L.. Stanton, rector of St. Mary'o Cathedral, Fall River. Most Rev. James L. Connollv~ Bishop of the Diocese, and MoSl1; Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop , will attend the Mass. The wif.e of the late Daniel A. Stanton died Tuesday morning. Visiting hours at the Dolan Sax on Funeral Home, 123 Broadway. Taunto!), ,are from 2 to 4 and ''I to 9. In addition to Father Stanton, one daughter, lVIrs. Paul (Doro thea Stanton) Mulhern, of Tawm. ton, survives.
Diocese of Foi~ R~ver OFF~C~AL AlI'lI'iOlIN'll'MIENTS
The Most Reverend Bishop has approved the following appointments made by Very Reverend Roger Charest, S.M.M., ,Provincial SuperiQr of the Monfort Fatbers: Rev. Hugo Munro, S.M.M., .superior of tbe Mission House Rev. Ronald 'lLIOyd, S.M.M., newly appointed preaching missionary at the Mission House in Taunton.
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Bishop of Fall
Mass Ordo
R.iver~
Holy See Revises Policy For Granting' Indulg~nces
FRIDAY - Commemoration of the Baptism of Our Lord, Jesus Christ. II Class. White. Mass Proper; (Mass as iB Missal for January 13) Glom Creed; 'Pre,face of Epiphan¥.
SHliPBOARD WELCOME: "Happy New Year! How are you?" was the greeting as Francis Cardinal Spellman met N,avymell aboard the carrier Enterprise in the Tonkin Gulf, where the Cardinal offered Mass and met many of the crew. NO Photo
VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Holy See has altered its practice of granting indulgences for prayers and good works, emphasizing the necessity of personal piety and pl~l~,i~g QUEBEC (NC)-Maurice Car down the necessity of ~xternal objects or places as condItIons dinal Roy of Quebec opened the for gaining them.' , miw year by giving the sermon The changes are contained of, an action of the individual at an ecumenical service in Holy' , while the objector the 'in an apostolic constitution person place is only the occasion for .T r i nit y Anglican cathedral, , opening the nation's centennial en tit led "Indulgentiarum gaining it. ,
Quebtec Cardonlo; Opens Centennial
Doctrina" (Tbe Doctrine of In An indulgence is .defined in dulgences) dated Jan, 1 and pub the Churcb's Code of Canon Law lished Jan. 9 in L'Osservatore as the "remission before God of Romano, Vatican City daily. In the temporal punishment due for summary it contains three prin sins already forgiven insofar as 'Cipal revisions of the Church's their guilt is concerned, which traditional practice: the . ecclesiastical authority, Partial indulgences will no drawing from the treasury of longer be counted quantitatively' the Church grants to the liv,ing in days or years. Instead 3' quaIl:' by way of absolution, and to,the 'tative norm wlll be used,' based 'dead ,by way of suffl'age"', (Canon on the' d'ispositions" of the indi '911)..,: " '.' vidual and the perfectio'n with . Though according. to Chureh which he says a prayer or per- theology the guilt of sin is re ,forms a gooQ work. To this qual.., moved by sacramental confes ity of personal merit known only sion, and the eternal punishment to God, according to ,the consti ,or liability to suffer the pains of 'tution, the Church will add' fur~' hell whicb follow from serious ,ther merits from its own treas 'sin'is condolled, there is still ,a ury. residual liaoility to 'punishment , A considerable reduction in reml$ling because the natural 'the number cif plenary indUl order of justice has.been thrown gences which can be gained. off balance when man sins. Jus The general law will be that tice demands punisbm:ent to re only one plenary indulgence may establish this order. Tbis "tem be gained in anyone day. An poral. punishment," according to exception is made for the hour theology, is not always or com of death, when a plenary indul pletely remitted in the sacrament gence may be granted even of Penance. Such punishment though another has been ac can be remitted in this life by quired on the same day. Condi- prayer and the performance of tions for gaining this indulgence good works and by indulgences "at the hour of death" hence.,. granted from the Church's treas forth will eXClude the necessity ury. Otherwise due satisfaction of a pi-iest being present or hold must be made in Purgatory, ac~ ing some object in the hand or - cording to the Church's -usual of having acquired a right to teaching-though this has never this indulgence by having re been defined as an article of ceived what is popularly known faith. as a "papal blessing." Indulgences which the Church The reorganization of the dis distributes are drawn from what <eipline attaching indulgences to St. Albert the Great' called the objects or places such as n rosary "treasury of supererogation, con or some particular church. ' taining the superabundant, mer According to Msgr. Giovanni its of the Passion of Jesus Christ, Sessolo, regent of the Sacred of the glorious Virgin Mary, the Apostol~c, Penitentiary, w h i c h ,Apostles and martyrs, and of all deals witb matters concerriing the saints of God, living and indulgences, tbis last is intended dead;" to make, .the gaining of indul- .. The power of the Church to . gences "more simple and more grant indulgences was defwed dignified 0 11> :;. Referring to them as an article of faith by the . as 'indulgences on objects or Council of Trent in the·16th cen places' has been abolished in tury aDd is founded on the order to make it clear tbat an' "powers oftbe k~ys" granted by 'indulgence is granted because Jesus to St. Peter and his succes sors (Matt. 16:18).' . iHE MCHOIl' The specifications of the new second Class POStilg, Palo Ilt 'fiJlI Illver~ constitution will take effect 1Iul., "ubllshel over,' Tbursda) al 41u three months after its appear Hlghlanollvenue... Fall Rive. Mas5, 02722 bY tile catholic ..ress a> the DIocese of, FaD . ance in the Church's official ,1l1ver Subscrlptlor. prlt«l 'I:IJ lilall. Ilostpalll publication, ,Acta Apostolicae : ~.OO pel y88l. \
....
year. "Our ideal," he said, "must be always to give an example of justice and fraternal love among
Sedis.· Tbe . publicatio'n date, however, was not announced. Father Luigi 'Ciappi; Q.P., the Pope''S official theolo.giari, caned ,'it' "a legislative act of great portance" 'and explained that' it was': "not a' definition 'of a doc trihe 'of'faitb, but'a confirmation of the Church's theology On' iti' dUlgences;' and an updating' of Jh~ pra~ti~~l aspects or discipline resulting from this, theology.H ;He ,r~I1ea~ed what the Pope had s~d in announcing (Dec. 23) th"t sucb a, 'doctiment was forthcom,.. "ing:' "It. does not, involve ',,' .l!l cbange in the concept of indul gences in tbe light of ,faith, but is designed mainly as a spur to 'greater fervor of t;harity." Father Ciappi explained that indulgences are neither sacra ments nor sacramentals. They are, he said, "a disposal by the ,Church of its treasury of graces. Remission of tbe temporal pun ishment due to sin is granted not in the external form, the vis ible, external and 'juridical so ciety, of the Church) but in the in~ernal forum (the realm of the individual soul in its personal relationship' with God) through the Intervention of the Church authoritatively applying the fruits of tbis treasury." This is based on three truths, ,he said: "first, the existence of 'debit' after sin even when sin has been forgiven (this was de fined by tbe council of Trent); second, the Cburch's treasury of qualitative satisfaction for this 'debit;' third, the 'power of the keys,' a jurisdiction which ap plies not only in the external forum but also before the tribu
nal of God.
.. "If the Church has'been able,
during the course of history, to
establish temporal values for in
d,ulgences," 'he said, "it th,en has
power, to now change that disci pline" and apply a more secure way Qf measuring the effective ',ness of indulgences,"
im
ourselves in Canaua and to our fellow men in all countries of the world.'" ' , Before his sermon, the cardi nal joined Anglican, Protestant and Orthodox clergymen in a ~ervice of the Word. His talk was intended ,to keynote the nation's centennial celebrations. "We must admire the great
things that bave been accom plished, the progress, that has been made in a 'great many do mains by those 'wbo have gone
before us'" said: ' :' , , "But a:~areofail that rertlairis to De done; we will have t6 lWve in1iiatlve and c()u~age as they to' .uridertak'e't~e tasks . ~ncumbe,hto~ r[i~~of t9da'y;"',:.~ , '''We '.i>ray t)111t, 1l1~ cause ,f.O~ . ~~vi~io~ am~mg, '<?~ristia~s, :~i,11 ,Olsappear as soon as pOSSIble; that tbey may be one, as our Divine Saviour ,\lrgently, de quested on the eve of His death. and that they Will always remain 'aithful to His word.~
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FORTY HOURS DEVOTION, Jan. 15-8t. Joseph, F air haven. Our Lady of AngelS, Fan River. ' Jan. 22--0urLady of Mt. Car mel; New Bedford. St.' Patrick, Wareham.
BROOKLAWN FUNERAl. HOME, .INC.
SATURDAY-St. Hilary, BishoPt, Confessor and Doctor of the Cburch. III Class. White. Ma&9 Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer St. Felix, priest and Martyr, DC> Creed; Common Preface. SUNDAY - II Sunday aftell' Epiphany. iI Class. Green. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Preface of Trinity. MONDAY-St. Marcellus I, Pop€) and Martyr., II Class, Red. Mass' Prop'er; Glory; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY - St. Antony, Abbot. In Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Com mOIl Preface.. '
WEDNESDAY-Mass of previoUfl Sunday.,IV Class. Green. Ma911 ,Properi No Glory;'lno Creed;
2nd ,Pray.er of' St.. Prisca; Com , mon','.f'refac'e. ' ' ','. ,'" t," ••.•' .:'.... '
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JAN. 20 Rev.,Roland J. Masse, 1952, AS sistant, Notre Dame de LourdeD, Fall River.
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'FHE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 12, 1967
Catholics-Protestants Agree On Bible Translation Work
Assert Bay State N'eeds Stronger Public Morality
ROME (NC)-Representatives of the Catholic Ohurch and the Protestant United Bible Societies have agreed on a set of recommended guidelines for future efforts toward eommon translations of the Bible. The list of recommenda tions to their respective au thorities were drawn up dur ects wherever local churches them. Consideration was ing "informal convers'ations" asked also given to the basic require here, attended by Roman ments of Bible translation work.
Catholic scholars invited by the Vatican Secretariat for Promot ing Christian Unity and an ad hoc group approved by the exec utive committee of the United Bible Societies. Details of the meeting were announced the following day in a prepared joint otatement. In an address to the group, Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J.. president of the unity secretariat, expressed the hope that the meeting would "clarify possib'il ities of cooperation between the 'United Bible Societies and the Catholic Church for a work that is basic and vital to the future of Christianity: translation and distribution of the Bible'" '" ",,, "It does not seem to be an exaggeration to say that the pos sibility of our cooperation is one Qf the most important develop ments in contemporary Christian history," he continued. "It chal lenges decades, even generations of suspicion and in some cases hostility. It draws us into a deeper probing and more honest appraisal of our different atti tudes. We stand on the threshold of a great enterprise." Dr. Holmgren, who is also general secretary of the Amer ican Bible Society, acknowledged that there will be difficulties. "The heritage of suspicion and hostility, the conservative resis tance to change in both tradi tions, misinformation-or no in formation at all-regarding the policies and procedures of the ether, the unequal size and strength of our constituencies in different parts of the world, and' a whole cluster of practical problems involved in tile joint administration of such coopera tive efforts _as we are, here to OPnsider." , The joint statement said tllat du"ing the meeting "considera tion was given to implications in 1;be field of translation, produc tion and distribution of the Scriptures Ilccording to the rec Gmmendations of the Second Vatican Council on the use of the Bible." Father Walter Abbot, 8.J., spe elal assistant to Cardinal Bea for the project, told NC News Ser vice that, stric~y speaking, ef forts toward a common Bible" mean at)empts to agree on a IJtandard text from which to draw ,translations of the Bible. For the Old Testament this would mean an agreed text of the ancient Hebrew Bible,' and for the New Testament, an an dent Greek text. But he noted that the unity secretariat was also in the proc ess of making a survey on avail able translations in various lan guages, and would endeavor to find ways to promote joint efforts m producing and distributing DeW translations. "c 0 m m 0 n recommendations were made for the consideration .t Roman Catholic authorities lind Bible Society constituencies as to the pattern to be applied and the procedures to be fol .wed in undertaking joint proj-
Enthronement Set _IE (NC)-Bishop John F. ~ealon will be enthroned Tues day, March 7 in St. Peter's Ca thedral here as the sixth spiritual head of the Erie diocese. Arch bishop John J. Krol of Philadel phia win be the enthroning ~late.
BOSTON (NC)-Cheating by Massachusetts motorists
in connection with the state's compulsory auto insurance
Reports on, experiments made in various countries, particularly in French-speaking Europe where new inter-confessional transla tions are in process, were re ceived with considerable interest. It was agreed that the Secretar iat for Promoting Christian Unity and the United Bible So eieties would keep each other informed of developments in their own spheres of activity."
laws is one glaring example of the need for "strengthening per sonal and public morality" in the state, according to a com mittee of Catholic, Jewish and Protestant leaders. The Ecumenical Committee on Health and Morality, comprised of leaders of the three major faiths, asked for drastic "reforms in thought and action" in the state in a statement on publie morality. The committee noted that con ditions have changed in Massa chusetts since its famed orator ,Daniel Webster exclaimed before ,_., the United States Senate: "Massachusetts: there she stands, she needs no encomium!" 'Outright 'lrhefW
Pontiff Accepts 32 Resignations VATICAN CITY (NC) -The resignations of 32 prelates have been accepted by Pope Paul VI since his formal recommendation to the Church's bishops to offer to retire by the age of 75. According to Msgr. Fausto Vallainc, head of the Holy See's press office, it was expected that almost all the rest of the Church's some 200 bishops who are eligible for retirement would submit their resignations, "probably within the next few months." About 60 have already done so, he said, and all' of these "have been or will be decided by the PoPe case by case, as specified ill the formal recommendation." The invitation to retire was eontained in a papal document, Ecclesiae Sanctae, dated Aug. 6, that implemented the recommen dations of four documents of the Second Vatican Council, includ ing the Decree on the Bishops' Pastoral Office in the Church. Its prescriptions, did not go into effect, however, until Oct. 11. Msgr.. Vallainc 'said the Pope was "pleased with the response made by the world's bishops to the recommendation" during the two and one-half, months since ·tbe document became effective.
Polemics Concerning Cardinal Humiliating 'VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Vatican City weekly has de plored the "humiliating polem ics" stirred up in the press over the reported remarks of Francis Cardinal Spellman about a U. S. victory in Vietnam. L'Osservatore della Domenica ,said that the press reports have involved both the cardinal and even an "ecclesiastic personality of high level," obviously refer ring to Pope Paul VI. The week ly said: "On Christmas eve Cardinal Spellman in his capacity as mil itary chaplain for· the United States a~y celebrated Mass in an American base near Saigon and spoke to the soldiers. Ex eerpts of this discourse, of which the full text is not yet known, were spread and distributed, giv ing rise to a humiliating polemic involving ecclesiastic personal ities of a high level. "No effort was made to find out in what context the wishes for 'victory' were formulated and 'civilization' was mentioned. A few words offered an occasion for statements which we all know and perhaps, so as not to appear to be 'accomplices' of American 'aggression,' a fine contribution was given to the other 'escalation' - the psycho logical form-Which when all is said 'and done opposes one 'vic to!')'" 'in order to foster another."
3
APOSTLE OF POOR: Brother Zenon Zebrowski, Polish Capuchin known throughout Japan as the "Apostle of the Poor," meets the catechist, Paul Murakami Yazo, during. a recent visit to the city of MatBuyama. NC Photo
Telephone Workers Rush to Help When Fire Destroys Food, Clothes SAULT STE. MARIE (NC) Three tons of food, clothing and Christmas presents collected for Chippewa Indians were destroy ~ iQ. a pre-Christmas fire here, but out of, the ashes rose a re newed effprt to help the Indians,_ Fire on the Bay Mills Indian reservation near here on Michi gan's Upper Peninsula destroyed both St. Catherine's Catholic church and the parish hall where volunteer. workers had left 258 boxes containing warm clothing, boots and food. Indian mothers wept as they watched the blaze level the par ish hall where a few hours earli er they had selected gifts for their children. Gets Company Support "I worked in the church for 26 years," Mrs. Adele Parish said. "This was going to be such a fine Christmas for my fumily. Now what?" Her question receivec an an swer in Detroit, 370 miles to the south where Harry Mitchell, who started the drive to aid the Indians, began getting calls from many persons who read about the fire. Mitchell, a toll circuit layout supervisor for Michigan Bell Co. in Detroit, also obtained the full support of his company and his co-workers. A company van took the first
I
truckload of new gifts to the res ervation. The company also gave Mitchell two phones to handle all the calls.
Moral abuses connected with the auto insurance laws, such as unwarranted and exorbitant claims of injuries, constitute "outright perjury and theft," the committee claimed. The group also scored "sub human housing conditions" and stressed the need of better edu cational facilities in deprived areas, more respect for law en forcement agencies and improved employment facilities. Also needed in Massachusetts, the religious leaders asserted, is more effective control of "public obscenity in picture and print." Signers of the statement in clude Msgr. Joseph P. Donelan, moderator of the Boston Archdi ocesan Councils of Catholic Men and Women; the Rev. Myron W. Fowell, Secretary of the Massa- , chusetts Conference, U nit e d Church of Christ; and Rabbi Earl Grollman.
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4
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of,Fali River-Thurs'., Jan. 12, 1"967
Lauds American Business, Industrial Executives By Msgr. G~rg~ G. Higgins (Director, Social Adion Dept., NCWC) Every year, during the last week of December, -public officials, economists, editors and a scattering of lesser lights threw their customary prudence to the winds and casu~Uy den the prophet's mantle. Their predictions for the 'New' Year are sometimes rather almost unthinkable, not so many breathtaking. To be sure, years ago, for the Chamber -of they generally hedge their Commerce to play a progressive bets very cautiously and lard and initiating role in the nation's 'their predictions with enough escape hatches to enable them to scramble to ~afety, with a :ninimum of loss clf face and cre dibility, should ',he fates per '!ersely decide '0 trip them up. '!:ven at, that, ,lOwever, 0 n e can only mar vel at their courage. Lack ,ng such cour ;' ge, I am reluctant, for my own '.1art, to make any predictions at all about the probable turn of events, either at home or abroad, during the year 1967. In this turn-of'-the-'year col limn '1 would prefer to talk ,about one-just one-of the more sig-' dficant things that happeJfled in my own particular field of inter est during 1966. C of C Conference To my way of thinking, per haps the most significant turn of events in the field of social. :~ction during the past yeal' was ',he unexpected but very wel come decision of the National ,\ssociation ,of Manufacturers :~nd the U. S. Chamber of Com :nerce-the two most influential 'Jusiness organizations in the united' States-to shed their_tra ditional ultra-conservatism ,and ,0 -begin to play a constructiVe ,'ole in the .area 'of llocio ectmomic reform. Seme months ago in thiB ,col umn I called attention to cer lain developments which indi cated, to me at least, that the : r~ had begun to move ii't this tijrection. This wtlek I should :ike to report -on some similar I~eveloplllent in the U. 'S. Cfnam iJer -of Commerce. There was a time in tb(1 not 100 dist~lnt past when -it would llavc' been almost unthinlrable :01" the Chamber of CommeriCe t.o "upport ,anything as "radical" as ! he guaranteed annual income. ,\rid yet just a few weeks ago the C of C sponsored a high-level conferellce on this very cOlltro ':ersial subject. Work Constructively 'Regretfully I wasn't able to ;,ttend this conference, but, fmm ,,11 accounts, I gather that it was l; m()st constructive and SUCI:ess luI meeting. Similarly it would have been,_
long overdue war against 'pov erty. And yet it now has a task force of 100 leading business and industrial executives work ing very constructively on the problem of poverty. This task force has commis sioned 37 academic experts' and' other authorities to develop background papers, has brought together for discussions on 10 panels at least 150 additional au thorities, and has made six field trips to representative areas of the nation to interview many scores of individuals concerned with the problem. It has already published three lengthy reports: 1) ,"The Concept. of Poverty"; 2), "Poverty; 'The Sick, Disabled and Aged'; and 3) "The Disadvantaged Poor; Edu cation,and Employmel)t." ,Copies of these reports are available upon request in the News ':De partment, U. S. Chamber ·of Commerce, 1615 H' St., N.W~ Washington, D. C. 20006. Latest Report The Chamber's most recent Report, "The Disadvantaged Poor: Education an'd Employ ment," recommends ways to im prove both public schooling -and job opportunities for the poor. Tuition-paid vocational-tech
nical courses for students in,eor
respondence schools or for -on
the-job' training in industries,
consideration of Feder.al rev
'enuc-sharing ideas \ to' flixnish " tunds for education, and ,possible competition between public .and private schools are among "the specific recommendations -etl education. More ,~uitable enforcement of -the Civil Rights Act to open em ,ployment "oppor.tunities for mi nol"iti~s,programs ,to -encourage Negroes to become private ,busi ness entrepreneurs, ,and .a mini ·mum wage scale for ,teenagers to 'give them exposure to the disci pline .and rewards of wo"k -ex perience were among the reC()Hl mendations regarding -emplGy ment. Hats off to the Chamber ~f Commerce-and the NAM-for their constructive ,and f<lrward. looking reassessment ,of their role in the field of soci.o economic I·eform. They are mov ing in the right direction. M()re power to them as we prayerfully begin .a new and, 'hopefully, a. happier year.
