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GREATER NEW BEDFORD DIALOGUE: Twenty-four representa tives, clerical ·and lay, from Catholic-Orthodox-Protestant Churches gath ered at the Inter-Church Council Center, So. Dartmouth, to inaugurate the Week of Prayer for Unity. Left: Lester Faulkingham, Advent Chris tian Church; Mrs. John J. DeBoer, Mattapoisett Congregational Church; Sister Anne Monica, S.N.D. Bishop Stang High School; Center: Sydney
The A CllOft .n
PRICE 10c
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An Catholic high schools in the Diocese of Fall River will conduct an entrance and placement examination for new students at 8 :30 Saturday morning 'February 5.. Stu- . dents wishing to enter any diocesan school next September IShould report to the school dollar fee, payable at the time of their choice prepared to of the examination. . take a three hour examina-' The students need· bring no tion There will be a three~ records with them, nor do their
Director Gives Vocation Date Rt. Rev. John J. Hayes, Diocesan Vocation Director, today announced that a Vo cation Program will take Tum to Page Seventeen
MONSIGNOR HAYES
parents have to accompany them. Complete information as to courses, and, activities, will be given at that time. Students are not limited to a high school in their city but may. apply to any school in the di oceSl;l. Parish schools will give first. consideration to their par ishioners; diocesan schools will give first consideration to mem bers of the diocese. . High schools of the Diocese of Fall River: Attleboro: Bishop E'eehan High School (for boys and girls). Fairhaven: Sacred Hearts Academy (for girls only). Fall River: Academy of the Sacred Hearts (for girls only); Bishop Connolly Hi!(h (for boys only) (examination to be given at Mt. St. Mary's); Dominican Academy (for girls only); Jesus- . Mary Academy (for girls only); . Mount St. Mary Academy (for girls only); Monsignor Prevost High School (for boys Oilly). New Bedford: Holy Family High School (for boys and girls); St. Anthony High School (for boys and girls). North Dartmouth: Bishop Stang High School (for boys and girls) . Taunton: Bishop Cassidy High School (for girls only); Msgr. Coyle High School (boys only).
Adams, Executive Secretary, Greater New Bedford Inter-Church Counciil p Rev. John Aalfs, First Presbyterian Church; Rev. Albert F. Shovelton. St. James Church; Right: Rt. Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher, St. James Church; Mrs. Everett McCullough, President, United Church Women; Anthony J. John, ,Our Lady of Purgatory. Story on Prayer-Dialogue and participants in it on Page Six. .
Bishop Issues Directives
For Ecumenical Action
The Most Reverend Bishop has issued Interi'm Directives for Ecumenical Activities in the Diocese of Fall River. The 11 page brochure was drawn up by the Diocesan Com mission for Christian Unity in consultation with representatives of the ministerial as sociations of Fall River, New Bedford, Taunton, Attleboro and Cape Cod. The Com mission worked for four of the Diocese. Copies were also A. Hamel, 951 Stafford Rd., Fall .months on the Directives, sent to all convents, schools, River. the first two drafts being s~minarians and are available Members of the Diocesan prepared by a sub-committee upon request from theCommis Commission are: Chairman Rt. headed by Rev. Cornelius J. O'Neill with Rev. Edward A. Oliveira and Attorney Richard K. Martin. The entire Committee then worked on the next two drafts until the entire project was approved by the Bishop. The first draft was drawn up after consultation with various other dioceses throughout the country and using of the guide lines laid down by the American Bishops. The next three drafts were drawn up in consultation with representatives of the Min isterial Associations within the area of the Fall River Diocese. Copies of the Directives have been sent to all priests of the Diocese, to Orthodox priests, to ministers, and, as a courtesy, to Jewish rabbis within the area Registration for the new Bishop Connolly High School for Boys in Fall River will be held on the next two Satur days, Jan. 22 and 29, from 10-3 at Mt. St. Mary's Academy, Fall River. All registrants are requested to use the Second Street entrance.
