• All Medical Problems Aren't In the Books'
~Mar'Yknoll
Physician Is Most Enthusiastic .Overr Expandiwg Guatemalan CFM Program
By Patrica M<.;Gowan She's one of three Sister-doctors servinga' remote Indian community in the mountains of Guatemala. She often sees medical problems that aren't in the books. She began a home visit to Fall River with
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Ar3 A IIc!JO>' of tbe Soul, Sure and Firm-St.
'VoL ]2, Noo
~ © 1968 ,
/Palll
$4.00 per Year PRICE IOc
Jail River, Mas§. Jarra. 18, 1968
hours oi horseback riding because trails from her pueblo are impossible to traverse in any other way. But the~e exploits worthy of a modern St. Paul are .casually dismissed by Sister Maureen Thomas of Mary knoll. What does she really want· to talk about? It's the effect of the Christian Family Movement upon "her" In dians. Brown eyes sparkle and her gestures are an~mated as she describes what CFM has done for family life in mountainous jacaltenango. All the Maryknoll doctors and nurses staffing the 50 bed Jacaltenango hospital have other strings to their bows, she explains. Her special project for the past year has been introduction of the family organization to the Indians. "We have 12 CFM groups going," she said "involving
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75 couples. They've really taught us more than we've taught them." Sister Maureen Thomas said that CFM in Guatemala had been confined to middle-class city dwellers and that her work with rural Indians was the first of its kind. She and the Maryknoll pastors at Jacaltenango developed an adaptation of the city CFM program so successfully that many of their meeting plans have been incorporated into a rural CFM handbook. "We have an advantage in that CFM is one of the few outlets the people have," she noted. "There's no television to compete with our meetings!" A special problem in the pueblo was the traditionally inferior position of Indian women. "At first the women wouldn't speak at all at meetings, and when they did start to talk, you could tell that their husbands were petrified of what they might say. But then you could see how proud the men were when their wives made worthwhile contri~ butions." Tum to Page Three
Di-oc-esan Areas Mark Unity Octave
Martha's Vineyard Rev. Donald A. Couza, pas
Attleboro
The program for -the week A Week of Prayer For Pra.~'er for' Christian Christian Unity will be ob Unity in the Attleboro area served in Dartmouth with will touch, Attleboro" No." two inter-faith services to be
tor of Sacred Heart.Ohurch, . of
Oak Bluffs, is chairman of 'eommittee planning an ex
tended observance of' Church Attleboro and Mahsfield. A held on successive Fridays Bible Vigil will be conducted . January 19th and January 26th. Unity Octave on· Martha's Vine The opening service will' be fOrd. An island-wide program every evening at 7:30 in St. &>egan Monday night with com Jo.hn the Evangelist Church, held Friday evening, Jan. 19 at 7:30' at St. Mary's Church. ".mity gatherings for interfaith Attleboro, however, on Tuesday, _tty services in Edgartown, . Jan. 23 a joint Service of Pniyer Among the clergy to participate Oak Bluffs, Vineyard Haven will constitute the EcumenIcal in the service are: Rev. Nehe Service. miah Boynton III, pastor of the Mld Chilmark. The program is being co South Dartmouth Congregation : Fot· thc next five Monday sponsored . by the Attleboro al Church, who will preach at WlTenings discussion meetings :will be held .for small groups Area Council of Churches and the service; the Rev. John N. McLaughlin, rector of St. lift each of the four towns, using the Roman Catholic parishes in the area. Peter's Episcopal Church; and iii text the well-known "Living Turn to Page Eighteen Turn to Page Eighteen Turn to Page Eighteen
G. M. O'Hara
Is Knight Of Malta . George M; O'Hara Sr. 783 lou t h Dartmouth Street, .uth Dartmouth and Pres ident of George M. O'Hara Chevrolct of New Bedford was &.wested MOnday liS a Magistral Knight of the ~overeign Mili I8l'y Order of Malta in St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York. Yhc investiture was per limned by Archbishop John J. Maguirc, K.M., Administrator If the AI'chdiocese of New York Turn to Page Eighteen
Cape Cod
South Dartmouth
The Commission for Chris An Interfaith Unity Prayel" tian Unity oil the Cape Cod Serv.ice will be held. at 7 :30 Area has planned services' Sund-ay night in St. Mary's for members of all faiths at . Church, Taunton, sponsored a liturgical service scheduled' for 7:30 Sunday evening, Jan. 21 in the Wesleyan Methodist Church, East Dennis. Rev. Joseph A. Nolin, M.S., pastor of Our Lady of the Cape Church, Brewster, and area di rector for the Diocesan Commis sion for Christian Unity will de liver the sermon. Rev. Peter Marshall, minister of the East Dennis Church, will serve as host clergyman.
Bishop .ClQ)nrtlolly to Address Protestant Groups In Their Somerset and Newport Churches . Bishop Comlolly, contin uing his leadership in ecu menical activities, will speak on Ecumenism in connection with the Week of Prayer for' Christian Unity in two Protes'". tant churches. On Sunday, Jan. 21, the Fall River Ordinary will give the sermon at St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Newport, RI. and on ThullSday, Jan. 25, he will preach at the Episcopal Church of Our Saviour, Somerset. . . Also taking part in ecumeni cal activities will be Bishop
Anson Phelps Stokes, Episcopal -Bishop of Massachusetts, who will speak at an ecumenical service at Our Lady of Fatima ehurch, Swansea. :. . . The observance of Christian Unity Week has always been a highlight of January religious activity in the Diocese of Fall River. However, with the lead ership of Bishop Connolly and the spirit of Vatican II, the prayerful observance has taken on real activity in the field of ecumenism. As good often is wrought . from pain or suffering, Chris-
tian Unity in the Diocese took a firm external aspect with the funerals of Pope John XXIII and President Kennedy. Representatives of the' Fall River Ministerial Association and officers of Temple Beth-el were invited by Bishop Con nolly to participate in the rites. Their acceptance of places of honor in the cathedral and fra ternal exchanges with the bish op then permitted the spirit of Vatican II to be a normal part of religious activitiy in the Dio cese as well.
Tum ~ Page Eighteen
The Catholic . Press .Is Indispensa ble .
It Quickens and. Sustains
_ ••GE 1\1. O'HARA SR.
Taunton
The Catholic press is indispensable to Catholics seeking spiritual matu'rity in today's changing ·.-world says the head· of the Catholic Press Association in a 'statement mark ing February as Cat.holic Press Month. Msgr. Terrence P. McMahon, ex~utive editor of the Hartford Catholic Transcript, emphasizes ~'three consideration~'prove the indispen sability of the Catholic press. in 1968. "Currents . of pessimism "The .Church through .and optimism' are churning out the world is bubbling "The Catholic press does and clashing in the Church. with life and change, and the more than givea' candid 'ac * * . . Both extremes are Church in the United States count of exciting events; it wrong. Calm .confidenc~ is Ja experiencing a crisis all also provides thoughtful in requisite to prevent a 1000 of nerve or a loss of. momen its own • ito • The complete terpretation '" * *0 picture can be found only in tum. This the Catholic press quickens and sustains." the Catholic Press.
by the Greater 'I'aunton Clergy Associatiop, comprised of aU clergymen in the area. Preachers will be Rev. Leo Sullivan of St. Ann's, Raynham, and Rev. Howard Love of Me morial Methodist Church, Taun ton. In announcing the service to Catholic clergy Rev. Edward Oliveira of Our Lady of Lourdes, Taunton, appointed by Bishop Connolly .as area co-ordinator for the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, stated: "By joining together in prayer with our Christian ~rethren, we are taking a significant step in fulfilling Christ's prayer for unity. This Prayer Service, to gether with the special Prayer of the Faithful to be recited at Masses during .the Octave, caa help us to give real meaning to our sincere desire for oneness in Christ." The service .will include or gan prelude and postlude, choral selections by the Taun ton Civic Chorus, congrega tional singing of hymns, silent meditation and scripture read ings by Robert Ricketson and Francis Guay. . The introduction, antiphon Turn ~ Page Eighteen
••.................•.••
COMING SOON t·
CATHOLIC
PRESS
MONTH
Su:Jseripti@n Time
.2
,., ·Red .1:D)f~l~t~~iq~) ,In Ur",g~ay .,.-;j
.THe ANCH9R 7 Dipcese of FoJl.RIveJ:-Thurs. Jon. .1 8, 1968
St~dy ,Revea,!s ~ina,~~ia~ ,PrrO~~emSI1 DecreClsing" Enrc;lIn1er.t in; Schools ST. PAUL (NC)-A bureau of tions on the premise that .the education study of the st. Paul- high schools 'must be maintained Minneapolis archdiocesan ~gb and enrollment increased. IICbools indicates steps must be . Enroli~elit Down taken to meet financial problems Four suggestions were: parish and decreasing enrollment. assessment; a major fund drive, " 'l'Ihe 23-page study, releaSed by'. for at least $10 million; diocesan Father Raymond A. Lucker, wide solicitation on an, annual archdiocesan school 'superintend- basis; and parish ,scholarship ent, was prepared from informa- programs, which. might ·not. be tion supplied by principals of acceptable to less-affluent par .'&he 23 archdiocesan high schools. . ishes; :Jt included' sections on 'enroll-·, " The report 'cites a five-year (merit; tuition" lay teaeli~rs; eost..·.decline in,el;1~ollnieni, r~iJlting ;'0£ Operation, vocations and pro-, . .in, the Schools .operating at, '82' :posals for the future,~th~- ,.percento~ capaci,ty. The stiJpy 'tistical tables docwnentling' the- attributed the decllrie ·~to . "a '~rends reported. ' . . g~wing: disll3,tisi~ct~o~i~ s~ine :;. Among some' of. the;siudyls quarterS' with Catholic edu<!atioo, .eonclusions. was: ''The peOple 'of, C!"'. deterioration 01 ·the:ai'eas 'Jthe archdiocese be invited 'to in which some of 1lhe 'scho'ols' iue "iupport the 'catholic' . high . loCated;" and tuition iric~eases. Schools. If this is not possible, A Committee of 75 to 100 iier ~en the only other alternative sOns.has· been formed to' follow is to consolidate, to close some up' on the' report. The' group, of the schools and to turn some called the Ad Hoc' Committee .of the plants to other puiposes." on Hi.gh School Financing.and The report showed that en- Organization, includejl school rollment in Catholic high schoolS administrators, laymen from a ',is decreasing and they are in variety of occupations, repre "serio~ financial trouble." sentatives of religious communi . While noting that other educa- ties and priests. . tional problems--such as eleJohn G. Boor, supervisor of' mentary schools, religious edu": secondaiy schools in the arch cation of children and youth diocesan bureau of education, attending public schools.. adult will be executive secretary of religious 'education, Catholic eol- ~ committee. . , . .leges and ihe religious educ:a. The group will work' On all .twn of st~dents at stateuniver- immediate solution to the pres . sities-could not belforgotteD, ent deficit and a 'long range the' study made recommenda-·. plan for secondary' school 'edu cation . .- in· the archdiocese. . (
Mass Ordo
Solemn Requiem ,For Mr. ,Dupuis
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TACUAREMBO '. (NC}':'- Prl>oo · fessional comml.lJlisi agents a~ ·using 'infiltration tacti'cs among Catholics in Uruguay, Bisho)J! MigUel Balaguer of Tacuarembq charged here in the Montevidecl daily, La Manana. The bishop said that "there _ a group of political agents, backed by powerful forces, seeking to propagate their ide ology, not solve our social probo lerns, and to impose their mate rialistic, atheistic system upoa
us."
HISTORIC, HANDSHAKE.: Pope Paul VI greets Yu goslav Prime Minister Mika Spiljak on his historic visit to the Vatican. NC Photo.
Peace Day
.
:.
Christians of Various TlI'aditions Join' In Prayer With I~ish Anglicans: ' DUBLIN (NC) - Anglicans held'a special service in their cathedral here to join their prayers "on a Day of Peace which ,Pope Paul has encou!'aged 'all m~n of good will _ observe." 'Anglican Archbishop G. O. Simms of Dublin said '''Chris tians of varied traditions" joined in the service.
nUDAY - Mass of precedinl
'Sunday. IV. Class. Green.
Trouble, he said, does' DOt :MasS Proper; Glory; Common cause the believer to throw U})
Bishop Connolly gave the his hands'in despair and panic. Preface. final absolution this morning 'lWe do not become despondent
Or 55.Marius and Companions, following a sOlemn Higb Mass if there are no quick, slick re . red. Glory; Common Preface. of . Requiem offered at Notre sults from a day of prayer," be OrO' . Dame. Church, Fall River for said. "We pray first not to_ St. Canute, King and. M3l'tyr. t.be repose of the soul of ibe ·.results, but to create desire." ,Red. Glory; Con:unonPre~ace. .Jat.~ :H!>nnid~', J.Dupuis, ,fatJi~r "'I': ., ' ,SATURDAY-SS. Fabiana.1i d ,.. ~f;.Rt:.Rev. ~h~r J. DuIffl~S,
William· ·Cardinal Conway'. of '.( .. Seb.istian, Martyrs. IU Cl~. ,pastor: of St., Louis de. France · Amnagh, speaking at a 'special ....: concelebrated Mass in St. Pat , Red...MaSs . Prope,r; Glory; ,Churcp,',.: $wanSt!8..' ." :.The oWcers of the Mass wer;e: rick's .,cathedral· there - to mark ,... Common rreface. '. '.' SUNDAY-Third Sunday. .. After ·Re.v.·IJ~nti J. ~h~rest, cele~r3J;lt; the first w.orld Day of Peace, Epiphany. II Class. Green. Rt. Rev. Alfred J. Gendreau, ,said·.that... th~ spirit of peace was -.1, , Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; deacon; ,Rev. Henry .R. Canuel, subdeacon. . '. , Preface of Trinity. Bishop Gerrard, Auxiliary : )40NDAY-SS. Vincent and Anastasius, Martyrs. III claSs. Bisho., of th,e Diocese, was also Red. Mass Proper; Glory; present in the sanctuary. '. , Mr. Dupuis the "lliisband of Common Preface. CHICAGO (NC)-,John Car TUESDAY -,St. Raymond of .the late Marie IL' Guelri-emorit dinal, Cody has announced that d i' e d unexPectedly. · the college department of the Pennafort, Confessor. III Class. Dupuis, ·White. Mass' Proper; Glory;' Monday. Chicago archdiocesan seminary Common Preface. . In addition to Monsignor Du will become affiliated with Loy puis,' he· is . survived by two ola Uni"versity here next June Or St. Emerentiana, Virgin, Mar": daughters, the Misses Medora 15. tyro Red. Glory; Common and Jeannette E. DupuiS. Cardinal Cody, in a joint an Intennent was in Notre Dame Preface. nouncement with Father James
WEDNESDAY - St. Timothy, Cemetery.
.F. Maguire, S,J., Loyola presi Bishop, Martyr. III Class. Red•.
dent, said that under the affili Mass Proper; Glory; Common ation, the college department of Preface.
.JAN..,Z'L·, .... ;THURSDAY-Conversion of St. - Rev; John' T. ~O~Grady, 1919, . St. Mary of the Lake Seminary, located in Niles, Ill.,· becomes a Paul, Apostle. III Class. White. Assistant, Immac'ulate: Concep: division Of Loyola. Mass Proper; Glory; 'Preface tion, Fall River. . of Apostles. Father Edward F. Breen, dean ~ev. Joseph M. Silvia, 1955, Pastor, St.· Micl:!ael,·F.all.. River. of studies and registrar at St. Mary's, ~aid the college, which JAN. 28 . Rev. Joseph M" Griffio, 1947, . ·currently enrolls 500 seminari ans studying in preparation for Pastor, St. Mary, Nantucket. Rt; Rev. John J. Shay,' 1961, the priesthood, will retain its own administration. Pastor, St. John Evangelist, At Jan. 21-Qur Lady of Mt. tleboro.
Carmel, New Bedford.
JAN. ·39
St. Patrick, Wareham.
Rev. Christi~o J. Borges, 1944, Pastor, St.. John the Bap Jan. 28---St: Anthony, Taun Fifty-two men from the Di tist, New Bedford. . ton. . . Rev: Albert J. Masse, 1950, ocese begin a Cursillo tonight Sacred Heart, Fall River. at LaSalette Center of Christian
Pastor, St. Joseph" Attleboro. . Bishop Stang Convent,
Living, Attleboro. Lay rector
JAN. 31
North Dartmouth .
will be John Antaya, Attleboro,
Rev. 'Charles J.' Bums, 1901, and spiritual directors will in
Our Lady of Mercy Con
Pastor, St. Mary,. No.' Attleboro. clude Rev: Giles Genest, M.S.,
vent, Attleboro Rev. William ,F'-Sullivan, 1930 Rev. ~ene ,Gagnon, M.S. and Pastor,S!'. Patrick Somerset. ,:' ·Rev.. Peter Mullen of Sacred -Rev. Manuel C:.-;:Terra, ,1939, ,.Ifeart PliI-ish,Fall River. Cursil1ME ANCHOR Pastor, St. Peter, Provincetown. listas Qf the Diocese are re
second Class Postage Paid at Fall I~ .FEB. 1
,quest~ ~ .send "palam~a" for
MaS6 Dubllshaa evel) Thurnday at 4",
Rt. Rev. Michael J. O'Reilly, the sucl;e~s of the ,three day'
HlglIlana ~venue.. Fall Rive, Mass.. 02722 by If.Ie :lathollt "ress 0' the DIocese of F.n 1948, Pastor, Immaculate Con spiritual program to LaSalette 1tlvaI. SUbscription pril:e bylillall. postPaid ception, Taunt~n. . Center~ Attleborq 02703. M.OO PlIr .....
CQliegeto Affiliate' WithOniv.ersitY
Necrology.
F0RTY HOURS DEVOTION
La Saletfl'e Cursillo
j
something which should follow from a proper: realization of the broth~rhood of man, and partie ularly from the implications 'of Christ's life and teaching. He , added, that ,Pope Paul called for a change of the world's thiriking-a' 'peneration of the .spirit of' peace. into the hearts of the' great masses of humanity.
Cardinal at Panama Missio~ Dedicatio'
. ,CHICAGO (~)-John Cal' 4inal Cody headed a delegatiOll of clergy and laymen from the Chicago archdiocese who left ~~~ by.pl~e tQ "take ill . ~remoD1!'!S dedicatiJ;lg b~iJ~i,"gs Of ,th~ phicago '. miSSiODSi :",in ·;pana~~,..· , .; . " .,' : ,; :',;,; ". ". ':file. ~hd~oc~ .. ,maintaips . ~ven .missions· in ·panllmll.:,:The , b~ldings. to be dedicated a~, in phrfst the' Redeemer, parbb,. in P~~a ,City, ~d . C~rist",.tbe Son of Man. parish ne::jr' Panama CitY. . ' .~.,.
Part
,
I
The bishop ,~d the agen. have been professionally: trllin~ci ill foreign ~ters and "tota,l~ prepared for the task, of .,inti) tration which ~on,e can $00 written on the walls .of Dl~ cities in the :world." The bishop added that .~aDJr. religious persons are gullib1eo succUmbing to the appeal ot what they believe is a hope fCllll the future without· considerind the price of their cooperation ~ the real principles of sociaJ justice•
Irotherhood Honor For D.C.. Cardinal .
. WASHINGTON (NC) - Fa'-' rick Cardinal O'Boyle of Wash ington will receive a 1001 Brotherhood CitatiOll from the 'National Conference .of Chri& tians and Jews. Announcing the award, NCc:r. officials. praised CaraiDlii O'Boyle's "leadership in obtam log greater economic and 00.... · cational opportunities for PeJl IlODS of an races and creeds." They cited Cardinal O'Boyln desegregation of Catholic schooJII in 1948 as well as his receDI aetions in forming an urbaa eoolition in the city. E:ardinal O'Boyle will receive the award at a 'Feb. 15 di.nJle«
hen.
.' Changes; NQm,e . ,:
"
KM'sAS, ~.' .(NC)_~
....Kansas City .1lr~~S&n ,ne~
paper, lQrmez:ly known· as iDe '.;Easte~ .~as. Citi ,. Regis~ .'" DOW',the~~m Kansas.COD ~. A stateme~ by the pa~ said· the new name is ·onlY."tem porary,.. ~d !t, llrelc<!me,s ,name suggesiionll' ,f.rom, . interested '~aders;, 4:t the .. time, '~ .A.Jx:t0n~ accompanyin8 ·paper's, format was· changed." tabloid 8i~. . . . :--:: ~ . Cardinal. were Auxiliary BlShops Aloysius J. Wycisloand Thomas J.. Grady and F~iher Gilbert A. Carroll, chairman of the Archdiocesan Latin Amer ican Committee.
.'
Sanie
'. those.;
Higher Earnings
ON YOUR SAVINGS
01-
Entrance Exams
:70
Per AnnUM
Ail the Catholic high schools Ask about
in the Diocese of Fail River will INVESTMENT
conduct an Entrance and Place I'· . ment Examination for new stu ~VINGS dents on Saturday morning, CERTIFICATES '. . Feb. 3 at 8:30. Students wishing to enter .any of these schools next September should report '. SAFETY - Savings insurell safe ~. Government. . . to the school -of their eOOiee ·apncy of the U. prepared to take a three .:hour IYAiLABILIn -'No "Rot~ requiraL examination. . . ,. Your funds available when needed. . There will be a three dollar SAVE bJ MAIL - We process proinaJtlJ f~, payable at the time 0f the examination. The students need aDd pay postage both ways. • bring no records with them nor Assets ...,. M1,ooo,ooo do their parents have to ae~om pany them. Complete informa 'Don as to courses, activities. etc. will be given at the time 01 the ·Savings and Lo~n Associatioa examination.
s:
FIRST FEDERAL
of FALL RIVER
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Est. 1897
Builders Supplies 2343 Purchase Street
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CardinaIShehan Commen'ds ,Pastoral to Clergy" L~ity BALTIMORE (NC)-Lawrence Oardinal Shehan of Baltimore described the U.S. bishops' ooHective pastoral laS one of the most meaningful documents since Vatican Council II. He recommended it to priests and laity "in the JUghest terms," not only be cause of the inform~tion it called the institutional ehurch eontains but also because or the structural Church," he , ~ its inspirational value. "In remarked.
, JHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Jan. 18, 1968
Maryknoll PhY,sician Lauds
Continued from PlIIge, One Until CFM, said Sister Mau reen Thomas, "men and women had no real communication. A husband and wife might talk about how the crops were doing, but that was about it. After some months we felt that our Structure of CbulI'cb couples were ready for a re· ~ntent it is rich and positive," "When Charles Davis turned treat and one of the rules was eardinal Shehan said in an in
his back on the priesthood and that the husbands and wives terview, "In form I find it ad departed from the Church, and could speak only to each other. mirable." , He added that although the when some others followed in This led to personal discussions his footsteps, they directed their for the first time in many cases. . pastoral letter is based on Vati bitterness toward the institu The retreat was climaxed by a tan II documents, and particu larly on the first four chapters tIonal or structural Church. In renewal of maniage promises JIIf the Dogmatic Constitution on the light of these attacks, it is and after it was over many !&be Church, "it by no means important that everyone should , couples told us it had been the happiest time of their lives." lDerely repeats what the council read Chapter Two of the pas toral, which put the structure of· To illustrate how seriously
bas already said. the Church into focus," Cardinal the CFM members take their
, Pertinent Teachings Shehan stated. ' Christian commitment, Sister
""In the light of subsequent . Be said the pastoral's treat related that a group decided to
~nts and conditions it devel-' ment of laymen "and especially build a house for a very poor
!lIPS at considerable length and the laymen within structu,res family whose shack was near
"nth great richness those teach strikes me all being particularly collapse. The men walked for
ings of the council which are beautiful and relevant. several hours to a forest to fell
8sPecially pertinent now." "'Also," the cardinal continued, trees, then carried stripped logs
Cardinal Shehan said the pas "in view of some recent exag back to the pueblo and erected
iloral takes note of the existence gerations and distortions, the a new house for the family. So
~ God in light of the so-called role of the laym~n is placed in pleased were they with the proj
(leath-of-God philosophy which perspective. This will encourage ect' that they've decided to
!has caused much recent com those who have been apathetic . build 35 new houses yearly for
ment. "It explores with great and those whose views. have the I>--"'Qrest pueblo families.
pertinence the coimection be -been distorted." "And these are men," added tween the existence of God and .. I Cardinal Shehan recalled that Sister, "who live in dirt-floored . houses themselves." ~ existence of the Church." many priests were disappointed , Another CFM project has The Baltimore archbishop the Dogmatic Constitution been arranging for the adoption I3id the letter places the coun "that on the Church gave no special eil's teaching on the Church as ,attention to the priesthood.
of children left homeless, and yet another byproduct has been eommunity in proper perspec
Treatment of Priestbood
the interest CFMershave shown [live. "During ,the post-conciliar ,"Iii their pastoral the United in helping maritally troubled ~riod a great deal of criticism States bishops have given a par ' couples achieve reconciliation. laos been directed at what is ticularly full treatment of' the Tbousand Thumbprints priesthood," he noted. The way for CFM and like ac "Not only have the bishops .tivities is paved for Maryknoll, stressed the essential impor of course, by the concern it tanee of the role of the priest shows for the' physical needs of In the renewal of the Church; the Jacaltenango Indians. The the7 also have treated the n,.o~_ pueblo hospital, said Sister &AI,GON (HC) - Some of ent crisis in priestly lite-the Maureen 'J;'homas, had its begin laigon's poor will have a hap sense of irrelevance, loneliness nings in 1959 when the Mary lier "'~et" this year because of and apartness." ' " knoll Mother General visited tile generosity of the employees Noting that questions'. of au the pueblo. She was' met- with a ~ management of the Su "tbority, conscience and' freedom ',petition signed by one thousand Di:eine Council of the Kriights ,have been widely discussed in ,thumbprints. It begged .'for .a " ColumbuS in New Haven, ~ post-conciliar Church, Car- hospital. ' Omn. "Tet" is the Chinese or 'diDal Shehan said the pastoral ; . Immensely moved, the supe- \ ...-nar ,new year, a traditional .makes use of the writings of the rior sent Sisters the next year -.ne in Vietnam for celebra '19th-century Anglican' convert. to start a clinic. It has grown lIOns within the family circle. ,John Henry Cardinal Newman to the present modern hospital, 'Supreme Knight John. W. Mc "who' gave so much attention to which can handle all but very Devitt sent a check to the nature of conscience and its unusual cases: Indians contrib ~ther (Lt: Col.) Corbin Ketch relationship to revelations as uted all labor on 'the hospital, eDId, deputy staff chaplain of well as to the teaching and said Sister, but money for con ~ U. S. Army in Vietnam. governing. role of the Church." struction materials and equip !'ather Ketchersid, a priest of , In concluding, Cardinal She- ment came from American B8leigh, N. C. diocese, gave it ,han said: "If the pastoral is friends of Maryknoll. Every ~ Father Robert Crawford, made the subject of private thing had to be packed' into the CoM., of Philadelphia for a meditation and reflection, if it. pueblo on horseback, she said, -Tet" distribution to poor fam serves as a text for courses in but all arrived safely, down to Dies. Vincentian Sisters to reHgion, especially in high a fragile X-ray machine. "'om Father Crawford is chap schools and advanced CCO pro Last year a practical nursing lain will select the families. grams, I am confident that it school was opened in conjunc Father (Lt. Col.) James C. will promote the cause of tion with the hospital. So far it Church renewa!."
has graduated nine girls. All ~rroll, a native of New Haven were possessors of a sixth grade and a priest of Hartford arch
education before' entering the jio(:ese, suggested to the Su
schoo!. "That's considered high preme Knight that the money 'Leader Asks Delay er education in Guatemala," ~ sent to Vietnam. Father Car In Blaine RepeaO said Sister. "Illiteracy in the IIOli left Vietnam in July 1967 ALBANY (NC)-New York country is the second highest lor his present post as deputy state Assembly Speaker An in the world." v staff chaplain at 5th Army head thony J. Travia, one' of the Ministering to the sick doesn't ~uarters in Chicago. He knew strongest spokesman for the re balt at the hospital walls. Some the needs of Saigon's poor. 86,000 Indians live in the area The lunar new year comes at peat of the state's ban against aid to church-related schools, around Jacaltenango and the lIle end of January this year. 10r the second time in three Sister-doctors are constantly on DlOll'I;hs has asked a delay in re- the move visiting clinics set up peal attempts. . in far-off mountain villages. Hotre Dame Gets 'f\he aid ban remained in ef Maryknoll priests in the villages $3 Million Loan teet after the state's voters arrange as much transportation NOTRE DAME (NC) - The turned down a new. constitution as possible for the medical ieOnstruction of two ll-story -which included repeal-last teams and each area is visited Nov. 7. Shortly after that, he at least four times yearly. Be :Jesidence halls at the Univer !lity of Notre Dame moved a said he still wanted to see the tween times, villagers trained steP closer with approval of a barrier removed, but' :favored for the work operate rudimen $3 million loan by the U. S. De waiLting a while before making tary dispensaries for their' fel partment of Housing and Devel lows. a new attempt. Malnutrition Problem AIlment. His latest bid :flor a delay was Malnutrition is among the Bids for construction of the made at a news conference on two high-rise dormitories will the opening of the legislature's chief medical problems, said Sister Maureen Thomas. The be invited in mid-February. 1968 session. Travia said he per sonally favored repeal of the Indian diet is largely corn anv ~e buildings will be erected so-called Blaine Amendment, beans and it's slow work teach north of the Notre Dame Memo rial Library beginning in the but thought it "should! be studied ing the use of green vegetables. Anemia, wbrms, intestinal paraa lWtle better." Spring.
K of C Assist Vietnam Poor
3
Prog~am
SISTER MAUREEN THOMAS
sites and typhoid are among other ailments frequently met, and the Sister-physician says she has seen more congenital anomalies at Jacaltenango than in ali her medical training. The high rate is caused by a great deal of intermarriage in the isolated' Indian communities.
'900
Before coming to Guatemaia in 1965, Sister Maureen Thomas was stationed is' Bolivia. A graduate of Sacred Hearts Academy, she 'is th'e sister of Dr. Thomas F. Higgins of Holy Name parish, well-known Fan River physician, and she- hu Tum to Page Eighteen
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1967,
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4
Urges Portia nd .Sehool System
T@ C@!fdsolidate Admil'llisl'1l"ction
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Jan. 18, 196"8
Father Greeley;n~erprets
History of Chu.rch an U'.S.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr John S. Kennedy
In The Catholic Experience (Doubleday,501 Fr.anklin
Ave., Garden City, N.Y. 11531.$4.95), Father Andrew M.
Greeley offers "an essay toward the ,gociologi.cal interpre
tation of the history of the Catholic Church in the T;Jnited
States." Such an interpreta His successor briskly set about
tiOn is important for self undoing his accompl'.-h'1'U'n t -,
understanding and the chart To Father Greeley's mind, John
ing ofa future course. It-has England represented an op.ioL.
PORTLAND (NC) - A 'com mittee appointed to study' the Catholic school system in U!e Portland area of Maine has rec ommended the complete con solidation of the administration and operation ofCathoHc schools in the area. The committee SOlid .tbis should be accomplished througl') the establishment of .admilJ is trative powers in a single, of ficial school authority. It also called for the estab lishment of a single religious education center staffed by pro fessional educators and offering' programs for all age grt}ups.. This would unify and improve religious formation in Catoolic schools, the committee 'Said. Ask New School The 14-month study w.as ear-· ried out by. the Catholic 'Educa tion Committee for Gl'eater Portland, established by the diocese of Portland in October, 1966. . Ralph I. Lancester Jr., .3 'Port land attorney and vice-chair man of the diocesan board of education was chairman of the 60-member committee. Father· Charles M. Murphy, director of the diocesan office of educa tion, was coordinator.
Among other'bigbJilghts of the committee's recommendations: Replacing the lJ2-year-old Cathedral High SChOGlI for girl:J ,by establishing a new school in -connection with an existing modern Catholic high school. having a coeducational multi course curriculum: The possible construction oil a junior high school withilll Greater Portland. CCD lProgram Development Q:f a regiona!l Confraternity of Christian D'oe-_ trine program. Establishment of an, intet' paroChial fund-raising program to insure that no student be de prived of a Catholic: education bec!ause of lack of finances. Establishment of a public re lations program to provide in ferMation on all aspects of Catholic education through com mtmication and cooperation ·with public school officials. Obtaining professional help to improve elementary school of ferings in such subjects as an. music, physical education and ·sCience. ;The committee also recom mended that salaries and per sonnel benefits of lay teachel'll be stUdied.
been quite sadly lacking. And which was rejected with de plorable consequences. even. of comprehensive and 'Irate' Man probing Amer Four years before Englandls
ican C h u rc h CARIDINAL BRENNAN. death in '1842, John Hughes ·be history we have
gan his reign ·ofmore than a
very little. quarter of a century in .New
'Using that little,
York. The tidal wave of immi Father Greeley
gration ;was flowing,and the
attempts to prodigious numerical growth <Jf read its socio
the Church was ·because .of logical mean
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Fran Catholic newComers. ing. He main cis Cardinal Brennan, who has They were resented' .·and re tains that for been named by Pope' Paul VI as sisted by the' natives. Hughes the past 200 prefect 'of the Congregation of saw himself as their sole cham years the Amer the Sacraments, is an American • pion. He was 'an irate man who ican Catholic who . has spent most of his delighted in fierce ·battle,and Church has been of two minds priestly life in Rome. he was generally at war with concerning American society. From 19511 until his elevation One attitude, already manife~t someone. to the college of cardinals in Contrasting' with him were in the first American Catholic 1967 he was dean of the Sacred two 'contemporaries, the intel bishop, John Carroll, was that Roman Rota, one' of the the Church should be perfectly lectual Orestes Brownson and Church's highest courts, which the intuitive Isaac Hecker, .Deplor~s at home and at ease in Ameri cleals mostly but not exclusively founder of the Paulists who can society and should accom with matrimonial cases. Prior modate itself to the American were eager to have the ·Church FCl~n to becoming the first American enter the American mainstream ethos. Carroll and those who - dean or chief judge ·of the Rota VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope .t.bepath of our liife, in fear anCI' ~ later shared his convictions, and heartily accept American he had been an auditor, ·or Paul VI, recalling the Wise Men 'in love." civilization. . Fath¥ Gr.eele~ c~ls American judge, of the' court for 19 year.s. who went in search of the Christ· . Man's failure to seek Gt>CJ " But Hughes' .authoritarian izers or Amerlcanlsts. He was the first from the ·U. S. Child, branded the failure' te "bas very serious' practical con style .prevailed· .and :his Hself_ , They have .always had oOp ·to. be named to the tribunal. seek God "the great aberr.alioD" sequences in e1IeT,V field 01 image of the ·bishop .as the ponents: those who have ·be A legal scholar, ~l'dinal ·of ·our . time. human. activity,," t1'le. Pope de father andprotector-·of .a·:flock lieved that, for self-'pTeser'-'3 BrenDan dealt with complicated .The Pope was .addr~ elared. tion in .a ]wstile ·environment, .not .able' to take -care -of .itself cases ,and' .suits. crowdsinSt. .Peter's Squau on . !Ie' ealled the seare!1·f()r 60ci CathMics SholUd stay .apart .and and 'SUrrounded -by -hostile ~ne He· was :born .at Sht..'1,andoah, ~ipbany. Be appeared ,in _ in,. ebrist '"the crompass- .t lif"e~'" mm was ·to ·persist in ,the protect their own subclliture j.n Fa., May' 7, 1894, .and first-c:iJne studY window to neite the -ll4)4)D 'Chu:rcl1 .fOT .at least a.. 00flUH;y, order to prot~ct their faith. to Rome .as .3. student .at the .Angelus with them .andk :aiM The holders of this view were after Hughes' death.'" 'Pontifical. ,Roman Semina.ry: He them his' b1ess~. b)' no means un~trietic. They :Splendid.. Leadll!'S' 'was ordained April 3, 1920, ;in -EPiphany," the Pope .'&aid, were loyal American .citi~, Conflict a nod ~nWoversy Rome '3D.d cOl1tinued ·his 'studies and indeed ~nthusiastic 'for w.a1led off the'Catholic~y'... in 'law. In 1924 ~e '""as .aW.al:ded "presentstw.o ,gPeat ~iea." ALWAYE {~)-An Nuti. American -democratic ·pr.ocesses a :great .extent. Three ·men w~ .3 doctorate in -both Chul'ch .and "The first. is' how· God .·maDi tested' himself in Christ. 'TIle ·1Ute Movement·tID eatnpaigR, " in the political :;phere. But they endeavered' -to break: .dOWilthe civi11aw. siDde rite for· tile OOUD\l'7 'second ,is bow-men ~' tiDd wanted no .ad<lptation ·of the wall were James .cardinal- Gib He returned to ·the U. S . .and' Christ antI' 'in Christ find GOO.'" _ , _ u p hen!. at a Ia:r-elere Church to Ame-:ican w.ays. bons, Archbishop .J~lm. Ireland, :served. from' 1928 to 1940 ~ a ..Asserting that e\.'Cry - man ~ Long Stru::-gle Bishop John J. K-eane. 'They professor at :st. ChaJ"les' Semi Heading the meeting was, Fa... must .seek. God, be ;said: A strQ:ggle between !he ·two. were friends .and .allies during nary: in Overbrook, P.a. His \ , '''The ,great aberation 4)1 .ow: -tiler. Varghese ChathaparampH, the turbulent period from .about 'work attracted' tlwl .attention oQf' modern mind ·is ·precisely -Yiis: llchools has been going on hasserved'smee last J'~ly all i880 to 1900, and.F.ather Gree then Archbishop Amleio Cico thi'oughout the history of Amer Man no'lon:ger'sean~hes for ·GGcJ. pilesideDt of a' committee work ley declares that "leaders' ~f' gnani, at that time' .apostolic ican Catholicism, accol'ding to He .believes ,both science .and ing .tor ~ eommOD ri,te in KeraJll delegate· in the United States faith ,are .extinguished. ......bePe~ State- , m. place of. the· preseml ,J!'athcr Greeley. Round after their splendor have' il~t .again appeared on tlwl ecc1esiastkal and now Papal Secretary .of ro.md has been lost by the tbeyboth make God shine UJMliD ~, .Syro-Malabar ami SYfl> scene." 'State. :1\:xchbishop CicQgnani Americanizers. Yet the whole Malankar.l rites. There is an almost .oomplete had been one of FOlther ,Br.en trend ·of events has been in '"RKlmeetiJ:tg decided ~ ~ absence of formulated 1\.meriean nan's professors when ·the young their favor, and they have in ~. &be. eommfttee into • Catholic history for the ·t~J:l priest studied in Rome. He rec fact won out. K.eraIa state branch of the pro-, tieth ·century, hence F.ather ommended Father Brennan lor Father Greeley illustrates his posed. movement, which is' aimetl Greeley has skimpy matc£ials to ar. opening on the Rota. CARACAS (NC)-The lBter argument by a series ~f por 'at ,iDtroducing on llinationalleveJ work with in (lonsidering ·t~at ·Msgr.. Brennan came to Rome American Devel<Jpment Bank 'Of' traits. Most of these are of pt-riod. in 1940 just as World W.ar IT Washington, granted a $1.5 miJ- . a .. 1lingle rite reflecting HIndiaD bishops, since American Catho He writes on 'M~nsi-gnQC John was beginning. After ·the U.:S. lion loan to the:hndres )Bello euttural traditions." It ~led OlD. lic historY has been. written A. Ryan and F.ather -charles entrance into the war in 1941 Catbolic universitybcrC' f'f}f'. iIa CaUuilleB throughout the coUJr chiefly, almost exclusi vely, in llrty ~. observe 1968 as a year 01' Coughlin as eXPtlnents ·of Msgr.Brennanw.as .able to -con terms of the hierarchy. building program. The And£es ''UIiteBse prayer and wor"" tor· Catholic social philosophy. He tinue his·work becOluse he ,lived The first ()f the selected fig Bd10 FOundation of' Vene1uem describes the pil}neering wor.k in .the neutral state .of Vatican is providing another $J.5 mil~ U. pmposed riote. urer is, of course, John Carroll. City. 'Carroll' was a native American, done in Chi~o, beginning in lion. the late 1930's, -on lay .action, Over a period ·1>f 19 'years and an aristocrat, closely - re The university expects.an en -Msgr. Brennan advanced in sen lated to, or acquaint~~d with, social' action, catechetics, lit rollment of. 3,000 students.by urgy, and marriage :education. iority . among Rota judges. 1969. Andres Bello (1781-Ul65) men who had decisive roles in :' Paint and Wallpap~r When Pope John named the was a Catholic jurist, -educator the establishment of th~ repub End of N.ativism then Msgr. \)William HeOlrd, 'W and historian who did extenSiv.e lic. The new country, its climate Dup~ Paint In the election ·of JOhn F. and institutions, wel'e familiar work ·in England, Venezuela aDd Kennedy he sees .Qle :end ,~f the rank· of cardinal, Msgr. CClJ:. Middle St. Brennan - became dean of the Chile. and dear to him. nativism, and in KennOOY ·him ,422,Acush. A.,.. Rotp. Eight years later Pope Misunderstood by Rome The Inter-American Devel{lf) self he discerns .a doctor .of ..the ·'4.c:;,a,.New Bedf&rd Much of what he proposed Church: "He 'spoke to :the Paul rewarded his more than ment ,Bank was jointly -establish · PARKING was vetoed by Rome, and Father Church and .warned it .of a. a quarter-century of servicem ed four years ago by the U,S. the Rota with the red" hat. Greeley is vehement in insisting dramatic change in its ·ewnpo · ' Rear of Store and the··Latin American -ooun - - - - - - - - tries. to pool financial r.esourees that then, and repeatedly later, sition in American society." Rome misunderstood the Amer That position was at the fite£.flexible, dynamic .leadership, in America and Eu!'ope' lor ~ -ican situation and thwarted section 'of two transitions: First; . '.rhis m"lkes for .a dim prospect 'lie and private projects _ .aid reasonable and constructive the complete Amerkanizatiol1 in .the short run, but he is san the development of Latif) 1imft' , suggestions. • of U. S. Catholics; secondly, the guine about the long run. iiea. A case in point is the isola change' in the universal 'Church F.ather Greeley's book is 'sure tion of John England, first from closed to ·open "in .anecuto rouse discussion. !twill .be ,AnLEBORO'S bishop of Charleston, South menical age: "A .c·risis similar called opinionated ano even Cc.rolina. England was some to that of Jhe 1820's .'~!lQ. .. t.he brash. Some of its assumptions Leading ·Garden C.nt. thing of a miracle. He arrived 1890's has come' upon the - and conclusions are easily chal 'here from Ireland in 1820, about Church. One ·even senses that lengeable. But its core .argument to take over the new see '6f the present crisis. ~nakes . the seems indisputable. It ,gives Charleston. He immediatel~' other two 100kmiJd ';byc&rrlpar- ' some evidence of hasty writing sensed .and appreciated the '.son." , _ .~F. p~or .proof-reading. There Sooth· 'MeJin Ii Waif Sta. American temper and the op It is not- being .well· met, to,·, 'a'l:e .someerrors of fact, .and far portunity it offered the Church. Father Greeley's eye, for a too many" misspellings .and But "e was regarded with number of reasOl; _ chiefly a woUnded' sent~nces. The .book .222-0234 should havenad ·an index'; •.: sU::u;Iicion and had no imit<ltors. dearth ot informed, cap<lble,
AmerDcan Named
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-ThvR, Jon. 18,1968
Urge Catholics Implement
Human Rights Statemerut
WASHINGTON (NC) - Americans Catholics have JOOen urged t'O wor-k for a "fundamental change of atti 'tude" in the United States which will enable all men to 'enjoy equal rights and opportunity. The plea came in a ~int statement yesterday by Aurdliary Bishop John JJ. the right to social security for every citizen. . . . It is hardly Dougherty of Newark, chair necessary to say that the United mun of the U.S. Bishops' States is still struggling with Committee for World Justice nnd Peace, and Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, episcopal dlairman of the Social Action lOepartment of the U. S. Cath olic Conference. The occasion was the 20th an niversary of the adoption of th~ United Nations Unive:rsal Decla mUon of Human Rights. Strii.r.m:; l?~dCl!'El The declaration's 30 articles' <>paint a stri~ring picture of :nun's dignity und his rights tIS , a person, ns u member of society Q1Jcl as a citizen of his nation Dnel of the world," they said in 1.be statement. ,, ,"As Catholic Christians, we wekome this solemn assertion en man's basic and inalienable rights. These rights, the decla , ;ration notes, are to be granted to all. No form of discrimination based on race, 00101', sex, lan ~age, religion, political or other opinion, national or social O1'lgin, property, birth or othet' lltatus is to be tolerated," the,. saiti. "As Americans, we rejoiee ~t the rights, liberties and !freedom asserteli in our Consti ~Uon unCI the Bm of Rights llr.e substantially present in this. declaration." But· they add that "equal ex ercise of their rights by all our eHizens . • • • is far from .a ~a1.ity nnd equal opportunity, is b many only a cruel myth;" Work fOil" Changes They asserted that "without a fundamental change ot attitude by the comfortable, by the fa vored ethnic majority, and espe eiaHy by those who profess Utemselves Christians, we can-· not build the sOcial order which will lift the burdens and remove the indignities inflicted by m dnl discrimination and material privation. . . ." They urged Catholic institu tions and organizations to study, the UN declaration in the light of Church teachings, the Vatican Council and "in view of the con ~ete situations in which men lUrnll themselves today," and asked individual CatholicS to eooperate with other Americans GlIn working for changes in our ll-:lWS and in our social and eeo ll10mic institutions" to eradicate discrimination and to meet the needs of the poor. The bishops singled out four areas in which action is needed: Burden of IcllReoess Economic security: "Article 22 ((.of the dec1uration) ••• asserts
Board Authorizes
Hiring of Editor
WILMINGTON (MC) - Cath olic Press of Wilmington, Inc., the corporation which publishes the Delmarva Dialog, Wilming ton diocesan newspaper, has Guthorized the hiring of a per manent editor for the paper. The editor will succeed James P. Parks Jr., whose five-month term as interim editor expires the end of January. Parks had told the boarell early in Decem ber that he did not wish to l\P Jl)Iy for the position on a penna Dent bas.l& Parks, former assistant metr0 politan editor of the WilmingtoR dail¥ News-Journal, replaced .John A. O'Connor, fo~ dUor lJl the Dialog, who re
.., 'tne<i I_September.
the problem of poverty. Too. often our welfare programs for the destitute offer little in the way of assistance or incentive to help these personS riSE' above the level of poverty." Work: "Article 23 .. asserts that 'Everyone has the right to wOI'k, to free choice of employ ment, to just and favo::able con ditions of work and to protec tion against unemployment.' It is a shameful fact that there are several million Americans with out wOI·k. Even worse is the fact that the burden of idleness is displ'oportionately beirne by American Negroes and particu larly by Negro youth." Education; "Article 26 states that 'Parents have a prior right to choose the kind of education that shall be given to their chil dren.' While no law in -the United States inteferes with this right, severe economic burdens make it difficult for many par ents to secure an adequate reli gious education for their chi! Men." llsk Deeper Knowledge "Finally,'''' they said, "we Ie wet that the efforts of President Kennedy and of President John-' san to secure United States par ticipati.fln in the proposed inter national agreement relating to forced labor, have received lit tie- interest and little under standing from United States citizens." "These flaws are imperfec tions which should challenge the social conscience of every citizen," the bishops said. They concluded their state ment by asking Catholics "to deepen our knowledge and un derstanding of the efforts being made by the United Nations and other agencies of economic and, social cooperation, both public alld private, which contribute effectively to the implementa tion of human rights."