BIG DIVIDEND NEWS!
:\nnounces Program ~or Unity Octave NEWAR.K (NC)-A four-point -'rognim for the Chair of ,Unity Octave has been suggested for '1arishes in the Newark Al'ch <'iocese by Archbishop Thomas .\. Boland. The archbishop asked that a ,"pecial Prayer of the Faithful be !'eCited at all Masses during the letave, from Jan. 18 to 25. He also urged that special de ,'otions be held in every pm'ish 'n one or more days during the 'eriod, and granted permission ')l' evening Masses, particularly "ecommending the votive Mass "or Church Unity.
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THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 12, 1967
Dutch .Liturgical Activities Object of Rome's Criticism'
Raise $50,000 For Seminary
THE NETHERLANDS (NC)-Many Catholic _circles in this country believe that the Holy See's criticism of Jan. 4: of extreme liturgical experiments included the "Last Supper" service and other activities practiced by the Dutch Sjaloom group, according to intended to suggest the Dutch Catholic news adelegation considerable latitude on litur agency KNP. Extreme litur gical matters for the Dutch gical experiments were de bishops, it was reported the Vat plored in a joint statement of the Congregation of Rites and ftle commission for implementing tile Vatican Council's Constitu tion on the Liturgy. A cover story with photo (traphs appearing in the Paris Jaatch magazine caused concern to Vatican circles. Among other rituals, the story dealt with a type of Eucharistic celebration, auch as that which the Sjaloom tfroup a small number of Cath olics and Protestants in The Netherlands wij.o seek to pro mote ecumenical development by extreme experimentation, KNP said. The Paris Match photo (Jraphs showed a group of indi viduals gafhered in a private borne at a table with food set for dinner. According to the captions, Mass was celebrated in these circumstances. The Dutch bis~ops have re peatedly warned against ex treme experimentation with the liturgy. Rome Disret:lU"doo Piet Beckmann" a spokesman IDe the Sjaloom group, said, ac oording to KNP, that his group paid no attention to the recent atatement from Rome. He said it <loes celebrate a Eucharistic G1Last Supper" service with bota eatholics and Protestants parti cipating. The essential parts of the Mass 1Ilave been retained, be said, yet ... the prayers are changed lIORlewhat to confonn with mod ern thinking and conditions. He added that the celebration's ac oent is not on the words of con secration but upon the whole aervice as of a consecrational maracter. Reckmann said the group does DOt need episcopal permission for their service because it has been authorized by Christ Him lielf. Besides, he said, permission fcom the bishops would not mean anything because the Prot estants participating are not uder the bishops' authority. Bishop Jan Bluyssen of 's Bertogenbosch, a liturgical con sultant for the Dutch Bishops' Conference, said the Dutch bish ops have official permission from the Holy See to establish experi mental liturgical centers. Sja loom is one of the centers, he l18id. Bishop Bluyssen stressed, how ever, that the Sjaloom group lIioes not have the right to pro eeed with experiments because talks with the Holy See about the conditions for the experi ments are still in the prelim mary stage. He said that the talks had been initiated by the l!:ate Bishop Willem Bekkers of "s-Hertogenbosch and were halt ed when he died. They have not ;wet been resumed. KNP said a three-man delega tion from Rome visited The Netherlands before Christmas IJ!I.d returned with favorable re ]l)Orts on the results of liturgical Jrenewal in The Netherlands. The delegation consisted of Archbish C)p Canisius Van Lierde, O.SA., papal sacristan; Father Annibale Bugnini, secretary of the post ~nciliar commission for imple menting the Vatican Council's
Ccmstitution on the Liturgy and IBldersecretary of the Congrega
tion of Rites for the sacred liturgy, and Msgr. Pietro A. Fru
bz, undersecretary of the Con aregation of Rites for canoniza
IkNl and beatification causes. ltNP claimed that although the
ican was upset by disclosure of the liturgical experiments in the Paris Match article.
Delegate Says Youth Is Hope Of Church MIAMI BEACH (NC) Youth is the hope and future of the Church and must as sume a role of leadership among the people of God· in bringing Christian ideals into the lives of ev.eryone, Archbish op Egidio Vagnozzi told Miami diocesan Catholic Youth Organ ization members here. The Apostolic Delegate in the United States spoke during the closing convention banquet of a one-day meeting which attracted more than 600 boys and gids from south Florida parishes. "The ecumenical council has giVeR the best definition of the Church as. the peopls of Goo," Arehbishop Vagnozzi said. "At my age," he continued, "we recognize that the best group of the people of God are tbe y<mng people." Archbishop Vagnozzi Said· that "working together is the most important thing. in the Church today. In the diocese of Miami there is Gne bishop, and· I will agree-with you that he· islt WaD der:ful man. "But what couid he do- in the diocese oli! Miami by himself? He needs his priests and, the people. What we need is the cooperation of the lay people. Without that cooperation we we cannot do much." He called upon youth· to work with their bishop to do- what is "truly apostolic work." Need Participa.tion "If you respond to this chal lenge," he continued, "you will love your Church in a manner that you will work for the . Church." . "The clergy are still in charge," he stated, "but we need YOUi' participation. You are looking to- the future; we are the present and the past." Also addressing the CYO meeting was Bishop Coleman F. Carroll, of Miami, national CYO episcopal moderator, who called on all attending to concentrate in a special way on the encourage ment and nurturing of vocations to the priestholld and the reli gious life. Bishop Carroll also pointed out that Catholic youth have "definite social obligations to go out into the community anc. help those in the community who are denied their rights by reason of their color and thoE,e such as the migrant workers who are denied proper education and housing.
JESUIT SCIENTIST: "The Sea Is a Drugstore," says Father George D. Ruggieri, S.J., 41-year-old scientist shown at work at Osborne Laboratories, New York, where he is a research a.~sociate studying possible future uses of sea pr6ducts-~ Father Ruggieri is aN assistant professor of biology at St. Joseph's College, Philadelphia. NC Photo.
Outlaw Cross Oregon Jurist R\tIes 51-Foot Work of Art On City Property Violates Ordinance ENGENE (NC) - A Lane County circuit court judge- here in Oregon has ruled that a, 51 foot CGncrete' cross located _ city-owned property must be re moved. The· cross was erected in 1964 on a knoll overlooking' this city by the Eugene Sand and Gravel Company as a gift to the city. In ordering' the cross removed, Judge William Fort said it was religious symbol and as such violated the city charter. He did not rule on the consti tutional issue of separation of church and state, however. It was on the basis that the cross
a
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Official Ceremonies Popular in Sweden STOCKHOLM (NC)-8unday church attendance in Sweden ranks among the lowest in the world but the- use of special cer emonies of the Lutheran state church is widespread. A surve.r of the Lutheran residents ol Stockholm showed that only 1.11 per cent went to church on- Sun day; Regardless of kinds of be-lief --existence and nature- of God, an overwhelming percentage' 0( those queried used the offic~ ceremonies. It was found that 90 per cent of the children were baptized; about 95 per cent were married by a Lutheran minister; and II Lutheran minister officiated at funerals in the same proportion.
NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMAll
SULLIVAN BllOS. PRINTERS
Continued from Page One· for the latest triumph in the per ennial success of what is con sidered the outstanding social event il,1 Southeastern Massachu setts. Marilyn' Roderick, in her World of Fashion column on Page Eight, gives an account of fashion at the ball. The diocese's two Nazareth' schools for exceptional children, one in Fall River, and the other in Hyannis, are the beneficiaries of the ball proceeds. Bishop Connolly authorized the annual ball, at the request of dedicated laity, 12 years ago to support partially his work in behalf of exceptional children of all races and creeds.
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violated- the- constitution. Tea citizens who brought suit for removal of the cross .included two-Congregationalists, two Uni tiH'ians, an Episcopalian, a Jew, a- member of the Bahai sect and three- humanists. Eugene City Attorney Herman P: HendershC'tt said that the city council would decide whether to appeal to the Oregon Supreme Court. The city argued that the cross should be allowed as it was one of several which had been built on the location since 1936, that it was a work of art and that it was in line with wide usage and custom.
BOSTON (NC) - Some 25,000 members of the Boston archdioc esan Holy Name Societies raised more than $50,000. for the bene fit of the Pope John Seminary for Delayed Vocations though "Operation Change Plate." In church parking lots, filling stations and other areas near the 400 parish churches of the archdiocese, the Holy Name members, for a charge of $1 per car, took off 1966 auto registra tion plates for motorists and af fixed the new 1967 plates. The Holy Name men pledged three years ago to raise $100,000 for the seminary and have now reached that goal. This will be the last time the job will be done because the plates for 1967 will last for five years. The new auto tags are now made of aluminum, are reflector ized and will do away with the annual task of changing plates every New Year. Richard Car dinal Cushing, who put the plan in operation three years ago, praised the Holy Name men highly for their cooperation.
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THE" ANCHOR-Diocese of Fal~River-Thurs,iJan. 12; 1967
',Posts~1fY,pt
to Faiher
D([U,TjJRS
PITTSBURGH (NC) Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, recently return.. ed from a series of lectures
A distinguished English theologian, Father Charles Pavis, has announced that he has left the Catholic Church and that he will marry. The first reaction i,s and should be 'to pray that God wiI~, guide him in his life ahead. But Father Davis has made statements that cannot go unanswered. He sees the Church as a cold and impersonal institution, and it is regrettable that one of his peerless qualifications has not made the distinction between the Church and those Churchmen who perhaps can fit into his sorry accusation.
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He c-alls the Pope a liar because the Holy Father has said that until a decision is made relative to the so-called birth control pill, the Church stand in the matter has not changed and there is no confusion. Certainly people are confused, but the papal statement is quite clear - there is no confu sion in the Pope's mind; he is waiting until scientists tell him what the pill does ehemically, biologically, and then he will try to make a mora.! judgment on the basis of that testi
mony. Where is there confusion here? Isn't that the exact way the Food and Drl:lg Administration works? F-ather Davis ialks of lack of love in the Church, or love in spite, of the Church. Perhaps his life in the rarified atmosphere of the intellectual has kept him from people, from the people whom the average parish. priest sees and has contact with every day - the little people of God, good and bad, weary and problem-loaded, people in whom any 'priest sees Christ and whom he tries to draw to Christ, people in whom there is surely love, strong and inspiring, or weak and waiting to be fanned into a brighter flame.
Alien and l'ncredible Time and time again the insistent cry is heard that 'every effort must be expended to make the Mass more m~aningful to the faithful. That is a nece:~sary and a worthy design.. " " In these efforts there has been official experimentation , and experimentation by those who have taken that role, upon themselves. . , There has been renewed interest in the presentation of the Mass as regards the physical appointments of the sanctuary, the vestments of' the Mass, the music' that accompanies it. It is not to be wondered at, then, that these efforts have been of 'varying degrees of excellence - some noble and most inspiring, some change for the sake of change, some' with limited appeal and to the unorthodo;X, some drab and unimaginative, some--and these have now been specifi cally banned by the Holy Father-"alien to Catholic worship and almost incredible." These latter have perhaps had more widespread prac tice and publicity in Europe than in the United States although the "underground" wireless every so often gives information about various made-up ceremonies in the , e'elebration of Mass .in this country.' " The Pope's warnings will be reCeived, by some as the wise counsel of the man who, after, all, is by position the' , ~rie responsible for th~ Liturgy, the 'Church's worship of God. These will see that experimentatiQnmust be in the hands of those with sufficient knowledge and sound judg ment to carry it on. Since few men are ready, to admit ., that they do not fall into that Category, then someone haS to be the final judge of who has the knowledge and' judg ment, and if the bishops' of the Church and they alone are , Bignalled out for this, why this is all to the good. At least ',it keeps the whole project from becoming a free for all. On the other hand, there will be those who will protest that the Pope's words will stifle the "freedom of the chil dren of God." Well, -it will. surely stifle them. But how other can it be and not fall into absolute chaos? There is judgment and judgment, and there is taste and taste, and the, Church must of necessity keep in mind the essence of what is being done - the changing of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ - and the most dignified and meaningful setting in which tHis is done on behalf of her almost six hundred million Catholics. What must never be forgQtten, of course, is that what ~ done is essentially inexpressible. How can anyone express the,reality of bread and wine being changed into the Body and .Blood' of Christ? If one has faith, he believes and accepts this mystery of faith. If one hlig not, faith, then the , 'whole Mass may be a beautiful alIld' dignified ceremonial " . but It,.isoruY a performance.
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at universities In Sweden, sa)llJ "clear J:O.ovements of grace in the life of Scandinavia 11= Ijl (I seem to presage an intensification of the ties between many Scand.l. navians and the Lord Jesus." Noting Scandinavia's pre-Re1l ormation ties with Catholicism, he said there are signs, "sman but worth prayer," of the re newal of three basic ones: "the living ties realized in the Virgin Mary, as Mother of Christ; in the Blessed Sacrament, as the Real Presence of Christ among us in the Eucharist; and in Peter, still serving in Rome las Christ'a Vicar on earth." ,
.He said the "movements of grace" were especially notable among intellectuals. Bishop Wright declared that "con:versations with present day scholars give hope" of renewed fidelity to the "ancient faith." He concluded: "Just as He was centuries ago, so now again Christ is no doubt destined· to illuminate again the North with His manifold other presences, that of His purifying power, as in His Virgin Mother; that of His life-giving strength, as in the Eucharistic presence; that of the loving service of His teaching, as in His Vicar on earth, Peter, and the company of the Apostles in communion with Him."
. Continued from Page One closely linked but which for the homes and followed by a meal; last 16 centuries the Church has and Masses offered using strange wished' separated," stated Rev. and arbitrary rites, vestments Annibale Bugnini, secretary of and formulas, and sometimes ac- the council implementation com companied by music of a totally mission ,and undersecretary of profane and worldly character, the Congregation of Rites. To not worthy of a sacred action." return to this abandoned custom, There was no explanation of he said, "makes no sense, nor is exactly what kind of music was it called for by legitimate pas meant although official commen- toral needs or justified by ,doc .tary mentioned that some music trinal considerations." now considered "popular" could ' Private Initiative be "sacralized" in such a way 'Thedeclaration stated that"an that it might become fit for li- these manifestations of cult perturgical use. Decisions here are formed ,on private initiative nee up to lOcal hierarchies. 'essarily tend to destroy the NEW YORK (NC) -Amen Private Homes sacred character ()f the liturgy cans of Lebanese and Syrian de The declaration stated that "it which is the purest expression scent are joining the effort te is not lawful to celebrate Mass of the worship rendered to GOd ' build an American school in the in private homes, except in those by the Churcl1. Shice 'aggiorn~- ' mountains of Lebanon. cases foreseen and clearly de- mento' must be made with order, Msgr. John G. Nolan, Catholie fined by liturgical legislation." and not arbitrarily, it is abso- Near East Welfare Association Such stated cases are to be con- lutely incorrect to allege a mo- national secretary, announced sidered "the exception" and tive of pastoral renewal for such that Edward J. Leon, a New cannot be invoked as support for practices. York attorney of Lebanese de general practices. "They are not ip conformity scent, 'had made the first of a The same applies, an official. with the letter and the spirit of number of founding gifts pledged commentary stated, to celebrat- the liturgical constitution of the by Levantine descendants. The ing Mass in the 'open or in fac- Second Vatican Council; they association has begun a drive to tories or other locations which are contrary to ecclesial meaning enroll 400 founders, each mak are not specifically set aside for of the liturgy; and they damage ing gifts of $1,000 or more, to the liturgy. the unity of the Church and the meet the cost' of the elementary , Mass in private homes, it was dignity of the people of God;" school scheduled for opening in
pointed out, "minimizes and With regard to liturgical ex- October, ]968, Msgr. Nolan said..
weakens the sense of the church periments in general, the official The prelate, who is also presi
as a meeting place for the people commentary noted that they are dent of the Pontifical Mission
of God in its' wider meaning. It to be conducted "in speci;u for Palestine, said that the new would attenuate greatly the uni- places among those who are wen school-located in the mountaill
versal, commimitarian, and fra- prepared and oriented, and using village of Ain Enoub, near Bei
ternal aspect of Communion in rites which have been well stud- rut, Lebanon-will be open ..
the faith and in the charity", ied and prepared by competent children of all religion8-CathO which must animate our full organismS duly authorized; under lic, Orthodox, MoSlem; Druse- Christian assemblies." the guidance, control and "on the basiB of need,Dot creed.Agapes " sPoilsibility of the sacred hi.er- ." ,.. , .. , , The practice of :joining' the archy."" Eucharist with a love feast or ' 'Saered Masle , "agape" is a "form' of worship Introduction into' the liturgy movements, gestures, or involve which lias been superseded in the Ofrilusic which .is "totally pre.-' ~ent which is incompatible with Church, combining it did two fane" is also disapproved. This l!nd unworthy of a sacred action,-, things whiCh onlyiJi the begin- woUld include music "which in the commentary stated. , > Primarily, Father Bugninl ning, and sporadically, were its performance'seems to demand notes, it is within the compe tence o"the "rector of a church· to decide whether certain selee> tions of music meet with the Council's standards. "But," be said, "in these times of transi tion, there should be some guide lines set by qualified experts. The music of each era is differ ent and has its own form of e. . nl!=FICIAL NEWSPAPER OF lHEDIOCESE OF FALL RIVER pression. But certainly, the gen eral principle laid down by Pope Published weekly by The Catholi~ Press of tbe Diocese of Fall River Pius XlI still holds, excludiDII 410 Highland Avenue music which is 'light and frivo Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 lous or clamorous and noisy.. .' .Father Bugnini said however PUBLISHER that he was "anxious not to close Most 'Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. the door for the future on mUlile which is now ill vogue - p.. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER· vided a certain. sacralization ,et Rt. Rev. Daniel f. Shalloo, M.A; " Rev. John P. Driscoll that music takes place first, 1ift MANAGING EDITOR' ing . it from the merely 'secula.: sphere to that which is spirituaL 'Hugh J. Golden
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@rheANCHOR
lIIEANCMOI
lishopSheen Names Priest To New Post
.
ROCHESTER (NC) Bishop'Fulton J. Sheen took prompt, decisive action nn the first major problem which eonfronted him only a few weeks after lie assumed office as the sixth spiritual leader of the Bochester diocese. The bishop created a new di ocesan "cabinet post..:....-episcopal . vicar of the urban ministry-to oversee the welfare of the poor tn this industrial area. ,. He selected Father P. David Finks, 36, to fill the post. Father Finks, assistant pastor at Immac wate Conception church, is asso ciated with a militant group en ~aged in the war against poverty. Tours ll"IllIl'BSllles Bishop Sheen started the New Year with a tour o:l! three inner city parishes. At each rectory he asked the priests what they be lieved was necessary to battle poverty's inroads in the parishes. And at each rectory, the priests' reply was they need a "cabinet post," on a par with the diocesan offices for schools, charities, the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, to cope wifu the problem. Two days later Bishop Sheen established the "cabinet post" and named Father Finks to fill it. In his directive concerning the new office, Bishop Sheen said he was moved to this action because "my soul is so anguished' by this " dehumanization of our human ity" and because 'of""roy own sweet impatience' t6 'ser've those who are most in need." Like Other I[)m~ He said he found Rochester no different from' any other city as • place where the poor- are .~Ited by hope. ~e s~id ROJ:hes ·tel' is like any. Qtber, ~~besleged . ~ty" from which people. with draw to. the suburbs, lea.ving be hind the poor. : . "As I look at It,. l. can see "Christ weeping Gver: it .as He ,. cmce wept ove-I;".· Je'olsalem," .. Bishop Sheen stated...He also ·oounseled: . "Stained· . glass win dows are apt to becloud. our vi sion of poverty and distress." Father Finks said he will re main in Immaculate Conception parish, situated in a predomi nantly Negro area, one of the dty's most depreilse4 sections. He said he will contitlue.to work fa the slum areas and added: -We don't need someone down 'oown behind a ·desk."
Enthrone ,:_,~.,.hop At Daven:p.!~rt
of
PLAN CeD CONGRESS: At planning meeting for New . Ernest J. Primeau the M:anchester Diocese; Thomas Men England Co:rifr~ternity of Christian Doctrine to be held ·in ten, general chairman for the congress. the August meeting August in. ,New Hampshire are, from left, Thomas Dwane, will be the first in CCD history for which the program has president of lay board planning' congress program; Rev. been developed by.a, Diocesan lay board. Edward Angelo is Joseph Powers; Fall River Diocesan CCD Director;' Bishop ;..president. of the. Diocei3an CCD.
Pres'byterian '. Favors . .
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More Ecumenism on Local Leve.1 ,.
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CLEVELAND (NC)-More 'cooperation'between Chris tian denominations 'on the loca1 level has been proP9sed by . William P. Thompson, stated clerk.or chief executiv,e o.fficer of the United Presbyterian Ohurch, U.S.A. Thompsoo, a . Wichita (Kan.) attorney, has son reminded: headed the 3~3 million mem"We need humility, gentle her church since his election ness, patience and love-not jl,!st as stated clerk laSt summer. personally, but on denomination He hailed' national movements toward church unity but stressed that "much. remains to be done," and·
that
inter-denominational
cooperati~ .on. the local level is essential to the ecumenical
movement. JI)eImominatiolllan Lines Urging' 'Fr-~sbyteria:ns to ·take part ih' the quest .for unity 'in their own' 'cbmmun'ity,' Thomp-
and individual church levels as well. "And I am not suggesting," .he continued, "we exercise these vil1ues solely toward the secular world. We shall need them with our dealings with each other, especially across denomination lines. . ." . " ' . ' . '~Far greater patienc;:e and love ;·is n~ed~d," Tho~pson :laid, "when a Methopist deals with a
,stiff-nec~ed
Presbyterian' .than when either of them deals with III non-Christian." FriendlY Overtures Speaking of lProtestant;.Cath olic relations, Thompson also urged the Presbyterians to se~k stronger ties on the local level. "Today as renewal is taking place within the great Roman Catholic Church," he said, "we should make friendly overtures to . the Bishop of the diocese where we live and work to ideo ·tify. through cordial dialogue the
En joy Din;.';, IN T",E '.