sion Chairman Rt. Rev. Henri
n~@u~~e
Turn to Page Fourteen
@~~®~~D@[J1
For latin AmiJrica WASHINGTON (NC)'-The U. S. bishops have ap pealed to Catholics here to strengthen their ties with their fellow Christians in Latin America. In a special statement, the hierachy proposed a national observance of "Latin America Cooperation Week" nounced a national collection for Ja.nuary 23 to 30. All dio the Church in Latin America. It ceses were urged to have Turn to Page Two p.rograms stressing links with Catholics south of the border. ·Father John J. Considine, M.M., director .of the Latin America Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, explained that supplies for the observances' during the proposed week are available from the bu reau's program office established with the cooperation of Bishop Ralph L. Hayes in the Daven port, Iowa, chancery building. In addition, the bishops an-
rnvest Kearns Malta Knight
Aloysius J. Kearns, 458 Madison St., Fall River, who was named a Papal Knight of St. Gregory in 1959 by Turn to Page. Sixteen
Msgr. Medeiros to· Speak At CeD Renewal Meetings The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine is sponsoring an evening of ~hristian Renewal through the Second Vat ican Council in each of the five areas of the Diocese, featuring an address by Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Chancellor of the Diocese . rate ac(:ording to the type of and pastor of St. Michael's CCD adivity in which they are Parish, Fall River, entitled engaged: teachers, fishers etc. After .the' group discussions "Challenge 1966 - Renewal in the CCD through the Second Vatican Council." Msgr. Medeiros attended the four sessions of the Second Vati can· Council as a 'peritus' (ex-. pert). Following his talk there will be discussion groups in class rooms directed by members of the CCD Diocesan Executive Board. The groups will sepa~
refreshments will be served by the members of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women in each district. Priests, Religious, and present and prospective CCD members throughout the Diocese are in vited to attend these evenings of Christian Renewal, scheduled as follows: !.rurn to Page Seventeen
ALOYSIUS J. KEARNS, K.M.
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THE ANCHOR-rDiocese of Foil
Riv~r-Thurs.Jan.
20, 1966'
Proper: of the AAass for Th~rd S~~dayAfter; .fEpBph@ny
INTROIT: Ado~e God, all you h,is angels, Sion hears and is glad, and the cities of Juda :rejoice. The Lord is King; let the earth rejoice; let the many isles be glad. ,Glory be to the FatJJ,er, etc. . . . Adore God, all you his ~ngels; Sion hears ,and. is gJad, anq the citi~s of Juda rejoice. GRADUAL: nations' shall revere your name" 0 Lord,- and all the kings of the earth your glory. ,For the Lord has rebuilt Sidn, and he shall lappear in his glory. Alleluia, alleluia. ThJ Lo~d is King; ~et the earth rejoice; let the many isles b~ glad ! Alleluia. .
The
OFFERTORY: The right hand of the Lord has struck with power; the rigqt hand of the Lord has,exalted me; I . shall not 'die, but live, and declare th~ works of the Lord. COMMUNION: All marveled at the words that came froin the mouth of God. '
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C@P~ C~~[f~Y H@~d M®®~grrng
In keeping ·with the' nation wide observance of the Week of, Prayer for Christi~ Unity, the Cape Area will have' an ecu :menical luncheon and dl~cussion Monday, Jan. 24th. I . In a spirit of fellowspip, the Catholic priests of the C~pe Cod _ Deanery as well as thos~ of. t~e Islands have been inviteQ to JOID, ministers of the churches in the Cape Cod Council of qhurches as well as the Rabbi of lihe local Jewish synagogue and the priest of the Greek Orthodox 'Church. The luncheon will talte place
Folk . Festiv~1 .
Alumni of Bishop St~g High School, North Dartmouth, will sponsor their third i annual Southeastern Folk Festival at 8 Saturday night, Jan. 291 at the schooL Proceeds will go to the alumni scholarship fund and eollege groups wl11 be featured on the program. I ,
,
Nec.rology
II'
JAN. 28
:Rev. Joseph"M. Griffip., 194'1, Pastor, St. Mary, Nantucket. Rt. Rev. John J. Shay, 1961, Pastor, St. John Evenge~ At tleboro. . JAN. 29 Rev. Christiano J. :Borges, 1944, Pastor, st. John 'Baptist, New Bedford. : Rev. Albert J. Masse, 1950, Pastor, St.' Joseph, Attleboro.
JAN.
31 I Rev. Charles J. Bums, 1901, Pastor, St. Mary, No. Attteboro. Rev. William F. Sullivan, 1930, Pastor, St. Patrick, Somerset. Rev. Manuel C. Ter~ 1930, Pastor, St. Peter, Provinbetown. , I
FEB. 1 , Rt. Rev.' Michael J. O'Reilly, 1948, Pastor, Immaculate Con ception, Taunton.
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FEB. I , Most Rev. William Stang, D.D., 1907, First Bishop of Fall River, 1904-07. ; Rev. Patrick F. McKenna, 1913, Pastor, Immaculate ConCeption, 'l'aunton. ' Rev. John L. McNamar~, 1941, Pastor, Immaculate Conception, Fall River. i Rev. P. Roland Decosse, 1947, Pastor,St. Hyacinth, New Bed ford. FEB. 3 Rev. Antonio O. Ponte, 1952, Pastor, Our Lady of Ang~ls, Fall JUver.