TAUNTON SERRANS GREET BISlIOP:.Rev. Francis B. Connors, chaplain to Taun ton. Serra Club, Mrs. Joseph C; 'Murray, Bishop Connolly and Joseph C. Murray, president of Taunton Serran-s, gather before the' annual BishOp's Night held in Marian Manor.
No Weather Worries When You Own An
Electric Clothes Dryer
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Taunton Selflr@ns Honor Oll'dorm@[fW Copies of the American B'ish ops' Pastoral, "The Church in Our Day," will be distributed to every family in the Diocese, said Bishop Connolly in address ing the annual Bishop's Night meeting of the Taunton area Serra Club, held at Marian Manor. The prelate said he hoped the pastoral would be discussed by lay groups and would· fOl'm the subject ad ckesses and homilies by priests of the Diocese, In' lauding Taunton Serrans on theii· accomplishments in four years of existence, Bishop Connolly noted that four Serra Clubs. are active in the Diocese. This is remarkable for a small Diiocese, he said. "Many Dio ceses far larger than ours have but one active group." Serra Clubs have the promo tion of vocations as their aim and- one of their projects is spo.nsorship of Junipero Clubs in area high schools for boys iaterested· in the priestly life. Fathw Lyons Guests at the Taunton meet ing included Rev. James F, Lyons, first chlllplam of the unit and- now' pastor of 'Our Lady of Victory Church, Centerville, TllunfoG area pastor!!, and wives. of SeFrans. Present chaplain is ~... Franc~ IJ. CoJlDora.
of
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6
THE ANCHOR"":Dioc~se of'Fall Riv'er-Thurs. Jan. 18, 1968
the 'Way" .-..
." /'-G;',.r
Church Unity Octave 1968: Once again, Christians all over the 'world welcome the annual church unity octave. With each passing year, the concerted prayers of Christendom have focused attention on the unity ootave with its ardent and sincere plea for unity among Christians. , During the closi~g days of World War II, the late Dr. Serge Kousevitsky, ,director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, offered his services to the State Department.. . for peace. He envisioned an ambitious series of concerts to be given throughout the war ravaged capitals of Europe. Although the offer was never formally accepted, the im plications of the maestro were not unheeded.' They are as valid today as they were almost twenty , 'five years ago. Everyone realizes that music speaks a common, language., There is' never any need for an inter Pretor. A composition by a German author, interpreted by a Russian director, and blended together to form a unified work by a polyglot orchestra proves onl~one. thing * '" * the blessings of united and concerted activity., The vision of Kousevitsky is eminently applicable 00 the church unity octave. Christian worship expresses a unity among men which is desirable and needed in these <!ays' of anxiety and stress. Out Christian liturgy unif\es men and actually expresses this unity both by word and
Asserts Church '" Expects Laymen
Aid in Renewal
'
VATICAN CITY (NC). Pope Paul VI has asserted the-Church is depending up.. on the laity to bring about
the renewal of her mission m: our time. 'Speaking at a general audli enc!) for the second time sineei his' operation early in Novem-. ',ber, the Pope recalle~ the atteq.. tion the Second Vatican Coun cil paid to "the definition' and the function of the laity in t!m midst of the people of God." This, he said, "is Ii sign tJ,1~ we are all obliged to PC!y p~ ticular attention to this subje~ He continued: "The CI1ureb: of the council, in its teaching IIiu the' laity, did not merely ~ , ,pound a teaching . that merited , W~.EK .of PRAYER .being put in, a better light. sbil for ' did not merely make asyntb& ,sis of ideas and of facts ,whieti CHRiSTIAN UNITY for more than a century have interested Catholic life in ~ JANUARY '18~25 lay order and has reached rath er authoritative and positiVe , ' conclusions. _ act. "She has demonstrated thaaI Until Vatican Council II, the church unity ootave was she puts her confidence preciS&e more an ideal than a reality. Catholics and Protestants more ly in the apostolate of the la,p; or less fenced with each other verbally. They cited the need AmericGI(I'I and Canadian Bishops Discuss faithful for the renewal of the awareness and of the efficency' for, unity. The acclamations never became actions. ProSJrams at Meeting in' Detroit'
of her mission in our time, de-. , Since Vatican II, with its sweeping DECREE ON ECU cIaring openly that 'mo(Jem ,DETROIT (NC) - United U. S. and Canada.. have been, conditions demand· that their MEN:ISM, the unity octa,ve has come to be an actual living, states and Canadian bishops under pressure to relax anti vihrant tool for unity. In the DECREE ON ECUMENISM, apostolate be thoroughly broa~ a two-day meeting here at ' abortion laws in recent yellrs. ened and intensified.'" the council teaches that "common worship should signify held the home of Detroit's Arch ArChbishop Dearden, presi (The Pope was quoting from the unity 'of the church and it should provide a sharing' bishop John F. Dearden. They dent -of the U. S. National Con . the introduction to the concilisr in the means of grace. The fact that it should signify said the talks were so useful that they will meet again this ference of Cl,ltholic Bishops, led decree on the Apostolate of, tOO unity generally rules out common worship. Yet; the ob- Fall. the American delegation. Others Laity.) taining of a needed grace sometimes commends it." The bishops said they dis were -John Cardinal Krol of The council, ag~in speaking 'on ecumenism and unity cussed the liturgy, religious edu Philadelphia, NCCB vice-presi [2)@U'D'ilOD'!l~e~n rf!>r~of caused a number of ecclesiastical and lay eyebrows to lift cation, mission aid, and moral dent; John Cardinal Cody of and ethical problems, but an Chicago and Bishop John, J. in surprise by its definite refusal to identify the Church nounced no agreement on joint Wright of Pittsburgh. ~~[k~ [L©J5~DZ:;@ff~OI1) exclusively Roman Catholicism. The Council did teach, in programs. They indicated, how The Canadian delegation was DUBUQUE (NC)-The reu,.. the CONSTITUTION ON THE CHURCH, that the Ohurch ever, that such programs - par led by Canadian Catholic Con gious superior of Rose Prio~ ticularly relating to aid to the ference president, Bishop Alex of Christ subsists in the Roman, Oatholic communion. ' the residence fo:r;, Dominican It goes further however, and rstates that "many ele-, Latin American Church - will ander Carter of Sault Ste. Marie, priests .who teach at the ecu probably emerge eventually. Onto With him were Bishop menical Aquinas Institute m! ments of sanctification and truth can be found outside her In an official release at the Gerard-Marie Coderre of St. Theology and' at Mt. St., Bernard visible structure." end of the meeting, the bishops Jean, Que., vice-president of diocesan seminary, has resigned What does all this. m~an to the average man in the said the discussion of moral and the, CCC, and Bishop Paul-Emile his post and asked to be reo street during the church unity octave? It means that non ethical questions was concerned Charbonneau of Hull, Que'., and turneq to the lay state. mainly 'with "problems reflected Coadjutor Archbishop 'Philip Father John B. Endress, O.p.. Oatholic Chris,tians are communities of the Spirit to which . in legislative trends." Both the' Pocock of Toronto. 39, submitted his resignation Christ is present in wors'hip. shortly before Christmas'. It 'was ... Their sacramental celebrations, although not valid in accepted early in Jariuary. HIS ~@[f@]DITll@~ ~[}u®[}u@ITll [}=O'®@©J~' had been prior only since last the strict sense we now understand, do communicate the May 4. . - ' presence of Christ in some way. In the case of Orthodox ~@~ ~®~D~D@[IT) ,@{F ~\I'@U'ut®s
Father John Sullivan, sulba Christianity, we can include a validly ordained prieSthood committee of the university's prior at St. Rose, said"he has no. WASHINGTON' (NC) - Law and all seven sacraments. , knowledge of Farther Endresn board of trustees. rence Cardinal Shehan of Balti The church unity octave should then forcibly remind more has been named chairman One of the responsibilities future plans, or of the priest" us that the various Christian churches and their members of a seven-man special commit with which the Hochwalt com reasons for requesting laiciza.. . are not second class Ohristians. They are not separated tee for revision of the Catholic mitee was charged by the trus tion. Father Endress was reportEd University of America statutes, tees was total revision of the from Christ. to be in Chicago-he is a na Father John P. Whalen, acting university statutes. tive of suburban Oak Park, IlL They are rather vital links and sources of a desired rector of the university, an Aims of University -but could not be reached far spiritual unity. The 1968 church unity octave presents an nounc,ed. The District of Columbia comment. appeal which cannot go unheeded. We despe'rately need Other members of the com Father Endress attended Lorcw granted civil rights to Catholie the concerted liturgical action and worship of the whole mittee are Jobn Cardinal Cody University in 1887. Two years College in Dubuque for twO Christ. Heinrich Schlier, the German exegete, commenting of Chicago; Francis X. Gallagher, later, its statutes were approved' years before joining the ~ on St. Paul's letter to the Ephesians, summarizes what attorney for the Baltimore arch by Pope Leo XIII. They were mini cans in 1948. He studied ail diocese; Dr. John J. Budds, cltan Aquina~ Institute of Philosophy last revised in 1937. should be our attitude: ,. "There is no sphere of being that cellor of the University, of Con in River Forest, 111., and received The statutes spell out the na is not also- the Church's sphere. necticut and president-elect of a doctorate in theology in Rome, ture ~nd aims of, the un,iversity, The Church is fundamentally directed, to the universe. the Association of Governing where he was ordained in 1954 i~ goverance, the functions of Her boundaries are those of the· universe. There is no re Boards; Father Lawrence Mc the academic senate and of the He had been at St. Rose PrlOl'J: Gin~ey, S.J." former president of since 1957, and taught both afj alization of Christ's dominion without the Church or be Fordham University, now at St. faculties of the various schools Aquinas 'I'heology Institute yond her, in fulfillment apart'from her. The way in which Peter's College; Dr. Stephen ,and departments; appointment the and at Mt. St. Bernard. Kuttner, a canon lawyer who is and promotion 'of teaehe1'8, Turn to Page Seven professor of CathoJric Studies at their rights and obligations, the K of C Employees, Yale University; and Father makeup of the. student body, courses of studies, conferring of Whalen. ' degrees, and procedures by Get Pay Increase Thecomrriittee was formed by which statutes are revised. NEW HAVEN (NC) - "J'tIe Dr. Carroll Hochwalt, chairman typographers' and printed The 1889 statutes established of the survey and objectives an academic senate to "assist unions at the Knights of COoo the rector in the government of lumbus printing plant haWl agreed to three-year contracbl' the university," one of the first Fatima Pi~grimage . such "'1I:1:'rJ~L NIEW~PAPER OF T!-fE DIOCESE OF LCI\LL P'VER providing for substantial PlQlJ bodies in America. Recently an interim Iformula raises and increased frinp RO,ME (NC)-The Committee Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River for enlargement of the senate penefits. for Celebrations of the 50th An 410 Highland Avenue niversary of Fatima announced to provide' proportionate repre According to the details cd Fall River, Mass. 02722 . 675-7151 sentation for .he faculty of the here that an international pil the contracts released here ~ . PUBLISHER . grimage of sick- will be held at schools of the university was ap- , John W. McDevitt, supreme Most Rev. James L. 'Connolly, D.O., PhD. the shrine of Our Lady of proved by the board of trustees, knight of the Knights of Colum GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER' Fatima in Portugal March 29-31. until revision of the statutes is bus, wage increases range from. Rt. Rev, Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. ,Driscoll Pilgrims' will study the theme -.completed. Voting privileges $22 to $26 a week over the MANAGING EDITOR "The Sick Person at the Service were also extended to all full- . three-year life of the contracu. Hugh J. Golden .. , of Christian Society.", time faculty ,members. .. which became effective Jan. 1.
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'
Useful Talk
ce@ffifi)[fifi)8tflfee
CCllD,
@rheANCHOR
ceD: Teachers'
ANCHORThurs., Jan. 18~ 1968
Volunteers Help Dioce$on Paper
Grea~r New Bedford Confraternity· of Ohristian Doc
trine teachers on both the elementary and high sc.hoollevels will have the opportunity to ahtend an In-Service Work- ' !Shop on 8aturday, Jan. 27, at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth. There is no registration fee for the tion class-6th grade level; Use n'lV'lgram but teachers are of film in religious education ,.....~ on the high school level; and asked to bring a box lunch. Use of popular songs in the high Registration is from 9:30 to 10 and the program day will condude at about 3:30. J[n addition to III general ses1 roan and Bible Vigil in the morning, workshop sessions ·will ·discuss:. Techniques and proj. cds· that make elementarY reli'gion class' come alive; Use of .. ·filinstrips':'demonstrations on the c;Iementary, level; Demonstra,
I
•
YAKIMA (NC) - Thanks to the assistance of a group of vol unteers an issue of Our Times, Yakima diocesan newspaper, was assembled, folded by hand and mailed on time. A statement by the paper said the machine which gathers the pages together. and folds them "failed to cooperate." Ordinarily, it explained, 2,000 or more papers per hour are run through the collator-folder, but on this occasion "the count was more like 300 'an hour. "At that rate, it would have taken nearly 44 hours to assem ble the more than 13,000 copies of the paper" needed. In response to telephone pleas from staff members, some 35 men and women arrived to as semble and fold the copies by han(I. This was completed by early the next morning, and later that day the last of the papers were mailed.
school religion class. The afternoon will feature separate workshops for elemen tary and high school teachers and will conclude with the cele bratio~, of Mass. After the program ti;l'e Victory Noll Sisters will be available to discUSll Parish Re~ig'ious.,Educa tion Programs with indiViduals' or,~rish groups. .' ' !,
',.
','
.:Chaplain, Says .Viet!;'C'ong :E~ploded Mine Under Truck~:with Children , ,
,SAIGON (NC)-''There were a crowded theater in Mytho," !5 orphans in the truck when Father Brinkman said. "That' Ute Viet Cong exploded the titne, they kiHed eight and mine under it," Father (Capt.) wounded more." ,,!ler~an' J ..:l3rinkman, Redemp On Christmas Day, .he said, an
torist from, ~altimore said.:, American serviceman' dressed
, lJe was ;still grieving over the as Santa Claus was flown by
, ,tragedy that followed the I or- 'helicopter from Dong Tam to
\ ' pbans' Christmas visit to a camp Mytho, bringing gifts to lighten of .9th U. S. Division troops at the grief in the orphanage. Dong Tam; about 40 miles south Conducted by Vietnamese at Saigon.. 'Sisters of St. Paul of Chartres, the institution has' rome' 130 , It happened two days before ' Christmas, he said. The orphans, orphans. 'little girls around 10 years of
age, had come to entertain
Vietnamese men' and women employed in the camp. I,t was all part of a Christmas treat planned by the Americans for MADRID (NC) - The new the Vietnamese workers. On apostolic nuncio to Spain, Arch Christmas Day there would be bishop Luigi Dadaglio, told a II special party for the orphans. Catholic educators' convention A U. S. Army truck -brought here that criticism of their them the five miles from Mytho schools as being money-minded about 11 A.M. on Dec. 23. First, 14 un~air. the children were given dinner He told the 10th national con in the camp. Afterwards they vention of the Federation of sang and danced at the enter Religious Teaching Orders tainment. About 50 Americans (FERE) that "non-public schools poined 150 Vietnamese in the should receive from the state audience. economic aid similar to that At 4 P.M. the children started given to public schools, accord em the journey home to Mytho. ing to what's just. Then educa A military police escort went tion in general could be truly ahead in a jeep. Three Ameri democratic, .and the 'classism' cans rode In the 2% ton truck that may exist in some private with the orphans. It was an institutions would surely end." open truck. Some 1,000 delegates at the Command Detonated convention represented about They were only about 500 4,000 private schools with a total yards from the gate when the enrollment Of one million stu mine exploded. "It was com , dents. mand detonated," Father Brink . One of its resolutions called man said. ''The Viet Cong were for state aid to ,the' efforts of near. They followed the explo Catholic schools to broaden sion with small arms fire." their facilities in order to in A 20-year-old girl, Marie clude children from low-income Nguyen thi Be Hai, who had families. accompanied the children from the orphanage was mortally ~. D 'Wounded in the mine explosion~: If:r. avus to lOir~€:t,
,'Defends Spanish Catholic: S(:hools
7
r....e.
Workshop
In' New Bedford Jan. '27
V~cations
Directors Ask National Office
WEEKLY SOCIAL: The ~eekly Indian fair in Otavalo, Peru, a town high in the Andes, is one of the most color ful in So. America.NC Photo.
Parents Seek State' Aid Parisian APEL Claims 1949 Law Providing Help to Private Schools Now Inadequate PARIS (NC) -The National Union of Associations of Par ents of Private School Students (APEL) has called for increased government support of private education. A spokesman for the group said that the, guidance program
required by the state demands the establishment of various kinds of schools in all regions of tile country. Catholic educa tion, he said, has made efforts to establish a variety of types' of schools but had run into financial difficulties. He said the 1959 law provid
ing government aid to Catholic
schools is inadequate to allow
Project to Probe the necessary aid for the re
Religious Educatic;»n quired expansion. WASHINGTON (NC) -Pres That law provides varying ent systems of religious educa amounts of state control over tion throughout the nation will the schools. In general, the be probed in a research project greater the aid,' the greater the inaugurated by the Confrater control. nity of Christian Doctrine The spokesman for the pri (CCD). vate school group said that de lays in obtaining government Msgr. Russell J. Neighbor, di rector of the CCD national cen- . contracts necessitated the un ter here, said CCD directors in dertaking of great financial burdens by the' parents of every ,diocese have been re quested to cooperate in the first private-school children in an phase of the study program-a 'attempt to meet the require fact-finding questionmiire to be ments of the guidance program completed by late January. It advocated- by 'the state. 'includes queries on CCD per sonnel' and staff, budget,' pro-ECUmenOCDm Aff@irs :~eth~ie:rp~::sh~:drsp~~e~f~~~,. 'La farge hll§Hhite grams, 'and cooperation with',
hand torn off. Six more were ,', "NEVV, YORK (NC) -:-,Fa,ther other diocesan agencies' and Commiss'iolJ1 ,groups. ' ". mjured. Part of the truck ,was.. .!'F4l,1r~ton N. ;Davis, S.-J., editor • 1 OMAHA (NC)·..,.., Archbishop , ll>lown off. 1 .1 1f1.-:o'uef, of, ,America, magl;lzine "Two weeks before that, th~.:, sj.~ce .1955, ,has gee1l ,n!1m¢ di';' , . The'second phase, an attitudi-., Gerald T. Bergan of Omaha an nal questionnaire to be com- . nounced the formation of an Viet Cong tftlrew grenades into, ,.~~r of tq.e -!<!hn La. Farge In pleted by mid-March, wi1l. ex'- ' 'Ah:hdiocesan 'Conirnission for , .. ~tute, the interracial 'and ec . ,. imlenical oragnization named' plore the "image", of CCl) in . Ecumenical AffairS, composed ,diocese,_ inch,ldtng ,that of of priests, Sisters ,and laity. Cardinati Criticizes . for 'the late.' Fatiler John La each bishops, pastors, CCD workers, Its purpose will be to' work Farg,e, ~.J.;. ' parents, and others, according to toward renewal among all rell School Aid Proposal His appointment,.was an Msgr. Neighbor. gious denominations in the area. ARMAGH (NC) - William noun~ed after a, recent meet Cardinal Conway of Armagh has ing of the 14 Jesuit provincials , again criticized a school aid pro of the U.S. and Canada., Fa,ther posal of the Northern Ireland government as a threat to the' ,Davis succeeds the late Father Continued from Page-Six, Church's authority over its John Courtney Murray, S.J., woo died ,last August. the universe grows toward Christ is the way the Church schools. The La Farge Institute was -grows." Progress toward this desired unity ultimately de The Irish primate had first sPoken out against the measure -founded in 1963 as a center for pends on our patience :w~th one' another and our confidence when it was made public as a debate and discussion -'- usually in the Spirit. During t}:iese serious days of prayer for unity, off the record-of racial justice White Paper by the government last Fall. His new comment, and ecumenical understanding. It our plea should be for peace and fraternity; for harmony made on behalf of the Irish also sponsors encounters on other 'and love' in Christ. subjects, such as a' 1966 discus bishops, expressed disappoint In short; the' p~ay~r:,~f Jesus ,himself must be our model ment that the government had 'sion between the French'Marx and guide ... :" ... "that they may all be one; that they too advanced the proposal to par- ist, theorist, Roger Garaudy, may, be' one..in us, as thou Father art in me, and I in thee; 'Jiamentary consideration with and a dozen Christian philoso- phem and theologi'ans. ' ~ makina significant changes. that they should/all be one, as we are one.".
Name'd
JAMAICA (NC)-Resolutions urging formation of a national voca.tions office, promotion of relligious life careers through national news agencies, and pro viding better professional coun seling ,training were adopted here in New York by the East ern Association of Religious Vocation Directors. Some 80 members of 30 com munities met at Bishop Molloy Retreat House for three days ~ discussions concerning the pre,sent crisis of faith affecting voca.tions and for new ap proaches in professional train ing and counseling. Brother Frederick Stokely, F. S.C., a candidate for a doctorate at Harvard University, said "ideation techniques" used in business and industry could be employed by vocation directors to sllimulate new ideals.
Episcopalian Bishop In Cathedral Pulpit NEW YORK (NC)-A Protes tant clergyman will preach from the pulpit of St. Patrick's Cathedral here for the first time during this year's Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Suffragan Bishop James S~u art Wetmore of the Episcopal diocese, of New York will preach at a ceremony Thursday, Jan. 25 in the cathedral marking the close of the official observ ance of the unity week.