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DAVENPORT, {NO)·-,.. Simpli JOllY' WHAllieR .' . '.,' ... .. , ... dty and humility marked the .,' . . ,TAUNTON, MASS.· . , -;-.~Nlll :--::' . ascension of Bishop Gerald F. )~~s~.()rian ·')olilli1'~s.-':; ,9'Keefe. to. ·~h,tO ,~ff~'f~",9f ,~i?fth '." SPOUlrlER· ,INN, I: OJ .' ,i~frituaqealiel,". of, t~E;l..D~v.e,nlwrt ..... NEW·: YORK (NC)""':':'HiiJtorian" the' university's disrrussal'of 31 .:' \ . VHIE' RAINK OlIN RrESTAOIRAL\iis ,. , ; ~ocese... , ...• ,. '.,' .,1 . . '. ';Arthur,' Schillsinger" Jr.. stepped' ··':teach'ers·last Winter fot "t1np'ro TAUNTON GRIEIEIN' : . i .:: "The bishop's t"rone is'. not a ' fnto the smoldering. disp'ute' :at "'fess'idnal' "conduct" . Most·,· were . .:., A1:ways' IFr~POlrki~' Ileat of power; it' 'rahier," the ··.. St. John's Un'ive'rsity ,by I charg-'iriernbers of 'tht! stHkihg 'tinion. I'. ~ember 06. lFede1i"sD. !D'epo,S1fifi ,. 'Iilhair of Ii teacher,'" t'he •48'-year-, . ing that the'schooI's"administra- ". \"Other-speakers' at th'e ratly'1o . !nsuronce Corporaeiolll' '1I)1d prelate said in his £prst public tion "has shown. itself deeply cluded Father Peter P. O'Reilly, ·'address to the ·people'· Daven hostile to the values and pur chairman of the campus chapter '&ort. ..". ' poses of an adult university."· of the striking union; Dr. John Ceremonies at once simple and University officials said they Glanville, aJ;l associate professor ~!IIII11I11I1I11I11I11I11I,"1I1111111l1l1l1ll11ll1l1l1l1l1ll1l1l1ll1ll1l1l1ll11l1ll1l1l1ll11ll1l1l1l1l1ll1l1ll1l1ll1l1ll111I1111111111Hm~ . 'oolorful marked his' enthrone preferred to make no comment of philosophy who was disIl;lissed, 'ment in Sacred Heart.'Cathedral· 'on Schlesinger;s talk. - and John Leo, associate ;editor bere by Archbishop James J. Schlesinger spoke at a rally of Commonweal magazirle and Byrne of Dubuque: marking,the #r5t anniversary of leader of a citizens' committee
A capacity congregation of a strike at St. John's by the supporting the strike. INC.
'/IOme 900 persons; including four United Feder,ation of College ~-hbl'shops, 41 bl'sh'Aps,' an abbot . Teachers. 'The strike followed ~... '" :!lIIIllIIllIllIIlIIllIIHIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~ and 24 clergymen from Protes ~ . DRY CLEANING ~ . . .. ·tant denominations, crowded the L 501 B edifice. Each' parish· in the '00 SIK.S 70 ~ ncome § and § oc:ese was represented by two LONDON" (NC)-":'The Church ~ FUR' StORAGE § ~
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THE ANCHOR~Dioc~se of F~" ir.ver-Th~rs., Jan. 12,' ;967
Negro Woman
Gets State Post
Crackanufr Pie ~s More Fun Than Educationa~ Playthings
lLOS ANGELES fMC) - ~ first Negro woman deputy attw ,ney general of California hatl been sworn in by Chief Justiee Roger J. Traynor here. By Mary Tinley Daly Lola Marie McAlpin, 25, :l!lIl. alumna of St. Mary's Academ3t, From habit or interest, more likely a combination of Mount ,St. Mary's College lllDCll 'both, articles on child guidanct: hold an irresistible interest Loyola' University Law School, ~r the author of this colunm. Let it be the care and feed said without the help of her fa~ ily she would not have achieved ing' of infantll, the Montessori method, so popular nowadays ., the position.
in the self - education of promise, we' put the shoes just as , She and a twjn brother, Leon
'J'Oung children, pre-teen they were, to be replaced after ard, are the eldest of the six ~aining or the ever-intrigu nap, left shoe on the left side of children of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard ing treatment of teenagers-, the bed, and that was that: J. McAlpin Sr.. The parents sac let it appear in print and here's Afternoon baby sitting session rificed over the years so their an eager reader. Also, as with took a turn-for the worse, we children could have a Catholie most gr'andmothers, comes the thought, at· first. education. almost instinc':" "I'm tired of playing with Miss McAlpin's twin brother, tive d r i f tin g those things." Leonard, interrupted his OWlB Would you like to color? Or 1 n t 0 children's studies in architecture to work ~d toy depart paint a picture? And have grand the past three years to keep her ments on shop rna help you?" in law school. She was graduated ping trips. In "No, III help you," Tara said. last June. novations in toys "And I'll help Grandpa, help lFamily Traditi9n keep the toy him do whatever he's doing," A younger brother, Columbus, box at our house volunteered Tim. ' is in Howard University Medical lIpdate~ and, What Grandpa was doing for School, Washington, D. C. obviously, focal the afternoon was finishing ,8 Miss McAlpin said she plans to point for little piece af writing, hardly a task keep up the family tradition by visitors w hen needing an assistant, but the helping her younger brothers they come. With a new SUPl.I'Y Head of the House was game. and sisters in their education. Iilflded, during the post Christmas Fixing up a "desk" for Tim (up She has a sister, Veronica, 9, in sales, educational, this, ed"-" ended orange crate) with a foot grammar school, and Jerome and tional that" "what every child stool for a chair, in the basement Christina, pre-schoolers. NEW HABIT: Experimental garb of grey suit and ab ohould have," we were all set writing room, surrounded by' She majored jn political sci when the Gormans came to' papers, pencils, index cards, breviated veil adopted by the Glenmary Sisters at their re ence at Mount St. M~ry's Colle~ llPend the day. paperclips and stapler, Tim set cent general chapter is worn by Sister Laura, as she visits here and was encouraged to go ' Tim and Tara, aged four and to work in his office, both part,.. some of her neighbors in the lower Price Hill area of Cin into law by another woman at three respectively,' could jolly ners in the firm of Daly and Gor-. cinnati, where she works at St. Michael's convent. NCPhoto~ torney, Miss Mary Creutz, also well baby-sit themselveS 'in this man keeping silent and concen an alumna of St. Mary's Acad child's garden 'of toys, with a ttating on work. There was only' emy, Mount St. Mary's and Loy minimum of grandmotherly su one brief interruption, when ola Law School. Tara wandered downstairs wahf.:. pervision. Miss McAlpin's father is' 'il Amen and so be it during the ing to be "office girl." building contractor, her mother, whole long morning when the "Get that girl out of here, will a real estate broker. He is 0 weather was too bad for outdoor you, Grandpa?" asked the junior summa cum laude graduate cdl play. Tim became suc(~essively partner. "'We got men's work tc Bishop College, Marshall, Tex. o fireman, truck driver, traffic do." 'II'II lBlelp Grandmar , There is nothing any woman, ' director, bridge builder and Exit Tara, her red head held from the age of eight to 80, likes ice. Blue again, this time in a ambulance driver to the accom-' lovely paled shade of crepe, was Wants Used Cards pimiment of roaring engines and high. "O.K., 'I'll help Grandma!" to do better than dress 'up in her worn by Mr!i. Hugh Golden, wife Why not? Goodness knows, most fabulous glad rags and at An appeal for used Christmas wailing sirens, under tables and of The Anchor's editor and a cards and Catholic literature has around the legs, of chair/; and of when my childr,en were small tend a celebration of' any sort. member of Holy Name parish, there wasn't time to ,"entertain This celebration becomes even grandmother. Fall River. This. elegant column been issued by Rev. Alphonse Tara, on the other hand, chose them; they just sort of trailed more of an occasion for primping of fIued fabric charmingly set Thundil, St. Thomas 'Hostel, along, enjoying helping in when it is a ball.. the more feminine toys, becom off Mrs. Golden's softly grayed Quilon-l, Kerala State, South India. Father Thundil says cards ing mother and dressmaker to household tasks - real, not ,Iri this area the coiffure. 'Women of the ai:e used as teaching aids and Miss Teen, nurse to "a very sick "made" work. " As the Grand March began, in So we cooked, Tara and I. Diocese h a v e literature is employed to teach baby," and shopper in the play dividual designs of the gowns "These cookies have to be mixed, bee n looking high school English. Packages Bupermarket. could be seen more clearly and forward to the may be sent by sea mail and This expanded and replenished baked and packed 'ihis", after one glorious emerald green con noon," I explained, cracking annual Bishop's. should be marked "Used Cards toy box was really paying off! fection, worn by Mrs. Roland walnuts. . C h a ri t y Ball (or Literature), Of No, Value." lLunch Time Desmarais, wife of the mayor "And I'm going to make a that was held , It did until noon; that is, when of Fall River, dazzled the eyes crackanut pie for Mommy," Tara last evening at , it was time for lunch, followed of the viewers.' , by a reluctantly accepted nap announced. "You do your work, the Lincoln Park Original Designs Grandma, and I'll do mine." Ballroom for a time. "Fine," I responded absent capacity crowd. Standing out among the many "My mother always lets me truly beautiful ball dresses were - Bieep with my shoes on," Tim milH::dly. "And Mommy will Along with cre atitlg the opportunity and setting some original designs, Mrs. Rob ~@[jj)@ ~o ~@Y~!1\1~, ~ll1to insisted, a bald-faced lie if ever love that coconut pie." We worked in silence, just for the fashion-conscious to see ert E. O'Neil of Hyannis Port, we heard one and cover,·up for, Dilyannis like the men in the writing room and be seen, the January affair who worked diligently this year the fact that he's never quite sure which shoe to put on which' downstairs, Tara at the breakfast perf(;lTIllS the more important as Cape Ball chairman, wore her ~7~ IFlcsD'nstable Road loot but wouldn't admit it for alcove table, I at the kitchen function of aiding the work of own creation of French ivory table. Cookies mixed and spooned the Diocese for exceptional colored silk. Mrs. O'Neil, who $P 5-0079 the world. In a face-saving c~m-, out, came time to put themm children. designs under the name of Gisela, the oven. ' ' Shimmering like a thousand was the picture of elegance in "My crackanut pie's ready too, eandles, the jewel-toned gowns her slender 'silk gown accented Former Diving Champ
Grandma. Will you bake it for of the dancers created a fairy with a front panel of Italiah bro Now Cloistered Nun
me?" land setting out of the mundane cade shot with threads of silver Ready jt was, a crackanut pie, ballroom. Looking like a cameo and gold. Completing this' strik SUMMIT (NC) - A former Where A
amateur and profesSional diving truly named: empty nl,lt shells in in black and white, .or perhaps ing costume was a matching eve champion has abandoned the a pie pan, liberally, sprinkled' like a' snow princess, was Mrs. ning coat in golden velvet lined GOOD NAME
Gerald ,Silvia of St. Michael's with ivory satin. springboard for the, life af tI with raisins. When Mary and Tim came to parish in Fall, River as she Mrs. O'Neil added a poignant cloistered Dominican nun. Means A Sister Carol Marie, who was pick up the children, the account waltzed by in an A-shaped white not~ when she remarked that she' of their day wall an eye-opener,' brocade gown accented by a had worn this ensemble once be Carol Ann Collins of Bal Har reported by Tim, Jr.: ' black velvet bodice atwinkle fore at President John F. Ken GREAT DEAl. bour, Fla., made her solemn pro "'We'plared this morning. You w~th jet beads. nedy's' Inaugural Ball. fession of vows as a Dominican The dazzling brightness of Another designer's oi'iginal Sister of the Perpetual Rosary at know, toys and stuff. But this was 'a' shimmering gold nugget ]Rosary Monastery here jn New afternoon we worked, really white- was seen again in, a beau worked jn the office, didn't we, tiful gown worn by a ,beau satin A lihe gown worn' by ,Mis. Jersey,. . 'tiful lady, -Mrs. Manuel Camara ,Paul Letendre of S1. Anne's She was graduated with Grandpa?" "Me, too," from Tara. "I made Jr. of St. Anthony of Padua par parish,' Fall River and designecf magna cum laude honors ill 1962 ish, Fall River. Mrs. Camara's by Ella Ciardi of Brookline. The 1/rom Barry College, conducted you this nice crackanut pie." Proving, perhaps, that all the stunning peau de soie sheath -softly' cUI;ving' bodice of Mrs. by - the Dominican nuns of Adrian, Mich., in Miami, Fla. "educational" projects are not to with a sparkling beaded bodice Letendre's dress was beaded iD. was a perfect backdrop for her a rococo design that was repeat She dove professionally fo,r two ~ found solely in toy depart , dark hah' that was swept up into ed on the jet-fringed bottom ol years with the Pete DesjardiDB ments. 8 crown of French curls. th' front panel. Water Shows before entering the Aids Flood Victims Outstanding among the rlch After viewing the many vi convent here on June 29, 1!l62. ~OOl VIENNA (NC)-Pope Paul VI toned jewel-topped dresses was sions of lov~liness that graced . Before turning professional, Lincoln Park Ballroom last e've a deep royal blue shaft of color 'ehe had won six titles in eight sent a personal gift I;)f $10,000 rears of amateur competition, to aid the victims of recent worn by Mrs. Thomas Griffin of ning, this columnist vowed to NEW BEDFORD start work on her gown for next <:earning travel expenses' to vari floods in Austria. Archbishop St. Thomas More's parish, Som ous meets with jobs ranging Opilio Rossi, Apostolic Nuncio to erset. Mrs. Griffin's choice af year right now so that she would $rom life-guard and recreation Austria, gave the money to the accessories was perfect, we noted, have a chance to shine amidst all director, to dining room p!.anist Austrian Caritas, the nation's her lovely earrings' matching this elegant competition' at the Catholic chaBities organization. exactly the beading on her bod-' social event of the year, at various Miami Beach hotels.
~2fRof.~f?~
FASHIONS AT BALL
rn?,®@~ Est'@1fe
GEO. O'HARA
CHEVROLET
Kings Hw,.
Declares Rock Garden Difficult BMf Fasc~fl'\lati.ng Garden Project By Jioo allRi!lI
Vaudry to Speak On Drug Menace
MarHYffiI RooeJric&:
Only the most dieharo gardeners are to be seen out iii this weather 'and Ymust admit that I am one who prefers the gym for exercise rather than a brisk walk through the woods in 'this freezing weather. This is fire place weather and 1f I had water. The fact that Mr. Childs one I am sure that I would was a gourmet eater was encour not stray too far from it at agement enough for his loving this time of year. Right now spouse to do her very best to ~oors
J! spend most of mY time planning learn the art of fine cooking. This art of fine cooking turned next year's garden with the help of seed and plant catalogs. This into the art of French cooking is ,great sport although I must when the Childs were transfer admit that what I plan in the red to Paris (Mr. Childs was in Winter and what I do in the the Foreign Service) and Julia Spring are two different matters. enrolled in a six-month course Our garden is about five yearn at the world's finest cooking old now and it has begUn to take school, the Cordon Bleu. It was while absorbing the best llhape, although it has s long way to go. We have tackled the of French cooking instructions Gasy beds and these are fairly that she met Simone Beck and well planted and except for a Louisette Bertholle, two French women who shared her growing ~ew minor deletions and addi aions will probably change very love of fine cuisine. They, in little over the next few years. fact, were working on a cook book for Americans and invited There are sore spots in our gar her to join them as the third den, however, which need atten contributor. Over a period of tion. One is a slope which we have seven years they finally brought begun to convert into a rock forth a masterpiece of cookbook garden and which will require 1:1 writing, "Mastering the Art of French Cooking." This bestsell great deal of labor before it be gins to take any shape at all. ing culinary effort has become a must on the shelves of cookbook Rock gardens are difficult main collectors and even beginning ly because there are a limited cooks. number of plants which are suit A word of caution, however, to able for them and many of these are difficult to obtain. In the the new cook; while this is a next two columns I shall attempt basic French cookbook it is not, J>EAF SKI TEAM MEMBER: Georgiana May Duran to describe how one should go I believe, a basic all-round ceau of St. Mark's parish, Seattle, has been chosen to rep cookbook and certainly should about making a rock garden and not be purchased as such; but resent the United States on the U.S. Deaf Ski team at the what type plants are adapted to rather as a wonderful introduc International Winter Games for the Deaf at Berchtesgaden. growth in such a garden. Personally I find this type of tion to a speci-fic country's spe West Germany, in February. Her pet St. Bernard, "Brandy," garden fascinating and difficult. cialties. isn't sad; it's his natural iook. Even the greatest have critics, It is suited to the gardener 'who and Mrs. Childs is no exception. is meticulous in detail and who <mjoys individual little flowers for I have both read and heard 1l"ather than masses of bloom. criticism of the fact that she Meticulous I am not, but I have wipes her hands on her apron, always been attracted to the is not above putting a finger in a Nun Supervisor of' Extended School Program little flower which grows in the liquid to see if it's the right temperature or sneaking 11 lip oorner behind the zinnias or the /At Home' With lutheran Pupils wild flower one stumbles across smacking taste from the stirrintr spoon. DETROIT (NC)-Imagine an Philip's consists of. modern danc !II a meadow. These are not These heartwarming gestures" ecumenical dialogue between III ing, woodwind and brass lessons, showy but they are delicate to the point where one would not in my eyes, make her more of a nun and a student that began: "'I phonics and remedial reading, dream of picking them or even food lovers' cook than a prim hear you have dancing lessons-I library and two classes of ton antiseptic dietitian type who sure want to learn!" ettes, a music appreciation hour, amelling them, but merely glane !ng at their beauty and letting runs her kitehen more like a lab The introduction indicated the mystery story reading session, than the warm, aromatic center rapport developed between a travel films, photography and ~em be. of the home that it should be. Sister of the Immaculate Heart rhythm and percussion band. ID the Kitchen I have just finished watching And if Julia's souffles lean a bit . of Mary and students at lil Luth Classes have a minimum of l@ what I consider one of the best to the left and her cream puffs eran grade school here. and a maximum of 15 pupils. aren't perfect in shape, then her half hours of television viewing Sister Agnesine, a teacher in viewers experience an empathy the non-grade primary class at which permits unusual teacher available, The French Chef, bet student rapport. with this goddess of. good eating. aer known to her adoring public HQly Redeemer parish, is the Both Sister Agnesine and Ray as Julia Childs. Mrs. Childs, lW for ours are very likely to do the supervisor of the Great CitieD A. Jagels, principal of St. Phil same. Extended School Program in 17 anyone who has ever caught her This onion soup is one Mrs. nonpublic schools. Sixteen of the ip's, said the program coordi show knows, is a six foot two nates the efforts of the public, Childs did on one of her pro schools are Catholic, the 17th ill Catholic and Lutheran schools in bundle of charm who has single ll1andedly done more for cooking grams and it's a per:fect warming St. Philip's Lutheran school. The serving the community. than any gal since Fannie ,agent for these eold January special after-school programs ar'l "It's really hindng us to days. I generally make this sou~ essentially the same at all the Farmer. gether," said Jagels. schools Sister Agnesine said. In this area her 30 minutes of on a Silturday or Sunday when I The 17 schools receive funds, 'Really Binding Us' recipes, techniques, and visual have the time to cmjoy its frt} She noted that on her first lilS do public schools, under title delights can be seen on channel 2 grance permeating my kitchen. Onion Soup on Mondays at 8 P.M. and again visit ~ St. Philip's, the children one of the education act of 1965 for speciallilctivities for cultural on Wednesdays at 2 P.M., as she "'just looked." It wasn't until 5 cups thinly sliced onicm!il whips a clean dish towel around their second meeting that she ly deprived children after school 3 Tablespoons butter bel' waist, flexes her egg whip began ~ hear "Hi, Sister" from hours. 1 Tablespoon oil ping muscles and wraps her au III flew. The children now accept Ph teaspoons salt dience around her little finger. her, she !l8id, and she in tum % teaspoon sugar !oJ. beginnillg to feel "at home."' The latter feat is accomplished 3 Tablespoons flour 1 quart boiling watei' 'il'he 4 to 6 P.M. program at St. while she's describing how to make a no-flop souffle or deftly 1 quart beef stock (bouiliOlll INSURANCE AGENCY,INC. blanching sweetbreads, no mean cubes may be used to mak$ do~es Seminary teat for a mere mortal female. this stock if you haven't IIII(J' 96 WILLIAM STREET This oolumnist must confess homemade stock available). Rll:O DE JANEIRO (NC) NEW BEDFORD, MASS. ' Chat she is a charter member of lh C\1lP dry white wine Archbisbop '.:rose de Medeiros 0!1 salt and pepper to taste the Julio Childs' cult and hlW Fortaleaa bas ordered the clos 998~lA 997~161 been since the very beginning 1) In Il heaVJ'-bottomecll 4 mg of the l02-year-old Prahin~ PERSONAL SERVICE (;)f her television show. People quart saucepan cook the oniC!lllll majOll' seminary because ~ who love to cook just naturally in the butter and oil very slowliY lacked facilities for the training gravitate toward others who fee! foto 15 minutes. ] like ~ k~ ~ priests capable oil meeting the the same way, and Mrs. Childs' stirring them every few minute1 Jrequirements oil modern times." oomplete preoccupation wit lil 19 make !lure t!u~y don't stl.clt, Jfuod and its proper preparation Keep pan covered, between Btfu> tJ like l:l magnet to those who rings. ~ ~ heat and ~ir ir.1l th:2 ONE STOP Z) Tlilke the oovei' off tine Tooillilg liquid. Add the wine and have suffered long in thili la!MIl SHOPPING CENTER ' <If the TV dinner. mcrease the beat a bit 8lllld Dtill' Beasolll ac taste. A biographical point concern inJ. the salt and sugar. Cook fC!!? ~ Simmer partially oovell'e«ll I\t Television 0 furnitura blg 'Julio that should brin~ <all ~ ~ 40 minutes, stirring i!Ire fox ~ ~ .wi minuteo Cir more. ~ Appliances 0 Grocery oouragement to the novice cook quently, Wltil the onionl!l IWe Ii'! y~ fur seasoning. 104 Allen St., New Bedford is the fact that up until bell' ma1l" :rid!., eVeJlil deep brown iliil ~. S~ Set aside withoUll¢ 0 el>ve1i' riage to Paul Childs at t!ile a~ 3) Sprinkle in the fllour lm!I 1llil!l'W. read,. to serve SllM<l ~ 991··9354 r;:d 34, Bh!l could jWJt ~ ~ !,mEt ll'eheat I» &1Wllltel? ~ ~ ~ L:Il.Ula~ Bem9~
Speaking on "Drugs, the Hid den Sickness," Louis F. Vaud17 will address members of New Bedford Catholic Woman's Club at 8 tonight in the organization's elubhouse, 399 County Street. A native of the city, Mr. Vaudry is a graduate of Assumption Col lege and a pharmaceutical com pany service representative. He will discuss the abuse 011 drugs and explain the use of new preparations currently available. Mrs. Robert E. Durant will be hospitality chairman, aided bV members of her committee.