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second Class I'Ostag~ PalO at qal! River. Mass. °ubJished every Thursda). al 410 H,gIIlano Avenuel._ Fall Rive, Matis.. 02722 IIw 1IIe catholic I'l'ess ~\ tile Diocese of Fall Rlve,. Subscription price _ pO$~1II ".00", Yell.
1lIaI'"
at East Bay Lodge in Osterville and will be followed by a gen eral discussion of topics .perti nent to the· Decree' on Ecumen- . IF' ALL lIUVlER lLUNCHEON: Priests and Ministers inaugurated the Week of Prayer ism of the Second Vatican Coun cil. The session will open and for Unity ~ith a joint luncheon. Left to right, Rev. George F. Hodgdon, Quarry Metho close with prayers from the leaf dist Church Rev. Edward J. Burns, St.Louis Church; Man'uel Avila Jr., Baptist Observer,
let prepared by the National Council bf Churches, the World Springfieid, Pa.; Rev. Bento R. Fraga. St. John of God Church; Rt:Rev. Henri A. Hamel,
Council 'of Churches imd the , St. Jean Baptiste Church; Rev. William B. Taylor, First Baptist Church; Rev. John G.
Bishops' Commission for Ecu Carroll, St. John's Church; Rev. Pierre Lachance, O.P., St. Anrie's Church. menical Affairs for the Observ ance of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. . Arrangements are under the joint chairmanship of Rev. Continued from Page--one The Pontiff also expressed"~ "To this end," it continues, Warren Johnson of the South proposed Jan. 30, the concluding "sincere interest" in the thii'ltl "each diocese is urged to en Congregational Church of Cen day of the cooperation week. eourage a program embracing annual national conference ~ terville and :Rev. Ronald A. The document's title is "State spiritual, cultura~, educational. the Catholic Inter-American Cc=> Tosti of, Our Lady of the As sumption Church in Osterville. ment of Solidarity by the Bish .and financial activities touching operation Program taking pl~ ops of the United States to their Latin America." in Chicago this week. Confreres in Christ, the Bishops Share Concern Pope Paul's letter of praise for of Latin America." Mass Ordo the undertaking was relea~d I The 'whole Christian famllt' Unique Document here by the Latin America Bu FRIDAY1....st. Agnes, Virgin and The document is rated as reau of the National Catholic . must share this concern, tlllc Martyr. III Class. Red. Mass unique in modem Church his Pope said, praising the "enviabla Proper; Glory; no Creed; tory because it is addressed from Welfare Conference, the coordi insight and praiseworthy cour nating agency for U. S. Cathollc age" of the U. S. bishops in'88 Common Preface. one hierarchy to another group cooperation with Latin Ameri SATURDAY-SS. Vincent and of bishops. sisting the Church in Latia can Catholics. Anastasius, Martyrs. III Class•. America. The bishops say that "in the Red. Mass Proper; Glory; no inspired atmosphere of the final "We have been truly grati Cree'tl; ;Common Preface hours of the ecumenical council,'" fied," said Pope Paul in his let SUNDAY-III Sunday Aft e r Fall, Guild they expe'rience "the strength of ter to the U. S. bishops, "by the Epiphahy . II Class. Green. the bond which binds Christians knowledge that you, acting as a Fall River Catholic Guild few Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; together in the fraternity of the body in your recent annual' the Bli,nd will meet Sunday Preface of Trinity. . Church and in the world broth meeting have decided to pro afternoon in St. Joseph's School, MONDAY-St. Timothy, Bishop erhood of the human race." claim in the United States a following Rosary and Benedic and Martyr. m 'Class. Red. "The bishops 0 . ' .. find- them L a tin America Cooperation Mass Proper; Glory;' no Creed;' selves prompted to tum their Week during the coming month tion in the church at 2:15. Common Preface. thoughts in a special manner to of January." TUESDAY - Conversion 'of St. the bishops of Latin America Paul, Apostle. III Class. White. with their flocks in an earnest Mass Proper; Glory; 2nd declaration of solidarity." Rome Affiliate Prayer ;(under one conclusion)
The statement notes the grow DUBLIN (NC) - Holy Cross St. Peter,' Apostle; no Creed;' ing involvement of U. S. Catho Reg. Master Plumber 2930
Preface of Apostles.
lics in cooperative programs with College, .the major seminary of GEORGE M. MONTLE
the DubliD. archdiocese, has been WEDNE~DAY - St. Polycarp, Latin Americans, but it also calls Over 35 Years
affiliated with the Pontifical Bishop ,and Martyr. m "Class. attention to recent dramatic pas Red. Mass Proper; Glory, no torals by several hierarchiea University of St. Thomas Aqui of Satisfied Serviee
Creed; Common Preface.