YOURS FOR IONLV
254
Evorv homo should hovo a reminder of thO crucified . Savior. This all molol cruelfhl IS 5;3/4" lang, Send 254 a 'self-addrossed onvoldpo
and
10:
CRUCIFIX OFFER OGpartmenl 9 Salvotorlon Center Wisconsin S3061
Church, Unity _Octave. 1968: '
ELECTRICAL Contradors
944 County St. New Bedford
8
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of
F~n
Asks Supplement
River-Thurs. Jan. 't8, 1968
Family Income
Yule Party leaves Residue Of Unclaimed Belongings By Mary Tinley Daly January' is ."inventory time" wherever you go. In department stores 'tis almost impossible to get the size, color or style you want until "after inventory." Same Bit the grocery sore and from your favorite friendly neigh borhood t druggist. "Those • vitamins will be available Rather surprisingly, we have ,after inventory." In the thus far received few requests. meantime one can jolly In the box are lone mittens,
SAN JUAN (NC) - Puerto Rico's top political leader has urged implementation of papal teachings on family income, for the second time in less than four months. -' Sen. Luis Muno~ Marin, a fOl" mer governor and foremost fig ure in island politics, delivered the speech in the Senate. Be said: "We must immediately reach conclusions with respect to what is the standard of living which a community of over $3 billion of collective income I should be able to offer its citi-'" zens, with respect to what would be the cost of supplementing , , the incomes CYf families which would be below such a mini- ' mum. "We must decide whether supplying them that difference directly on their family income in the manner in which the illustrious papal encyclicals speak to us, is the best way of serving such families, or whether it is of more lasting benefit to use the money which slowly becomes available in preparing their .members with ':i regard to health, training, goals, ,to help them to attain the same" i' thing in a manner more related''-' to their own effort. (. I "In one form or' another, I: n' believe there is in this a"duty 0If" '" social and human 'conscience '(I ,Which is morally unavoidable."
well get through the cold-and- five; di.apers, three; a baby flu season until the new stocks bottle; a stuffed animal; green of vitamin: C sweater, size 10; a baby tooth a r r i ve _. or wrapped carefully in a paper double up on napkin (somebody wondering the natural C why the Good Fairy doesn't vitamins, citrus produce that dime under the fruits and the pillow, or has the price gone up dark green vegto a quarter?); a teen-dolI's etables. In the curler; a pink rosary; two um finance departbrellas; a vital part from a ment of any game, same for a camera; bat household also teries .for a toy truck; a baby eomes'inventory - blanket (security?); a pipe; a time, as men'1968 diary; a note starting, tioned in this colum last 'week: "Dear Uncle Joe, Thank you PAPAL GREETING: Li,ttle Pietro, a patient at the " very much. • '" ." -' . assessing debits and ere d'ts 1 ,
Hospital'of the Child jesus in Rome, received fa visit from mostly debits. And buttons! Here is a col.,.
.. And at our house we find the lection of everything from the Pope Paul. The Pontiff appears to be well recovered from most confusing assortment· of large overcoat type to the tiny his own recent convalescence. NC Photo. items classified, or rather uJi-' dabs that popoff the back· of·s
classified, under t~e general fat baby's neck: suit buttons,
heading of "Miscellaneous.~' . . dress bllttons, shirt buttons.
With the friendly camaradeAnybody who doesn't have rie of holiday visiting, friends all his buttons is welcome to and. ·kinfolk dropping in, after- search the Daly' button jar. Ten math of objects looks· like a .to-one, the lost shall be' found ~ By ~RILYN R~:Pf.:RIC~.,=~~=~~.:,'St.~ i~uis.·Has'·Ch~'pter ~,,~ "take your pick" table at a par- therein. Phi Beta Kappa '" , ish bazaar.. To . paraphrase the lyricist Family Day .. William Schwenck GUbert in ST.:LOUIS (NC)-:..Dr. Bentley "'i . The only hint of Spring in the come as a shock to many (my- . Glass, national president o! Phi
Large part of the miscellany "The' Mikado": was residue from the day the I've got a list,' I've got a little offing is in ,the first previews self included) who for the past Beta Kappa, installed the St.
of the new season's fashions. four years have let their waist- Louis University chapter of Plrl
whole 30 of us spent together list at our house, 17 children; 13 Of what never would be Through news media ilnd the lines expand under all that Beta _Kappa Sunday.
store windows. and racks of the lovely excessive material floatThirteen faculty members
adults. Vainly, for a while, we strug- missed, never would be missed. better shops, we are at least able ing down in an A line from our were installed as charter mem
to get a glimpse
gled as a telephone committee shoulders. bers, and six faculty members of the feminine to reunite possessor and the un In fact, the fashion industry were initiated as foundation
Pennsylvania Revives <> bright clothes
possessed.
' has discovered ,that size 10 girls members of the chapter. Student
that' are the
Did you leave a pair of gloves Birth Control Plan have jumped from wearing a members will be' elected after look of Spring here?" we long-distance tele 25% belt to wearing a 27 and March 1.
HARRISBURG (NC) - The . and Summer
· new styles have had to take
phoned Eileen, "natural colored . Pennsylvania Department of '68. Also if you
these new affluent American St. Louis University was pigskin, size 71" dimensions into account. granted a charter by the Nation "No, the ones I lost were Welfare, with some help from have the money Even the, Spring' coats are 'al Phi Beta Kappa Council last at this time of black wool. But I did lose a the U.S. government, has re belted to. reveal our excesses.': 'August, along with seven other popgun. Rather, Miichael lost vived a plan to expand birth ·year or a mar universities inc1udi~g the Uni:' his popgun. Is it there?" , control aid to welfare 'recipients.. velous ere d i t · and the designers have the" versity of Notre Dame. Phi Beta' ner.ve to emphasize that these
Under regulations announced rating this is Well, that accounted for the coats have a lithe and narrow Kappa, an intellectual honor so ,popgun propped in the corner, ,by'Welfare Secretary Thomas W. the time to shop
,silhouette. But all kidding aside, ciety with considerable prestige,
for your warm
.but not for the pigskin gloves, Georges Jr., welfare case work I think that the feminine belted was founded in 1776 at the Col and no trace of black wool ers would be able to initiate weather wardrobe.
gloves. .Resort clothes are but a pre , fashions of Spring '68 with their lege of William and Mary ill" . discussion CYf birth coD/trol, and "Did Tara lose her shoe?" we would be able to refer unmar ··view of what you'll be wearing full flowing skirts and slender Virginia. ", asked Mary, "just one shoe? ried women and those living on the shores of the Atlantic bodies are a tremendous imVocations Seminar Perhaps she put on her boots ,apart from their husbandg,-as Ocean this Summer so why not · provement on the chemise and and forgot the shoe." weli as married women now buy your bathing suit now and shift. BOGOTA (NC) - The Latin' Nope. Tara was Miss Goody covered-fur birth control ad These former fashions may American spend the rest of these wintry Bishops' Councl1 Two Shoes. months exercising to get into have given us a chance to hide wee. (CELAM) is sponsoring a sem By that time, we gave up. The pl'llfl is similar to one in;. it. Maybe one of the new sultry, our figures but they did· very inar on pastoral work for voca Certainly if any child lost one troduced two years ago' and sophisticated beach outfitS is little to make us look like at tions here for 40 priests and shoe, what with the price of later abandoned under pressure just the incentive we all need to tractive women. In fact, in Religious from Central America children's shoes nowadays, the .from Catholic Ohurch g,roups lose a few of those pounds piled many cases when you met some and the northern countries of • parents could do the sleuthing. and some. state legislators. on by holiday gorging. one wearing one of these tent South America. Will Call I'm sure you realize already, dresses, you had to look twice The regulation was reinstated what with all the ballyhooing to make sure she wasn't con . Same thing with all the other under pressure from welfllJ'e bnpedimenta. ·the fashion industry has been cealing a blessed event. Most Of We simply made a miniature . workers and with some urging doing, that the waistline is back us have spent enough time ill ,inventory of items not belong from the federal Department of where God put it and that the maternity clothes to appreciate
ing to anybody living at our HeaLth, Education and Welfare. figure-hiding shift has become the return of the waistline even
house, put the miscellany into a yesterday's n.ews. This revived if we have to resort to heroic
big carton labelled "To be called Portugal Relief Agency emphasis on the middle will 'measures to get ours back,
'for" and awaited results. CITIES SERVICE
WOR' LD OF .FASHIO·N.. WAISTLINE RETURNS
of
w.
H. RILEY & SON, Inc.
Thanks U.S. Catholics Bethlehem Open City For Observa nces BETHLEHEM (NC) - Israeli author.ities now in control of Bethlehem permitted unlimited access to the city of Christ's birth for the Orthodox celebra tion of Christmas and the coin cidental Western Christian ob servance of the Epiphany. The two feasts, observed to gether because of the use of differing calendars, brought smaller numbers of pilgrims than the Dec. 24-25 celebration of Christmas. But the attend ance among tie Greek, Syrian and Coptic Orthodox who note Christmas here on Jan. 6-7 was regarded as about normal.
Societies M,erge
LISBON (NC) - Portugal's national Catholic relief agency has tha'nked the Catholics of the Brooklyn Catholic Benevolent Legion Now U. S. f9r help given to wctims Part of Larger K of C Organization' of the recent floods in the, Lis bon area. · NEW HAVEN (NC) - The surance assets of $300 million. A shipment of 42 tons of food Catholic Benevolent Legion of The Catholic Benevolen~ Le stuffs sent from America by Brooklyn has been formally in- gion has about 2,850 members
Catholic Relief Services was corporated into the Knights of with insurance assets of over
distributed here immediately. A Columbus: The merger docu- $500,000.
team of more than '225 volun ments have been signed at K . The Legion, founded in 1881,
teers was organized by Portu of C supreme headquarters here requested the merger because
guese Caritas to work. with the in Connecticut by John W. Mc- it found its membership too
flood victims. Each day more Devit, supreme knight of the small to function effectively' as
than 100 of them went to the Knights of Columbus, and Alex- a fraternal benefit society. ravaged districts, where they 'ander Boehler, supreme presiThe incorporation of the Le gave out bedwear, clothing and" dent of the Catholic Benevo- gion into the Knights has the shoes, as well as. food. lent, Legion. ' 'approval of the superintendent Caritas' message of thanks The Knights of Columbus is of insurance of the State of New also included one to Pope Paul . a fraternal benefit society of 'York and of the commissioner VI, who sent lhid from Rome. 1,200,000 Catholic men with in- "of insurance for Connecticut.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Jan. 18, 1968
Hearty Soups Chase Winter ChBn~p ~[f©vide Good EatQ'ng
9
FoU"m Apos"\t"o~a"\t"e For Men"\t"aUy U~
JJ~~ph and !fariTI}'lll Ro~el1"ic~ Chives a,re a must for the herb gardener and easy to start and grow. They may be stal1"ted in the house and kept on the window sill, or they may be planted in the garden where they will return year after year. I would suggest Chat you do both, as a packet of seed will give you enough remedy to both ward off the ..IL. effects of 'the wintry blast and IIIl1ives to satisfy any onion also to make it easier to live lover. .As I slllggested last with your aches and miseries if l':$y
NEWARK (NC) - A Nationall Apostolate for the Mentally Re-> tarded was organized at a meet ing here of directors of work 'with the retarded. Father Matthew M. Pesaniello of the Mount Carmel Guild.. social welfare agency of the Newark archdiocese, was elected president of the apostolate. Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston is episcopal advisor tG the group. The apostolate is designed \@ assist and coordinate Cathol e work among the mentally hal dicapped. "We are pointing toward the total integration of the retarded' into the life of the community and the Church," Father Pesa niello said in explaining the group's goals. "We hope to see the day when they are looked on as full citizens of the Church." Vice-president of the group is Father Joseph A. Goebel of Cleveland. Fathers Joseph C. Gengras of Hartford and Ger ald Sabourin of Providence were named 'to the executive'
week, start the seed in several you do get them is a steaming pots ,31)d keep one for the house bowl of hot homemade soup. and U.e other for the garden. Poets have written ociles to For, those who like their herbs ~ soup kettle and William to ai ve o~ ·some aroma, sage is M&cepeace Thacl:I.eray in his on mUjlt. We have grown thiB. Ballad of Bouillabaisse lauded both in, and. out of the house ami ~ merits of this spectacular it too is easy to grow and will ,seafood soup that today even :retu~· each year. (;rown in the Thac.keray would have a diffi ho~, ' sage ,should be thinned, ,cult time affording. Fillecil with out, ~, leave one or two plants lobster, snapper, perch, cod, sea in the seedling stage as they bass and mackerel this is defi are quite large and deep-rooted. nitely not an economy soup. Again, it is wise to plan to plant However, there are as many va some in the garden or a window rieties of soup to simmer on box which has eQSy access from your stove as there are snow the house. flakes in our wintry B:des. ' ~semanr d.oes excellently in Over the weekend I visited the ,b,ouse and. ,is quite. pretty as "the' bomes of three friencils and well: ~ ,beipg IlfOmatic. It grows, "oddly I enough in eaeh there was flui ~ Jarg~ JIG it il;l. n. good idea to ,Ill 1ail"ge' pan of soup simmering I"OOt .p'~e ,~plant from .time. ,11m the baek of the stove. One 'board. ' " . to time to dw~rf it somewhat. "girl was making chi<:ken be MASS FOR PATIENTS: Few-of.us ever,(,-aD attend !'h~s i~. ,~o~~.. b7' Ple~elY clipping' cause she had a few extra pieces the Pope's Mass. Imagine the joy' of' these small' boy-s, ~ of. ~~ts sO thnt the.· ,!bat· She hadn't used fl>r dinner, patients ·at the Hospital of the Child'Jesu$ in .Rome; when CU Re-establishes ' plant .is, ~ted ,l)\~t not kiUed. ,~~her had m~de a hearty rib their beds were rolled into the chapel so I that they QOuld Preachers Institute ,PoiDts to, Remember sticking vegetable and the third Mass with the Holy Father. NC ~~<>to. .. Basil thyme mint savo.,. had: made my favorite,Caldo or attend WASHINGTON (NC)-Fathef' . i' \ '. '
and other herbs' are, not difficult ,~ort~guese soup, as it's known I
John P. Whalen, acting rector to start and in dwarf forms are In flhls area. of The Catholi<: University of perfeclly 'suitable to indoor eul . Ka.1e Soup America, has announced the re-, tore. Reall)' the lIist goes on and· The latter is also known as establishment of the university's em, and to treat each plant Indi- Kale soup. Meryl and Melissa Preachers' Institute,founded ill Federal Court to Rule on COnstitutionality 'ridlJlaUy would take four or five both enjoy it as much as ][ do 1932 by Father Ignatius Smith. .Of Welfare Requirement i_n California O.P. eolumns. but strange as it may seem, Joe However, there nre several who had it a great dealt at home, The institute will offer a 12
SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-A Monterey County Welfare De musts which should be kept In can take it or leave it. This soup credit Summer program, on the
three-judge federal court has partment told her that she would mind in dealing with herbs: (1) is very easy to make but the graduate level, in preaching and
have to file a divorce suit against in a wide range of allied disci:'
do not overcrowd a pot, (2) recipe is quite hard to come by. been asked to role on the con heros do very well in poor soil "Oh I just take a bit of this and -stitutionality of a California hel' husband, Steven, before she plines, leading to a certificate
can collect $179 a month aid for in preaching. Clergymen of all
80 don't overfeeQl the plants, (3) that and a handful of something welfare ~uirement that a Cath her two children. denominations may attend.
herbs resiSlt transplanting so else," seems to be the answer oUc mother must sue for Iii vorce before she is eligible for Steven Jenisch, she said, de don't try moving them from pot that I've come across most fre The professional service of to pot or to different parts of quently in the quest for an ex Aid to Dependen1: Children ben serted their home last October. the university's speech and efits. She applied for aid Dec. 28 and the garden. plicit recipe for this rib-warmhearing clinic will be at the dis Federal Judge Oliver J. Car was told that s~ate law prohibits posal of participants. Once a plant has grown, lea'm ing dish. Finally I persuaded my to leave it alone (resist the mother-in~law (who makes ter has issued a temporary or payments to children whose par temptation to water it every Caldo very well) to measure der. requ.iring the California ents have been separated less Parish Adoption Plan day and wait until the plant is what she put into this tasty dish Welfare Department to pay the than three m0':lths, or unless di actually drooping before you as she went along and the result benefits to the mother until the vorce proceedmgs have begun. LOUISVILLE (NC)-Parish~ three-judge panel rules later in She told Judge Carter that a get out the wntering can). dB the following recipe. to-parish aid totaling some January. department ofiicial told her that Keep in mind tha t modem This is n very basic recipe $240,000 will begin to flow in herbs are not too much differ that is, generally adjusted to Mrs. Carolyn JeniSch, 21, of ''to .~ss,~e the sepa~tion ~s the Louisville archdiocese thif.l ent from . those which were sui'!; tile individual likes and Menterey told Carter that the genwn~ she s?ould Immedi year. ately flile for divorce." grown hundreds of years ago. diBlikes of a family. The aid will come through the Whereas great advances have ' Caldo 'or Kale Sonp She said she cannot do this "parish adoption" plan proposed because she is a Catholic and at the 1967 Corpus' Christi 0b been made in hybridizing fruits Urge bOne with a arent deal BC ,Plans Jerusalem because she hopes fur a recon and v~legatables, the herbs ~ of meat on it servance by Archbishop Thomas Biblical Institute ciliation, which might be impos are usmg are much the same as 1 pound. of chourico J. McDonough. He urged that CHESTNUT HILL (NC) sible if she files for divorce. more affluent parishes adopt less those used b.y ~uropea~ long 11k pounds of cabbage Boston College will conduct an. well-off parishes in the arcb before the Pilgnms arnved on 1 ¥.! pounds of couves She asked the coL1I"t to rule diocese or elsewhere. our shores. 'l'hes.2 ore weed-like 2 <:ans of red kidney beans institute of arche'ology and the that the divorce requirement vi plants which WIll survive poor drained or ':Ih bolt of d Bible in Jerusalem during July olates "constitutionally garan !SOil, drought and the trampling beans ry and August. teed rights to religious freedom, feet. of children, but not the 7 white potatoes cut in half Father Williaql Le(;mard, S.J., marital happiness and due pro White's Farm Dairy
metlc~lo~ care of .an over (My mother-in-law often uses theology dep3rtment chainnan, cess of law and equal treatment." eonsclentlous housewife. !l chiCken breast' to add more IISPECfAl MILK
said seminars, lectures and read In the lKitche:n flavor and also some dried fava ings will ot: augmented by work From Our Own
It looks like a cold, cold Win beans for more body.) ing at archeological excavatil>ns ter, filled with blustery days 1) IIi 'a' large six quart pan in Pal~stine for deeper insights Tested Herd l l
rand snowy nights. The inevit ,place the meat bone and half into the geographical real1ties Acushnet, Mass. 993-4457
able ills that accompany Janu fiU the pan' with water. Bring to of b,iblical history. • Special Milk ary and February weather have a beil and then lower heat so D.r. David Neiman, an eminent already set in ns wet feet and that the water and bone simmer' • Homogenized Vito D Milk ehilled bodies welcome flu and for about an hour or until the Hebrew scholar and the first • Buttermilk 94 'TREMONT STREET rabbi to be appointd to the Bos virus bugs. An oldfashioned meat on the bone is partially • Tropicana Orange Juice ton College theology faculty, is 4AUNTON, MASS. cooked. • Coffee and Choc. Milk institute director. 2) Add the chourico (not cut Tel. 822-0621 • Eggs - Butter Conference Appoints u.p) and continue simmering about half an hour more. Georgetown Dedicates Information Director 3) Then add the cabbage and , .' ," " . ,,-',' i' "'. ,; ., . ." "".: -" ,,'
CHICAGO (NC)-Don Rose, couves, which should have been Ham Radio Station editor' and publicist, has been. cut up quite small, along with WASHINGTON (NC)-George o.ppointed public infonnation di the drained kidney beans and town University dedicated a new rector of the National Catholic the potatoes. If you' use the Rt. 6-Between Fall River and New Bedford Conference. for Interracial Jus drained kidney beans, add them ham radio station here to pro vide emergency consultation to tice and its Project program with the chourico. ',One of Southern New England's Finest Facilities several hospitals, medi~al schools bere, Mathew Ahmann, NCCIJ 4) CO"ntinue 'cooking until the and missions throughout the potatoes 'are done. . . _ecutive director, announced. 'Now Available for: world. Project Equality is an inter 5) This soup tastes even bet Known as the International denominational effort sponsored ter the next day when the fIe 'BANQUETS, FASHION SHOWS, ETC. by NCCIJ to harness the pur vors'l:tave' had a chance to blend. Medical 'Amateur" Radio Society, FOR DETAILS CALL MANAGER chasing power O'f religious In There is nothing better to ward the short-wave station-with' the stitutions behind equal opportu off Ii chill than huge bowls of caLl letters WA3FXJ-is one of 636-2744 or 999-6984 nities for minorities. Thoonas II. 'this soup served with thick the firse of' i'~ klnd in' a U.S. ',Center.' ' slices :ef fresh Portuguese bre~•. medical:',i':' Gibbons, Jr.. is director. • r ,.11'1 '.
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tHE ANCHOR-Diocese of: Fall River-Thurs. Jan. 18; 19,68
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AIDING UNDERPRIVILEGED CHILDREN: An estimated 5,000 ,~~rspns attended: the annual Bishop's, Charity" Ball ,af Lincoln Park ))l;lllrOQm. .Jn left photo gu~&t~ 'YatclL the presentatiot:l o,f ,47 youl1g ladies ef the Diocese to Bishop Connolly. In ,centerpa.n~J Cynt~ia Curry and
R,epQrts Clergy Lack Knowledge 'Of Technology
William, Synnott, of, New Bedford enjoy dancing to the music of Woody Herman's or-chel:\tra. At right Mis/? ,Maureen McCarthy of ,the, Attleboro area is presented W the Bis'hop. BaJlproceeds help underwrite BishClP'1I program for, exceptional children.
Stresses Need' for, Devotion to" M~ry Redemptorist Says DogmQ Must 8e Explained
'DAYTON (NC)-The Church cannot minimize devotion 10 Mary' and her place in Redemp tion for the sake of ecumenical understanding, Father Joseph E. Manton, c.ss.R., of Boston told Ilome changes," among the 'cler the annual convention of the "gy, most of Brazil's diocesan and Mariological Society of -America ,Religious priests lack a' 'knowl at' the Bergamo' Center' 'for "edge of science and technology Christian ,Renewal 'here.' Dnd their religious implications. Mariari dogma must" be 'pa tientlyexplained, not denied or "', This appraisal was ,given: in changed, he said. ,~ report of Father .fulimundo At 'the convention, 'Marian ,Caramuru de Barros, coordina experts: tor of the' Catholic, Church's Honored one of their col five-year pastoral renewai pro , leagues, Father Cletus Wessels, gram in BraziL O.P., of' Aquinas Institute, Du The two-year interim report buque, Iowa, for his contribu also said the Brazilian clergy' tions to the field of.', Marian lacks an understanding of the theology. demands of social justice and Exchange Ideas shows "an excessive preoccupa tion with material efforts such Elected Father Alban Maguire, as church building and institu O.F.M., of Holy Name College, tional organization." ,Washington, D. C., as new presi dent of the Mariological Society, Part :0£ the trouble, the report said, is due to the method of succeeding Father William G. Most of Loras College, Dubuque. training priests, which is devoid Heard a major address by "of contacts with the new tech nological society.:' Father Most in which he' was sh:'irply critical of a deClaration. Superficial Experience on academic freedom by the In Other points stressed in the ternational' Federation of Cath report were: olic" Universities. Acknowledgea /' a "deteriora More and more Christians are tion" 'in Marian devotion which becoming aware, of the Gospel's they ,agreed was not in the demand that they try to solve spirit of Vatican CouncilllI. the problems of modern 'society,. but the great majority has been Exchanged ideas with nontrained, in the externals of faith Catholic scholars attending the convention. , Without an understanding of Submitted to ,'the Mariological their social, economic and pol it Society's membership a sugges ,ical obligations. tiotl 'that 'the phrases "ever Youth is more and more feel virgin" and "mother of God" be ing that the Church should r~n explicitly stated in the English del' "service" rather than em Canon. phasize itself as an "institution." Catholics Confused Little has been accomplished in exp~nding the Church's presD~clari~g th~re ,ras "~o ence mto the field 'of social"· d~wngr!ldmg ,of, Mary at VatI eommunications , ' . c,an 1,1, Father Manton said the '· . . ,., " ,. :' "dow.i1gradin,g'" 'come's from R e I19lon has been a superfl.- th. ", -~ ". . I . ',.. . , , ose, y,earnnrg more'-·f' . On pu b CIa expenence rather, t~!ln the Ii'j;', th f' ' altd'" Jr i'oot of truly Christian living'.' CCI y t ~dn. ~.r; Pth t l~teh"~" ":1 , , ' . '. , , , ' on e~ mg a' e'aver,ge A gr\lwing numbel' of CathoCatholic' is confused" 'on the )lcs want to belong' to 'the questio'nof -Marian "devotilJll d~ Church as the People of God ~pite clear statements by Vati " llUt too fe~, arc desirous of joincan H, Father Manton said, a ing its ~'militant" groups. possible" reason is that council'
:,,: RIO DE JANEIRO (NO) ~ Although "the ,,'inds of the (SecOlld) Vatican Coun~ '~ii are beginning to effect
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documents have not been widely read. Ideas on Marian .devotions, " on the other hand, have been taken "from random religious pieces in the press." . ' ,Convention sessions included discussions 'on how to e'ncourage Marian devotions in, the, post conciliar era. One participant said a major cause for declining devotion was not the 'fault of the teaching of the Church, ,but, the widespread viewpoint, of the "modern woman," who wants "neither virginity nor mother hood," as exemplified b:y Mary. Essential Dimension Another took the view that it 'is a mistake to assume that only, Marian devotion!' have been in decline. "There has been a huge fallout of confes sion, weekday Mass attendance and visits to the Blessed Sacra ment," he said. One of the major speakers was Rt. Rev. Alexander Schme-
JaBsfr fFoli' DSfI'U'iler WAKEMAN (NC) - Father John Sherbrio, pastor of St. Mary's church in this Ohio com munity, take a no-nonsense at titude toward ecumenism, ~>r at least he did when he invited local clergymen, lay leaders and their families to a get together 'at the parish hall. "There will be no sermons, no speeches, no service-just din ner," he told his guests.