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Young Adult Unit Restudies Goa!s
THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 1-2, 1967
DBrrects C@[(e~l1!Il
The Fall River Diocesan Coun cil of Catholic young adults h3$ established a special committee to review the needs of the young adult in- the light of the Second Vatican Council and to reap praise the goals and activities ell the Catholic Young Adult Organ ization in the Diocese. Members of the committee in clude Carolyn Fournier and Doreen Benjamin of the New Bedford council; Mary Leite and Norman Travis of the Fall River council; and Susan Fontaine and Eugene Lallier of the Attleboros.
BQl~€.1lmJ~e ~etl'ween
Art @l1'Ild !L9hnrfSlY VATICAN CITY (NC) Pope Paul VI urged a group of Italian liturgists here to f 0 s t e r through research -deeper links between "two sis , tel's, the liturgy and art." But he warned them against using arbi trary judgments in reforming the art surrounding the W;urgy. Even'though research into the fUl'tdamentaldoctrinal import of the Eucharistic liturgy leads to greater emphasis 'Qn it's charac ter as the "sacrament oj: charity," the Pope said, "this does not in any way authorize one to use his J personal judgment in divesting the worship established by the Church of the sacred and orna mental formulations wjth which it is to be celebrated and pre sented to the people of God. The Pope called on liturgists to "take care to give wise, prompt and effective execution to liturgical reform, avoid arbi trary liturgical judgments and stay away from the types of cdt icism which slows progl·ess." "Make dear," he continued, .. the (ecumenical) council's . meaning on prayer, and make clear what the CatholiC' Church· is,' in which' it is known how to trali'slate the law of charity faithfully ~ncispontaneouslyinto the law of obedience . And, vice versa, show with facts how the lay,; or' obedience is entil'ely fav orable to the law of chnrity." '. He urged· curatc;>rs of sacl'ed art and civil authorities con cerned' with it to make every ef fort to facilitate the preservation II)f artistic treasures and to pro mote their appreciation "not· II)nly for esthetic considorations; but above·all for the devotioll of the people for whom the,:e treas.... Ul'es were conceived and pro duced .* *: *'. ' "The chi:il'ch has need. ·.of saints, ~§' is well known; but .it also has n'eed"bfgood and 'com petent artist~. Both ar.e witnesses of the living ~pirit of Chl,·ist."
Golden Rose Award
To Brazilian Shrine
VATICAN CITY (NC)--At an audience granted to a group of Brazilian journalists accompany ing President-elect Arthur da Costa e Silva on a European tour, Pope p'aul announced he was sending the Golden Rose to the Sanctuary of the Immaculate Conception of Aparacida, the country's patJ'oness. He said the traditional honor II)f the Holy See would be sent "sometime du\ing this year" on the occasion of the 250th anni versary of the rediscovery of the image of Mary whi'ch is vener ated there. . The Golden Hose is a replica of a rose and thorny branch fashioned in gold, sometimes or namented with precious gems, which the Pope blesses on Lae tare Sunday and which i:; sent occasionally as an award to Catholic sovereigns, illustl'ious churches or Catholic citieE. The most recent such gifts have been to Marian sanctuaries at F~tima, Portugal, and Mexico City.
For Flood Victims FREIBURG (NC) - German Catholics have given $850,000 in church collections or contribu-. tions to the Church's charities OI'ganization, 'Deutsche Caritas Vel'band, for relief of victims of floods in Italy and Austria: They olso gave gQods valued at $350, 000.
WHILE MOTHERS I.EARN: Nursery school in Menlo Park, Calif., is one of many organized across the country by Opportunity Industrialization Center (OIC) , a self-help program to train or 'retrain people who want to help themselves through specific skills for employment. Marjorie Moyhan, a member of the board of directors, enlivens a group of boys and girls while their mothers improve their employment prospects. NC Photo. ~
Former Assistant Hf FoIl River Parish Describe$ December Ilol.ydays in· Bolivia .
.
I
By Rev. .Ja'mes E. Murphy Missioner, in Santa Cruz
CYAO Role Items being studied include the role of the CYAO in regard to the universal Church, the Diocese, the deanery and the parish; its role in regard to so ciety and the cQuntry; the im pact of its goals on the united' action of young adults in the Diocese. Thought will be gi ven to the possibility of reviewing the entire construction of the CYAO in the light of this study.
CYAO has existed on area levels for several years, and the Diocesan Council was established by the Most Reverend Bishop in 1965 under direction of Rev. WaHer Sullivan, Diocesan youth director. Rev. Edward Duffy is director of the - New Bedford council; and the Fall River coun- . cil is under the direction of Rev. Paul McCarrick. Rev. Hoger LeDuc, director of the Attleboro area council, is also chairman oil the. special study committee.
Christmas preparations began. It is rather difficult.to "dream and fruit. It will probably be The· cri b scene was ·set. up in of a white Christmas" when the the only' Christmas present they receive. temperature is in the nineties but front of the church. The men take chal'ge of making the in spite of the lack of snow this The "pinata" for the men was "stable" and' placing the large Christmas has been about the a little different. It was filled finest' that I have ever experi with flour and 2.0 packs of cigar enced. ettes. Christmas Day itself was Actually the entire month of very nice. There were three December has been filled with VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope midnight Masses 'in three differ activity. The feast of the Im Paul VI will ordain 16 students ent villages and six more in maculate Conception, was the of the Beda College in Rome, in other villages. on Christmas Day. parish feast. For eight days we cluding two Americans, on Jan. That left 11 villages without prepared for the feast with songs 25 at the Basilica of St. Paul's Mass. OU!' cardbQard crib scene and a Bible service at n!ght. Th~ Outside the Walls. It will be the seem to impress everyone. Even ninth day, Dec. 8, was the 'grand first time in the history of the the men would stand in front of fiesta. The statue . of "The college, which trains delayed it for an hour or so. Nobody Virgin" was placed in the ~iqdle vocations, that a Pope has per SP9ke they. all pl:a~'.ed. '. of the church and beautifully sonally ordained its students. decorated with .clothes made by. These people are a people in The two Americans are Rev. Mr. th~' '·illagers. The statue had a poverty that the United States ·.James Fallon, being ordained f(YJ' nicer 'clothes than anyo'ile ill the could never understalid but, at ·the Thailand diocese of Udon villaj;{e·. . . .' least for· the month of December, thani and Rev. Mr. Vernon Rob lf~ is impossible to describe tliey wer.e a people filled 'with ertson for the diocese of Louis- . the 'beauty of the flowel's of a joy and fai tho Christmas .for our ville.
jungl~ area in the warm season.
12,000 pal'ishiqners (that we know
'There' were more flowers around
of) is only what we make it for
"The Virgiil" than most florist
them.' Christ must have loved . sh61>1; at home have in the entire the poor - He made so many of them.' ' . . ... . store" To 'our I'gringo" mentality VIENNA (NC)-Orthoiio~ Ec~'" REV. JAMES E. MURPHY this seems at times all out of umenical 'Patrial'ch Athenagoras, Christmas was made even' I of Constantinople will visit propol'fion. But then-we are more enjoyable for me receiving "gringoes." Vienna, Austria, on his return cardboard figure in place. so many Chl'istmas cards from trip from the visit to Rome On Dec. 6 there was a very For eight nights pdor to home, especially from the parish scheduled for later this year. Christmas we had a "posada" serious threat of rain, which is ioners of St. Patrick's in Fall (a place to·stay). A boy, dt'essed nQ small thing in the jungle. River. YoU!' generosity is deeply We were worried - the people as St. Joseph, and a girl as Mary appreciated and your Chl'istmas were not. "The Virgin will not and mounted on a donkey, walk cards are now on the mud walls ELECTRICAL let it rain on her fiesta, Padre." through the parish looking for a of my parishioners. Many thanks
Contractors place to stay. In accordance with She didn't. For three days
and a belated Merry Christmas
the Scriptures, nobody receives and a very happy new 'year
black clouds kept passing over. On Dec. 9 it poured. \Ve also had ·them.
to all.
In a very few minutes a large
lights for the fiesta. The village
group would be following and
motor had' been broken for tht'ee
singing Christmas carols. The months. On Dec. 6 the parts ar 'rived and the town had lights. posada ends at the church seek
On Dec. 9 the motor broke down ing entrance. A group inside the HOBART (NC)-Forty-eight
again ahd it will be another , church alternate verses of a very Tasmanian college students paid beautiful carol with the group three or four months before_ we $120 each to go to Catholic, An outside. Finally 'the doors are have light again. Coincidence? glican and Lutheran missions
944 County St. opened and Joseph and Mary \Vho knows?
in New Guinea and do a month's New Bedford come down the middle aisle. volunteer work there.
Dec. 8 was a great success. We then had Scripture read
The number of confessions and
ings, a sermon and Chl'istmas ~.I_.I_'I_I'_II_II_'I_'I_'I_"_II_II_U_l)_II_'I_t'_I)_U_0_0_ Communions was tremendous. .. _0_,,:. We also had our 500th baptism carols. The climax of these
posadas was the.. midnighC Mass
for the year on the feast. on Christmas. D'i:ie to the influ
One of the many games was a 40-foot greased pole with many ence of the Mexican sisters we
nice prizes at the top. A young also had a "pinata" every eve- . Wood, Metal Desks and Chairs boy finally made it to the top ning after the services. The "pinata" is a clay-baked con after eight hours. The only thing tainer, decorated colorfully, 'and' "JUST GIVE ME A CHANCE TO QUOTE"
that I cannot quite get accus filled with candy and fwit. It
tomed to is that at the Consecra 187 SHAWMUT STREE!. • - NEW BEDFORD, M~SS.
tion of the Mass the band starts is suspended from a wire .and playing and the men shoot off swung at furiously by a blind-' P. O. Box 2062.:... Hervey L Levesque fireworks. I suppose that this . folded man, woman or child until .' broken.. ' .
could be considen;d some fOI'm· - T!lephone 993·12U
of pal·ticipation in the Mass. Then the fun begins. All
~'_G_O_~._tl_a_o_u_o_O With the fiesta over' our .scramble for the fallen candy
Pontiff to Ordain Two Americans
Vienna Visit
Volunteers
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THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 12,
Columnists Back Co"rdinaf's View On Vietnam
Israeli Greets
Two nationally syndicated lIleWRpaper columnists rallied to the defense of Francis Cardinal Spellman, whose views concerning the conflict in Vietnam stirred up widespread <controversy. VetN"an columnist David Law rence asserted: "Cardinal Spellman visited American servicemen in Viet nam and other Far East areas during Christmas week. Should he"have told them that they must not fight hard and that, if guns are directed at them by the ene my, they must not fire back? Or was he right when he told the troops that they are 'defending the cause of righteousness?' " Lawrence maintained the car dinal did not advocate "total vic tory" nor say anything that could possibly be construed as opposi tion to a peace negotiation itself. Rig"ht of Self-Defense "There is really no difference, incidentally, between the Vati can's point of view and Cardinal Spellman's, although I' e port s from Rome hint that there are sohle discrepancies. I'The Pope, to be sure, is try ing assiduously to bring about peace by attempting to appeal to the enemy on humane grounds, but he doesn't deny the right of self-defense to a people who al'e victims of ag/{ression. 'Columnist William Buckley. Jr.; asked critics of Cardinal Spellman's views: "What, pray assuming use of the wOI'd has not been ,'epealed by the ecumenical conference (council)-is the pur pose of our venture in Vietnam if not to win a victory? Why in the name of God or mammon are our soldiel's dying in Vietnam if not to win a victory?" Buckley asserted: "God help us and especially our soldiers, against the effete moralizel's who drained the war of any moral purpose and gangbang a simple and devoted clergyman whose message, simply, is that our sol diel's do not die in vain, that it is inconceivable, yes inconceiv abl j that we should settle for ,'anything less than victory, yes victory. "The sooner the bette I'. There is mueh for our fighting men to do back here at home to teach our moralizel'S the rudiments of ,morality.'? "
Canadian Priest
Named Bishop
VATICAN CITY (NC) - A Canadian-born pl'iest who has been servin"g as head of the inde pendent prelature of Choluteca, Honduras, for the past two years has been made a bishop. Bishop-elect Mal'eel Gerin Y. Boulay of the Society for the Foreign Missions was boJ'll in Sherbrooke, Que. in 1913. He was ordained in 1936 and received a doctorate in canon law from Laval University in Quebec. He sel"ved in the missions in Cuba where he becHme regional supe rior for Canadian missional'ies there. Later he was named director of the Canadian Catholic Office for Latin Amel'ica and of the bulletin of the Missinary Union of the Clergy of Quebec. In 1963 he was named pastor of the church of Our Lady of Guada lupe in Tegucigalpa, Honduras.
Holidays Reduced RIO DE JANEIRO (NC) _ Brazil's President Humbel'to Cas tello Branco has issued a decree ordering all municipalities to re duce the observance of religious holidays fwm the present" seven to four: Good Friday, Ascension, Corpus Christi and All Souls.
~ 967
11
Pres~dent
le~derJ"s
JERUSALEM (NC)-President Shneor Zalman Shazar of Israel received at his residence here the heads of Israel's Christian communities on the occasion of the New Year. Wishing them and all Chris tian citizens of Israel a New Year of peace, prosperity and happiness, he said: "Let all of us earnestly wish e<lch other a year that will bring us closer to mu tual understanding. respect and friendship among peoples, both near and far." Melkite-rite A I' C h b ish 0 p Georges Hakim of Acre, re sponding for the group, said: "We join the President in ex pressing the fervent wish that a just and lasting peace shall pre vail in the Near East and throughout the world." Archbishop Hakim declared. that it is the intention of Israel's Chl'istian communities "to work hand in hand (with the govern ment) in advancing the interests of this country."
RECEPTION LINE IN JERUSALEM: Bishop Hannah Kaldany, Vicar General for Israel of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, greets President Shneor Zalman Shazar of Israel at reception the President held for religious leaders at his residence in Jerusalem.
Rabbis Hit American Jewish Congress 0rthodox Favor" Federal Education Act BALTIMORE (NC)-Twenty five Orthodox Jewish rabbis have sharply criticized the American Jewish Congress" for challenging government aid to pupils in private and parochial schools. In a resolution proposed and voted on at a meeting of the Baltimore Metropolitan District of the Rabbinical Council of America here, the Orthodox Rabbis expressed deep concern "with the unwarranted suit in stituted by" the American Jew ish Congress in New York chal lenging the constitutionality of the Education Act of 1965." Responsible Segment R<lbbi Hermnn R. Neuberger, chairman of the district's legis lative committee, commented: "We would like the community to know that the American Jew ish Congress does not represent American Jewry in this area and that the responsible segment of the (Ol·thodox) spiritual leader-
Jewish Scholar NIJMEGEN (NC)-An ortho dox .J~wish pI"ofessor ft"om Am sterdam University will lecture on the Old Testament at the Catholic Univel'sity of Nijmegen here in The Netherlands. He is Prof. L. Fuks, who in this aca demic year is replacing Father J. P. M. van del' Ploeg, O.P., on leave for further study. '
ship wants to express its support of this bill." Affirm Support At issue is a suit filed in U. S. District Court and New York State Supreme Court by the American· Jewish Congress, the New York branch of the Amer ican Civil Liberties Union, the
Historical Christ
Not In Crib Alone
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Today more than ever man "needs "to recognize that Christ exists," Pope Paul VI told his first Wed nesday gencl:al audie'nce of 1967, Speaking to thousands gath ered "in the Hall of Benedictions in St. PeteJ,:'S basilica, U{e Pope sp~k~ Ol~ the "thenle of 'Christ's birth and the feast of the Epiph any. He st.ressed that Christ's birth is not only a historical fact but a fact "which is more deep. more essential and more myste rious." The Pope said it is "necessary above all that one di'aw close to Christ or recognize that He ex ists. This is the cenh'al theme from which the Gospel is woven. It is still today's theme, and to day's more t.han ever, and it is present for the mind of aware" . men, men who st.udy, who suf fer, and glimpse within the be ing of Jesus Christ a certain se cret which attracts, makes one fearful, and disturbs."
United Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, and the United Par ents Association. They claim that allocating fed eral and state aid to children in church-related schools violates the federal and state constitu tions by supporting religious in stitutions. The resolution passed by the Orthodox Rabbis here declared: "We want to affirm our suP-. port for the" Education Act of "1965," which among other things guarantees child attending pa rochial or private school some of the same rights as those children attending public schools. This act makes available to these stu dents certain educational bene fits, regardless of which type of school they happen to attend."
Open Church Books Show Bad Business MEDELLIN (NC)-Archbishop Tulio Botero Salazar of Colom bia has requisted religious or ders and congregations to pub lish statements on their economic status and annual income ie prove that the mission of the Church in Colombia is "bad. business." The move is designed to refute persistent charges made here concerning the alleged wealth dl religious orders.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs~, Jan. 12,.1967
12
An Invitation
Show~ Re~~tQoC'1')' of 1rh®@~o~V
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God love YQ€ )(UJ
~lrn~Hn~~ng ~(@ffi)@~liB@lrn~
]By
(J
Father Charles E. Curran' has prepared Christian Morality To day (Fides Publishers. $2.45; Not re Dame, Indiana 46556), which bears the subtitle "The Re newal of Moral Theology." The
several chapters
were originally
composed
as articles or
addresses. But they fit togethe·r ,very welL Three of them, written at intervals, illustrate the development of the author's views ori birth control. This is a most interesting example of change in the light of continuing study, reflection, and consulta tion. 'Development is a theme con stantly stressed in this book. The author observes that Bome who assent to the notion of doctrinal development actually believe that It came to a halt some 50 years ago, or at least would ?ot allow cognizance of anythIng produced by it since then. He, on the contrary, maintains that it still goes on and that; its fresh yield must be taken into account. Findings of Science He also insists that theology must perceive and meet the de veloping contemporary situation, in order to be relevant and -, meaningful. For this, hl~ may be charged with advocating situa tion ethics. Such an allegation would be unjust, and grievously so.. It is 'Plain that Father Curran IS no champion of situation ethics. But theology, while certainly not rel-: ative, must relate to ('hanging conditions in the world, and must come to grips witl~ bettel' under stood relations (for example, be tween man and God, and be tween persons). Theology, moreover, cannot ig nore the findings of the sciences. In our times, scientific discov eries have been numerous and radical. They bear on human na ture, human society, the environ ment in which man lives and works out his destiny. To pay them no heed, or to go squarely against them, is unrealis\1;ic and wlwise. Intelligent Communication Father Curran would have theology speak to people Qf to day in language which they wouid understand. This plea may also be twisted into seeming ad vocacy of an irresponsible ac commodation to, the ways of the world. It is, in fact, 'nothing of the sort. ' Rather, it is but. another in stance of the importance of in telligent and, intelligible. com munication. And this is requisite if ordinary folk are not to regard theology as something a,rcane and' unpractical, something to be resverenced but not to be com prehended and lived byjn every-, day circumstances.