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;' says that "Catholics of the .. Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory, no Creed: Common United States have heretofore St. Francis known little about the Church Preface. and its 200,000,000 members who ,Residence are their brothers in the Latin Inc.
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St· John's College S~rike Without End in Sight
THE ANCHOR-
Catholics Join In Christian Unity Week
JAMAICA (NC)-The strike which began Jan. 4 at St. John's University continues, with student lead~rs reaching for a growing role in bringing -about a settlement. Dissident faculty members continued to picket Outside the ga tes of Brooklyn center and the Jamaica campus of the replaced by 44 fill-in teachers Vincentian Fathers' institu who have a total of 17 doctorates tion, but the administration and 27 masters degrees. dismissed their impact and said etasses were on a normal sched ule. The dispute, which began in a disagreement over salaries, ten ure, academic freedom and par ticipation of teachers in policy decisions, is now centered chiefly on demands of union pickets that 31 teachers fired during the Christmas hoiidays be re":hired. St. John's President Rev. Joseph T. Cahill, C.M., noted that the national offices of the American Association of Univer sity Professors in Washington has appointed a three-member committee to make a study of the dismissals of the teachers. He also warned the students: "Participation in a boycott can only serve to harm individual students. It will not constitute an excuse for failure to attend class and a certain number of unexcused absences may result in loss of the semester's credit for that class." Varied Widely
Figures on the participation of faculty members in the strike varied widely. The university's total for each day generally was about 40, but the striking United Federation of College Teachers almost always put the daily fig ure over 100. The university revealed that 10 of the 31 dismissed teachers have been allowed to complete their contracts until June. The 21 others dismissed have been paid the full amount of their contracts, but are not teaching. It said that of the 21, there were 9 who held doctorates and 12" who held masters degrees. In a letter to the New York State Department of Education, the university said these have been
Fairhaven Parish Sets Open House St. Joseph's parish, Fairhaven, will sponsor Good-Will Sunday from 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon, March 20, by conducting an open house at the church, to which the public will be invited. At a planning committee meeting Rev. John Bl'ennan, SS.CC., pastor, announced that invitations will be sent to min isters and parishioners of all Fairhaven, Acushnet a.nd Matta poisett churches. The pastor noted that he was pleased to make this announcement during the Church Unity Octave. Parishioners Aid
Visitors will be taken in small groups on tours of St. Joseph's during the open house. They will view the altars, sacred ves sels, vestments, confessionals, stations of the cross and bap tistry. Parishioners at each point of interest will answer questions and give explanations to supple ment information on charts. , John B. Davidson is general chairman of the event, aided by Harry L. Young Jr., Mrs. James B. Lanagan, Mrs. Earl J. Dias, Charles A. Stiles, James B. Lan agan, Mrs. Lionel J. Dulude and Louis Cardoza as chairmen of Bubcommittees.
In Indian Language AHMEDABAD (NC) - The first Catholic New Testament in Gujerati, an Indian language spoken by about 21 million peo 1tJle, has been published here.
NEW YORK (NC) - A Catholic pastor joined a Protestant minister and an Orthodox priest in opening
Hopes Dashed
Hopes of the striking union that the matter would get the at tention of the National Labor Relations Board were dashed on Jan. 12 when Samuel M. Kay nard, NLRB regional director, said he had dismissed the union's charge of unfair labor· practices by St. John's. Kaynard said that the board would not assert jurisdiction "in as much as st. John's University is a non-profit educational insti tution and the activities involved in the case are non-commercial in nature and intimately con nected with the charitable pur poses and activities of the insti tution." Ten professors at St. John's defended the university in a statement claiming that there had been no restriction on their academic freedom at the school. At the Jamaica campus, where classes are held for about 9,000 students and the administration says attendance is' over 90%, 'faculty picket lines were bol stered Jan. 13 by officers of the American Federation of Teach ers, AFL-CIO, parent' body of the striking campus union. Charles Cogan, parent union president, said 650 locals had been asked to contribute to a fund for striking teachers. The local United Federation of Teachers has given $5,000, he said.