Archbishop Reports On Social Action SAN SALVADOR (NC) Following, earlier stat~menUt that the Church can and must ,make a contribution to the de.
velopment 'of this ,cou'nt~
, Archbishop Luis Chavez y Gon zalez of San Salvador has listed the accomplishments 'in hitl archdiocese.
mann, dean of St. Vladimir's
Orthodox Theological ;Sel1)inary, CJ;estwood, N. Y., ,who ,s~ressed th,e importance of Mary in the Eastern Liturgy. 'He 'said the 'cult" of Mary is "not' a separate element in the, ',rich tradition of the' Church~'" 'It Some 7,200 farmfamiiies" i2e is an "essential dimension' of taxi drivers, 7* bus owners anell Christian cosmology, anthro , about 50 truck owners have beea organized by archdiocesan cO pology" 'eccIesiology and escha,tology," he said. : operatives, he reported.
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OUTSTANDING SOCIAL' EVENT: "Mediterranean Fantasy" was the theine'bf the annual"Bishop's 'Charity Ball at LincOln Park ballroom '.for under-'PriviledgedchildreilJAt left, Bishop Conriolly' talks with Mrs. Charles Landry and Edward Kennedy. In center'photo bea'u-tifully gowned'
S'pani~h: Religious .'
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Ask "Governme'nt Aid for Sc'hools
Mrs. Fredric Bartek and Mrs. Stanley J. Godek chat at intermission. Tw© .New Bedford couples sit ou,t dance in right photo. Mr. and Mrs. Aglli'nDll Rose at left and Mr. and IMrs. Antonio Gomes.. Ball brought togeth6!r people from every area of the Diocese. '
11 Catholic Magazines Cease Publication Deficits, Circulation Less Chief Factors
WASHINGTON (NC) -Dur ing the past year' 11" Catholic magazines in the U. S. have 'either ceased publication or' combined to form new ones. Operating deficits and decline their efforts to open their iii. circulation were given as the s!=hools to ,all cllildren. , Ipric~pal reasons for Shutting , , "This 'jil a .i'cquisite of justice "down. "if'true freed'om and opportu'nity , Father Thomas McCube, pub "of education' is to be had,",' ac lisherof, Extension magazine, C()I'ding to'tl resolution of' the official organ of the Catholic loth nati'onal 'congress held here Extension Society, with head by the 'Federation of Religious quarters in Chicago, said there Teat.:hing Orders (FERE). FERE represents some 4,000. was as yet no official an'nounce ment that the magazine would schools In the country, with also cease publication with its close to one miIJiion students. April Issue, as had been re The 1,000 delegates also ported, He admitted, however, stressed the need for financing that circulation had dropped more facilities and scholarships considerably. for lower-income children.
Extension's publisher added
Actual1y, the government is that if the present magazine paying a smal1 subsidy to ele mentary non-public schools of was phased out, there would be
some form of Extension Society about $45 a month pel' school. publication given to donors. It However, private secondary education receives no such sub- . might be either a magazine or a newsletter, he, said, but the sidies. This includes some 1,400 matter was still undecided. schools with about 400,000 stu dents and 20,000 teachers, half Denies Rumor 01 them lay persons. A spokesman for Sign maga Democratize Education zine, published in Union City,
Vocational schools do receive N. J., by Passionist Fathel's, de nied a rumor that the publica state subsidies, from tax~s col lected on wa!{es of industrial· tion was shutting down despite workers and technicians. The a .circulation ioss of _'50,000, Church in Spain runs, 76 voca-. ,bringing, the magazine distribu tion to 245,000 copies a month. tional tl'aiJjing institutes. The five-day sessions of the Among the most widely known
of the magazines that ceased convention dealt mostly with publication durinl: the year was the "democratization" of Cath~ oUc education, with the implied. ,the Sacred Heart Messenger, 101-year-old Jesuit magazine reco!{nition that Cat h 0 U'c schools up to now have catered published in New York. Another was JM, official organ of Jesuit o largely to the well-to-do. Missions, Inc.~central office' for PI·of. J'an Lindemans of Bel U. S. ,and' Canadian Jesuit mis
gium, generlll sercetary of the International Office for Catholic sion endea vol's. B~th. ceased
publication with their 'Decem
Education, delivered the princi pal tllik on "The DemoCl'atiza-, ber, 1967, issues. ,JM was also
tion Pmcess in EuropeanCath-· 'Pliblished in New York. olic Schools." The Marist magazine, pub
Archbishop Luigi Dadaglio, lished in Lowell, Ma'ss" by the
apostolic nuncio to Spain, en Marist Secretariat of America, couraged FERE's efforts 'and ,repres'imting t.he Marist Fathers, said that no child of 'talent Brothers and Sisters in the should be denied an opportu United States and Mary Today, nity, nor his parents a true frce- . published in Dayton, Ohio, by
·the, ", Marianis't Fathers' "also
aum of' choice.
MADRiD' (NC)-ReIigiou8 eongregati,ons de~oted to' teaching are seeking more government subsidies" in
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ceased publicatioJll of 1967, . .
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Two Combined
'Mary Immaculate, ceased sepa rate publication at the end of 1967, and combined to fOlom a new J!lagazine, O:M,I. Missions. The. puplication's first issue ir; January-FeQruary, 1968.
Other magazines no longer publishing are: Immaculate Heart CTusader, published in In the reiigiouS education Chicago by the Claretian Fath . field, the North American edi , ers; Mission Digest, published in tion of Good Tidings-a cate : Frazier, Mich., by the Society of chetical' magazinl~ - has been 'Catholic Mission Sisters of 'St. discontinued and' is being re 'Francis Xavier; Missionary placed by the monthly magazine, 'Youth, published il) Techny, 111., Religion Te:lCher's Journal, pub . by the Society of the Divine lished in Fort Wayne, Ind. Word, and Impact, published iiT New York by the Dominican Fathers' St. Jude Missions. Isles of Mary and Mary Im maculate, both published in San Antonio, Tex., by the Oblates of
Apostolic Delegate To Install Bishop JACKSON (NC)-Archbishott Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Dele gate in the United States, wilD formally install Bishop Josepl:! B. Brunini as bishop of Natchez Jackson at a ceremony in Sa. Peter's co-cathedral here in Mis 9issippi Jan. 29. , The delegate will also officiate at- a liturgical ceremony at~. Mary's cathedral, Natchez, O!T.l Jan. 30.
Bishop Brunini has served :IS 'apostolic administrator of the Natchez-Jackson diocese sinee July, 11966.
Jesuit Asks R.e~el!iJs;e
Of' Priestl'ly V@WS NEW YORK (NC) - Father Carl Hemmer, 35-year-old priest who has been expelled from the Jesuits after twice being refused' a hearing on his application to become a married priest, has asked to be released from his priestly vows, "But I am asking to be lai cized only on the condition that I can return to the priesthood ii!' the Church changes its rules on
celibacy" during my lifetime,"
he said, adding he has no im
mediate plans to marry. Father Hemmer ,has been a
frequent spokesman for the Na
tional Association for Pastoral
Renewal, an association of,
priests seeking a change in the Western' Church?s rule of mand atory ~lerlc'al celibacy.·
)A;~b~e(C. A.ustin ~In~. ';....
FUNER"a: SERJJJ~E
~ NEW 'BED~6RD; ~MASS.' 549 COU.NTY: STREET
'"
.Read
fheANCHOR
THE ANCHOR-, Thurs., Jan. 18, ,1968
S)O~\?®[[[}U@@@] M@LID~
M@@]@[[[fi) M®\?[]u@cdJ O~ ~U'®LID@[[@\?D@~ ST. LOUIS (NC)-A new method of preparing young women for life in a modern sisterhood has been inaugu
The PaP,rrl§b Paitrr~&©
OlUR ]LADY OlF' TlHllE CAPlE, I1SRlEWSTlER
"The Singing Nuns" will be
featured at an ecumenical meet
ing to be sponsored by the
Women's Guild at 8 Tuesday
night, Jan: 23 in the churcp halL
Women of all faiths in the Brewster-Dennis-Pleasant Lake area are invited to attend. Mrs.
Edward Boyle heads the com
mittee arranging a social hour
to follow the program.
rated by the st. Louis province of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet. . In a break with past custom, 'the province dis~los~ the yo~ng HOLY GHOST, womiln interested 10 becommg ATrLEBORO , Some super breed of stalwart heroes, somehow immune' te a nun complete basic prepA public card partY win be the ills of ordinary men and women? Legendary figures of ex aration for her professional 'sponsored at 8 Thursday night, treme strength and endurance, whose physical, needs are unlike eareer' before entering a novi-', Jan. 25 by the Women's Guild bhose of mortal men? Romantic crea.tures of tiction~ Who are "mis tiate'" for' the special year of in the parish hall. Games will sionaries"? spiritual 'study required by" include progressive whist and MONSIGNOR GEOGHEGAN Catholic canon 'law. ' ." .. bridge. Refreshments will be Before this time, she, will' also served and many prizes. will be That missionaries are ordinary people Is their glory and their . have'spent a year living as·a lay,' awarded. Tickets are. available burden. They sweat in the heat of a blazing tropical sun; their woman in 'a convent and ,have from Mrs. Stephen, H. Sullivan, bones ache in the piercing cbill'~and dampness of rainy winter worked at teaching, nursing, chairman, or any guild member. nights. They know the hunger. tine thirst, the lonliness, the E(h.f1c~too[J'!l social work or whatever service IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, fatigue, the anxieties that are daily adversaries trying to A group of educators will , she has chosen. Vows will not· TAUNTON weaken them. Still they are dauntless. Why? Because to each '~be taken after a set period of Eleven new members were in- constitute a panel that will dis one of them, SERVICE Is the key to the meaning of a missionary cuss "Federal Aid to Education" time, but only when both the ducted into the Holy Name SO -SERVICE as varied' and as complex as the needs ,of Christ's at a forum to be conducted at young woman and the commu- ciety on Sunday morning by brothers all'onnd the world. These men are the adventurers of our 8 on Wednesday' evening, Jan. oity"" think she is ready,. the 'Rev. William H. O'Reilly, pasday ....... melllwho merit a headline. But 'tragically peOple ~aek province stated. '. :' tor, with the assistance of Louis ~2 in the gym of the Sacred home" rarely read of. their heroic and 'quiet daUi service to thf1 Hearts Academy, Prospect Street, peoples of the world.' . ~"',' ,' "' , ' "",Experience" MaturiC,. , . ,'Dupont, ,president. , 'J'"
The new approach to the ,.. " Charles"Saribom, president' of Fall 'Rivei-. " train~n.g of, f\lture membe~l of) St. 'Paul's Holy Name' Society " ,Panelists, will be Rt., Rev.
:. There is Father Thomas. He COuld 'b~v~ ~n afrO~-Page seD Arthur T. Geoghegari, S.T.D., the."cQngreg~on was approved,. and Stanley, Saladyga, president sation: lost in the'Brazili'an jungles for' mon~" ti;!ve1U)gb,. ,for ".~xperim~tation at .8 gen;-".of St. Joseph's Holy Name So-' superintendent of schools in the boat on jungle streams, discovering and ministering to a hitherto Providence Diocese; Dr. Vincent era! ,~hapterand was anno~nced ".ciety, were guests of honor at unknown. tribe of Indians. "I was searehing' for . human beings I by !:;i~s,ter Joan Marie. GI~aSOR,. ,the Communion breakfast that P. Wright, dean 'of the faculty at Could help and to whom I ,eouldbring the love of Christ," ,he said provin~ial ~perior. It win 1,0 ".~ollowed the' induction' «:ere- .. SMTI; Dr. John H. O'Neill, dep 0IIl his return. During the long journey; he shook uDder attacks of uty commissioner of. education Into" effect tbis Summer. ,.', ,monies. fever and ached from hunger. Palm leaves we're his only nourish for the State of Massachusetts. The program is based on the,,; ment. Nevertheless, he celebrated Mass daily-on' 'a river blink, in Idea" ,that the ' modern world., SACRED HEART, Edward J. Sullivan, director Deeds nuns whose professional "kORTH ATrLEBORO of the Ci,tizens for Citizens [ne. the jungle bush. of Fall River will serve as mod
expe~ience and maturity have Activities sponsored by the erator of the forum.
been developed in part before CCD i l1 clude a c01:resoondp~"e Meet Father Goldmann, the rae picker of Tokyo In CIIe The Fathers' Club of the entering the convent, Sister program for parishioners in the brown cowl of St. 'Francis. With his own hands, he rummaged Sacred, Hearts Academy is spon Joan Marie said. , armed forces and the Apostlethrough refuse and garbage palls in seareh of anything usefuL Soring the affair as part of an' For most applicants, basic ship of Prayer. Names of ser And the fruits of his· work are amazing: a church, a eonvales effort to bring this vi tal Issue education will be acquired in a vicemen and women may be Clent home for mothers- from the slums, charitable institutions Catholic college. Sister Joan sent to Mr. Robert Sirois, 14 to the attention of the' average and 'equipment for welfare work where before there was no~. Marie said a college education Cooney Ave., Plainville '02762; citizen whose concern about the is not a requisite for acceptance and those wishing to join the future of our pluralistic system A missionary is a young woman.. Sister Agnes, bubbling with since some candidates will enter Apostleship may contact Mrs. of education is utmost in their minds. life and humor who, if still at home, might now 'be selecting her fields where other training or Yvonne Morel, 79 Eddy Street, work experience can be ade- North Attleboro 02760. The' forum is expected to aid trousseau. Instead she suffers1he ravages of war. Wri.ting to ner individuals to realize the roles quate substitutes. In all cases, Bishop, she says: "All the vestments were. destroyed and the HOLY NAME, they will wear secular dress, they must 'play to d'etermine 'Blessed Sacrament profaned. We fled, taking nothing with us, and FALL RIVER that future. she'said. spent seven days traveling, eating only wild fruit. Our clothes are The parish council will meet Spiritual Growth The meeting is open to the mgs, our bodies covered with cuts, and we s-leep on the leaves." at 7:30 tonight in the rectory. general public. But deep, persevering love for souls sustains her. During the period of profes 'sional preparation the future All parishioners are invited to I could go on endlessly. These brave and unselfish men anel Sister will keep in touch with attend. , The CCD executive board will Councils women_me of them your own relations, neighbors and frienlls a formation team of nuns who at 7:30 tomorrow night, _xtend their hanlls to you for henp. They ask nothing for will provide opportunities for 'meet Wisconsnn 'also at the rectory. : spiritiJal g,rowth and commu themselves. They seek only that which will mean the difference Mi\DISON (NC) Bishop Contemporary Mass music nity experience. These may talce between life and death for the desperately poor whom they serve. Cletus F. O'Donnell has aP 'Will accompany 11:15 Mass Sun the form of we'ekend visits to a The outcasts and rejected of society; the too-many starving, aban proved a unanimous endorse day morning, Jan. 21. local convent, study days, re doned little 'ones; the aged,' weak, Ignorant and .suffering look ment I:>y the Priests' Senate of treats, discussion groups and to them. They look to you for"your prayers to sustain their mis the Madison diocese for the Summer institutes at the novi sional"Y effort, for your sacrifices to enable them to continue the mandatory establishment of par tiate house. tremendous task to be aecomplished. Only with your help ean ish councils in all parishes and When finished with her balJie they continue to live daily the worlls of Christ. "I have come n~t missions by May 5. education, the young woman to be served but to serve." The target'date will be pre will follow the' career of her ceded by a program of educa ':.oehoice while living in a convent tion and information during the Do you pride yourself on being "up on the news"?, ~en ask and sharing in the commWlity Lenten season. you.rself this question: "How much do I know about what is hap life of the Sisters, the province The purpose of parish coun pening on today's 'frontiers of the Ohurch?" Find out in the words said. She will then begin her cils is to invoive laymen more of missionaries living and working on t:he scene who wri,te of their novitiate, a year of intense spir deeply in the adwnistration of e~periences .in the new .WORLpMISSION. This quarterly maga itual development which will Church' affairs, as callec,i for by , nne, edited by the Right Rev. Edward T.' O'Meara, will be sent build on her previous educa the Second Vatican Council. to you for only $5.00 a year. It is an ideal gMt for priests and tiorial, theological and apostolie The priests earlier approved a ~ork. ' irehoollibraries. Write to WORLDMISSION, 366 Fifth Avenue, New model constitution and manda .......Following her novitiate, the
York, N~ Y. 10001. tory 'guidelines to ,be incorpor Sister will Plake a promise to ated in parish council constitu live and serve as a Sister of St. Salvation anel Service are the work of The Society for the tions'- .Joseph until she and the con Propagation of? the Faith. Please send your offering to Right Rev gregation judge her ready to erend Edward T. O'Meara, National Director, 366 Fifth Avenue, take perpetual vows. S. COUll't to RuBe New York, N. Y. 10001 or directly to your local Diocesan Director, The St. Louis province of the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, 368 North Main Street, Fail On ,ResiCl1elrniCY [Law Sisters of St. Joseph of ,Caron Kivu Mass. 02720. delet has 1,400 Sisters in ten WASHINGTON (NC) - The Iltates-Missouri, Illinois, Indi U. S. Supreme Court has agreed
ana, Michigan, Wisconsin, Geor
to decide if states can impose
gia; Oklahoma.' Texas, Colorado
residency requirements on state and Alabama. ' welfare recipients. A federal court in Hartford last, June ruled that Connecti t@ RlnstaU , cUt's, .one-year residence re , PITTSBURGH (NC) - The ,quirement was a violation of at ILLINOIS 'AUXILIARY: Byzantine-rite Pittsburgh dio ;the r,igh,t to tr~vel, Other courts
Bishop-Elect RaYInond J. 'in California" the .District of
eese has' announced that Arch bishop Luigi Raimondi, apos Vonesh, a priest of the arch i Columbia. ,m~n.pis", Wisconsin
tolic delegate in the United diocese of Chicago, has been i and;p~nnl!ylv~a have" issued
States, will officiate at instal 'similar rl,1lings. ' ", , lation ceremonies of' Bishop named by Pope Paul VI to A,',tptalof~(sta~eS ~llve ~I Stephen J. Kocisko, Tuesday, 'he Auxiliary Bishop of Jo ,dency req~,~f~~~ril$it~,;~~'\',IL. 1-15 WIlLIAM ST....._ ...NEW BEDfORD, MASS....I .sort. ." March 5' at Holy Spirit'Church. liet-in-Illinois. NC Photo.
"Men Who Mer;' A HeadliiJe"
will
Topic for Panel Amd
.1
-
•
'.
"';
,
.
nine
In
Mandatory See
u.
qelegate
,
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NEW BEDFORD~ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE ·BANK
Theologian Cites East Influence On Church
THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 18, 1968
Priests Senates In 121 Sees
WASHINGTON (NO) A Melkite theologian said here the Second· Vatican Council caused concepts de veloped in the Eastern rites to coIfle alive in the Western Church. ''The restoration of a vernac ular usage in the liturgy, the encouraging of local differences in liturgical rites and customs and above all, the active role given the National Conference of Catholic Bishops in deter mining local policies are all signs of the rebirth of the tra ditional Eastern concept of the patriarchate as an autonomous body within the one universal Church," said Archimandrite Oreste Kerame. Msgr. Kerame, who was an expert at the Second Vatican Council and personal theologian to the late Melkite-rite Patri arch of Antioch, Maximos Car dinal Saigh, addressed theology students and laity at a forum on Eastern theology. The forum was sponsored by the Catholic University of America and the St. Paul Center Byzantine In formation Bureau. Msgr. Kerame said the Cath olic Church in the U. S. is rap dly developing all the charac teristics which identified the ancient patriarchates in the early Christian Church. Concepts Again Developed "The ancient patriarchates," he explained, "were nothing more than a group of bishops from a distinct area in the uni \"ersal Church together with their clergy and people who followed the same national cus toms, vernacular liturgy, and developed a local ecclesiastical legislation and organization. "With the implementation of the decrees of the Second Vati can Council, these concepts are again being' developed within the Roman Church," Msgr. Kerame stated. The prelate said the decen tralizing of authority in the Church is not a dangerous phenomenon. "We have seen since the late Medieval period an unnatural development of papalmonarchial power and the assumption of the powers of local bishops by the See of Rome which was foreign to the mind of the early Fathers and the whole tradition of the Church," he said. Mutual Help The pope is a man and as such is limited in his capabilities," Msgr. Kerame continued. "It is impossible for one person to lay hold of the concrete experi ence and spirit of all peoples at once. "How can the life of the world multitude of Christians be placed in the hands of any single group or civilization or in the abilities of a single man?" he asked Msgr. Kerame said the cur rent trend toward collegiality in the Church does not imply a lessening of papal authority but rather a reinterpreting of the position of the pope in its most ancient and traditional concept. "If it is for the bishops to help the pope in the government of the universal Church, is it not in fact more true to say that it Is the pope who by his divine ly appointed guidance and au thority helps the body of the bishops of the universal Church to govern the whole Christian tamil,y?"
13
1 i
j ,.
j
,--_~-,---:"".jL_...:.........L.:_..J
VISITS HOLY FATHER: Pope Paul received Prime Minister Mika Spiljak and his retinue in audience following a 45-minute private conversation between the Pontiff and Prime .Minister.