MmSSRClI'Il' And AACHEN (NC)-The German brailch of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith here has sent $650,000 to Asia and Africa,
ing marriage are being exam ined. Morality can not be deter mined only or chiefly by, the ex-' perience of the married, but that experience surely has much to say to the moralist, and must be a capital factor in his delibera tions. Spirit of Love Another theme repeatedly en countered in this book is that moral theology must be life centered. 'Here again the hasty or hostile reader may suppose that the author is proposing a de par t u r e from traditional Christian standards, in favor of fluidity or even formlessness ·in the matter of morals. What he means -is that much moral theology is "confessional oriented." That is, it is principal ly aimed at telling us how to make a complete and integral confession rather than at telling us how to live fully and fruitful
ly as a true Christian.
It is over-concerned with law, its minutiae, its infractions, and not sufficiently concerned with love-which is, as Christ himself insists, the' supreme law. It leaves little room for dialogue with the Spirit of Love. 'Does Father Curran have' a cavalier way with law? No. What he is criticizing is giving pri-' macy of place to external law, putting excessive faith in legal coercion. Difficult Questions He is always careful to dis-' avow and warn against the other extreme. pelagianism, or the heresy of self-sufficiency. This would make man the meas ure, and indeed the source, of all things. In addition to being er-' roneous, it "leads to mediocrity." It is an abuse of the legitimate freedom of the- children of God. In this book Father Curran does not confine himself to gen eral considerations. He takes ,up specific, and difficult, questions. One, as has been mentioned, is that of Christian marriage, espe cially family planning and birth control. Concerning the latter, he writes , "As a confessor and guide, I must continue to uphold the present teaching of the Church." But he contends that this teaching is open to develop ment and agrees with those who are asking for a change in it. Living Theology .
His reasons he sets out at length, with particular attention to the natural law argument. A change, 'in his opinion, will in no way undermine the teaching authority of the Church nor will it open the door to ,sheer sub jectivism and moral anarchy. 'Other chapters deal with the Christian conscience today, the mixed marriage promises, and Sunday, observance. In each in.. stance, Father Curran considers the history behind the present state of the question and the na ture of contemporary conditions, ' arid proceeds to suggest what he considers a so1lnd, relevant view. But if his comments on partic
ular issues command attention,
it is his general approach which
makes a greater and more lasting impression. He is not only calling for a living and life-giving moral theology, but doing much b show the way toward it. ,
lFUlIlt@uu Jr.
Slliee~
.!Dl.j])).
During the days of Stalin, some Communists were sent into n classroom in northern Russia where they distributed candy and cake;. The children were then asked, "Who gave you these? Was it God?'" They answered "No." "But who gave them to you?" the Comt;nunistJ asked again. Then came the well-framed answer, "Stalin." How tbfuJ seems to echo Soloviev's phophecy concerning the dictator at the en@! of the 20th century! He was pictured as the author of a book "Peaca and Prosperity," a man who would feed the world.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy The spirit of renewal in the Church is bound to affect moral theology. There will, be changes in it as in all else. This does not mean that the moral teaching of the Church has been in any sense erroneous, and now stands in need ,'of correction. But develop Further, the experience of peo
ment has taken place, and ple must be considered. This is
will continue to take place, most pertinent, for example, and it must be recognized. when'moral questions concern It is with this in mind that
JR~'7.
Mosa
NAMED: Bishop Luigi Battazzi, Auxiliary of Bol ogna, Italy, has been appoint ed Bishop of the Diocese of Ivrea in Italy. The you'ng-, Italian prelate is known to many <if the Fall River Dio cese for the active part he piayed in the New England CCD Congress held at Bishop Stang High School in 1965.
1,000 Participate In Renewal BURLINGTON (NC) ~ Less than a year after Bishop Robert F. Joyce of Burlington estab lished a network of parish, dean ery and diocesan commissions to speed Church renewal in Ver mont, more than 1,000 people are actively engaged in the work. That works out to an average of 10 persons--clergy. Religious and lay-in each of VemlOnt's 100 parishes, according to a year end report on renewal by the bishop. Their concern is broad-any thing concerning Church renew al-and so far they have had a number of their suggestions ap proved, among them programs to care for the poor in each parish and abolishment of the absti , nence pledge at Confirmation. All com m iss ion members, with the exception of a nine man "core commission" named by the bishop, are elected. r
~Il'llvell"l\l'ov~ Mgssn@II'\l(~1l'
COCkSJl'il9J OJl'il TqJJ!nlLZQlli'UB@ NDOLELEJI (NC)-N<r mat ter how successful Father George Coffer, M.M., is in his mission
here, no will be able to say
that he's "cooking with gas." Instead, Father Cotter's pa rishioners are cooking with sun'=' light. Father learned of experi ments being made with inex-, pensive devices for cooking witnl
the sun's rays by the Voluntee1'8 for International Technical As sistance (VITA).
He arranged to have some cf
the devices sent here to Tan..
zania for field trials becaulIle' 'getting fuel' to cook with 18 a
problem in this open oountry. It takes a full day's work to get a supply _of wood that will 'l~ two or three days.
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This brings up the question-who gives tIlS Olllrblessings, ODr food, our clothing, our technology? The philosophical answer to the question is that God is the First Cause of aU, things, and man is the secondary cause. But there is another answer whicb affects us very vitally, namely. that since the incarnation when God took' UPOD Himself a human nature, It is through -humanity that God redeems humanity. lIt is through you and me that God feeds the poor. The two Hands that Mary gave Him at birth are in heaven, but He left a
million hands behind. His two !Eyes' that
~ought out the woman wbo toucheci the
hem of lI:Ilis garment, anell pierced the soul
of the young man with great possessions,
are in heaven, but llHe left eyes in yoW head and my head. If we never look up from our shining kitchens, our attics full 'off PQssessions, our closets full of clothes, to the 200,000 missionaries the Holy Father has to care for - then Christ fails to that extent in us. Just as man has the power to "cooperate" with God in transforming trees into wooden houses, so he has the power of cooperating with. Christ "to go about doing good." The earthly task of men is. taken into the Divine Mission, and it is on the basis of this cooperation with Christ, that we will be judged on the last day: "I was hWIg17 and you gave Me not to eat:" '
When, therefore, one points to the two-thirds of the people who go to bed hungry every night, one is not pointing out the failure of God's Providence; it is our own failure to seek first the Kingdom of God and our failure to be co-missionaries with ClIrist. The Heavenly Father fulfills His Mission and His Providence on earth through us. That is why for 16 years this GOD LOVE YOU eolWDD and MISSION magazine have never iust asked YOll to help the poor. Rather, they seek to anite 70ur sacrifices with Christ. to spiritualize you and to Incorporate you with Christ prolonginc His Incarnation in 70ur human nature. If we have deepened this love ~f Christ in your soul In this article, you will write us. If we have Ilot-then we mu~ try again. But in the meantime pray for us that our work may 1:'0 Oil, and that the Holy Father who has .. care for ali of the Missions of the WCH'ld, may not be lacldac those who will take Bethlehem seriousb. God Love Yon! INVITATION (RS.V.P.) Has your school ring graduated to the back of the drawer? Is your wristwatch too old to keep up with' the times? Have granddad's gold glasses seen better days? Don't let these old treasures f~l useless any longer. Look up your old earrings, bracelets and necklaces (gold, silver, PQrcelan) and give them one last fling. Retire them with a royall send-off to the PROP and we promise to give them a reception equal to any they've ever had before. When melted down they'll be proud: of the money they earned for the Missions. What a way to go! The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. 10001. , Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to It lllnd mail it W> Most Rev. Fulton J. Shcen, National Director of The Society fOIf the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10001, @]l' to your Diocesan Director, Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. ConsidiDe, 368 North MaiD Street, Fall River, Mass. ~111ll1ll1lJ1II1I1IJ1I1IJ1IJ1I1I1I1l1I1I1l1l1IJ1II1l1I1IJ1I1I1II1IJ1II1I1II1II1IJ1I1II1I1II1l1I1I1II1I1II1II1II1II1II1II1I1I1I1IJ11II11111~
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lHf ANCHORThurs., Jon. 12, 1967
Prelate Defends U,,$. Position In Vietnam
13
N.. H" See Opens Mission School In Colombia
LAFAYETTE (NC)-The United States position in Vietnam was defended as ""moral" here by Archbishop Philip M. Hannan (lIf New Or leans. "Our nation has a moral obU "gation to be in Vietnam," the archbishop said, "to uphold our
contract with the South Viet
namese who requested the assis
tance of the' U. S. in fighting the
Viet Cong and North Viet
namese."
Archbishop' Hannan, a chap
lain in World War II, made his
remarks about the war in an in
terview during his official visit
to this southwest Louisiana dio cese.
"In general," he told a corre spondent, "I feel the U. S. han
conducted the war in an admir
able way, gradually responding
to increased needs. There has
LEGION OlF MARY BOOKRACK: Apos.tolate to the crowd brings a Legion of Mary been no more violence than called for by the action of the bookrack to a street corner in North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco. North Beach war. I think the U. S. has shown likes'to be called a "little city" within the city, with its' mixture of ethnic groups and great restraint in its conduct of variety of life. NC Photo. the war." The American public, the archbishop contended, has been "short changed" by news reports of the Vietnam conflict because there has been "almost no cov 0 erage of the atrocities committed by the other side." Continued from" Page One for appro,ximately 240 persons. when the new wing is finished," "There has been," the arch Sister Claire, now sacristan in Construction on the main Mother Superior says, "and there bishop continued, "an almost the home chapel, came to Sacred building began in 1923 and it are dumb waiters to send food total blackout of the atrocities H~art 41 years ago to find the opened in 1925. The south wing to the floors where hot carts and cruelties inflicted on civil present main building already construction began in 1947 and are waiting."
ians by the Viet Cong and com under construction. It was open During the years of its growth, was opened for residents in 1949. munists. ed in 1925. The last construction project was the Dames Patronesses of the
"After all," he noted, "this is Sister Claire is one of seven the north wing along Austin home have purchased numerous
one of the real reasons for the golden jubilarians at the home Street that opened in 1958. The pieces of equipment for the use of patients and "give each resi
war." . . who are looking forward to the new wing will extend from the Concerning alleged casualties Golden' Anniversary celebration. latter wing to Cottage Street. dent a present on his birthday." inflicted on North Vietnamese The others are Sister St. Archel They also provide the movie that To Sister Claire O'Brien-who is shown once a month to the civilians by U. S. air raids, Arch aus of Beauce, Canada; Sister residents and set up the com bishop Hannan said it is possible S1. Ida, a native of St. Raymond, resumed her family name re cently when the sisters were pletely equipped beauty parlor that North Vietnamese anti-air Canada; Sister St. Mary of Al given an opportunity to do so craft fire could have caused bany, N. Y.; Sister St. Joseph-de that caters to the eternal desire the changes in the last 40 years of the female to look attractive. some of their own casualties. la-Providence of Gaspesia, Cana .,Girl scouts of the parish troop "This happened to us in World da; Sister St. Alexis-de-Rome of have been wonderful but not come in once a week to visit the War II. The damage will look Prince Edward Island and Sister unexpected. She, like the other nuns at elderly residents and do errands the same, and there is no way to st. Adelina of st. Nieholas, Que Sacred Heart Home, believes the for them. determine that it was not caused bec. Lord will provide, and in their by their own guns. . All seem to have found the This jubilee year, Mother Su case He has. "As a former air force and air secret of eternal youth. perior also hopes that "some borne chaplain," Archbishop Even the residents at the home "There were about four sisters how" a corp of teen-age volun
Hannan concluded, "I feel we specialize in longevity. Twenty when I came in 1923," she re teers can be established to make
have used all possible precau three of them are "over 90 and calls. "Three other sisters' came regular visits to residents and
tion." 75 are over 80;" Mother Superior with me." Now there are 24 and help with theIr care. says smiling at the amazed ex hopefully more will be coming. . Mother Superior, who spent pression sitting in front of her. ~<e[hJ~d!1ll~~ «:8lJ[j'D$frS@fTI) eight years at Mt. St. Joseph At present, there are 87 resi Oldest resident at Sacred dents in the nursing wing of the School in Fall River before be lUJfi'Ilefry Ob$e5'V(i~H'll«;~ Heart, "still alert" and a pet of home. They are served meals in ing assignetl to the home, "isn't
the staff, is Mrs. Leonie Riox of their rooms and have the special sure" how the teen-age group
SAN FRANCISCO (NC) Christians of all denominations ..Fall River, who will observe her help they require. will be organized, but she feels will meet in the civic auditorium 100th birthday this year. Cur Ninety other residents "go to they could be a "tremendous here Sunday,. Jan. 22; to pray for rently there are 24 nuns at the the dining room" on their re help." home, three of them registered spective floors" for meals and unity, making the annual observ In the meantime, the good sis ance of the Unity Octave, Jan. nurses, Sister Theresa Bergeron live a normal community life ters are not making comments of New Bedford, Sister Benedic 18-25. out loud, but indications are with their friends. ta of Prince Edward Island and Archbishop Joseph T. Mc they are praying furiously that "We will have three elevato1'l3 Sister Joseph Herve of Fall Gucken of San Francisco, Epis the new wing construction won't copal Bishop C. Kilmer Myers River. be delayed. There also are "six or seven !P@pe !raul Th~Jrfil~tiI and Dr. James McCord, president After all, how often does ooa of Princeton, N. J., Theological licensed practical nurses, includ have a 50th anniversary? ing laywomen," and more lay Seminary, are schedu.led to par IJ< nurses are expected to be added ticipate in the service. NEW HAVEN (NC) - Pope to the staff when the new wing Paul VI has expressed his thanks opens. to ·the Knights .of Columbus for WASHINGTON (NC)-Auxil From small beginnings, Sacred a $5,000 gift sent to him to help iary Bishop John S. Spence of Continued from Page One Heart Home had grown to a fa alleviate suffering and devasta Washington dedicated the first from 10 in the moming until :s cility caring for 173 elderly per tion brought to the people of in the aftemoon, at st. William's sons before demolition for the Florence, Italy, by the Novem- permanent center for the New man Foundation at George Center, Stafford Road, for any new wing started. in June. About ber floods. . Washington University here. The one seeking information about 160 men and ·women now live center contains m'eeting rooms, The Pope's thanks were ex the school. there and when the new, wing is office space, a lounge,' library pressed i~ a letter sent to, Su The newest diocesan high finished the Gray Nuns can caFe and chapel as well as living preme Knight John W. McDevitt IIChool registered its first class of quarters for thtl Newman chap here by Amleto Cardinal Cico freshmen last September. gnani, papal secl'etary of state. lain. Father Cornellier emphasized 1hat this is not a registration but
only an informative procedure at KANDY (NC) - The Kandy which time brochures explaining & (Ceylon) dioceses first synod
the aims of the school may be hal,! decided to establish Ii dioc
F~u.e"fd Rome obtained. The permanent facilities at the esan pastoral council. 550 Locust Stree~ Reg. Moster Plumber 2930 The synod's resolution on the DeW Bishop Connolly High !Fain River, Mass. GEORGE M. MONTLE School on the 70 acres bounded subject said that the council, Over 35 Years consultative by Elsbree Street, President which will have 672-239] of Satisfied Service
Avenue and Route 24 are rapidly vote on an matters connected Iltose lEo S ulnivallil npproaching completion but St. with pastoral activity, is being.
lEl06 NO. MAIN S1TRIEIE'Ii' Jeffrey E. SUmvalli. Winiam's Center is ~ll being established "as desired by the
!fit/I! RiveII' 675-74<\l>7 (Second) Vatican Council." rnJed by the school.
New Bedford
~~ns
Mark Golden Jubilee
$1,000 000 Exp@nsion of H@me for Aged
MANCHESTER (NC) Manchester's mission in CaJr tago, Colombia, has opened a new five-grade elementary school for boys, staffed by five
Colombian t~achel's.
The school, which has 167 stu
dents, is directed by Sister M.
Pauline, R.S.M., of the Manches
ter Sistel's of Mercy. It is part
of Our Lady of Perpetual Help
parish, Manchester's mission
parish in Cartago, whose pastor
is Msgr. Thomas Duffy of Man
chester. Money to build and staff the
school was raised through thee efforts of Manchester Mission,
the diocesan mission apostolate,
here in New Hampshire.
lfg,e~@lI'd COrtl~eli'®fJ'i)<1::®
@n New !Liil'l11lfj'~'f ENGLEWOOD (NC) - FatheE' Clement McNaspy, S.J., recorded a spiritual conference on thee "new llturgy" for the Confer ence-A-Month club here in New Jersey, it was announced by Father Ronald Gray, O. Carm., director. The record is scheduled to be released this month. Father McNaspy, an associate eeditor of America, the Jesuit weekly, spoke on the need ro up-date the liturgy, and ell:
pressed the idea that the liturgy is open-ended, always subjecl to adaptation to different anell changing circumstances.
He stressed that Religiou!l
should guide the liturgy into sane and understandable forms to make its pastoral aims morGl cafficient.
Nun Gell's Gramltl' DETROIT (NC) - Sister Palllll Mary Farley, assistant professoE' of philosophy at Mercy Collegee
of Detroit, has been awal'ded n
Danforth Foundation Grant forr
work toward her doctoral ~
gree in philosophy.
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Plan Interviews
Ceylon Establishes Pastoral Council
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14
JinL Ali. 8eIllOn'ltaVe •
tunitJ'
~assidy,
'SHA Fedl River Students Mourn Death of Music, Director At Academy' for Past 20 Years
oPPM
of making. closed week
end retreat at LaSalette Retreat House in Attleboro, in place of the school retreat. Weekends of January and early February are available for Feehan students. Athletically, Feehan girls have been engaged in III busy baske~ ban schedule. On Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 7 and 8, they took: part in a basketball tournament at La Salle Academy, Providence. In addition to trophies for bas ketball, trophies were also awarded for cheerleaders and for · the school with the best school spirit. . The boys' basketball teams' are cheered on by the Varsity .cheerleaders, at every game 'on Tuesdays and Fridays. Freshmen cheerleaders cheer for freshman teams and for the girls' teams. So far, the Feehan Varsity and JV teams have been undefeated. The girls have lost two games and have won five. The religion department Is sponsoring a series of films foil' teenagers during religion classes once a month. Students find them helpful and thought-pro voking. Members of the faculty at Feehan have been busy on extra curricular business, too. During the holidays, Sister Mary Pro-' tase, head of the language de partment, attended the 39th an nual meeting of the American Association of Teachers of French at the Hotel New Yorker in' New York. One important topic discussed was the advanced placement program in French. .' Members of the English De · partment attended a wot-ksh'op at Attleboro High School "tast · week. Speaker was John:' E. Kearney, Senior Supervisor" in ·English, . Massachusetts Depart 'ment " of Education, who dis cussed 'current trends in Englis\l. " Thirteen Feehanites have had original: PQems ,accepted for In clusion in the National POetlY Pr~ss Anthology; "Young Amer . ica Sing~." . .' ."