Channel 6 Shows CCD Roles On Saturday morning at 9:30 Qver Channel 6 - New Bedford Television Station WTEV, Ar mand Goulet of New Bedford will discuss the Parent-Educator Program in the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. The discussion will be a part of the television production "The' Little Flock" seen regularly at that time. . This program presents a pop ular catechetics class' for young sters and this will be retained while a part of the program will be devoted to the discussion of the role of the various CCD units in· the parish. On Saturday, J'an. 29, Miss Patricia Makin of Westport will be seen and heard speaking on the Teaching Apostolate in the CCD.
Council Documents Set for Publication NEW YORK (NC)-Associa tion Press, publishing division of the National Board of the YMCA's, will publish the 16 of ficial documents of the Second Vatican Council, along with commentaries on each by a Catholic scholar and a Protestant ,or an Orthodox religious "leader. Publication date is March 7. The organization also an nounced it will publish between March and May four volumes on the Church in the modern world, edited by the staff of the World Council of Churches. The books, used as study doc uments of the world conference on "The Church and Society" in Geneva in July, will deal with such matters as Christian social ethics in a changing world, re sponsible government in a revo lutionary age, economic growth in world perspective, and man in community.
3
Thurs., Jan. 20, 1966
COUNCIL OF CHURCHES: Ministers, priests attend breakfast meeting of Fall River Council of Churches. From left, Rev. Edward Mitchell, Holy Name parIsh; Rev. William B. Taylor, First Baptist Church; Rev. Harold Melvin, St. John's Episcopal Church; Rev. R.G. Stephanopoulos, St. Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church.
Better Life Brazilian Cardinal Praises Student Project Designed to As§ist latin Americonl5 MANKATO (NC)-A student project aimed at assisting Latin Americans in finding a better life has received a special com mendation from Agnelo Cardinal Rossi of Sao Paulo, Brazil. The Cardinal, traveling in the U. S. prior' to attending the Catholic Inter-American Co operation Program (CICOP» conference in Chicago spoke of "Operation Relocation," a finan cial assistance drive originated by Catholic high school and grade school students in the Mankato area. The students hope to raise by door-to-door canvassing $10,000 to be used to finance the build ing of homes for some of the most impoverished residents of the "favellas" of Sao Paulo. The money will be put~n a revolving
New Bedfordite Says Parrot's Good Dog SANTA CRUZ, Bolivia - A
parrot may replace the watch dog at a Maryknoll mission par ish here. The watchdog was taken in by the missioners during a re cent wave of burglaries. He per formed quite well. So did the parish's parrot. The bird learned to bark better than the dog. . Result may be, says Maryknon Father David I. Walsh of New Bedford, that the missioners will . find the dog another home and let the parrot do the barking.
fund for long-term, . low-interest loans to some of the 100,000 Bra zilians living in the Sao Paulo slums. Over 250 teams of two stu
dents each will sell "shares" in the house-building project, shares not in the ordinary mone tary terms but rather in helping the less fortunate; "dividends" on this investment will be paid in "social consciousness" rather than in dollars. Robert Tillman, spokesman for the student group, expressed their hope that this "spirit of CICOP" will be taken up by
other American teenagers.
Cardinal Rossi, in his special message, called Operation RelO cation "one of the finest exam ples of inter-American coopera tion I have found in my travel to the U. S."
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the Week of Prayer for Chris tian Unity at Manhattan's Inter church Center in the National Council of Churches headquar ters here. Msgr. Arthur A. Campbell. pastor of Corpus Christi parish, helped inaugurate a recently completed joint prayer service for Christian Unity sponsored by the National Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches and recommended by the U. S. Catholic Bishops' Commission for Ecumenical Affairs. The leaflet containing the Scripture-and-litany service is the first publication of a service for Christian unity prepared under a program of Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox coop eration. The leaflet is being distributed by the American office of the World Council of Churches and by the Franciscan Friars of the Atonement of Graymoor Monastery, Garrison, N.Y. Daily Services A spokesman for the World Council of Churches said an in itial supply of 100,000 leaflets had been completely sold out and that recent orders coming to the council's offices were for warded to the Graymoor Friars
to be filled.
The Christian unity services at the Interchurch Center are being held daily at noon from Jan. 18 to 25.
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YOUR HELPFUL FAMilY BANKING CENTER
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Jon. 20,1966
Bishops Name Manchester Prelate liaison With Ccnon law Soc!ety
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.FBnd§) Ch~rm and Thought lfi 'Wor~di of H~lJUrY'O~ieffi1t8 I
By Jo~eph T. McGloin, S. J. . I don't go to marty movies. It's not that I don't want to, but circumstances prevent it. The first circumstance is that they take tim~. And the second is that there aren't many worth goi~g 1'1'.0. Sometimes, hpwever, in order to look at somethmg other ' . 't I s parents, or that theIr ambition th t . an a ypewrl er or la .c as was to pose for cheesecake, or or a retreat group' or a .any of the other intimate items group of parents, or a prob- which make some name-stars.