Yugloslav Prime Minister Visits Pope Decclares ~ . Support· for Peace Efforts Spiljak said, speaking in Serbo VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Croatian. Prime Minister of Communist He expressed "particular sat ruled Yugoslavia has visited ,Pope Paul VI and declared his isfaction" with the establish':' country's full support for the ment of semi-diplomatic rela tions between the Holy See and· Pope's peace efforts. Prime Minister Spiljak and Yugoslavia and with the "prog Pope Paul remained closeted ress already attained in the de velopment of these relations." for 45 minutes during the audi The Pope ~hanked the Yugo ence, the first- ever sought and obtained by a communist head slav prime minister for the sup of government. However, a port Yugoslavia had given his communist chief of state. Soviet peace efforts. President Nikolai Podgorny, "We will continue this action .had visited the Pope a year of ours despite the manifold dif before. ficulties and the lack of under During a formal exchange of . standing it seems at times to en addresses, the Yugoslav states counter," he said, speaking in man said that his government French. "regards the attempt to achieve l!lfighest Aim a lasting and just peace in the . He said that he had followed world as the most important "with great interest" the efforts aim of its international activ of the Yugoslav government for ity." peace. "In particular, we have Same Human l\llotives heard with satisfaction that the He said that Yugoslavia's President (Josip Broz Tito) of government and peoples "know the Socialist Federal Republic and greatly appreciate" the of Yugoslavia welcomed our in Pope's ·peace efforts and had vitation to mark the World Day supported his suggestion for a of Peace," he added. Day of Peace on Jan. 1. Peace efforts by the Holy See imd Yugoslavia "are inspired by New Nursing Course the' same human motives,"
Pound Devaluation Increases Needs DUBLIN (NC)-'l'he devalua tion of the Irish pound to keep in line with Britian's devalua tion has increased the financial needs of Dublin's Catholic So cial ,Service Conference (CSS C). Archbishop John C. McQuaid, C.S.Sp., of Dublin, patron of the essc, attended the meeting, do nated about $3,000 lind expressed satisfaction at seeing that the organizations that had establish ed the conference were still sup porting its work. The annual report showed that 22 food centers had supplied 2.4 million meals; 15 maternity wel fare centers had provided 99, 376 meals and 93,565 pints of mulk to expectant -and nursing mothers; that the youth organi zation was helping 10,000 ado lescents, and that the ambulance service had made 491 calls dur
iDe tae year.
.
At Ohio Hospital
HAMILTON (NC) - Mercy Hospital school of nursing will discontinue its diploma program in order to cooperate with Miami University here in Ohio in a two-year program leading to an associate degree in nursing. Miami Universi,ty, a state-con trolled institution based at Ox :llord, is now building a branch in Hamilton. Announcement of the phasing oUJt of the nursing' school pro gram at Mercy has been made by Mother Mary Albert, mother provincial of the Cincinnati pro vince of the Sisters of Mercy and Mary Macrina, school di rector. They said that findings of national and local stUdies had contributed to the decision. . Mercy's Gonzaga HaU, built in 1957, is expected to continue as a residence for women enroll ed in thevassociate degree pro gram at the Hamilton branch of Miami. Mercy Hospital will be used' for their cilinical train ing..
He emphasized that the Church's highest aim "in any country" is "essentially of a re ligious and spiritual order." Driving the point home, he said that "the virtues taught and inculcated by Christian doctrine are in fact the most worthwhile foundation of any orderly social life." He referred to the appoint ment of a Yugoslav citizen, Franjo Cardinal Seper of Za greb, to the post of pro-prefect of the Doctrinal Congregation.
Briltish Newmltilnites Publish Quarterly 'LONDON (NC)-Members of Britain's Newman Association, an organization of Catholic uni versity graduates, have aban doned publicaiion of the so ciety's monthly newsletter to give full support to a new theo logical quarterly.' The new magazine The Newman - is edited by Father Laurence Bright, O.P., but edi torial control rests in the hands of a lay board. Promising "free intellectua~ exploration by writers and readers," the New man will be put on public sale to meet the growing demand of the lay public for a deeper un derstanding of theology.
LARIVIERE'S
Pharmacy.
Prescriptions called for and delivered LOI-'Y CHOCOLATES
600 Cottage St. 994-7439
New Bedford
BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY
PARK
MOTORS
OLDSMOBILE Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 87 Middle Street, fairltaveo
WASHINGTON (NC) - Ap proximately 85 per cent of all dioceses in the United States have priests' senates in opera tion. According to a survey con ducted by CRUX, a newsletter published by Clarity Publishing, Inc. in Albany. N. Y., 1211 dioceses of the 152' in the U. S. have priests' senates. Four other Sees have established in dependent associations of priests in lieu of a senate. Approximately 10 other di oceses planning senates are new dioceses thai have not yet set up formal diocesan structures, or are vacant Sees. Sees which have no senate
and which reported no plans
for one are Los Angeles; An- .... ·
chorage, Fairbanks and Junea1ill '"
in Alaska; and Rapid City, S. D.
Also without senates are the
Rutbenian-rite diocese of Pas
saic, N. J.; the Maronite-rite
exarchate in the U. S.; the
Ukranian-rite Sees of Philadel- .'
phia, St. Nicholas of Chicago
and Stamford, Conn.
Of the dioceses having sen- ,.; ates; 72 per cent are completely···I, elective. In 24 per cent, the '" priests elect a majority of the membership with a minority ap- . d pointed, and four per cent have ., 'a majority of the membership' ." appointed and a minority elected. Both the Melkite-rite exarchates of the United States " and the Pittsburgh Ruthenian rite dioceses are among those with priests' senates in opera tion.
..
P'lans Conso~idation Of Three Sch~ols YAKIMA (NC)- Bishop Jo seph P. Dougherty of Yakima has accepted recommendations of the school study committee to consolidate three existing high schools by September, 1969. The consolidation will take place, the Washington Prelate said, if problems of finance anell staff are solved by that date. He added he will take immedi -ate action to begin a study of the staff and financing problems .for the proposed new school. I
SCHOOL Maintenance Supplies
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Bass River Savings Bank Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PlAZA • SOUTH YARMOUTH. HYANNIS • OENNIS PORT • OSTFQYIW
14
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs•.Jon. 18, ] 9,68
,
Dominican' A(ta;demy -Girls Mark Annual C~ufl'ch Unity Octave With ·Eucluarist Discussion
History,. .,. Music
Planned at Coyle
~; ::~:~o':1'-'-':M··'~~~";~;7:~.,i '..'''~'.('.' .'' .=~'
....•~
~"
,
High on Jan. 28
,,
An imaginative concert for students from fifth grade through college ·will be of fered at 2 Sunday afternoon,
Today opens the Church Unity Octave and sodalists
a.t Dominican Academy, Fall River, are holding an inter
Jan. 28 at Coyle High School, Taunton. Under the direction of Brother John Neidl, C.S.C., the Coyle band will present a sur ,_vey of music history. A study guide will be distributed to the audience for use during the program and at follow-up ses sions in school music apprecia Peterson, youth minister of the with; -lunch,'.. entertainment and tion classes. First Baptist Church; Capt. Wal- . ~lay·T~ces oritbe program. Jo "Commentary accompanying ter . Doughis of the Salvation Aim Pitera'is chairman of the
the performance," said Brother Army; and Rabbi Moushe Babin. dayandE.Uiabeth Almeida is in
John, "will be designed for the The Eucharist will be discussed. ~arge'of.. a;l!kit that will form
informing and entertaining of Another item on the DA pro part. of· the entertainment.
all ages.'" . gram is a hootenanny, ~ched ~::N~tioi1~ :Hon~r Society news . Composers ranging from Bach uled for 8. tonight, also ill the trom ··UolY :·F'lU~i1Y· High is that and Beethoven' to Rodgers and auditorium. Featured will be .IS .. seniors,i:22 1uniors and 13'. Learner and Loewe will be on local talent, including the DA sophomoresii;h;:~ been inducted. the program, with offerings in lDominidogs and the Parables Officers of the .organization are. cluding selections from My Fair from SHA Fall River. Kathleen Kowroski, president; Lady and the Music Man. The recent subzero weather Cynthia Rega,' vice::-president; Satisfying Experience took its toll at Diocesan highs. and, Kathleen Horton. secretary "The concert presentation in Add Sacred Hearts Academy treaSurer. AtMt. St. Mary and Mt. St.' Mary, both. Fall Academy NHS president Martha JOSETTA' STAFlF: W()rking on Jooetta, school paper both content and caliber of River, to the list of those that Nugent annoUnces that 1+ new at St. Joseph Prep School, Fall River, are, at typewriter, formance should prove satisfy ing to the intimate, the casual bad furnace and frozen pipe members have been added to Anne Braga; standing from left, Louise Di?n, ~itor; ~e~se acquaintance and the newcomer troubles, with resulting frigid the rolls. .' . · Beaudoin assistant editor; Darlene LemoIs, CIrculation 'as dassroom temperatures. Both to music," noted the Holy Cross It's music,': music, music at schools had· to double up their Brother. '''As the intimate . Coyle High where indefatigable sistant; Ma:r,-garet "iIali, circulation manager. knows, music is a healthy, ele 'dasses in warm sections of their Brother John Neidl has organ vating and satisfying emotional buildings, and in both cases experieQce most keenly appre "twas the new section that ized a Young People's Concert bCked heat, and the' old part for 2 Sunday afternoon, Jan. 28. ciated in a live concert." All area students from fifth lIti.at,came triumphantly through Students of area elementalT Ute ordeal. Maybe old things are grade through college are wel and seCondary seh~1s, ·both best? Meanwhile, at Coyle High coine to attend and the Coyle public and Diocesan have been Band promises a lively and in in Taunton, students got an un Tow(lllrtdl. invited to attend the program. formative panorama of music scheduled free day when their Tickets will be available at the history. Msgr. O'Neill guest speaker door. . ATLANTIC (NC)-A priest furnace gave up cOJl).pletely. at the annual dinner fur t1l.e At Midterms are upcoming, here. called here for a more under Report .Acceptalllces there and everywhere. At SHA standing and tolerant· attitude lan-tic County Federation of Jew College and other post-high Fall River the dreaded dates are toward Israel's position in the ish Charities, said he was" con school acceptances continue to January 22 through 26. On the Arab-Israeli conflict. fused that Americans seem re be reported. From Holy Family lighter side at SHA, however, is luctant and hesitant to support Msgr. J. Robert O'Neill; di BONN (NC)'- A Catholic High in New Bedford the word a Catholic charm course, which rector of Catholic Charities for -Israel in its fight for existence." paper in Yugoslavia has been is that Patricia Murphy is in at will conclude tomorrow, and has . the Camden, N.J., diocese speak oonfiscated by the communist "Ohri.sL.an culture must ac Anna Maria; Rose De Souza at been in session daily for the last ing at a. meeting of more than St. Anne's School of Nursing; two. weeks. Miss Mary Ann Cur 200 area . Jewish leaders praised knowledge Israel's heroism and government because of an ar ticle dealing with problems of Kathleen Horton at Stonehill; tin of Watertown is conducting what. he called Israel's love of courage in this struggle and un . derstand that this is a moral tlhe Catholic Church in that and Kevin Harrington at PC. the course, titled "Interior and freedom and readines to face the .issue rather than a national country during World War II, At Mt. St. Mary: Jo Ann Mat Exterior Grace." Topics have · storm necessary to defend it. one." he stated • according to the German Cath tos, Newton. College of the included good grooming,eti
"I .am concerned with the in olic news agency, KNA. Sacred Heart; Diane Witowski, quette, and "today's living." difference on the part of almost A report of .the confiscation Northeastern University with a "Charm and good grooming are everyone exeept the Jews iJm was carried in the Yugoslav $2,700 scholarship; Mary Har charity in action," says the in the Arab-Israel crisis and. the Catholic paper, Glas Konzila. rington, Northeastern with a ·structor. war,nhe said. The confiscated paper is the $1,550 scholarship; Nancy DA gir.ls are looking forward The priest· commended the un- . DORRIDGE (NC) - Catholir :;lasnik sv. Antuna (Messenger White, . Northeastern; Diane ~ a concert by singing semina derstanding shown Israel by Anglican, Methodist and Cot.. of· St. Anthony). Rochefort, Stonehill;' Ruth rian Paul Quinlan at 8 Thurs Pope Paul VI, saying "simply gregationalist clergy and laity Until now, acordiDg to KNA, Marle Faris, RIC; Jeanne Bou day night, .Jan. 25 in the school because the Holy Father has are planning to make Dorridge, there have been no confiscations - lay, URI and Forsyth School auditorium. The young Jesuit. I Dental Hygienists; Donna Pires, scholastic's appearance will be Shown concern, possibly there six miles from Birmingham. of Catholic papers in Yugoslavia is hope for a better outlook on Britain's first "ecumenical vil even when the government was URI and RIC; Cindy Callaghan, sponsored by the alumnae asso lage." the part of Cbrispans." Bryant. criticized. The attitude of the ciation. At present teaching at The village's four churches Catholic Church in Croatia dur Coyle students are getting in Holy Cross College, he previ shape· for a Donkey Basketball ously organized a coffee house the sceond World War has ~~~Ch~a ~~nt =~~i~ag: mg Game, to -be sponsored Sunday and folk singing group at Bos been widely discussed in the and Monday, Jan. 21 and 22 by -ton College. He has issued three On Undeii'sfr<aJ!l'ilding other activities. Catholic press for some years the student council. Matches record albums: Glory Bound, Volunteers from the four without action having been WAS H IN G TON ( N C ) churches are planning to visit will include students versus Paul Quinlalil in Concert and . taken by the government. :_ ' 'faculty and versus Dads; and Run Like a Deer. His program -Spokesmen for Buddhism, every house in the district to · Christianity, Confucianism, Hin encourage people to take an Dads versus faculty. at DA will feature his arrange duism, Judaism' and Islam met 'interest in' religion, to share At SHA Fall River, people are ments af· psalms in modem here Monday for the first Wash information collected and tQ getting in shape too. Upcoming style. . . ington Conference on Interreli· take part in each other's social is the annual gym meet, which gious Understanding. . "ts to ;all . Ycearoook Award .j "win: see some 300 students ·com,;. The conference" 'Which: ·.·will ... :events.. Regula.r.· .VlSl .. • . . , . , The .J.\Il~ •. St. lVIary yearbook seek practical ways of improv- local elderly, s.ick and 1 lonely peting on the Margaret '.and;, for '67, "Mercycrest," has won tl . Agnes teams. "Relays, stunts, ing understanding between the people are. being arranged. ,,, ", -·cheers :and challenges" are on first prize, in· national competi , , world's great religions, waS the meet agenda. Teams will be tion. Its proud editors were sponsored by the :remple of . led by Jackie Proulx. for the iJeannine'Santerre ami Patricia HEATU~~G~OI:LS Understanding here,' ·with the'L: i H~.",'r~,ipp Margarets and Judy Sullivan selleck. : National :i,Presbyterian Center , for the Agneses. bri' th~' Mou'ut agenda is th~ and Georgetown University as I; South • Sea Streets annual ring dance, to be held co-sponsors. The participants in Singing Seminarian J. lESER, Prop. On the basketball front SHA Friday, Jan. 26 and a father the one-day conference included. S DEN IAt Hyanni~ .. Tel. ~9 ..81 RE I T . ·is p~rforming mightily too. with. daughter ,dance, slated for leaders in religion; schol;trshiPi Thilrs.day . night; Feb'15. AND science and other fields, as well . 'INDUSTRIAL the varsity holding a 0-0 WiD • !., COMMERCIAL" · record in the Bristol COUiHY a candy drive has been started as students from local univetsi;. reporter Sharon ties. Girls'League. Recent victories and, says 253 Cedall' St., New Bedford Janick, "all students out to 'include DA, Westport .and Cas 993-3222 get you filt, so watch out." social work as careers, the earth'
sidy. Jayvees aren't far behind their big sisters, with a record Recently enjoyed by SHA Fan .science field and openings for
of three out of four wins. River music lovers was a con high school graduates, Pro
Aluminum or Steel Also in the SHA basketball cert at Boston's Symphony Han grams offered at DimanRe
944 County Street news: Jackie Proulx, who won under the baton of Harry Ellis . gional Vocational School will be
NEW BEDfORD, MASS. a, rating as an associate basket Dickenson. And the academy's explained to juniors and seniors
~ 2-6618 ball official at a workshop re guidance department. has. an",,· FridaY, Jan~ .26;. and on Wednes
cently held at Bridgewater State nounced asel-ies of career seS-' '.day,· Jan. 31 sOphomores and Over 35 Years College; and, less happily, Ste sions"to help freshmen and' '. freShmen will view a' on . of Satisfied Service phanie Powers, who suffered a sophomores think ahead ~nd ·.to .the ..work of· a·medical techni Reg. Master Plumber' 7023 ' broken ankle at the same work-. aid undecided juniors and sen- : ciano JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. shop. iors." Filmstrips and tapes will Newly elected . Domini~an 806 NO. MAIN STREET DOminican Academy girls will .cover topics such as junior and Academy Swim Club president Fall River ....:" ,!!~!j-"~!!. · :,v,ee·.that golden oldie,Gone With . .four ~ar ilOlleges;' nursing' and· is senior' Garol,:€hareat;'!!r'j;il!' ":',
f'aith program in the school auditorium., Mode.rotor will be Rev. Pierre Lachance, a.p. of St. Anne.s parIsh, and par ticipants will include Rev. Wind, tomorrow at a Provi James Carey, rector of St. the dence theatre; and also at DA Stephen and St. John Episco freshmen are :planning an open pal churches; Rev. Timothy house' for prospective students
>
per
Praises Israel
Camden Charities Director Urges Tolerance
Position in Arab Conflict
Yugoslav Catholic
'aper Confiscated
p'lan Ecumenical Village in Eng·land
for
Interfaith Meeting
ATWOOD
on, COMPANY SH·E,L:L
'Norris
SHEeT METAL
are
.
CONRAD SEGUIN
BODY COMPANY
Montie Plumbing & - Heating Co.
m:m
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16
THE
Ah-'~
Je~se,
In
Eight .Spanish' Sees Vac=ant
, -!;)iocese of FolI . Ri.ver-:T;hurs. Jon. 18, 1968
Cufry Je·su·it .
tp~:@fff)e,~lr .
, MADRID (NC)-In the put few years only four new bishops have been appointed in Spain. Eight dioceses continue vacant after long negotiation between Vatican representatives and the government of Generalissimo Francisco Franco. At stake is the state's centu ries-old prerogative .to -present its own candidates for bishops. . Church sources here say the apostolic nunciature has tried for the last two years to end the prerogative, recognized by the 1941 accord between the Franco regime ,and the Vatican, and maintained when a formal con cordat was signed in 1953. More vacancies of Sees are in the making if the Second 'Vatican Council's recommenda tion that bishops retire at 75 years of age is followed. About 15 of the present 66 Sees are. led by men well past retirement age. Some sources say that the government is willing to re nQunce this right - inherited from the old roy'lll patronage dating back to the colonial mis sionary efforts-but that it is asking in exchange that all present vacancies be filled with its nominees. Apparently the list does not fully satisfy Vatican represen .tatives here, who have the un derstanding .and support of the younger bishops and the more militant clergy and lay leader
.
L@@@~ ~~'hool MO\7®91fB@~t R), Msgr. G~orge G. Higgins
As I write this column, I h~ve just received word that Pather William J. Smith, S.J., one of the pioneers in the old Catholic labor school .movement, (died .in Jersey City, N.J. on Jan. 7 after a long illness, I say the "old" Catholic labor school movement, for, of the lose interest in our favorite lOO-odd institutes or schools to projects once the glamour be that flourished in the late gins to we.ar off or once we 30's and 40's only a handful b~gin ·to get the uneasy feeling
are still in existence. One of the that w~ are no longer where the best of these is St. Peter's Insti action is. 1n many ways this .is a tute of Indus trial Relations healthy human tendenl,'Y. Our in Jersey City . natural itch to be where ·the action is-serves to keep IUS on w h i c h Father S mit h estab our·toes and to .keep us -relevant and up-to-date. llished some 15 :.Exciting Movement or 20 years ago -after the de On the ·other hand, .1 ,think .it mise of his ori would be a 'mistake to .abandon _ ginal C'l'own worthwhile .projects in Jhe .1ield · Heights Labor of ,social.action just because .the School in glamourw.hich. once surrounded Brooklyn-and them' has 'begun to .fade. which he was The Jaborschool movement . l{ OF C GIFT: Father Robert Crawford, :left,a priest · "till directing at the time Gf his is;a good case in .point. '.That's of -the Philadelphia archdiocese who is pastor Of Our Lady where :the action was 'when death. . of Peace church in Saigo~, receives a check from the 'local Although Father Smith was Father .Smith was {getting Jl)rominently associated with the started 30 .years ago. ,It ,was ~an Knights of Columbus' council cOmposed mainly of ;military I abo r .education lmoveinent exciting and ;glamoroUs 'mo:ve personnel, from .Father (Lt.Col.).Corbin W. Ketchersid, without interruption for .ap ment. 'Thatceasea :to ~be 'the .a priest of 'the ,Raleigh, N.C. :c1iocese 'on,ldu~y .in .saigon rag IJlroximate].y ,three :decades and case, .howev:er;,some iIO ·or 115 USARV . depu1;y ·sbiffehaplain. 'The parish, knOWJl llS "'the "utough he \wrote sev.eral books yeul'S .ago, Qnfi 'hundrelisof 'columns and [Eather .-Smith ,knew ttliis :from .A:mer.ican chuTCb,/'is :b.eseiged fer aid by the poor ,of fbhe lJrticles on labor mattell:S··Qurll\g ·personal experience.}He Jtnew ci~y. NO 'Photo. ' " ship. Ilhat period' of time, I .dat'e ,say that, if he ls~yed .with itbe work that most (of ,the ,younger priests @{ i!abor 'education, Jt ;would :be and, -l-aymen now engaged itt tough sledding lall :the tw.ay :and <other -types of social :action. that it would !bring !hhn ::fewer BANGOR (NC) Roman 'lI1Iever 'heard 'of 'him or, -in .any . persmmlsatis'factions \than .some 'Catholic,' 'Bap'tist and ·Lutheran event, ne;v:erlhad ,the !Iileasure of of ·the newer ;and .more rgla~or eleI:gy.men will participate . in !M:ich~gan meeting him. 9US -forms .Of .social·action. the anmlal Convocatlon ·Week. 0ne ·reason for this is t·hat 'Ne.vertheless .he ~tho.l!ght ;that at Bangor Theologic;,.l Seminary, OnlPr.~1Posal $i~g1e flailing health J!1ade it impossi was lwhat .he .oqght .to {d~nd Jan. 29-31. ble 'for ·.him Ito get arounD ".tona he :did nt ·to ~the ;end \w.ith ,pro BAY 'CITY (rNC)-'I!hree ,di tional meetings in recent years. fessional skill land .with iurif8il ocesan high schools .here will.be ! ing .dedication. was ,a :faith 'Seek (Greener lEastures ·merged .into a single 'highschool I suspect, 'however, that the ful servant ·,to :the end.. :M~y (God operation next September if rewal'dhim for :his 'efforts. :RIP. parishioners of St. Stanislaus, most imnortant .reason ,is that the' youn'ger 'men, "by :and large; 'st. James and St. Joseph vote are' not greatly' interested in .the. favorably on thepropos!il Jan. ~t@ Rabor problem and tend to look 21. uponJhe labor .school.movement D "I'. • The mergerwo.uld utilize' , 1L~:de;r:s and its· few surviving devotees' ~r:eil!;Erm.o.n ;present facilities 'and Jeaching-I as· relics of another age .which ., .NEW 'YORK (NC)-'-:I.lhe 'Na:" ·staffs and offer 'a broader choice' Us '.gone :forever. tional ,Conference "of \'Christians of subjects than ·offered :by any : ,They-,want ·to be where the" and Jews willhonor,l1'~presenta of the three schools. action is-and the action .'today, .. tives, of four .major ffEiiths .at .8 The merger ·of the three' i 8S -they see it, is not·to ·be·:f9und·· dinner here Tuesday .Reb. :20. 'Michigan .h~gh schoolswas-pro- . I on the labor front. '." The Clergymen to 'be. citea 'for posed by the Saginaw diocesan' This is. perfectly understand "courageous lead·ership. in .inter- . board of education a year l:'go able from their point of view.' creedal relatiol1s" are: . 'Father Smith himself under-; . Father Robert I. Garinon, S.J., ;and recommenaed ina 'J'ElPort submitted to -the parishes in · stood their attitude very well.. president .emeritus of Fordham , He knew that many of the so-. University; Dr. John Coleman December by a University' of Michigan study team. ' called "new breed" thought that Benne.tt, president of Union The Two other Catholic high he was wasting his ti.me I'unning ological Seminary in New York; a traditional labor school in the Louis Finkelstein, .president and . schools here were merged ·into .a ·single ,operation in 1966. ,ISO's whe~, lin ,their opinion. lhe chancellor·o'! Jewish '!Vheologica1 should have been out on .the fir .Seminary in ,New York; and ilng line concentratwg ·on 'the problem of ,race relations, ,for Bishop Silas of the Greek Or example, and n!lateo 'problems Ithodox .:Archdioceseof.'Nor.th.and '. ,HOME ~MPRO"'EMENT lOANS
South' America. Ill»f .the inner city, . -BRAGA (NC) - .Ar.chbishop He could sym:pathize with. this .. JPERSONA.L fl;OANS
Francisco da Silva of 'Braga, in . .point of view, but he"was 'quiet-' ~C'Om'm:iftee ~Stu,a ies an effort to solve the problem of 'ly convinced that the work he • VACATION lOANS .the ;Braga :rite, issued a pastoral' i ywus, doing;at' St. meter,'s Iml.tUute ¥fMC:JVC'l'i,O iLmk document here asking whether' of Industrial Relations was still ONE STOP COMPLETE ·BANKING SERVICE AT ANY 'WASHING'l ION (NC) -The the ancient liturgical trite ,should very important - ' albeit .less appointment of Father Richard -be .maintained, kept only In the dl'amatic' than some of the OF ,OOR '6 HANDY Bfoll.lKS O1Keeffe, ,director of l.the Ca'th 'Braga Cathedral, ,or reformed· newer forms of social. ·action .olic Youth Organization of the "and ,he .made ,up .hi, .mind .aJong 'diocese ,of '.!]lucson, IAriz., 'as according to .the !ipirit of the DRIV.E-INSERV:ICEAJ .ALL ,BANKS time ago that he 'wasgoing to .chairman of.a study committee Second ~a.tican Council. .lteE:P at it<ior the . rest cof his Jife . ·on tthe relationship .between ·the :EmphasiZing that :he 'has 'taken WITH :SIX :CONVENIENt'lY lOOATED BANKS - ; ,Rare CommodIty no .stand on the matter, Arch- . YMCA and, the CY.O ,was· im notinced here by Msgr. 'Thomas bishopoa 'Silva 'llaidthat 'It .Is I think he made the right de cision. 'Trainingrank-"anQ.>:file 'J. ILeonard, 'director (of 'the a question eto ,be .decided [by ,aU Youth Department, .United the people of the archdiocese. imion members and mana·ge (He .added 'tha.t ihe Us 110t rgoingto ment representatives lin' ithe States 'Catholic Cotiference. ethics of labor-management ·re-· The committee is part of the make any immediate plans for Department ad:v.isory .reformation, should;it 'beillelations and in the techniques ef Youth board. It ·was formed In.re!iponse cided on, 'but wants ,,to ,get ·.dis';' elocial reforms is a vet:y ,i!1W9r ·to a suggestion 'that· ~CYO 1be cussion underway "to "Pre~ { I N ,NEW' BEDFORD tant type of social action. :for (the future. , !Father :Smith "was wel'Y f,good 'used as a vehicle ffor: iimple f $0.urH (BANK-Cove St. at Rodney .FrenchBoulevar.cl mentingan co".ganization~to . ~,The Braga' rite is .an .ancient !