Students at Bishop Cassidy High in Taunton and Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, attended the' funeral Mass laSlt . Saturday at Sacred' Heart Church, Fall River, for Sister Stephen Mary, for 20 years director of music at the Fall River school. Her sister, Sis ter Stephen Helen, S.U.S.C., Stonehill, Michele O'Brien is is on the Cassidy faculty, and headed for Bryant, and Yvonne her aunt, Sister John Eli~a Berger has received good tidings
from Salve Regina. abeth, S.U.S.C., Is Cassidy's prin J M' k f M S eipal. Sister Stephen Mary's last eanne IS a 0 t. t. Mary Academy has been· accepte4 at majorcoqtribution to music was Stonehill and' Veronica Plaziak the organization of' SHA's all has received word from Salve alumnae concert, presented in November for the benefit of the Regina that she's in: At DA Teracademy building fund: ' r i e Chouinard has been accepted 'by Salve and Joyce .Macek by SHA student council members Catholic ·U. Denise Martin will formed a~ honor l~uard at the 'be enrolling in Truesdale Hos funeral Mass and a special Mass pita1 'SChool of ,Nursing; and was celebrated previously at the Marilyn Lizak ·~t Bryant.' . CHESS PLAYElRS: Chess club officers at HQly Family academy for the repose of her SHA Fall RIver reports Jo- HIgh School, New Bedford,are, from left,' Michael Kramer soul by Rev. John R. FoIster. At anne Desmond accepted at Em'd tEl' b th S l ' . . . ' Cassidy a Mass wa$ offered by manuel; Sandra Silvestre at ~. presl en; .Iza e au mer, vIce-presIdent; MIchael Hall, Chaplain James F. Greene, Stonehill; Nancy Skrzypiec at treasurer; Rlch~d Connor, secretary. Bobby Fischer, here USAF. Bryant; Lana Moniz, ,at Union they come! Not only Christmas, but Little Hospital; and Sheila Gauthier Christmas was celebrated by and Pat Souza at Sl Anne'. Also at SHA, gym meet spirit I' h t t·t· French Club members at Mt. St. HospitaL" aug a supers I Ion tomorrow, Mary Academy, Fall Ri'ver, who Also at Mt. St. Mary, business is in the air, with practices under Friday the 13th, holding a good way for members of the Agnes luck dance from 8 to 11 at St. enjoyed an Epiphany party, fo1 students Vivian Ma'rkle, Paula, and Margarets teams. The units An ' A d't' d' lowing tradition in many lands. Rocha, Diana Arruda and Car- meet each Thursday afternoon in Prevost, ne SUI onum; an members also at French Club And at Do.miriican Academy, Iota Costa have been accepted as preparation for the meet, sched are readying a play for presen also Fall River, congratulations telephone ~ompany employees; uled for mid-February. tation in March. are in order for senior Joyce Alberta Costa will enroll in . r.lcek, a runnerup in the city's.' Johnson and Wales business At St. Anthony's H!gh in New French' Honor Society mem first Junior Miss contest. joyce' school; Linda Heywood plans to Bedford the seniors are prepar~ bers at'SHA Fall River, ,mean was also chosen Miss Congenial- work at J. O. Neill Supply Co.; ing for their annual play, slated while, are preparing a Mardi , ity by vote of fellow contestants, and Dina Aguiar will enter New for Sunday, Feb. 12. This year's .Gras celebration for Monday, and shared front page picture .York Career Academy. 'presentation, "Penny Antics,", Feb. 6. Feature will include a honors in the Fall R~ver Herald Chess, Tennis will feature Therese Lambalot, '. French cafe, miniature floats News with fiist place' winner " The Chel:ls Club is big at. HF . Stephen Charoon, Claire Boutin and a costume, parasol' and hat Donna Fairtile of DUlfee High. . High in' '. New" ,Bedford, with and Susan Dumas. Directing is show. There'll be an exit fee in Seniors at Jesus-Mary Acad- Inemi>ers' havifigplayed Several Sister Mary of Perpetual Help stead of an admission fee and emy, Fall River have named times a:gaip~:t'NewB~dfordHigh. and ~tage managers are Audrey proceeds will benefit the student Charlotte Dube general chairman' .Also big :,)5-" .Jl)e Terinis' Club, ,Levasseur arid Diane Dupont. council activity ftmd. for their upcoming prom. Alice ,which .will·hold indoor practice. 'McAuley chapter ofihe NHS And SHA debaterS 'attettded Dumoulin will plan decorations, ~essions. t~if.W:inter'and has ac at Mt. St./Mary Academy visited . the first Na'rry League totirna and planning and finances are quired a"ne~,'c6ach'and inoder 'Nazareth Hall Tuesday,' enter-' 'ment yesterda'y"afMount; being under management of Lucille ator. Roy:,Carulon,'il professional·taining Ule children and distrib 'represented' by' Jayne 'Darcy Phenix. A dance Monday, Feb. at the sporl,·:iS·:coach ari4Sister . uting ,gifts.. On Sunday, Jan. 15 Donna' Petit, Holly Cu'tting and 6 in the school gym will help de 'Mary Dianne,Is moderator. 'Sister Ma'ry Austina . of . the Linda Pomfret. ". fray expenses of the big one. ,·.~DA studen~:.~arked·Epiphany Mount faculty will review books Meanwhile, back at the Mou~t, '...... JMA girls met Prevost boys in with a specia.CaSsembly, featur-'fo'r' meinbers of Fall River Cath . the NHS-sponsored College cor : . ;. a "basketball battle of the sexes" ing a skit written ..by Joyce olic Wonian's Club; and 'on the ner is currently. featuring BC; Sunday at the Fall :Rh'er, Boys' Macek:. T~ree kings were'crown Same day'gO academy 'glee 'club and the unit's tutoring'service Is Club. Both schools'benefited' ed in accordance with tradition: members _will sing at dedication well under way. . from proceeds of the unorthodox' . senior Denise, Turcotte; her sis . ceremonies for the nearby Mor Mounties' school spirit has game. Cocaptains of the teams . ter Michelle, a sophomore; and gan- ,Apartment Housing Devel been boosted' by a newly formed were Alice Dumoulin and Ro freshman Nancy Butler. . opment for the aged. pep squad numbering some 60 chelle Goyette and Raymond 'And DA freShmen will en~r Also'on the busy· Mount calen members; and Virginia Lowney Gariepy and Guy·Morin. tain area eighth' graderS Friday, dar for January: a calendar has received the Elks Leadership At cheering and majorette Jan. 20 at an open house pro party ,Wednesday, the 25th, Award for service in the Neigh competitions sponsored! by the gram including refreshments, a ,s~sored by the McAuley Guild, borhood Youth Corps. ' Youth branch of Fall Rilver Citi tour of the school, a skit, a phys with stu'dents presentin,g. musical lFeehan High zens' Scholars~ip F~undation, i cal education demonstratIon and entertainment for each month of runnersup' in the eneeririg divi:..' addresses ,of1 welcome by presi . the year; a reading test ;for aU The New Year at Feehan has sion included girls from Jesus- dents of academy organizations. students Friday Jan. 20' and gotten off to a fast start as sen Mary, .Sacred Hea:r~: Academy, At C~s~i~y, Le Cercle Francaiil the: aill~ilal ring' cererrlon; Fri 'iors begin closed retreats next Fall RIVer, and Mt. St. Mary's, is makmg a survey of graduates . day, .Tari·, 27, at which time jun 'week and underclassmen bad with SHA a. nd Mount tied for who h~ve furthered their study 'iorS~ill receive theirclas$ rings. their school retreat Tuesday 'and " $i,st~r! fou'rth' ·p~ace. ' . ," , . of Frencli;'-A, 'college French ma- College hoard tests are u'pcOming ·yesterday. It was conducted by Msgr. McKe'oii Debate'Society"jor wiU be"~nvited to speak to . at the' Mourit this Saturday. '. " GIVING YOURSElf 'to '8 Iife"eom ~ ..~.t?ly Fa.mUy Hinh, in N:ew .: members o,n. her choice of this . : 'i 'N U <Of . ""~_ _""",,~,,,,_,,"!M-'''''''''''''_, , .pretely' dedicated '~o the salvation"iJt Bedford reportS" 'tMC 'Dembers ··areaof'studY.·
'., ,', 0 DI orlDS '" ·souls.' thr'!Ugh 'prayer," work. sac rifice ·and 'jo9 ...'by .using' your' tal debated' at' "li' t6iii-rielment . at" , Aild also at·'tbe Taunton girls'
'Dominican .Acadeiny's, mein 'BlUE'·.RIBB;ON:~
ents as a Nurse, l.aboratory and X-Ray Bis~op .f e ?wi~\1;, Wgh!; geaboqy'~. -school. '. ~~~ ~I;iS is, p!~ning a ory boo~ fund will benefit' from : "". r . '.' . ( ' .••• ;; : Te.c~nician. Secretary, Acc~untant~,Di whIle nOVlce debaterli, are pre-:- ,tll;lent show fo,r and by Its mem ,.11- nQ.,\,l;I).l.~9rm .,day, ,whell;.leach ., : etlttan; Seamstress,. Cook,.. as 'well"lIS paring to meet Tabor Academy. ·bers. Entetfahu'nerit will feature 1. s~44tWt wishing to wear '~clvilian :,,1 in other Hospital departments and ,in' Varsity melflberl? ~il1 be,gin,theil,',,, fi~its aqd ~~I~sQngs. ./alothl;!s":ifor. the day.:will pay a a new' exfension of our work in "Cate· NarrYLeague,!lchj79.l,lle ,tl?day.. '. '" -, ,Re,~~¢ii~~ ~olIages ,;;;qua,rter.'A~so at DA,.the.bas~et i • ,<;hetica/.,llRd Social Sll~ice, .Fie~ The staff of Cassidy's memory Jesus-Mary cheerleaders areil?illl ,~a.rslty 'team met·" and '" ,! .. i .• 'YI1~re'lls No "Greater ChClifitYl b<;lok,Corona, will meet its sec-; sporting new ,-outfits,. including .,~orllt~d" SJ::IA Fall, RiYe r " .but ondpublicatio~" deadline this". ,spqrt ski;rt:Un ,the school plaid, • $H~ ,)ayv,ee s turr.'ed the· tables, 992-6216 ,', (If 10u'are over 16,'wrltli ta·Slster· 'Marv S~nd~Y. Already taken are can- white long-sleeved blouses, navy ,be~~mg .the DA dIttoes 111-~fi·' Clarice. O.S.F. Box 111•.cathollc Slstenr' dId pIctures of the ent~re student ·blue vests and navy blue neck .' ,Talking. of athletics, the,· gym -- .l;ollege, .Washlngton. D. C. 20017 flit:. fur· NIEW IBIEDfORD ,body. Also on the recent agenda ties. And Catholic Students Mis floor'at SHA Fall River has been ther details 011 thIs happy IIfe~ of the Taunton scliool: a smoking . 'sion. Crusade members at JMA ·newly r.efinished, in time for' -the surve,Y..Questions centered about are collecting discarded eyeglass all-important gym meet.' ' _###_~#####.##Noiio##o###a ~ermlsslon ~o .s!!1~ke, reasons for, frames to be put to use for chil: At . JMA auditions for' . the It; hazards ~n~o~ved, and. its ef- dren wliocannot afford glasses. -- Spring concert have been held •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• fect on femlDlmty. Any students from other schools and rehearsals are 'under way : Scholarships, Who have unused frames may directed by Mother Mary .of :: -. Life beginning next September send them along to JMA. Carmel. l"W\. Is bein~ decided for more and ·A seven foot collage currently' Christians Youth Movements of ~ ':.. more as, news adorns thE7 mai9-:corridor of SHA Prevost,'and JMA have'offiCiallY; .' . lCollege and nursmg sc~ool ac- Fall River, the work of religion merged after a two month ex- ., '7pt/lnces and s~hQlarshlps con~~tudents.,!lq;~ster.John Alicia..It pel,'Iwl'lntal period,mar~ing the .: tinues to come .m. At JMA Su- Illustrates the beatitude "Blessed first such sodality merger in Fall :,:. ~~ne Lagarde IS the happy r - are the Poor in Spirit" and was Riyer. A central council repre<I , ...... :~ ~ ..•,:. !. ~. •• .. .oj. ' .... 7 Clplent of. a $2500 scholarshlp designed by Christine Mulvaney. seriting both schools 'will direct . ~ from .N?rthNeas~ern Uni~ersity. Other collages depicting themes activities,,· headed 'by Susanne . ~ , 653 .Washin ~ nSf:'" t"'Fc.....'h ;..,. '.....;,.".~, ," . ' '. - '.--' .9,0. ",r.~~ ~vell:!!", ;;',..'.., Su zanne IS a ahonal Me.nt Sem- such as love, life and freedom are Morr,isette arid Paul Carrier.·~ Ulnalist. Lucille 'pheniX, also of. in the works, projects of all Sis pjesidenti;.·., , " ' .. "'994-5058, ; '-".' ,'J .,.! J.'. ".'.,." '.. ~ bas _ !i~n' '. acce.pte~ at' -..te!'s,cla~ses . . , ;SiJpi!omores at', Pr~Jost' wIll ,····~~ii~~~~iii:i~~~~ii~·~' ·~·~~ii'~~i'~.~~;i;~ii~ •••• O•••••• ~.O ••••••••••••••••••••••. ~-••••••••
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Children From PovertYEStricken H@mes Have CVreat '" B17eak.f@~fr
SALISBURY (NC) -,The government of Prime Minis. ter Ian Smith has informed the churches that they will no longer receive subsidies for any new primary school they open for Negro Africans. All new primary schools will from now on be' entrusted to local govern ment authorities. This change of policy means that the Christian churches in Rhodesia can' no longer expand their educational work for the Negro African population. Hun dreds of mission schools will never reach the status of full primary schools unless parents and missions bear the entire cost for expansion, including the pay ment of teachers' salaries. Up to now the government left the primary education of Negro Africans mainly in the hands of the churches. 86 per cent of all Negro African school children attend mission schools. The Catholic Church has 23 per cent of the total school enrolment m its schools. The government has paid the teachers' salaries and set courses of study and examinations. The Churches were responsible for building, running and equipping schools. Three years ago the govern ment called upon the parents to transfer their schools from church supervision to local gov ernment authorities. The Negro African councils would then be made responsible for primary education in their respective areas. Negro African nationalist lead ers - while still free to make their voice heard - constantly warned their people that a trans fer of ilchools might be the be ginning of South Africa's type of "Bantu education". T hi. would mean a completely segre gated system and a low standard of schooling for Negro Africans. Therefore, only 100 of the country's 3,200 primary schools for Negro Africans are now un der the supervision of council authorities. Educators here' have com mented that Prime, Minister Smith's government could ill afford at the present time to have the inexpensive mission schools replaced by the more expensive government schools. , They believe that this change in the education policy for Negro Africans reflects one of the fundamental principles of the ruling Rhodesian Front Party and might well pave the way for a complete take-over of all mis: Ilion schools by the government, ~ was the case in neighboriD, South Africa in 1954.
New Officials Named For. Vatican Radio VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has named the former ltalian assistant general of the Jesuits to be director general of Vatican Radio. . Father Giacomo Marteganl, 8 ..1., who until his order's gen eral elections In 1965 was one of the regional assistants working WIder the Jesuit general, re placed Father Antonio Stefaniz zI. S.J. who has been named to the newly created' post of tech Dical director. Father Jorge Blajot, chief edi tor of the Spanish magazine, Bazon e Fe, will take Father . Francesco Ramirez' place as pro 8f1IJD director. In the newlyere Med post of director of new... eub and journalistic and infor matiOll services wiD be Father· Franceseo Farusi who has beeIl working OIl Vatican Radio new... . . . IIiDce 195&
15
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jon. 12,1967
Rhodesian Policy Blow to Church School System
MILWAUKEE (NC) - When pupils arrived at St. Fr.ancis ele mentary school one morning re cently, most of them didn't go to class. Instead, they trooped merrily into a basement lunchroom where they were greeted by a dozen school officials and visit ing dignitaries. And they got an unusual treat -breakfast-which most of them don't get in their poverty stricken homes. St. Francis was the first school in the nation to benefit from a $2.75 million program of the U. S. Department of Agriculture designed to augment the diets of students from poor homes. As the dignitaries watched, 136 of the school's 209 students hun grily downed scrambled eggs, rolls, oranges and milk. And as they did, Father Mat thew Gottschalk, O.F.M. Cap., pastor of St. Francis, explained what it will mean to them.
"The youngsters will now be getting a meal that they other wise wQuldn't have," he said. C4Jl: believe it will help them learn more efficiently and help devel op a school spirit by giving them a chance to socialize." "The breakfast gets these chil dren off to a good start," said the principal, Sister Raymain, ove!!' the rising din. Under the breakfast program, the Department of Agriculture pays' for the food and 75 per cent of the cost of kitchen equipment. The meals cost about 10 cents. They are free to children deemed eligible by the principal, and others may buy them at cost. Paul Ostendorf of the USDA Chicago office said the depart ment picked St. Francis school "because they were all set up and ready to go---they planned on this several months ago." Other schools will take part as soon as money and equipment are found, he said.
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.-'-'-_~ ---'__ -'.:"" ~- ~L'_-,-,,~k~t."l IDOlLlLS ARE GOOID COMPANY: Regina Ordyn, 3, takes care of her dolly at an Opportunity Industrialization Day Center, Menlo Park, Calif., where Regina makes friends and learns all the things a three-year-old finds fascinating while her mother is employed. NC Photo
WALE ~ADI(]'§
WIN 90GRAND
BA~AMA ADVEN1fU~EU
Salute to Library St. Francis First A.mong Seminaries
With 45,000 Volumes
MILWAUKEE '(NC)-Recogni tion for something praiseworthy is sometimes slow in coming, but a recent honor for the library at St. Francis seminary here is better late than never. Father Raymond Fetterer, li brarian for nearly 20 years, said he delights in the seminary's No. 1 ranking in a survey conducted on behalf of the U. S. Office of Education. Built in 1908 at a cost of $30,000, the library was a gift of alumni as a golden jubilee me morial of the seminary's found ing in 1856. Named in honor of Father Jo seph Salzmann, first procurator and second rector, the library has enriched the education of hundreds of seminarians. Enlarged and completely ren ovated in 1962, it is now the home of 45,000 volumes, 250 pe riodicals, and numerous micro films, microcards, tapes and recordings. The library includes sections for theology, philosophy, history, literature, arts and sciences. Hours of llIelp It was ranked first among seminaries, seventh among Cath olic institutions, and 83rd among 866 liberal arts colleges in the country by. James T. McDonough,
Promise Freedom To Goa ChllJ'rches BOMBAY (NC)-The Maha rashtra state government has as-. sured Goa that its churches and other places of worship "will be. allowed to function freely" if the territory merges with the state following a poll to be held soon. The assurance was contained in a policy statement on the for- . merly Portuguese-ruled territory issued here by the state's Chief Minister V.P. Naik after a spe cial meeting of his cabinet. Among other assurances was a promise to allow .'.'denomina tional educational institutions" to function freely "without dis eriminatiOJl of any· kind."
,a classicist at St. Joseph's Col lege, Philadelphia. The study was based on num ber of books, number .of books per student, salary budget, plus such factors as number of hours of student help, periodicals re ceived, and budget for rebinding and reconditioning books. Father Fetterer describes the rating as an honor because "as you go along you hltve no idea how you stand among others." u
fhn<dJ Origingfi P'U(!J]ns Off Mexico ChlllJlJ'ch MEXICO CITY (NC) - The long search for the original ar chitectural plans of Mexico City's 16th-century cathedral came to an end when Dr. Luis G. Serrano,. a specialist in the art of clay molding, found the plans in the cathedral itself. The finding has been wel comed in Mexico, Latin Ameriea and Spain by historians of early Spanish-American art and archi tecture. , . Because of the similarity be tween Mexico City's cathedral and the first ones built in Pueb la, Mexico, and in Cuzco and Lima, Peru, the Mexican cathe dral has been the object of ex- ' tensive study and research. Through Dr. Serrano's discovery it is now known that King Philip II of Spain gave the order for the cathedral's erection on May 4, 1569, and that he commis sioned a famous Spanish archi": tect, Claudio de Arziniega, to draw up plans for it.
110 GLORIOUS DAYS FOR TWO Bhni~i,
Great Isaac, Abaco; Exciting Nassau 1000 OTHER PRIZES
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10 times ,daily WALE, fall River (Dial 1400) will an nounce names and addresses of area residents.
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Names chosen alternately at random from area phon'e books and from. cords or entry blanks moiled in.
• When you hear your name, call WALE (674-3535) with,n 1.5 min. to ~in' a 'daily prize. • Daily winners will be' eligible for w~ekly prizes and for the grand prize drawing on Apr. 3, 1967. • All listeners who send in a cord or entry blank will also be eligible for a drawing for a GE Portable TV Set. • No purchase necessary. • Grand prize winner may choose either the cruise or $500 cosh. • Wherever you live, if you can hear WALE radio, you're eligible.
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CASA BLANCA Just Across The Coggeshall .St. Bridge Fairhaven, Mass.