)em, I hide myself in a Actually, I dearly love movie and. so, when' there is one which has been given ·esJ)ecially goo d writeups and they seem honest, I try to go. I took in "Tom Jones" largely because of all the propaganda, and at the risk of being categorized as a square (, ecause "everybody else liked it"), I did rwt think even close to lieserv ing the ecomiums heape1 on it. The acting was superb,and so. was the photography. i But I am not particularly entertained oy a pagan out~ook on life _especially when that outlook is looked on as c~te and winsome and funny. I do not find it praiseworthy ~o con )'{lungsters into t~inking that sexual immorality IS only good fun I . True Shows I an the other hand, I was most i n t eres t e d l'n shows like! "8Jh," d "The Girl With the Golden ~ " hich while ther con~:~d t:e na;ration of sOJ,lle immorality, still had great! depth te them, relating everything, at least implicitly, to the dighity of human nature and to the enormous fact of man's real p1i1rpose. These were real, true shows, insofar as they took basi!: facts into consideration and did not try to put across' the id~a that sin is really ooJy harmles~, even commendable fun, and that only the virtuous are really square. A short time ago, a ,movie came along and rated all sprts of wonderfu~ reviews. So I went to it, expecting -that, as usukl, the reviews would be abovle the 'actual merit of the perfor~ance. But this time, fortunate~y, the reverse was true - the 'movie was even better than the reviews had indicated. This picture was "The World of Henry Orient." By this time, l~ have Ileen it twice. I would like to see it again later on. I Charming Teen-agers Th~ ads, for the mostipart, featured a ver;y fine actor'l Peter Sellers. T~is was understaqdab~e, because his is a name which w111 draw customers and he ;is an excellent actor. ' . But the fact is that, in· this. picture, Petel Sellers, proficient as he is, has to take second place. to two· of the most cha1;ming teen-agers imaginable, cetltainly the two most charming I ones ever to hit the screen. The reviews prepare YOU for a good movie. They do n·ol1 prepare you for falling in love with. these two kids. ' Those responsible for' this movie had the good sense cast two .teen-aged girls whq had never acted before in I these parts. And they had the Isheer good luck (No amount o~ skill could have found these two unaided) to come up with the perfeet two for the part. These were two kids we had never met, even in the headlines, so we had never read tha~ they were soon to turn into giamor ~r1B, or that they hated! their
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completely incredible when cast in roles calling for innocence. Real Kids By some cinematic miracle, these two came through in· this show as ireal kids. They went from mopd to mood with the same unpredictability as any teen-aged girl, now jumping over hyqrants in sheer good spirits (which the camera caught as never, before on the screen. perhaps), now worrying about sam e eartn-shaking problem which would later seem trifling to them in the Itght of infinitely greater p~oblems. Their Ploods changed, too, with their imaginations, as they dreamed up entertaining situa tions for themselves one minute and, the next, as they imagined themselve!, in love with a shop worn idol of the entertainment world. They were real, too, in their attitudes-chattering happily to gether, or sharing the gossip, r~al or ima.gined, of their school gIrl acquamtances. Here was a teen-ager in a long, worn mink coat wear~ng it like a princess. Here. was, one shocked and ex-. pressmg her shock loudly and ' ded aud't pu bl'ICl Y 10 a crow I 0 rium, at ~he disco~ery that her friend had shaved her legs. Pathos, Joy But charming and real as these teen-agers are drawn in "Henry Orient" there . is much more in this movie than superficial charm. There is the pathos and joy apd sorrow of growing up. There. is the tremendous les son WhICh most adults have to learn ·over and over again that the problems of a teen-ager are not minor problems at all, but only seem, so to us adults be cause those problem we have en co~ntered in the meantime have echpsed them. To the teen-ager, the teen-age problem is as enormous as any problems come, and just as agonizing. Here too, the minor problems of crushes and imaginings give way to the greater problem of disillusionment, a transfer you cannot appreciate without seeing the picture. The problem of loneliness in the two girls and the. hel~ t~ey ~iv~ each other in theIr fnen,dship IS fundamental 10 the show. Commends Movie Both girls are the victims of broken homes, one more than the other. Both are living the restricted sort of life of· the big city dweller. And in the back ground lurk a few psychiatrists, the crutch of this sort of society long before he becomes the nec essity for those who really need him.' ; There is; then, charm to this picture. But there is much more than this.' There is depth and thought and feeling as well. It is. my sincere wish that every adult who has anything to do with teen-~ged girls-,-their par ents, teachers, anyone - would see the shoW and ponder it. And it is also my hope that some fortunate genius in the movie industry ·will come -up with an equally penetrating film sometime :featuring teen-aged boys. Genius and luck: tliat's what it will take. And two real ~n-aged boys.