tit it. He knew the businessJnside Out, :For'my own part, I am~g1ad .organization approach to .the Poduguese ritual 'for (~'ce1-' IW:EST :BANK-lKempton Street cit Min :Stre8t
be had the .perseverance ,to"stay YMCA. .ebration of Mass. ~Used ,only ·ill I fL:UND'S (CORNER .BANK-.'Acushnet iA~. ,near !lumP.. .com. ~
with it until the .end. Father O'Keeffe ~is a ,member !the :Bragaarchaiocese 1lDd .dat- l [DARTM01JJH ..BANK-Dartmouth $tr,eet \llear :Rockd. ,Ava. ~
This ,kind of perseverlJlli.ce lis ~Of the board (Of directors (of ..the ''.ing £romthe l~th centtillY, r.lt 1 differs Jnsmall details flma . I cNOlni iBANK,;,...Acu.hnelA".. at ~ -Ave. • NU'.e (commodity jin the tfield cOl ·1.t.ucson YMCA and for'months · aocial.reform. 'Human .naml'e has ,been negotiati~g ',wJ,th;ii :-at ,the celebratiOn'of Mass 'a@em- .f ,'!CENTER (IANK":"urduae .and WiftiCIM Sts. ~\te :theJRoman ftb. ~II.. • !1IeinJl.-J:lati.itiis,lmost(0f(ua~ rthe ;local f ~
':~C!hD'o1- jM~e~ger
,P:a:r:is'hioll1.e,Ir.S :in
Ecumenic·a'i Tone
fD.iocese'to Vote \Qpel\ation
for
'He
NCC.J.
lftIono..r·
I
SAVE DOLLARS with the MERCHANTS
"Economy" Auto loan Plan
Questions FllJJture 'OfBraga Rite
l
-
Law Seeks to Protect' Addressee From Mail Considered Obscer~e WASHINGTON (NC)-Going into effect this month is new legislation designed to protect Individuals from receiving in the mail material they consider obscene and which they do not ask for and do not want. Known as Title m of the postal rates and federal pay bill enacted by Congress on the brink of Its adjournment, the vew legislation provides that any addressee who receives maii which, "in his sole dise,retion," he determines to be "erotically arousing or sexually provocativc" can request the Postmaster General to direct the !'I.ender of such mail to remove the name of Ule addressee from his mailinrr lists. The POstmaster General must then eSrpress1y prohibit the sender or his agent from mak- inc; any further mailings to the complaining addressee. The sender, after' notification, would have to take the name of the complaining addressee off all his mailing lists. He would also be barred from sending nameless mail or mail addressed simply to "occupant" at the address of the protesting addressee, People Demand Action By making the individual the sole judue. as to wh(~tl1er the material received in the mail is "erotically arousing" to himself or' anyone' in his household un- del' 19 years of age, the Con..' gressional sponsors hav'.) souBht to avoid constitutional questions and rulings by the Suprema CouJ:t regarding; obscene' matter. Rep. Glenn <z:unningnam of' Nebraska, told the House 6£ Representatives that he and: his eolleagues,. including Rep. ..Jerome- Waldie of. <Z:a1ifornia bad' ptltTitle m in t~ postal' Dates bill "bec3USe 1.00 ~mcrican people are- dmnandin-g .adioaon:, this severe problem! .and -they want it now." :He said" ·that durm: the preeeding ~ear '~on1l'-qUarter miL- Item cormplaints." had come intc: tlie- POst Office :Department with reference -too. "pandering; advertisements.." IndiViduaJJ. DetellDliJtes. Rep'. Waldie said it should not be the responsibillt)': . 9f thc' postmaster'to> determine wl'1etli.. et' matter sent though the· mailS "runs afoul 0:11 the Supremc Court decision concerning pan. dering." "My amendment suggests that Ilhou1& not be a; -determination By the Postmaster General .at all but a determination of the' indi~ vidual who receives the mate rial.
''The
standards of conduct len.force in my house hold are no~ Uiose that the Supreme Court ,has laid down. in terms of" materials that arc availnble for my children's consumption. "I am! the Supreme Court in th-e I)drticular hou~ehold in whicb my children reside; and there ~hicl'l.
THE ANC' Thurs., .
ECUM~- -,Wl
SAGINAW (NC)-Priest sen ate .meetings in tlle Saginaw di ocese are being opened to the Pl:'ess.
Among items- on the' Jan. 15 agenda. are relations of the sen ate· to the press. and the' situa tion at' Sacred! Meart padsh where financial probelms are being studied by a committee appointed by Bishop Stephen S. Woznicldof Saginaw after the pastor, Fatllcl' Robert A. Kcllcr, refused the Michigan bishop's nlquest that he resi.gn. Meetings of the Sagj,naw Dio eesan Board of Educ:ltion have been open to tJ10e press since thc in"CJ)tion of the boa ...d more: than two years a~.
17
Gains
is no appeal from that determi nation." See l\Iany Problems
TANANARIVE (NC) - Ecu
Already voices are being menism is makiiJg great stride~ raised suggestiilg that the pro in the Malagasy Republic.
vision of the law, may be uncon As in other parts of the world, stitutional; that if will create a
Catholics and, non-Catholic gI'eat deal of' new work f1>r the Christians here are now think Post Office Department and ttle ing in terms' of working to Justice Department without gether. either having any say in it, In the ecumenical area illl and that it wilt create a great. this country recently: many problems for those who mail' material that may come 1Jhe Calvinist missions of thv int'o question. north, both French and English, On the other hIDld, the spon decided to unite their three sors of the new legislation say' branches: in a. single United there is, probably no member of Church of North Madagascar. Congress who has not receb,'ed The National. Catholic Bish a considerable number of letters ops' Conference' set up an ecu fror:n pments and householders, menical center headed by, Arch~ complaining' against unwanted bishop Gilbert Romanantoanin2, material received in the mail S.J., of Fianarantsoa, presiden~ which they find very objection of the conference. able. Ecumenical prayer and dil!l The sponsors of the legislation logue are becoming more fre say it is an extension of the quent in· most of the 16 Cath right of privacy, and that a olic dioceses in the island. lVrrCHIG~N ORDINARIES: Bishop Charles A. Salatka, person has as much' right to' Ii common translation of the protect himself' against: mail left, formerly. auxiliary of Grand Rapids, has been named Bible is progressing. which he considers obscene as by Pope Paul VI to be biHhop of Marquette, Mich. He suc he has, to protect himself against Common social action is beine ceeds Bishop Thomas NO~l, 75, right, who has resigned and undertaken, particularly -by an an intruder. . has been appointed to the titular see of Talaptula. NC Photo. interdenominational group a!l CRtg in Writing young people called the Unite~ Under rules being put into Christian Workers, which ,k] effect by the POst Office De helping in the drive to reduce partment, a person receiving' ilJiteracy by serving as- teachern mail to which he ob:iects must at their own expense. cite in writing the specific ad' 8razils., Racial Harmony Worth Studyirtg, Dialogue is taking place amonc veriisement. he considers of
theologians on pastoral activity. ,.
fensive- to. himself or a chilli of Ame,rit1al1: Pre.late Suggests. j)ll'rticularly, on Baptismj reIn-' his under 19 years of age.
Archbishop Sales: said. the sng.. glous' instructions in schools of, ' WASlnNGTON (NC)-Arch The Postmaster Generat must
other denominations, and mixed '
gestion "is· an, example of' the then direct the mailer not to. .IHshop EUgenio de Araujo Sales, send ,any more matedaltb the apostolic administrator of Sao willingness. of' the'U: Si Cliurcb, marriages. complainant beginnilJ1r' 30 days' "Salv.ador of" Bahia, Brazil,. has t~, expand its vision In search of: solutions: to.' raciBL harmony." thereafter.. The' name of' the pno. 'Dt:aise<L the necent suggestion of The iOOm could l "stimulate Spiritual, R~newal' Auxiliary Bishop testing person must be removed.' netroit~· from mailing lists' the' mailer Jhsepli M~ Breitenbeclt lliat' the meaningful' dialogue" at' too Importunt. Inter:-Amerlcan CO~
Uni-ted States might beneftt. € a tholic uses'. MADRIrr (·NC-':-SPeakinc .., opemtimr ~ . oonferencu £1'Olru .studying; Brazil's racial Then, jL·the order -or- ,the 500.'4elegates-' of' relIgious orden to be" hertll m Sit Louis; Jan. Postmastbr GcnCMI fs v,iolat6d: harmonY'and I oongregations; ArchblshoJ! 2~;.3i, /acbbishop S'ales added:. by, the mailer or anyone actillg~ Tlbe· state· of' Blmia in Br.azil Luigi: DMs-gIlo, apostoliC. D1.mM in bi1l belialf', the' PostmasFer to,'Sj,Jaili, emphasized' that' "tru. has almost' seven" million iR General eou}{l~ after BotificaHoo habitants; ofi "Wh'Om' one' millj~ Mlgious' renewal' demands total and hearing, ask the- A1torney are- N~, tlw.ol mUlion, arc> C9nsecration to tile spirltuaD G<meral!.o' seek a Ji!eder<'ll COurt LOlIlS-VILLE (N<::) - Flnan white. andl tHe' remaining three Ufe." 0 rd.e 1'" directing compliance; oial' 'SUDPOrt. of' priests in the Warning: against:; interpreia
Then, any further failures' to Louisville archdiocese" .will ·be' and.. one..htllf million are of! ticms- of-tHe decIleCS', of the Sec
comply woliidconstitut'e" oon- stan-dardized on the' basis of;' mixed- race:, , .AIr raees: enJi'pYc equali ty, be ond Vatkan Council that would tempt of! court. years of' .seI:vice; f(>r-8 the' Ulwr and in public aeo lead. tal. disorder,. Ute' arehbishorJ In' the' past, priestly-> incomes commodations, .saliuals, ch urclios painted ouf that ttie' connon, ..have' vmi'edaaaording to, the and! medical facilities. Names Comrrci:s:sion was meant' to establlstr "ooU}', Jl6si.tioffiield; The present plan eoordinatlon, interior life- aDd stiDulates a, salary based on f) Smut· renewal!" among, all Clrttiolics. SAN AN'llOmO (NC)-Pres-· ycam onser\tice; Mass stipendS' TJje- delegattlS'; meeting fOr the -recently; stabilized at $3' r~r ident Ly;ndon B, Johnson' has first· time in, sessions- open .. ' Readiirg; Movemenf aU. t3-"I)8s of! Masses within the named an 1lf-memool" Commis &he press, urged that. ReligioUl!' LONOON (NC)-The Catho ston. on Obscenity ~nd: Pornog.. a.!.'Ohdiocese; reimbursement up, shouldbe more involved' ~ to, $900. for tmr.-cxempt priestly. lic BiblicaLAssociation here has' raphy to study; the eUeot of suelt the' poor, that ll' pastoral ap material on anti-social beha,vjol', e:x;penses,per :reaD, payable on with ofUcial approval j'oined lllPoach· slHIuld. dominate' r~ forces with the.' Biblioal Readinc and to· flnda constituti~nal submission: of' an itemized ex Fellowship" Protestant group giOUlt, fJormation" and, that,,, JWW' means of conb'olling its distri~ pense- -account; Also rectory accomodations, which, encourages; regular read Clttitude tow.ar<l aelibacy l!hoWd bution. 00 developed..
iooluding board, room and laun ings from the' Scriptures. Its. chairman is William B: dry,; arnL a. subsidized, health and Fatbcm Robert: MUrra.y, S.J" LocR:hart, dean of the Univer. theologian,. bas joined the fe)~ sity of Minnesota Law ,Scliool: welfa~ proW:am. lowship as C.B;A.. :r$resenmtiVf;<. The' plan will. be tried 011 an The- commission was authorized by Congress in 1967. It must ex.perimental basis for one year, The two societies bet~een them and-then. evaluated for perma ",ill issue· tqree: se-ries f reoom... report by Jan. 31:, 197.0: mended Bible readi g~ with Other members include Father nent use. short notes'suitable fQ>'t CathoUfl Morton Hill, S.J., founder f¥f' reading. New York's Operation Y~rk Ta:ItZG nict Iteparf,s· T~e series offering d~ily SUl} ~ine; Barbara Scott, counsel to C.athol ics gestIons for Biblical ~adincs the l\1:otion Picture Associcltion, D:AR! ES SA:E.AAM: (NC) are graded for better eetucatoo of Ameri'ca; Rabbi' Irving' Lehr 365' NOR'r:H,' FRONT SlRm man of Temple Emanu-EI- in Tanzania Catholics numbered adults seeking simpler re~ing&, \ NEW" BEDFORD Mianli Beach, Fla., and the Rev. 2,228,622- at the end of June, and teenagers. 1967; according ttl: statistics Winfrey C. Link, executive di .Tohn Cardfuai Heenan" of' rector of Four-FoICl Challenge .based, OIlt officicll' reports of' W'1llltminster has' given the lilnk ... Campaign in Nashville, T-enn. bishop!! in. the 23; ecclesiastical up b1r; blossing. . ~: divisions of'the' country. Other members are psychia The statistics included tM trists, judges, media represen ~"ltiIIIlllllllllIllIJ:lm~II!!"~IJ'"""""~;l!!3mmI!II!!miifDllllD1DllllmmIllll1JlllllIIHllnll11II11II1IlI~: f.ollow~ tatives and lawyers, African priests, 401, African.' == '. ..' t == ~ WlNTlER STblt\... 'IS § O£others, 7,5, African Sisters, ~ ~ 140lt ~ Mon., Tues., Wed. 9 to 5 § Foreign Religious, stationed DETROIT (NC)--Father Wal in Tanzania, 8'76 pl;ests, 324" ~ ThlH'S. and Fri. 9to .1:36 ~ ter J. Ziemba has been appoint Bl'others, 829 Sisters. ~ Si:lrturdoy·, 9 to S \ ~
ed rector of Sts. Cyril and MetJu Over 325;POO pupils in 2,000:
odius! Se!1Jinary, p1'€ s ident of Closed. Day: Ii
€ h u£ch-operated schools-, one St. MaJ::¥'S College and superin tendent of' St. Mary's High third of them non~Catholic. ~ .~, School, Orchard Lake, Mich. Chw'ch-operatcdand staffed The top posts in the Orchard .hGspitals, 71, '''dispensarie's, 242, Lake schools became vacant maternity w.axds-; WS· and 11' ~ UNION' WHARF, FAIRHAVEN ,.""': 9Q7·93U ~ late last yeai' with. the death of leper aSyhmls, '9 bonies for the aged and 15 orphanages: Msgr. WaUace J'. Filipowicz.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of, Fan.River-Thurs. Jan. 18; ,1968' . ' '.". .
Kn'ight ~ ~aftci
I)iocese Observes 'Uni~y Octave'
Attleboro
South Dartmouth
Continued from Page One Continued from Page, One seCretary of the Council of Rev. John V. Magnani, assistant ehurches, ha!'l cooperated very at St. Mary's, who will give ' elosely. with Rev. Edward A. scriptural readings. Rausch, assistant at St. John 0n the following Friday eve the Evangelist Church, and with ning .at 7:30, Jan. 26th, a closing 'the following clergymen. Rev. service will be held at 81. Th'omas F. Airey, rector of All , Peter's' Episcopal Church with Saints Episcopal Church, Rev.' Father Magnani' preaching the Al~m Grant, pastor of Emm.anuel sermon. A combined choir from Lutheran Church, Rev. David the three participati'ng churches will lead the singing 'at both Dahlberg, pastor: af the' Evan gelical Covenant Church, and services.' Of special interest also, is a Rev. Berbard Hanninger, pastor of, the Centenary Methodist young people's meeting for aU , Protestant and Roman Catholic ehurch. A Protestant clergyman from high school stu4ents,which will I the area will .deliver the homily be held on Sunday evening, Jan. 21 at 6:30 at the South evening. Dar t in 0 u t h Congregational Following the evening's ser Church. Vices, a social hour will !>e. con The CBS documentary film ducted in St. JoluiSchoQl Cafe ' "Let My People Go" 'will 'be ter:ia~ . In No. Attleboro, a }6 minute . shown· and refreshments will be serVed. ' c:,> '!leI;Vice will be conducted Qur..; ing the first three days at noon in Sacred Heart Church, No. Attleboro, while the Grace Episcopal. Church will host the noon services on the last three Rev. Gilbert J. Simoes, assist days. ,',' A' Joint Service will be cQn ant. !It Mt. ,Carmel Church, ~ew ducted at 8 on Sunday evening, Bedford, was the principal cele 'Jan. 21' in the Foirst Baptist brant at a concelebrated Mass of Requiem offered on Monday eh'urch 'under the co-sponsor morning in, St.' Anthony's ship of the No. Attleboro Min isterial Association and the Church, East Falmouth, for the Roman Catholic clergy. " soul of his late father, Justino ANC][·ENT AND MODERN: The contrast of the mod " A Joint Service of Prayer wi~ Simoes. ern Birchenough Bridge and athatch-roofExl. house along The con-celebrants were: Rev. be conducted in Mansfield at ,3 the River Sabi in Rhodesia teil~, us something of the, im Jose M. Bettencourt e Avila, ,~day afternoon, Jan; 21. ,," memse problems of development in· Afrie,ari countries. Pope Prior to the Week of Prayer Rev. Maurice Souza, Rev. Ed ward J. Bums and Rev. Ber Paul's recent message to the rulers and peoples of Africa for Christian Unity, two noted has been welcomed by those who see the peoples of Africa ecumenical movements were nard'R. Kelly., In addition to his priest son, 0Onducted. as needing ~help in developing their potential, both as in Rabbi Kaplan spoke to the Mr. Simoes is survived by his dividuals and as a nation. NC Photo. Wife, the former Maria' Argen High School CCD school of re ligion on the Feast of Lights tina; Ii son; Joseph, and two and' Rev. Alan Grant af the sis~r, Mrs. John (Elvira) Lopes Errimanuel Lutheran Church and Mrs. Antonio (Celia) Mello; spoke to Particular Council of I ' Continued from Page One to theC va the ,St. Vincent de Paul Society t· include f th ued I' participa . ateen' ,the ,topic, ,"Why Engage in" CIontinuedfroin Page Three Protestants and Jews in the c~:UC:. non- a OlCS In C :Works, of Chan,' ty?" : . . . . Diocese were' requested to join ' , ' been' dividing', het ,time during their- Catholic fellowc'itizens hi Bishop eon,nolly saw to it : her home' Visit between' hIm prayer for the' success, of' the that the Fall River Diocese was and his 'family' and the Mary- Council.' ',: al~~ among the first to provi~e Ma;t~a's Iaioll motherhouse in New York, Bishop C. on~oily ,q'uick.'ly .a.u-. firm guidelines to not only reg .. ' 'Coiitinued from Page One' , Friends" have" 'been 'doing a . tillite inter-church cooperation ~~m' ',' Diaiogue~." At ' , the.s~ · doubie ,: taKe' upOn' seeing her, thorized all cooperation pOSllible' but to encourage all ecumenic;al ~eetings cl!,!rgymen of all faiths . , " , , ' I in ecumenical activities with f or she ,is we~iing a dark tal.. inter-church 'chorales, dialogues act.ivity possible. will rota:te among the groups as . · Qred suit"iri ,'place of the' tradi.;. . Bishop Stokes' . ' , , participants. , tional Marykrioll habit. She ex-' which brought nationally reAfter studies at the ,Episcopal " ' Cliina'xing the program will plainS that the suit is one af nowned figures like Bishop Theological School,Cambridge,' be a, mass meeting Monday several styles' the Sisters are Sheen to the diocese to partici.. Bishop Stokes served as Canon' ....ight, Feb. 26, at which an'. out wearing' pending a final deci.. pate' in .ecumenical dialogues. ' of St. 'Andrew's Cathedral, Hon-, lItanding ecumenist will, discuss slOn on a "new look" for the As soon as' it was at' all pos!!i- olulu from 1945 to 1950 when 'he cl!urrent problems in the field of · comnlunlty. ' ' b l e , .ecumenical boards were was' named Rector of St. Barehurch unity. Another home visit will come established, not only on the di- tholomew's Church, New York MemJ>ers of Father Couza's for Sister Maureen Thomas in ocesan level but even on area City. ~ommittee are Rev. William R. seven to· eight years. She will levels so as to more fruitfully In 1954, he was named Coad Krogstad, rector of St. Andrew's return to Guatemala at the end prepare prayer-octaves and re- jutor Bishop with right of suc Episcopal Church, Edgartown'; of· February,- and she com- ligiously oriented patriotic cel- cession to Bishop Norman B. .Rev. H. Osgood Bennett, pastor mented, castine a look at the ebr~tions. . Nash of Massachusetts and suc .. of CI:trist Methodist Church, The Diocese of Fall River was ce~ed him, to become the 11th ;Vineyard Haven, and Lambert's grey New England sky, that the Cove Methodist Church; Mrs. temperature in: Jacaltenango is the first in the nation to open Bishop of the Diocese of Massa ne,vell' below degrees. the CCD area conventions so as chusetts. Sylvester Kelly of St. Augus tine's Church, Vineyard Haven; Mrs. Donald Poole of ChiIInark and Lambert's Cove Methodist Church; George Jackson of the Federated Church, Edgartown.