Finest'Var,ety of SEAFOOD Served Anywhere - Also STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs;, Jan. 12, 1967
'mpact Teachers
Venezuelan Economy~ Seen Fascinating, Various
NCEA Asks What Makes Classroom, 'Instructors 'Tick" . WASHINGTON (NC) - What ':' 'makes a classroom teacher really
Edited by John J. Considine, M:M~ What happened in Venezuela after Juan Vicente Gomez, ·tor 27 years its dictator, died in 1936. For one thing, Betan eourt and Leoni came back. They had been students to gether. Luckily they had not been h~nged .or shot· by GOmez; they had gone into that 92 per cent of all theo-ex ~xile in Colombia. As a mat ports o'f Venezuela. are oil, that r\ller of fact, Leoni spent 80 two-thirds of all the profits from much time in exile in Colom the oil companies go in terms
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. The National Catholic Educa tional Association has a name for such teachers - "Impact Teachers"-and now it is invit ing all teachers in U. S. Catholic elementary and secondary schools to submit their ideas about what makes "Impact Teachers" click. The 40 teachers who come up with the best ideas will receive paid trips to Georgetown Uni versity in Washington in May for a three-day seminar to develop a cQIDplete "Impact Teacher" profile.
retary of the NCEA, "but few have given much thought to what makes a teacher· really . click. "Now we are asking the teach;' ers themselves to tell us," he said. Teachers are invited to use any approach they wish in pre senting their ideas-essays, let -tel's, charts, sketches or other visual materials. The NCEA hopes to announce the names of the top 40 entrants at its annual convention (March 27-30) in Atlantic City, N. J. Entry forms are available from· Impact Teacher Program, Na tional Catholic Educational As sociation, 1785 Massachusetto Ave., N.W., Washington, D. C.
of taxes and royalties to the gov Jl)ia that he even got his law de ernment-Venezuela gets .rough greeat the University of Bogo ly $100 million a month from ~ rather than in Caracas. When the oil companies. There are Ilte a n if Betan other taxes in Venezuela today, G:Ourt first fled . yet oil supplies the giant's share. ~ey were insep But still this oil industry of luable; the y "Everybody t;ecognizes the im Venezuela only provides about even operated a portance of the classroom two per cent of the jobs. Workers fruit stand to teacher," said Father C. A. Koob, 20036. therefore have to look to other gether in Co O. Praem., acting executive secThe deadline is March I, 1967. SISTER MJil.RY AUSTiNA. industries-iron ore which is the ~mbia. When second most important mineral they came back though far behind oil, agricul after the di~ta o ture which pI:ovides about 34 oorship, the y per cent of the jobs although 1l)egan to organ only seven per cent of the gross lliIe the party national product. Coffee, cocoa . h i ch is the Sister Mary Austina of the En ,overnment party today, Demo and beef are also important glish department of Mt. St. Mary. products. . ccatic Action, known by the ini Academy, Fall River, will speak This economy spreads itself' at 3 Sunday afternoon, Jan.. 15 fllals AD for Accion Democratica. They made a marvelous team of out over an area five times the for members of the literature de lJ'Oliticians-BetancouIr't the fiery state of Illinois, which. yet has partment of the Fal River Cath liPCaker who could whip up a a population smaller than Illi olic Woman's Club at the organ
nois. Indeed, the estimated pop ·<tI'owd and Leoni the quiet, be ization's clubhouse, 742 Rock
THE HOLY FATHER'. M,••,DN AID TD THI ORIENTAL CHURC"
IHnd-tbe-scene organizer. He es ulation' ·of Venezuela today is Street. ' only 8,750,000 whereas Dlinois tablished labor uniono and built She will review "The Kingdom "I'LL The prlmitiva Church still lives In the tiny vlllap 1JIP ,committees in every state, would run about 10 million. Within;" "On' Thin Ice" and . DO of Gusla, 'Ethiopia. In the shadow of splendor, This economy, for all of its "Who Gets the Drumstick," aU territory and district of Vene WITHOUT the impoverished' Cathollca worship In roln•• tropical character, has an amaz contemporary biographies with .uela. A Second class citizens, they watch for the Inspeo ing variety. It _goes from· sea When in 1958 elections finally the common theme of love as II PRIEST·HOUSE" tor who any day may close their church. ". caR .-me for the first time in· the level to 16,000 feet in altitude . motivating force of achievement. do without a priest's hOUll"" writes Fether IUBtory of Venezuela, Betancourt and thus has many climates and A ,native of Rhode Islanel,./· GeorBe, "but people can't have Mass without. a consequent apility to grow 11". the candidate of Accion Sister Mary Austina is a gradu church." •.• "In thlll country where the .xt.rnal many crops. Democratica. Leoni ~ayed be ate of Salve Regina College. She structure of a church Is symbolic of the lreat Role 01 MaDafaelurbt~._ lUnd the scenes and mlllDaged the is currently. doing graduate study neiS and lItrength of the Church itself our peel The government has been in the field of English literature. ....paign. In that camlPaign Ac pie are ridiCUled," writes ·Bishop Hall. Callsaf• Democratica woo 49 per building a stronger manufactur At Mt. St. Mary Academy she is "Something must·be done today for Guala." ••• ing economy in the last six years. _ t of the vote. Sodality moderator and ia loyal Catholics, the parishioners will do aH the The second party wan the URD It has followed the old classical charge of the Mercian, bi-month- work themselves. They need money, however, fill Villalba, another sdudent of method of .inviting domestic cap ly school publication. for bricks and cement..•• ·For $3,200 you alA aGmulo Gallegos, who bad taught ital and foreign capital to estab build the church and lift their heads. A plaque lish plants, insuring security in Leoni and Betancourt. on the door will assure for you ~elrgratltude , Third was Dr. Caldera's party, the form of protective tariffs and Criticize Religious eternally In their prayers and Masses. Send the the Christian Democra~c Party, import quotas.' Thus investors ",ntire gift now or any part ($100, $75, $50, $25, .15, $10, $5. $2). The people of Guala look ~ which won abo~t 15 per cent of have this market of 8,750,000· Education in Berlin people without fear 'of foreign ou with anxiety and hopa. Please do somethln8 BERLIN (NC)-Protestant and the vote. ..... help build this house for Bod. These three Parties aHreed be-. . competition for an indefinite Catholic teachers of West Berlin have assailed the government's lore the election that no matter period of years. This has brought, to Venezue educational policies which, they who won, they would form a co.,.· .lition and work together: They la automobiles (Chrysler, Ford, said, "under the cover of, reli JOIN Help Pope Paul care for a lepar child, feed • gious neutrality," are making the bonored their· promise lmd they General Motors), a huge bever age industry (with marvelous . Christian training of children inllIE hungry baby, teach a blind boy to 'read', brln. :worked together. HOLY the sacraments to the young and aging alike. creasingly difficult. . Thus .Betancourt started out beer, excellent wine and cor FAllIER Share at the same time In the Holy Father's A Protestant said that Protes with a comfortable majortity as dials). And they have built up NOW Masses and prayers and In the sacrifices of all ants .must. confront all political ;. result of this triple alliance. through protective tariffs an ex our priests and Sisters.••• How to help? Simply But as time went on Betancourt's ·tremely diversified manufactur-. parties with a challenge to face . Join (and enroll your friends) In this Association. ' a situation in which "a circle of majority slipped and he became ing industry. The dues for your family are only $100 for life. Business has been operating anti-Chrisian educational ex • minority president. Caldera of $10 for a year. For one person: $25 for life, COPEI stayed with him until the under a so-called four year plan perts" are monopolizing govern $2 for a year. We'll send you (or the parson you end. Thus for the first time in which, began in 1963 and ran ment policy in the administra enroll) one of our new membership certificates. . the history of Venezuela an through 1966. This plan called tion of schools. elected president completed his for an increase of eight per cent I ' A Catholic educator, charging per year in the gross national that only two classes in religion term: product. We here in this country a week are permitted, said the To elect a successor to Betan WITHOUT The Holy Father uses stringless gifts In any eourt, Accion Democrataca put think we're doing marvelously religious tr'aining issue in Berlin STRINGS amount ($5,000, $1,500, $500, $100, $50, $21. up Leoni, COPEI ran Caldera when, as, last year, we came up' is not between Protestants· and $10, $5, $2) where they're needed most:-' *gain, URD ran Villalba. Caldera .six per cent. Normally in recent Catholics but between Christians
was· second with 22 per cent of years 'we've been d~ing from and atheists.
He said Christian teachers
the vote, up sharply from the 15 three per cent to three and a ·half must pool their common inter
per cent he got five years before. per cent. A For only $10 you can feed a family of Palestine It is Interesting that the oil ests and activity in the field of Leoni continues the policy of BARGAIN refugees for a monthl In thanks, we'll send you Betancourt and seems to be industry is permitted to grow religious education. an Oliva Wood RosaI)' from the Holy LanclJ. building up a stronger economy. only at the rate of four per cent The terrorism which hit Vene.;. a year. Manufacturing, instead, -----~-----------CO lmela so hard in the last days of must go up at a rate ·of 13 per As of the moment Venezuela DGlU BNCLOSED PLI!ABII !'IHD $ _ Betancourt has disappeared. cent. These two are realistic has tremendous foreign "Invest Monsignor Nolam FOFlI _ operations. !]['here is still some guerilla fight ments, m·ostly in oil and iron ore. When he was inaugurated on There is about $3.5 billion worth llng in the remote areas but the Please NAMl!: ,;;:... _ March 11, 1964, President Leoni of direct foreign and private in
armed reoellions which 13etan return coupon
<oourt had to put down from time promised to continue the policies vestment in Venezuela, about with your OTRBlrr _ of Betancourt in operating an $2.8 billion of· which is from the ~ time have not recurred under offering Leoni, and it doesn't look as if economy which would be friend Unite.d States. OITY' I3TATII _ _ ZIP C O D E ilhey are going to. ly to private investment both fo It comes as a surprise to most Fascinating Economy metic and foreign. of us that Venezuela as a source Till CATHOUC NIAll IIABT WBLPARI ASBDCIATIDIII The four-year plan calls for of American investment ranks Now, let's take a look at the"Y economy. It's a fascinating econ $8 billion worth of new invest third after Canada and the omy. When you think of the ment over the period and they United Kingdom. Canada counts economy in Venezuela you think expect 50 per cent of that to about $12 billion and the United ~ oil gushing out of the country come from private savings with , Kingdom about $3.8 billion. Most IIide, and, of course, this has been in Venezuela. 37 per cent will of our money is in oil and iron FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preaklllllt the modern history of the coun- come from the Venezuelan gov ore but the Bethlehem Steel MSBR. JOHN Cl. NOLAN, National Secretary ky. ., . ernment and 13 per cent will Company and the United States Write: CATHOLIO NIIAIt EAsT WELFARE Aaoo. Keep in mind. that 30 per come from abroad (foreign in Steel Company are working 130 Madison Avenu•• New York, N.Y. 1001' ~nt 'of the gross nationaJ. prod vestors and foreign govern tremendous iron ore deposita ill TeI.phone 212/yukon 8-5840 _ of Venezuela comes from oil, ments). This, too, seems realistic. eastern Venezuela
To Speak Sunday On CUlrrl<ent Titles
ETHIOPIA: GOD'S HOUSE FIRST
_OIl
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NEAR ,EAST, MISSIONS
Theologians Role Is Faithfulness To Authority
Plan Discussions
For Pastors
In Illinois
NAPLES (NC) - Catholic theologians who are teaching others must remain faithful '00 the teachings of the mag
SPRINGFIELD (NC) A statewide program of "ec umenical consultations" be tween Protestant and Roman
Jsterium (teaching authority) at the Church or fail to fulfill their function. This was the opinion expressed by Bishop Carlo Colombo, bead of the theological faculty ef the Catholic University of Milan and often a personal theological consultant to Pope Paul VI. He spoke on the first day of a Na tional Italian Theological Con vention . "Each can be a theologian by himself," Bishop Colombo said, "but if he has been appointed by the authentic magisterium to the office of teaching others, .to a shared magisterium, he cannot <exercise this service unless he is in full harmony with that (au thority) which assigns it to him." Bishop Colombo, citing state ments of Pope Pius XII", de clared that "no one has the right of compromising others' faith or spiritual life, since the right of communicating the fruit of one's own studies or reflections is not greater than another's right, that of not threatening the certainty of divine truth." . Theologians' dependence on the Magisterium, Bishop Colom bo said is. evident since the "Church. has the right of declar ing where there is error or dan ger of error, of protecting its own faithful from error, per suaded as it is that every soul, even the single or smallest one, has the right of being nourished by truth and protected from error." . The means of accomplishing the latter changes with the times, Bishop Colombo said. However, he continued, the following principle remains valid for all time: "Anyone writing or sp'eaking of theological matters brings into playa witness, and his witness is not authentic nor does it edify the Christian community unless it is part of the great authentic witness which by means of the Holy Spirit has been brought into play in the magisterium of the successors of the Apostles. The co~munion and dependence on the magisterium are thus the necessary .condition for having. eertitude, which also is its own witness that it is sustained by the spirit of Christ who gives life to the Church." Bishop Colombo also rejected the idea 9f those who maintain that the Church's magisterium applies only to matters of faith and not to matters of morals arising from revelation or natu ral law. Finally, citing Pope Paul VI, Bishop Colombo pointed out that the charisma, or special gifts of the Holy' Spirit, are not equally distributed among all, and that it is Christ's will that the Church is to be the judge in these cases.
Irish Bishops Plan Youth Centers DUBLIN (NC) - A program planncd by the Irish bish0p.s to provide practical help for the 350,000 teenagers in Ireland was announced here by Father Mi chael Neville, president and founder of Ireland's Youth Apostolate. In addition to providing spir itual and recreational assistance to that country's youth, the cen ters will include employment agencies, a branch of the Marian Employment Agency for those who Intend to emigrate, and a branch of the Vocational Bureau. It is expectcd the program will be put into effect within four or five mo"
CYO: Msgr. Thomas J. Leonard, a priest of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, has been named the director of the Youth Department, U. S. Catholic Confl~rence, Washington, succeeding the. Rt. Rev. Frederick· J. Ste phenson who has been ap. pointed pastor of St. John Chrysostom Church, Wal Iingf9k-d, pa.. NC Photo
Rol~
of Po rents In U.S. Deplored LONDON (NC)-An English priest just back from 3. tour of the United States warned par ents here of the dangers of ex cessive interest in material suc cess. Rev. Michael Quigley, S.M.A., 43, spent three months in the United States 011 a Win ston Churchill fellowship. Father Quigley said: "There are over 17 million teenagers in America who have no I'eal home life. This fact is due, he contin ued, not only to the high inci dence of divorce in the U. S. but to the fact that many parents devote their time to the pur suit of material things and not tt> their children. Father Quigley went on: "The same thing is nOW taldng place m Britain wllere both parents are werking to get money for more material possessions. These people are not working for ne cessities." In the United States he said, the need of the moment is a second car and a color tele vision set. The Religious also warned parents of the danger of attempt ing to be brothers and sisters to their children instead of impos ing on them true parental disci pline.
Housing Project COLOMBO (NC)-A low-cost housing project is being launched here in Ceylon. by a relief service opened by Thomas Cardinal Cooray, O.M.L, of Co lombo.
Catholic pastors is beingplaB1af1l here this Spring. . Dr. Allan E. Schoff of Spring field, executive of the illinois Synod, U nit e d Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A., is chair ·man of the consultations pro gram. Msgr. Lawrence H. Wis kirchen, chairman of the Ecu menical Commission of the Ro man Catholic diocese of Spring field and rector of the diocesan seminary, is vice chairman. -Ur. W. Harold Loyd, assistant .to' Bishop Lance Webb, Methodist bishop of Southern Illinois, is secretary. Woi'lting Partnership The program was initiat~d last September by Bishop Webb, who invited Protestant and Catholic leaders of southern Illinois to a meeting in Springfield. The Catholic bishops of Belleville, Peoria and Springfield sent rep resentatives to the meeting. , Msgr. Wiskirchen represented Bishop William A. O'Connor of Springfield. Msgr. Wiskirchen said here that the purpose of the consulta tions is to provide pastors with an· opportunity to learn more about ecumenism before they at tempt to tell'ch it to their con gregations. Dr. Schoff commented: "If C'll'istians of different denomi national persuasions in local communities are to discover their oneness in Christ as a working partnership, it is ex tremely important that their spiritual leaders know each other as persons." Pilot Program Methodist past.ors will convene the consultations in downstate communities and Presbyterian clergymen will initiate them in the northern section of the state. "In some of the larger cities," Dr: Schoff stated, "as many as 130 to 150 pastors may be to gether for the experiment." Msgr. Wiskirchen said that most of· the consultations will begin after Easter and continue through Pentecost, but that a pilot program is currently un derway in Peoria. He said that the "clergymen will start off their consultations with a discussion of Scripture.
Seminary Closings Now .Postponed BONN (NC)-The meeting tn Warsaw of Poland's mixed Church-state commission result ed in postponement of the threatened closing of four sem inaries. according to· KNA, Ger man Catholic news agency. An other meeting is scheduled for mid-January. In a New Year's Day sermon, Auxiliary B ish 0 p Zygmunt Choromanski of Warsaw said that the meeting of the mixed Church-state commission solved practically nothing as far as the· basis of the dispute is concerned.
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FIRE-I<'IGHTER: Brother Christopher Coccia, OFM., a veteran fire-fighter, was re cently .elected president of toe Rye Beach, N. H,. volun teer fire department. Accept .' ing leadership of the 35-man department, the 29-year~old Franciscan revived an an cient tradition; Franciscans ; organized Europe's first fire brigades. NC Photo
Plan Christian' Unity Week Observances BALTIMORE (NC)--Lawrence Cardinal Shehan has requested pastors of the Baltimore arch diocese to cooperate with neigh boring Protestant churches in scheduling services marking Christian Unity Week, Jan. 18-25. Cardinal Shehan suggested that each parish share in arrang ing for two special ecumeJlical services during the week-one to be held in .the parish church and the other in a neighboring Pl"Otestant church. This will be the first time that such a large scale ecumenical effort has been undertaken in the an~hdiocese. "Our people should be encour aged to attend and. participate in approved ecumenical services held in churches other than our own, and Protestant visitors should be welcomed at such services in our churches," the cardinal said.
NEW YORK (NC) - Directol'l of Catholic cemeteries of the New York archdiocese and the Brooklyn, N. Y. 4iocese ex pressed "deep regret" over a strike by unionized gravediggers against Catholic, Jewish and < non-sectarian cemeteries in the New York metropolitan area. In a statement cemetery of ficials said they "deeply regret" that the 1,700 members of Local 365, Cemetery Workers and Greens Attendants, "unexpect edly rejected the new contract recommended to them by their union leadership." The directors "deplore the un usual burden that ha~ been placed on the already heavy hearts of the bereaved in the care of their deceased loved ones, and urge union members to return to work," the statement said. "Bodies are now being placed in receiving vaults," the state ment continued, "but because of very limited space, a more criti cal situatioiI will soon exist." '
Help· Set Up Family., Counseling Service PARK RIDGE (NC) - Two ' priests in this New Jersey area' have joined with six Protestant' . clCl'gymen"and two public school' psychologists to establish a fam ily counseling service. Father Edward V. Duffy of" Our Lady of Mercy parish here" and Father Mark J. Dooley, who is establishing a new parish in neal'by Woodcliff Lake, will· serve on the Interborough Coun- . seling Service, designed to assist people of all faiths and no faith from four communities. Supervising the project will be M. Lewis Engber and Roben Schonhorn, psychologists wiUa the Park Ridge sch~ol system.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jan. 12,1967
Fatima Jubilee Prepa rations ,
The Pari5h Parade
1ST. MARGARET. BUZZARDS BAlY SS. Margaret-Mary Guild has set 8 Saturday night, Jan. 28 as the tentative time and date for the .next in a series of whist parties planned as a fund raising project. The events are held at Sr. Margaret's kindergarten. An executive board! meeting is get for· Wednesday, Jan. 25 at the home 'Of Marion Ellis, 52 St. Margaret Street, Bm~zards Bay. The next regular meeting will take place at 8 Wednesday night, Feb. 1 in the parochial school hall. Mrs. Mary FuXIer, youth chairman, is in charlge of pro gram arrangements. New guild members are wel oome at any meeting. OUR lLADlY OF ANGIELS, Jli'ALlL RlIVEJIt
New Holy Name Society offi.".. cers include Joseph M. Theodore, president;, Lawrence Benevides Jr., vice-president; Alfred M. Mello, treasurer; Antone Mi chaels, secretary. Arrangements for the annual parish malasada supper to be held from 6 to 8 Saturday night,
Feb. 4 in the parish hall will be
under the direction of Lawrence
Benevides, Arthur Rega, Joseph Theodore and Mrs. Mary Silvia. . Dancing will follow true supper until 11 o'clock. ' Forty Hours devotion will open in the parish at 4 tomorrow afternoon with celebration of high Mass and' a procession.
ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVIER A crazy hat contest will fea ture the Women's Guild meeting at 8 tonight. The annual parish mid-Winter Gala will be held Saturday night,. Jan. 28 at Venus de Milo restau rant. The program will include a buffet supper, dancing and entertainment. Prizes will be awarded. CYO members will sponsor a hot dog and bean supper from 5:30 to 7 Saturday night, Jan. 21 in the school hall. Tickets are available at the rectory and from members. The parish adult theology class has been discontinued for the remainder of the school year. ,
LEIRIA (NC)-The widenIng of roads around Fatima and the consideration of a plan to con struct a landing strip for helicop ters and air taxis are among the' preparations being made for the golden jubilee commemoration of Our Lady's apparitions a~ Fatima, to be held from May to October. It was disclosed that 13 pil grimages from the U. S. ha.ve been scheduled for May 12 and 13. . The commemoration will be gin May 12 with an offering of flowers from all over the world. A Marian Congress will be held May 4 to 8. Other plans call for the erection of temporary build ings with 1,000 beds. Expanded train service is con templated, but, because the rail road station is 15,miles from the shrine, most pilgrims are expect ed to travel by highway•
~
l!lIOLJl GHOS'll', A'li'TlLEBORO Sister Mary Mercy, RS.M., principal of Bishop Feehan High School, will speak at a meeting of the Women's Guild to be held tonight. All women of the parish are invited. A social hour will follow th·e meeting.
S8~1l'n~p
Say Priest I nvclved In .nvas~onAttempt KEY WEST (NC)-An exiled Haitian priest was among a group arrested here for allegedly plotting to overthrow Haiti's President Francois Duvalier. He is Father Jean Baptiste Georges, who has been released on a rec':' ognizance bond. The group reportedly intended to invade Haiti, take over that country and then use it as a base of operations against the Cuban government of Premier Fidei Castro. Father Georges, who served as Haitian minister of education from 1957 to 1959, escaped to· the Dominican Republic in 1963. He had taken refuge in that coun try's embassy in the Haitian cap ital of Port-au-Prince when he learned that President Duvaiier's special police were going'tO ld.ll him.