FINAL VOWS: Perpetual \ have been pronounced by Brother Amadeus Bacon, O.S.F. in ceremonies at Bro ther Columba ReillySchol asticate, Brooklyn, N.Y. Bro ther Amadeus is the son of Mrs. Sybil Bacon, St. Peter's parish, Dighton. His com munity, the Franciscan Br~ thEirs of Brooklyn, conducts a college, three high schools ·and 11 elementary schools in the Diocese of Brooklyn and Rockville Center. Broth er Amadeus is at present a member of the faculty of St. Francis Xavier School, in Brooklyn.. vo~s
WASHINGTON (NC)-Bishop Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, N. H., has been appointed as the first episcopal liaison between the U. S. ~ishops and the' Canon Law Society of America. The prelate, who holds de grees in both theology and can ·on law, was named to the post
by the administrative board of
the National Catholic Welfare
Conference, the U. S. bishops'
.secretariat.
_ The appointment 'was hailed
by officials of the canon law
society as making a strong con-'
tribution to the society's efforts
to update its organizational'
structure and to participate in
the rewriting of Church laws
which is being guided by the
Holy See.
Bishop Primeau is a member
FLUSHING (NC)-A depar ture ceremony for six Holy Cross Brothers assigned to for eign posts wilil be held at Holy . Cross High School here in New York Sunday. B rot her Lorenzo Powers, C.S.C., of Atlantic City, N.J., is returning for the fourth time to Dacca, East Pakistan. Brother Thomas Sawyer, C.S.C., of Al bany, N. "I., will take up his first assignment in Dacca after some further studies at Holy Cross Foreign . Mis s ion Seminary, Washington, D. C.' Brothers Gilbert Morrissette, C.S.C., of Putnam, Conn., Mi chael Keegan, C.S.C., of Brook lyn, N. Y., John Houlihan, C.S.C., of Hamden, Conn., and James Holland, C.S,C., of Flushing, N. Y. have been assigned to posts in Uganda, Africa. The Eastern Province of the Brothers of Holy Cross staff three schools in East Pakistan. In Uganda they staff a college in Butiti and a college and dioc esan seminary in Fort Portal. . -
Chancellor Will Discuss Council The spiritual activities com mittee of the Fall River Colum bian Squires will sponsor a lec ture by Msgr. Humberto Medei ros, Diocesan Chancellor, and pastor of St. Michael's parish, Fall River, at 7:30 Tuesday night, Jan. 25 in Knights of Columbus Hall, 209 Franklin Street. Msgr. Medeiros will discuss the Ecumenical Council' and a film of Council activities will be shown.A question period will form part of the program. Knights of Columbus, relatives and friends of Squires, and thfi!.· public, are invited to attend. .1 Msgr. Medeiros, a Council peritus, will discuss its origin, purposes, leadership and re forms. In charge of arrange ments is Henry Mercer, spiritual activities committee chairman.
Of Bishop· Primeau's appoin~ ment, Father Boyle said the prelate "will make an invaluable contribution to our work and that of the bishops of America."
INDIA: DNLV
THE BEGINNING ,
THE HOLY FATHERDS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCII
SEE
Plan Departure For Brothers
~f the NCWC board, president- general of the National Catholie Educational Association a n Cl Episcopal Moderator of the Na tional Federation. of Catholie College Students. New Office At its 1965 meeting in Chica. go, the 1,000-member canon law ·society, in anticipation of the need for further cooperation: with the bishops and among the society's membership, establisb ed the new office of executive coordinator. Father Paul Doyle, C.P., of St. Meinrad, Ind., was chosen to flll the post.
HOW nfESE PEOPLE
.