each
Father Simoes
O.ffers Mass
CFM . " "P·rogro'm. ,
\
Bishop
Address, Protestants
'Vineyard '
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Clontinued from Page ~ during solemn ceremonies at tended by many dignitaries rep resenting the Church, State and Nation. ID. addition to members of the immediate family the ceremony was attended by Most Rev. James L; Connolly, D.D., bishop of' Fall River, several mon signori and priests of th'e Dio cese and a large delegation of personal friends and business asliocfates fro m Southeastern Massachusetts headed by Mr. and. Mrs" James H. Ottaway Jr. Following the investiture and POntifical Mass celebrated by Archbishop Maguire, a private ,dinner ana reception was held at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel attended by Bishop Connolly and members of the Knights of ' Malta from various sections of the country. Long active in Diocesan and community affairs, O'Hara is the sixth member of the Diocese to be named a Knight of Malta considered the highest honor conferred' on Catholic Laymen. The others are Atty. Maurice j. Downey and Philip Heming way of New Bedford,' Jtidge William A. Torphy, Aloysius J. Kearns, ~tty. Harold C. Clarkia llnd James F. Mooney' of Fall River. In addition to heading his own automotive sales company O'Hara is president of O'Hara Realty Inc. and O'Hara' Chev way Leasing & Rental Inc. ' ' He is a parishioner of St. Mary's Parish, South Dart mout~, Mass. His memberships ip.clude Catholic Charity Steer ing Committee, Advisory Board & Planning Committee of Stonehilf College, Easton; Clo ver Club of Boston. Past Presi dent of New Bedford Dealers ,Association, also a present member. Massachusetts State Auto Dealers Association, BoS ton. National Auto Dealers .As sociation, Washington, D. e. Past Member of President Deal ers, Advisory Counsel of General Motors,' Detroit, Michigan; Past 'Member 'of Dealer Panel Ad.. ,VisolyConsultant of the Chey 'rolet, School, of .y;erchandisinc &C. Management, ~troit, Mich.' Past Member. of Chevrolet Dealers '. Planning eo~itte, }Joston.; Trustee 'of Industrial Foundation Committee Of New Be!lford; ,New Bedford Co~ntry Club and Wamsutta Club 01. N~w Bedford. ,O'Hara is married to the for mer Barbara· V. Campbell of Boston. The couple has four 'children.
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Un~y Week Prayer of the Faithful
Taunton Continued from Page On<a and benediction will be given by Rev. John F. Callahan of the First Congregational Church, Raynham, president of' the Greater Taunton Clergy' Asso ciation. Rev. Gerald T. Shovel ton will lead the' recitation of the litany and the Lord's Prayer. The Christian. Unity booklet published by the Society of the Atotjement will be used. Charles Tripp, St. Mary's or ganist" will accompany the lIinging. GTCA sponsored a similar s.ervice last year at Bishop ~assidy High School. Layman chosen to read the scripture are members of the Taunton Interfaith Laymen's eouncil, a separate gwup.
(lLsctor)
The response for today's Prayer of the Faithful is: "Lord, have mercy.")
A]jJ)MQ'NlI'Jl'ION ., ' , (JPrieit) : Remembering our duty to love one another, let us pray for the full realization , ~ of that unity for which Christ prayed at the first Eucharist: "That all may be one, \' even as you, Father, in me and I in you; that they may also be one in us, that the J world may believe that you have sent me."
., eatt
WYman' 3-6592
CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE , NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
!P':t:5
3) That all nations and their leaders may 00 operate to accomplish peace and the unity
of brotherhood, let us pray to the Lord.
1) Th&it we may all heed the Spirit's call to 4) Th~t all t~e . Christian. Churches ~ay be fostor whatever can promote unity among um-ted agam. In the WItness they bear to all {...ho believe in Christ, let us pray to the Lord of llfe, let us pray to the Lord. the Ii.ord. . . ' , ' 5 ) That all who follow Christ may one day s.hare { " , the same Eucharist, let us pray to the Lord. 2) Th~ a11, Christians may serve, the poor and ~ That we all may learn to, love one another, th1 oppressed, IElt us pray to the Lord. ' let us pray to the LordJ ' (Leet
CONCLUDING PRA YEa ' " ' (Pr~est): God, o~r heavenly Father, strengthen our power to preach Christ. Help us to
show forth the Church ,to' those separate from her~ as a sign lifted up among the
nations; we ask this through your Son, Jesus' Christ our Lord. Amen.
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Ca$e:,qndHolr Fal1l,ilyrS,etPace:
THE ANCHOR- .
Thurs., .Jon. 18, 1968
Nar!-y"Hoop",Loop Top Berth; At Stake Tomorrow Might
'Alice Hk~rrington Will Lecifure
By PETER BARTEK
Norton High Coach
The Narragansett Basketball League wm Sltage its own version of the "Super-Bowl" tomorrow night in New Bedford. The two circuit leaders, Holy Family High of New Bedford. and Case High of Swansea will meet head-on in a oontest that will un doubtedly go a long way in vorite to annex the Narry crOWD. The, Cardinals have determing the eventual loop rolled to nine straight victories, ehampionship. " \ ,thus far,wi,th impressive wins The two fast moving clubs',h~ye ovet Rogers High of Newport
quickly outdistanced the other six league members and are locked in a race that di,-e~ parallels 'last Winter's., It w.~ only a year ago, as most NaJTy jlollow ers recall, that Holy Family commenced one of the most unforget tab 1 e seasons ever compiled by a league club. The Blue Peter Wave stormed over all oppoBartell nents only to eventually lose to :Melrose in the finals of the state c:bampionships. This year, how.ever, the sneaker may be -CIIl the other foot. :Based on performanees to date, Case, which lost only two "66-'67 encounters (both to Holy Family) during the regular sea 1lOD, is considered a slight 1a
and Foxboro, pr'ese'ason Jlavorite in the, Hockomock League. Meanwhile. Holy Family has lost only to Bishop Feehan Jligh of Attleboro, a Bristol County League member. The key to Coach Bob Gor don's Cardinals' success is bal anced scoring from llis starting five, and, stellar performances from his reserveS. George 'Jen kinson and 6'5" Tom Austin provide plenty of rebounding strength which may prove to be the deciding factor in tomor row's clash. These young fel lows, in' addition to Wayne Chase, brother Dave and 'Paul Connors more often than not finish each game in double figures. Coach Jack Nobrega's Paro ehials, who will place a winning streak of SO consecutive Narry victories on the line in this im portant meeting, will have to come up with one of their dutch performances in order to keep the skein intact.
Walsh, Gomes and Wilson Rate High
'Bill Walsh, the main cog·in the Blue Wave's attack, win have to be at' his best if the New :Bedfordites are to maintain their Narry supremacy. Walsh ill as highly thought of in the 8I'ea as Tom Gomes of New Bedford Voeational and Dana Wilson of Dennis-Yarmouth, of the ·cape:. ....ay. Conference. And, ))e····'1s capable of lifting the Wave :'to \'ictory against any opponent. ..:' . . John.' Gushue and Dave Che valier are also top flight pei'' formers, bbthoffensively and defensively. ' ' Both double figure scor~ the two defensive stalwarts 'will prevent Case from focusing at tention ,solely upon Walsh. Their effectiveness may prove the difference in the contest. In a game, as evenly matched as this appears to be, combina tions of all factors must be con sidered. Predicting the outcome is almost impossible. The win ner probably will reign as ehamp of the Narry loop. But, then again that may change during the last week of the cam paign when these two classy
dubs meet on Feb. 13 in Swan sea. Meanwhile' . Msgr. Prevost High of Fall Rivel1', Seekonk and Somerset are battling for third place spot in the league $tandin~., ' .', Coach 'Dick: Bessette of See )look' has 'il balanced attack that be has uSed effectively to stay in the 'running" for league !lon orS:' Scott Shiiding, Bob Clo~ tier, 'Tom' Fox, Wayne .. R9ge~ and Scott Marquis, theWarri ors' starting unit, have peen sharing sc6ring honors through the early portion of the season. Coach Bessette is hopeful that they will all start hitting on the same night and spearhead themselves back into contention. Prevost will travel to See konk tomorrow nigbt 00 stage a battle all-important_ for both clubs. Coach Doug Baxendale's club must defeat the Warriors if it is to maintain its position in the league"s ratings. Bob Gallant and Wayne Levesque, the Parochials' bright lights scoring-wise, m u s t- coritinue their hot pace to keep Prevost in the upper division.
Bednarz in Individual Scoring Race
Somerset 'should retain its portion of the third pla~ posi tion tomorrow when it hosts lowly Dighton-Rehoboth.. The Raiders, under Coach Tom Bums, have been an up-and down aggregation but they could erupt into one of the bet ter combines in the circuit. Dighton, winless in five league outings, is experiencing a tough luck campaign. Floyd Field and Dave- Horrocks are the bright lights. While his Diman Vocational team of Fall River is practically out of contention, Ed Bednarz is engaged in a personal battle for scoring honors with Bill Walsh of Holy Family. The high scoring senior has done every.: thing to chalk up victories for the Artisans but no one can do the job alone as the spunky for 'ud is learniJlM.
19
CONSOLATllON: An Indian priest brings consolation of the Sacrament of Penance to one of his parishioners in Magpur, India. NC Photo. ' I.
Jesuit to Evaluate Instruction I~ Parochial, Public Schools MILWAUKEE (NC)-A Jesuit ed·ucator is planning to develop aD experimental program which would evaluate grade school in struction in both paroehial and public schools in this area. Father Roman A. Berneri, S.J.. assistant professor of education at Marquette University, said the program would be. patterned ~ter a study in which he :was i~'Volved at t~e In.stitute for De velopment of Educa~on Activi ties at the Universi,tyof Cali fO,~~iaat Los' Angeles (UCLA). ,I., He returned, here in Septem ber after spending ~ year at the institute, conducted to improve instruction in 20 elementary schools around Los Angel.es. "I would like to see some thing similar here," Father Ber nert explained, "plus adding some of my own ideas $ • $ not so much a study but an experi ment-a takeoff ,of the program I was involved in· at UCLA." He said he is interested in warking with only fo.ur schools -two public, one Catholic and one' Protestant or Jewish school. Two or three of these schools
Dallas University Gets '$1. Milli~n
Victory, however, could be DALLAS (NC)-Mr. and Mrs. Bednarz's and Diman's tomor .Eugene Constantin Jr. of Dallas row when they play at We8t are donating $1 million to the port. University of Dallas in memory The Villagers are in virtually of their son Eugene Constantin the same boat as Dighton III who was killed in action in Rehoboth. Coach John Mello's Okinawa' duririg World' War II. unit lacks a dependable high Constantin, Texas oilman and scorer but may eant their sec Dallas civic leader, said the gift ond win of the Winter tomor is earmarked for the univer row' if they can stop Bednarz sity's undergraduate endowment while duplicating last week's fund. performance ,against Dighton. Bishop Thomas K. Gorman of While the chase for the league Dallas-Fort Worth,' university championship has developed chancellor, and Dr. Donald A. into a two-team race, the other Cowan, university president, six clubs are striving to improve were present during a brief their own positions and, in so ceremony at the Constantin doing, more than likely will in home in nearby University Park fluence the race to the wire. when formal announcement of Action will continue Tuesday the gift ·was made. with Case at Dighton, Holy The Constantins have also es Family at Somerset, Seekonk at tablished two othet scholarships Diman and Westport 'at Prevost. at tb~ university~
would be in "so-called disad' vantaged areas," he added. Looks lor Grant Father Bernert, who would direct tlhe study, feels it should last about three years "if it is to make any sense at all." He said he has not estimated its cost but is hoping to obtain • foundation grant to main~~ a s.afi o~ !wo full-time an(jt eig~t ~ 10 part.-ti~e peOJlle. , " He said the expedmenl's :pu~~ pose would'be to: Qevel6p eo;:. operationbet\v~n the varloWl schools; get school f>ei'sonrieltO recognize a problem they' facing; study each probiem klnd . propose solutions, and e)t~ri ment with sugges~ed proposals and· offer alternatives whiCh would be helpful to the schoolS.
are
Father Bernert pointed out that although four schools would be involved the results would be helpful to others because: it would be an ecumenical ap' proach; the experiment could be applied to other schools, by 2lnd large; and people in education should always be t~\' 'ng to de velop solutions to im ve prob lem situations. , 1
NAACP Hor\;lor NEW YORK (NC)--."For Rlill
suceess in arousing thle cOlll~i enee of the nation to t]4e evil 0If segregated hOUsing," i, Fafuer James E. Groppi of Mdlvauhee was presented a certific~te of merit by the' N ati,anal Assocna tiOD for the A<ivanCElment cd Colored People. The av,'!ard was made at the NAAG.?",lliflf:Jowship Dinner prec. ~ann2a tion's annual 1,".. F, HQ.t:ere.
CORREIA &S~NS
ONE STOP '" SHOPPING CENTER(
Members of Fall River Cath· oUc Woman's Club will hear a ,discussion of books by Miss Alice C. Harrington at 3 Sunday afternoon, Jan. 21 in Holy Name school hall on Read Street. The program will be sponsored by the literature department of the elub and is part of its annual series of book lectures. Miss Harringtoo's talk will be titled "My World of Books." She will discuss books in gen':' eral with emphasis' on recen. titles, including "The Future of Man" by Pierre Teilhard' 'de Chardin; "Confessions f'~ ~at Turner" by William Styron; and a biography of Sarah Bern hardt by Cornelia Otis Skinner. Vice-Principal " A vice-principal at B.M.C. Durfee High School, Miss Har';' rington attended Sacred Hearts Academy and graduated from'" Durfee. She holds degrees from Pembroke College and Boston University. She is president of the Fall River branch of the American Association of Urii:~ versity Women and serves ,on the board of directors of the District Nursing Association' and the Family Service Association.. She is chairman of the nursing committee Qf Truesdale H()spi tal, and is also active in FaD River Little Theatre produ~ tions. :Born in Fall River, the speaker is a lifelong member of Saered Heart parish.
Establishes Priests Retirement Fund ·MADISON (NC) - The 1V!at;J1,o son diocese, taking advantage of clergy tax benefits provid~ under federal legislation kn()w~ as the K~gh .l\Ct, has estab,.. lisbed a seW·administering re tirement fund f~r ,dioc~» priests. Provisions of the Keogh Act pennit the ~ei-gy, in compu~. iJlcome tax. to deduct contribu tionS 'to 'Ii' relliement plan and rodefer' tax liability on' 's'uc*i eontributions and on earningJ5 eI the plan: ' ., " Under the Madison progra~ an" institution to· whieh a priest is ·assigned' will contribute ~350 annually, to the fund while 'the priest contributes $120 a year: .
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Allentown Diocese Planning Synod ALLENTOWN (NC) - Three pu'blic meetings in the Allen· town Diocese have been held Un Pottsville and Reading to give the diocese's laymen an oppor-t tunity to review the work done thus far in preparation for the first diocesan synod. . . Goal of the synod is establish ment of rules and guidelines aiming toward practical ,im- . plementation of the renewal ealled for by the Second Vati ean Council. ' Bishop Joseph McShea of Al lentown has announced, ~at more than 150 members of a central and 13 special commi~ sions - iDcluding priests, Reli, gious and laity - have heeD working on formulation of doc trinal statements, statutes, and recommendations.
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llendries
• Television • Groce'" • Appliances .. Furnitui)e
104 Allen St., New Bedftrd 997-9354 \.
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_IcNCHOR-Diocese of Fan
River-Thurs. Jan. 18, 1968,
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LEARN MEANING OF SACRAMENT AT MARY BETH'S BAPTISM: Rev. John J. Steakem, parish CCD director, pours the water of Baptism
on . the forehead of Mary Beth McDonald.' The candle, 'the sY!llbol of light, is presented to the sponsors, Roy and Marlene Owens.
• North" Easton CCD ,Ceass Members Have :part In Baptism Rite, , 'For the' teenagers" of
Dorothy Mitchell Eastman Religion at
. have participated in over 500
come the custom for the new baptisms as representatives of paren'ts to invite not only their ~p the' parish family, welcoming families bilt their friends and .rarish in North Easton the word '''baptism'' will never be an abstract term in a religious its new members and preseI;lt., ,neighbors also to the baptisms. textbook. Thanks for this' must go to eight pounds, of new Christian 'life called Mary Beth ing baptismal candles to, t,he.. The cerEmiony ended :with the McDOllald. Last' October Mr; and Mrs': Robert' McDonald, who' were', expecting 'their ~nfal1ts. In the future, Mr. Borle c 'students singing "Allelu" and fourth child in December, , '.. " , told the group, the Pare,nt Edu- all hands adjourned to the other cators will also present the baby . end of the hall for refreshments. were asked if they w:ould al- 'refreshment committee for, the such a delight that she herself - with a baptismal robe; : ' The beautiful' star of the big 1\;"w thel'r expected o'ffsprl'ng christening party,.; was, ihe most appropriate 'sym-', .,.,. , .. ' , IlU At last, everything was ready. bol of all the joyful vitality of, ' .. 'He" also 'told the'group' that 'event made her exit for: home IIlo be baptized in the parish Everything that is, but the baby the Christ-life. the 'i>asior, 'Father,John Casey, .. ' fOr her own liquid refresbments. crenter on a Wednesday night· who was late in arriving. The Explains Program. . who' was' present at the cere':', If Mary Beth could have made . instead of the usual Sunday' sllspens'e 'was mou~ting. Finally' After the ceremony John mony, presents the new parents a curtain speech she would cer I1fternoon in the' church. The the word ~~as passed "Our baby Boyle, who represented the of . babies' born' in the parish' tainly, have' wanted' to say Victory Noll sisters who staff is here and it's a girl." When. Parent Educators of the parish, with ,a year's subscription to 'tThank you" to th;) teenagers ltbe CCD high school of religion Mary Beth finally' made 'her ,.e~plained the program of this' the new" "Parent Educator"" who had put so much work, thought it would be a wonder- entrance into the world there particular phase' of CCD., He magazine. enthusiasm' imd Christian joy ltul opportunity for the 'students was joy throughout the parish., said that in the four years they', Mr; Boyle said that he hoped into their big "Welcome" for IIQ participate in a "real live" The temperature was several 'had been in operation they' that in the 'future it would her; b'aptismal ceremony. Grace and degrees below zero the night of Bob McDonald, who are mem- the baptism, but the icy roads
bers of the parish CCO Parent ,and wintry blasts couldn't keep
JEducators said thaey would be away the teenagers. They had'
delighted to provide the leading waited too long for this night.
actor or actress for the event. They came in droves, streaming Sister· Joan Louise, superior into the parish center that was
of the Victory Noll convent and aglow with their bright banners.
supervisor of CCD religious The huge and vivid banners'"
education for the diocese, ex- lining the hall proclaimed:'
pressed the idea behind the plan "Joy", "Community, of Love":
this way: "We thought that with "Born Free", "Faith is a' Gift
the' young people we eould dem- that Grows", "Receive This
onstrate how the community of Light", and "Choose Life."
Christians welcomes' a new The students arranged them-' ..
member in the ceremony Of selves along one wall l,)n bleach
b'aptism.The ceremony is a ers behind' the baptismal font
Cl:~lebration and we wanted to that was set off from 'the' rest of
eKpress that, too." thehallJby, a, backd!:,op o.f biln-
Enthusiastic ners. As, the participimts ,and • The young 'people were en- the family came into, ,the., hall thusiastic .about the idea and the class greeted th'em "with' the began to study the sacrament of hymn "They'll kno""i :\Ve' ~re
6aptism with their teachers who ,Christians iby our ~o.ve.~~,,· ,~ ,.
~e Sisters Joan Louise, Martha One of "the boys stepped for.
l$:ary, Joseph Adele and Sister wardXt'a,'} , int,rociu'ced,' ,Father
JI) John e1kem, who would bap ePorres. , tize iy Beth'. He also intro-
They learned that in the sac- duced ~he parents, Mr. and Mrs.
r'ament, of baptism Christ our McD0!1:::l1d and the, gt:andparents,
Redeemer comes to, us: giving M rs. 'J.jeanne tt e M ,c,D,ona Id an d
us the gift, completely unearned Mr. 'and- Ml's.' Charles'Malloy.
on our part, of His own life, Taking'/ it bow with, great de- '
~hey di~covered that, the. baplight' Were Mary Beth's older
tlsm of mfants ~as bee,n muse ' broth~t and ~isters, William, 6
from th~ earliest times of, Roserltary: 8 and Donna 5 Christianity. Ro'\Y. and.Marlene Owe~s ~ere Since a helpless, infant, Clln godp~',rents. They were 'ably as A Calclnator Gas incinerator' eliminates messy garbage pails, eertainly do nothing. to 'earn : :sist.ed Jin this function' by the ' and the nuisance of daill/ tl'ips i1utdoorswith trash in all
anything at all for himself, what entire) congregation who all kinds 'of weather. It is smokeless. odorless, automatic and'
'foolproof. Simple and inellpensl,," tel' operate; Buy one now
a vivid reminder he is in 'his Joi~ 1 with them in 'the re~', very obvious he1plessnes,s,' that· . spol'li'~es. ' ",-., . and save., .,-.:-__;..._......~_....~_~
inan can do nothing by himself A,' , the. appropriate" moments '
BUYNOW~n'd SAVE ~ merit the gift of God's own in t1);eceremony, Dei:lorahMll1-i,
life. ' , lin I3nd Stephen Perrin, both, 'The symools of baptism h~ve tenf~' graders" stepped .forward '
traditionally been those of new and presented the candle' and
life, light, celebration and j.y: bapt smal gown. .,: ,:
The students decided ,to exMary BetiJ. was" alternately
press these symbols by making quilet in wide eyed awe of the
colorful banners for the liall, cOl~rlulbamiers, and hOVvling
designing and making a bap- lu,tily at this ititerrup:t~on in."'
COmpMf tismal candle and gown to pre- he'\r usual~peaceful schedlile. .
sellt to the infant. They chose ,$he wiggled and "bounced. 155 NORTH MAIN STREET - PHONE OS 5-7811 appropriate hymns and re- wvth all her three -week' old
hearsed them and appointed a v\ality • Jus!; watching, her waS'
th~ CC'DHigh ' Sch,' 001
of
1m, rna,c,ulate ConcAOntion
oe-
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GARBAGE' and TRASH
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