Speaks
Continued from Page One have the happy facility of bring- . ing God close to us all." The Bishop commented on the enthusiasm and numbers of those present those attending in formal attire numbered five thousand persons from every· ST. JOHN BAPTIS'li'. area of the Diocese. He signalled CENTRAL VILLAGE ·out the St. Vincent de Paul men A potluck supper formerly an nounced for members of the· and the ladies of the' Diocesan Ladies Guild only, hIlS been Council of Catholic Women who opened to all parishioners and organize each year this out will be held at 7:30 tonight in . standing social event that sup VISIT NASA: 1967 is the year· the National Aeronau 1lhe' parish hall. Entertainment ports the diocesan work for the . will feature Biblic~l folk songs mentally retarded. tics and Space Administration hopes to bring the U. S. closer In the course of the, talk, the by children from 88. Peter and Bishop complimented the young to the moon voyage with Project Apollo. .lJardware to be Paul School, Fall River. ladies~from the various areas of . used was viewed recently by these grade school children ST. JOAN OF ARC, th8"Diocese 'who were presented from Christ the King School in Jacksonville, Fla., as they
ORLEANS to him by their fathers. toured the space cente~ at Gape Kennedy. NC Photo The new slate of officers of the The ball room·, decorated in St. Francis G.uild for this year are: Mrs; . various shades O'f pink,:Was the ..JllJ).e Kee,nan, president;; Mrs. scene of socializing imd dancing Residence ~obert Peno, ,vice-pr~si4ent;, 14> ~e tunes of, Vincent Lopez FOR YOUNG WOMEN . ~rs ..Thomas Govett, se(~retary; who was invited· to play at the 196 Whipple 'St., Fall River State Board in' New}ersey Rec~mmends l\IIrs.. Agnes Rohmer, treasurer. Ball again this.year after a most Conducted by Franciscan Mrs. Gordon Harris will serve enthusiastic reception' last year. 'Co~rse Part 'of School' Curriculum Missionaries of Mary. as chairman for the social sched ROOMS • MEALS. uled for Friday night, Feb. 3. TRENTON' (NC) - A recom tutions cogniia·nt of what is de OVERNIGHT HOSPITAUn Commission Advises mendation that local· school sirable, what 'is 'possible and Inquire 673-7890 boards provide' sex education. as what is wise." , ~.# , • • • • • • •" • • • • ~. Service at Wakes part of school curriculums has TRENTON (NC) -The Dioc . been made here in a policy state esan Liturgical Commission of ment iss'ued by the New· Jersey Trenton has recommended use .Board of· Education. ,OTTAWA (NC)-A4eclaration of the Christian wake service marking the 1967 centennfial ob Dr. Marvin Levy, supervisor throughout the diocese in place ,~ servance of Canada's confedera of health and safety education .of the recitation of the'Rosary at tion' ha~ been endorsed here· by wakes. for the state education \ depart 34 religious bodies including ment, in presenting the policy The Christian wake service Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, statement to the board, said sex consists of psalms alternately .Jewish and other faiths. education is "more than repro The declaration, sponsored by recited by priest and people and duction or sex act education." readings from Sacred Scripture. the Canadian Interfaith C\)Dfer The policy statement asserts that In recommending the change, . "the ence, ~ill be read at religious primary purpose of sex edu services throughout the country the commission stressed that in cation is to promote more whole no instance is the wake service some family and inter-personal during January. to be substituted for the Rosary relationships and, therefore, It asks prayers for the coun try's growth "in brotherhood, without the consent of the fam-. more complete lives." without fear, without arro!/ance, ily of the deceased. The com The statement notes that "sex without servility, in constant mission said "the choice of the Deposits Welcomed in Multiples of·
education is a responsibility family is to be respected even if pursuit of righteousness." wh~ch should be shared by the up to $30,000-on Single and Joint Accounb
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../views and feelings of the priest;" home, church and school." Arkansas GUCllll'di~n "Schools," the statement said, DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR "are important agencies in the Offers New leok May Lift Repressive development of healthy habits of ~ebruary, May, August and November LITTLE ROCK (NC) - The living and moral values. There Guardian, newspaper of the Lit~ ,Measures in CeylonAll Deposits Insured ill) lFull fore, the department of educa COLOMBO (NC) - Ceylon's
tie Rock Diocese here in Arkan tion recommends t~at appropri minister of state, J. R Jayewar
sas, has a new look. ate programs in sex education be The ·paper has adopted offset dene, has indicated that the gov printing, having shifted from the ernment may take steps to miti developed by educational inst! gate the hardship caused to the letter press printing technique. Church by the nationalization of Financial conSiderations to Bishop Dies gether with a shortage of help private schools in 1960. The minister said that. some led Bishop Albert L. Fletcher BERLIN (NC) - Bishop Jan to close the print shop: He plans repressive measures introduced Kanty Lorek,' C.M., head of the. since 1960 will be revised in a lr,) sell the shop equipment.-A lommercial North Little Rock new system of education that the diocese of Sandomierz, Poland, Main Office: 4 Winthrop Street, Taunton
pdnt shop will do the offset cabinet is scheduled to draft since March. 1946, died -the~e 0IlI. Branch Office: 1409 Fall River Ave., .Seekonk
shorti)'. J8B. ~ at the age of 80. work for the diocesan paper.
Sex' Educa'tion as
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rHE ANCHOR-D,iocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jon. 12,1967
Key 'Narry Tilt Tomorrow
Durfee and ,Stang Leading Bristol County Hoop loop
19
Jim Bradshaw 01 Taunton
,A~gre§§ive Stonehill
1i'wo area interscholastic basketball leagueS are be ginning to fall into the I2xaci pattern that prognosticators predicted before the current campaign started only a few weeks ag<>. IDurfl2l2 of Fall River and Bishop Stang High of North ID art m 0 u t h arl2 ~rched atop the Bristol undefeated New Bedford High basketeers in a first place deadCuunty loop while Holy Fam lock with the perennial powerily High of New Bedford and house Somerville in the Greater
For'Vard
ILnbera'] AlItS Soph, Majoring in English BYl .1l0JE MIIIt&NIDA\
His worth to O'Brien was not only scoring, however, as the 220-pound Bradshaw is an ex cellent rebounder, an aggressive performer and is quickly picking up Stonehill defensive patterns. Case of Swansea are deadlocked Boston suburban league. Dur<GYaduated Cum Laude xor first place in the Narragan fee's only two losses this season The 19-year old St. Joseph's of sett competition. were administered by the Crim- No. Dighton parishioner is consid son Whalers who have chalked ered a good student and had an The latter tie will epd tomor excellent class room record at row night when the two Narry up eight straight victories. Coyle where he. was graduated front runners meet head-on In Fairhaven High, which for- in 1964 cum laude. Swansea. merly competed in the Bristol An honor roll student through Meanwhile, Fall lRiver broth County loop, is off to an excel- out his four years at Coyle, ers, Tom and Jack Doyle are lent start in its initial season in Bradshaw was voted into the chI p pin g" the Capeway Conference. Coach National Honor Society during in their abare Wayne Wilson's undefeated Blue high school but basketbal buffs :!Cor the two Devils hope to continue their throughout the Fall River Dio Bristol County all-winning skein at th.e expense cese recognized him for h.is tal leaders. Tom of Barnstable High at the latter's ent on the hardwood. plays an all-im court tom9 rrow night, and, Although Jim only played portant part in thereby stay out in front in the basketball at Coyle, he is also the Hilltoppers' Capeway flag race. a capable baseball player and powerful attack Feehan High takes on a far, performed for Sacred Heart in while Jack less formidable opponent in the Taunton CYOLeague. is one of the North Attleboro tomorrow night &11 Bristol County do e pen d than it-ran into in Durfee in its Jim was a starter for the War ablesCoach last outing. Coach Ray Charron's riors for three years and one of J 0 h n O'Brien Rocketeers showed last Tuesday the best products Lanagan has has employed to I 1hey are a club to be reckoned had since taking over the Coyle keep his North I with when they forced Attleboro coaching reins from Jim Burns. Dartmouth Spar- ! High to the limit before the latBradshaw was named to sev tans in the pen ter combine eked out a 56-52 eral All-Bristol County League ant race. Coach ':Jfobo--- win. Only one point separated teams as a junior and made Tom (S kip) O'Brien the rivals at the end of the third every All-BCL team published Karam's Durfee combine, which quarter as the Blue and White during his senior campaign. crushed Bishop Feehan High of Jewelers stretched their mastery As a sophomore, the talentem Attleboro on Tuesday last, 79 over North into the 21st straight Warrior forward helped Coyle 51, faces an easy opponent in year. Attleboro has bested North make an excellent showing in Taunton High at the latter'a every year since 1945. the New England Catholic tour-court tomorrow llight. Led by Coach Jim Cassidy's Attleboro nament and was selected as the the aggressive rebounding ace quintet entertains the Coyle tourney's most valuable player ErnIe Fleming, the Fall River Warriors tomorrow night in in the annual De La Salle event club toppled Feehan from the another league encounter. at Newport. , unbeaten ranks after six straight A capacity crowd is certain to James Redmond Bradshaw, an triumphs. be on hand for Holy Family honor roll student at Msgr. Coyle Stang is favored to continue High's invasion of Swans,ea for High of Taunton is now, further its winning wayS in the county the Case engagement tomorrow tng,. his education and ,helping circuit when it tackles New Bed':' night aS,Steve Lawless and Den- his college's backetball ,team, at ford Vocational at the latter's riis Kennedy attempt to extend '$tonehill in North Easlon., court tomorrow night. 'The the New Bedford club's ']ong , ' A 6-4 forward, who"conipUed O'Brienmen stayed a,breast of string of victories. an outstanding hoop record WlDurfee by barely edging Msgr. Diman Vocational, :toppled der.Jim Lanagan at Coyle, ill a Coyle High of Taunton, 79-76; from the unbeaten ranks by' Case, sophomore' in a Liberal Artll on Tuesday last. will be at home to meet Dightoncourse with a major in English Stang's .I5-point bl#~ge. shrunk Rehoboth which 'bested, Msgr. ,ot· Stonehill. to a,mere three after Craig' Wil Prevost High of Fall River, 44,., First 011 F01ll1l' liams was banished from the fray 38, in"last Tuesday night's 'league 'The son of Mr. and Mrs. via the "personal foul route. Ken game. This encounter will pit Clement Bradshaw of 1160 :Phelan tossed in 23 ,points for high scorin'g llutch Cabral of the Somerset· Avenue' in Taunton, the Spartans while ' George Rf!!gJ.onalS against' sharp-eyed Jim is the oldest of, fouY boys Hathaway collected" 25 for .the and setting an example for hiD scrappy Taunton aggregation. Walt Korzeniowskl of the' Artisbrothers to follow. Vocational was a 68-58 winner ans. They contributed 25 and 21 points for their clubs in their Jim's younger brothers 'tire over Taunton High Tuesday last ga,mes. Terrance, junior at Coyle, Wii night. lim, a sophomore at Coyle, ,and Meanwhile, defending. cham- , Coach Dick Bessette's Seekonk Thomas, an eighth gJ;'ader ~ pion Holy Family High is living Warriors will vie ,with Prevost Sacred Heart School in Taunton. up to pre-sea, in the other Narry' game tomor- The grammar school youth'livefl son pYedictions. row night. It will be played" at athletics according ~ Mro. the Fall River team's home court. Bradshaw. Coach Jack Nobrega's parochiIn addition to the Fairhaven'Coach Fran O'Brien is c9unt al school team -:":"':' Barnstable, d:lash, three other lng, heavily on Bradsb;~W's sbU. will be seeking : f , Capeway Conference games are ities on the basketball court this on tap tomorrow' night. They season to help spell tbe StoneNarry win when-;, ~ ... " , are: Falmouth at Dartmouth, hill regulars. ' it invades the ( Bourne at Old Rochester (Matta- Big Stonebill Helper Case gymnasium, ~ . , , poisett), and Wareham at DenTo date, Bradshaw has, lived in Swansea to-, ~'i" nis-Yarmouth. UlP' to his reputation as a hoop morrow night in . Three Cape-Vineyard League ster. In the first five games of n tilt that will :" contests billed tomorrow the season, Jim was called Gil decide the sole f night. They m'e: Harwtch at Nalll- regularly to fill An xor Ron first place club. ' , oot, Chatham at Sandwich and Richard, also a former Coyle The New Bed- i J' Martha's Vineyard I11t -PYovinciB- !lt8r, and did so admirably. ford school wal- :' 1oW1ll. During that e2li"ly ;pan, Jfim loped Somerset. , ' "'.__..__ ' a2-20, at the lat.Jack ter's court TuesNobyega day night to win theiy thircll :ti ON CAPE COD otraight loop game of the curren~ 'ri seaSon while Coach Bob GOTo don's Cardinals were forced int«!> overtime to turn back previously undefeated Diman Vocational! of Fall River, 59-52. The d':fense-minded ArtisallB, who led at the first three" stops" were outscored 8..;2 in the extra stanza. And, while in~rest ~eighteDII , ,AMPLE; PARKING in the county and Narry circuits, Coach Rouer Lemenager has -bAa"
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JAMES BRADSHAW QF TAUNTON ,,'
tossed 59 poin~ ,~~rough tp,e sti-ings an4, tWi,ce ~urned in, s~fl" gle game outPU'I1, 0,£ 20 poil).ts. ,tq help Stonehill ,to a good stf!or~. '." "He averaged U.,8, third an;long Stonehill player~w.:Qile repi~p,ipg tE:ammates' in "the. lineup, '~ittu~r, at ,gUa'rd_ or fOT~i(rd. ' ' : ' ,'I' )fim w,~ b,ec~I\lipg, know.:n, (!;\S an putstanqing ,1;,a*etball pr,QIt' pe~tas a 1~-~.~a,r pld bigh s,C?P~l sophomore and by the time he yeached hi-s senior season, Brad shaW was' the owner of the 'all time varsity ,scoring record at Coyle. ' " The versatile hoopster, who is o good ball handler and shoots well inside and outside, had con:' tributed 1,055, points to Coyle High's offense over a three, year period, more ,than any player before him or si.nce. .: , "
The Stonehill student also found time to participate for the Taunton Boys 'Club and' helped his mates win tournaments m Pawtucket \a:nd, 'Fall River.' . In th'e' Fad River tournamen~ of 1964: jim 'w'as chosen as too, most valuabl~ 'player, which ter';' minated ' his' days as a, high school st'lident a most'succt::ss ful note.' . ., .' ,
on
James Red.mQ.7)d, Bradsh~w ha:$, come 'a long way since his days at Sacred Heart Grammar School when the most important thing in his recreational life was a stamp col1ecti~Jl, which by the way has been passed down 10 each brother.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Jon. 12, 1967
Prayer for Unity Services
f
Continued from Page One . The personal response to this exercise of Christian Hope is what Vatican II calls "a change of heart" required in every ehristian and which must be ex perienced by the whole Christian community. The Diocesan Commission for Christian Unity has initiated programs on the area level of. the diocese in conjunction with clergy and ministerial associa 'tions in the areas. Fall River A week of inten;;e prayer and supplication has been planned for the Greater Fan River Area. An official prayer-service shall 'be conducted in olle of the Fall River Catholic Churches at 7:30 P:M. daily in which all churches of the area are 'invitedto partici- , pate. Developing the theme "Called ro One Hope" (Ephes. 4:4), the stations for the Christian Unity, Week have been designated as: Wednesday, Jan. ]8: st. Mary's Cathedral, Spring street. Thursday, Jan. Ji9: St. Mi chael's Church, Esse:'!: Street. Friday, Jan. 20: St. William's Church, Chicago Street. Saturday, Jan. 2J: St. Anne Church, South MaiN Street. Sunday, Jan. 22: St. Patrick ~chool Hall, Slade Street. Here the Inter-Faith Service of the Prayer Octave will be jointly sponsored 'by St. Patrick's Par ish, the Commission for Chris tian Unity and the Fall Riv.er Clergy Association. The clergy of 'all denominations will partici pate. Monday, Jan. 23: Kotre Dame Church, Notre Dame street. Tuesday, Jan. 24: St. Stanis laus Church, Rockland Street. Wednesday, Jan. 25: Holy'Ros ary Church, Beattie Street.
St. Augustine's Church, Vineyard Haven; Rev. David Lyons, Grace . Episcopal Church; Rev. H. O. Emmette, C h l' i s t Methodist Church and ,Rev. George Hill, ME:thodist Church. Attleboro Unity Week will open in the Attleboro Area with a special Mass to 1;le celebrated at St. John's Church, Attleboro, at 7:30 on Wednesday evening, Jan. 18. Members of all faiths are invited. A novena of pJ;ayers will be offered at St. John's Church each evening at the same hour. The ,Week pf Christian Unity. will close on Wednesday eve.. ' ning at 7:30, Jan. 25, with a spe cial prograrn to be held at Attle-
Rev. James F. Lyons, admin istrator of St. Peter's Churcill. Dighton, and Rev. Harold J. Will son, assistant at the Holy FamiU7 Church, East Taunton, will rep resent the Catholic clergy. Representing the other denom inations will be Rev. Roger Wil son of 51. Thomas Episcopal[ Church, Taunton, and Rev. Johlli Gilbert of the Dighton Methodis~ Church.
The three lay readers will be
George Shaw, First Congrega
tional Church. Raynham; Rich ard Martin, St. Joseph's Parish, Nq. Dighton; John Olsen of the Lutheran Church, Raynham. The Civic Chorus of Tauntoll1l will present the musical porUoa of ~he program.
The 8 . Annual l;eluxe Escorted Tour Of
, (Sobject to go;ernmcRt BI.proval) °lu&sed uf»on double OCCUIU1DC7
this low price includes •••
* ROUND TRIP JET FARE'
FULL MEALS IDAILY ** 3HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS
*
*
WI'I'.R
BATII
DlELUXIE MOTOR COACH TRANS(lltORTATION SIGHTSEEING (..a al,cci1lecU
'
THE ONLY IRISH TOUR THAT INCLUDES ALL THESE EXTRAS A T NO ADDITIONAL CHARGE
RIVER SHANNON CRUgSE/MEDIEVAL BANQUET AT BUNRATTY CASTLE/I IRISH NIGHT AT GALWAY/ABBEY THEATRE/ IRISH CABARET / JAUNT ING CAR HI.DE AROUND THE LAKES OF KILLARNEY/BLARNEY CASTLE/ 3 FULL IRISH MEALS DAILY . VISIT ,THE FOLLOWING FAMOUS TOWNS AND CITIES OF IREl AND
. Shannon-Killaloe-Glens of Aherlow -Cliffs of Moher-Limerick-Ennis- Gort-Galway-Connemara-Cong_' _Leenane-Maam Cross--Oilghterard Headford-Claremorris--Knock_KiI_ kelly-Sligo--Bundoran-Enniis-Killen
Sisters of Mercy P'lan Peru ,Mission
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bol'O High School. The program St. George Greek Orthodox: will include hymlls, psalms, and Church and Protestant churches a homily followiilg the guide- whose clergy are members of the lines published by the Friars of New Bedford Ministerial Asso the Atonement, Gnlymoor, N. Y. ciation will, hold similar proNew Bcdfol'd grams. Scheduled for the New BedTaunton ford area are open houses and a The clergy and laity of all panel discussion on WBSM. Four faiths in the Taunton area will Catholic churches will hold participate in a Service of open house on Sunday, Jan. 22' Prayer for Christian Unity to be from'two to four in the aftel'-, held on Sunday evening, Jan. 22, noon. at 7:30 in the Bishop Cassidy Participating in the program' High School Auditorium, Taun-, will be: St. Anthony of Padua ton. Church, Acushnet Avenue, New. ,Rt. Rev. Joseph C. Canty, di Bedford; St. John the Baptist rector of the program in the Church, County Street, New, Taunton area, has announced Bedford; St. Mary's Church,' that there. will be homilies b~' South Dartmouth and St. Mary's . four clergymen and scriptural Church, North Fairhaven. readings by three lay readers.
Areas
th
'Il'he Island Martha's Vineyard'.;; observ ance of Christian Unity Week will be an Inter-Faith Service and Round Table Discussion scheduled at St. Augustine's Hall, Vineyard Haven, for Wed nesday, Jan. 18 at 7::30 in the evening. Taking part in the prayer ser vice will be: Rev. John Perry, Sacred Heart Chureh, Oak Bluffs; Rev. S. Reed, Chatterton Confederated C h u l' C h, Edgar town; Rev. George Hill, Meth odist Church; Rev. Robert Kan agy, Baptist Church; and Rev. Eldon Mills, Congmgational Church. The Round Table DJscussion on "Our Christian Hope" will include: Rev. Donald A. Couza, Sacred Heart Church, Oak Bluffs; Rev. Joseph O'Donnell,
PITTSBURGH (NC) -- Four members of'the Sisters of Mercy of Pittsburgh will op~n a mission next Fall in Chimbote, Peru, a city where the diocese of Pitts burgh is already greatly com mitted. The Sisters will staff a new day nursery and a social r>eryice center. Plans were announced by Mother Mary Thomas Aqui nas, mother general of the order. She recently returned from an eight-day visit to Chimbote with Mother Mary Jerome, mother as sistant, and Father Joseph Knorr, director of the Pittsburgh diocesan Propagation of the Faith office. The diocese of Pittsburgh has four priests assigned to Chimbote and supports through fil)lIncial aid 'a network of schools and clinics, a maternity home, a refuge for the aged and a normal school.
for Various
. Diocesan \
-Clones--Armagh-liIelfast-Portrush -Newcastle_Mountains of MourneDundalk Dublin Bray Glenda lough-Avoc-Wexford-Waterford -Vee Gap..:...cashel-Killarney-Ken_ .mare-Glengariff....,lnchagella_Cork.
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MAY,l, 8. 15, 22, 29, JUNE 5, 12**, 19**, 26** JULY 3**, 10, 17, 24, 31 AUG. 14**, 21 **, 28 SEPT. 4, 11 ,18, 25
°alr fare additional •
Open 9 to 9'
15 STOlUGlHT<l»!M
n:.- ,
]1[00.
tltro lP'rl
9 io 5 SatordlilU
(Uphams Comer)" ~ORCHlESTEIJI, MASS.