LOVE ONE
ANm'HERI
What's new In India this week7 In towns and hamlets off the beaten path courageous priests and Sisters.are eating only ounces of rice each day In order to share their food with starving children. Lepers In Sheratallay get Immediate relief from the Dapsone tablets (only ·$8.50 for 10,000 tablets) we are able to send because you read this column. Indians In their 'teens, pre paring to be priests and Sisters, study hard for the day when they too can help the poor.•• _ What lies ahead In the next few weeks and monthsF Here's 8 aampllllB of what we hope to do: ~
WHERE o "An Investment In knowledge pays the best 8TUDENT8 Interest," Benjamin Franklin said. The Cannelita WILL Fathers In Calicut, with more than 1,000 stu TALK WITH
GOD
EVERY
FAMILY
NEEDS A
ROOF
dents In their care, are shaping India's future. "But what Is an education without Godl". Father Superior asks. The chapel they need at st. Joseph's College will cost only $7,500 (the cost of the materials) since the priests and the stu dents will do the work themselves. They need cash, however, in purchase the materials. Help ait you can7 Name the chapel for your favorite saint, In memory of your loved ones, If you build It all by yourself. Just write to us today. ''Help- a man put a roof over the heads of hIs wife and children, and you give him dignit;y and purpose," writes Archbishop Joseph Parecattil. In the- Emakulam area, where thousands are . hoineless, the Archbishop asks help to bUild 4,000 homes. The basic materials will cost only $200 for each. The family wiU build It under proper supervision, and they'll own It"no strIngs attached/'-If your home Is wann and com fortable, thank God by helping a family that is
o
poorl A For only $12.50 a month ($150 a year. $300 IISI'ER for the entire two-year course) you can enable OF a poor girl In India to become 8 Sister. She win YOUR write to you, pray for you and yours each day_ OWN WrIte to us. •
o
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S
nte ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR RiVet'-Thun. Jan. 20, 1966
., ~
I
SHE MAKES HOSTS: Who makes the hosts Catholics receive at Holy Communion? Usually dedicated Sisters are entrusted with the job, and these step-by-step pictures show Sister Mary Bernadette des Pyrenees, C.S.C. at work in St. Anthony's Convent, New Bedford. She is shown mix-
ing flower and water dough, baking it on waffle-like griddle, placing baked sheets in humidifier and finally eutting large and small size hosts with electric machine. She turns out 10 to 12 thousand hosts weekly for New Bedford area parishes.
Georgia Bulletin Scores Ba rring , Of Legislator
New Fast Laws Have Increased Communions Cites Klansmen Contempt Says New Bedford Sister Who Makes Hosts For .WASHINGTON (NC) - A
ATLANTA. (NC) - The Georgia Bulletin, newspaper of the Atlanta archdiocese; has denounced the Georgia
More peo])le in New Bedford are receiving Communion since the one-hour fast went into effect. That's the impression of Sister Mary Bernadette des Pyrenees, C.S.C., of St. Anthony Convent, BuU;lrd Street. Sister Bernadette should know. She is the one who makes the hosts used in the Consecration of the Mass at most New Bedford churches and she is making more than ever these days. A native priests' hosts and a smaller one in New Bedford. The fruits of her "baking" al of Manchester, N.H., Sister the hosts received by the laity. Each 8 by 11 inch "sheet" pro so go to St. Mary Church and Bernadette has been in the vides three large hosts and 33 to Sacred Hearts Monastery, Fair
House for its refusal to seat Negro Representative-elect Ju lian Bond. The Bulletin said the legisla tors', refusal to seat Bond be cause he supported a Student Non-Violent Coordinating Com mittee statement condemning U. S. action in Vietnam and ex pressing sympathy for draft card burners sets a "dangerous prece dent" which could lead to "the eventual silencing of any diSsent from the majority viewpoint." The newspaper said it dis agrees with the SNCC statement and considers Bond's support of it "imprudent." But, it added, the issue is not Bond's attitude toward the statement but rather "his right to be seated." The Bulletin noted that Geor gia state arid local officials have "many times" exercised the "right to dissent" in regard to civil rights. "Yet no one dared auggest that they were not fit to hold office," it said. What Price? The legislators who opposed &eating Bond "may have had the victory, but at what a price?" the newspaper asked. "Mr. Bond has been 'martyred' and the SNCC statement has re eeived more publicity than it deserved. Furthermore, racial tensions, which had been re duced to the minimum in this state, may now be increased and the good name of Georgia tar nlished." The Bulletin accused the Georgia House of having "struck n blow against the democratic process" by nullifying the free choice of the voters who elected Bond. "We hope the courts will reverse the ruling," it said.
In Anglican Pulpit BRADFORD '(NC) Msgr. Morgan Sweeney, headmaster of Il large elementary school here m England will be the first Catholic priest ever to officiate lilt Bradford's Anglican cathedraR when he takes a noon hour ser vice there Tuesday, Jan. 18. Clergymen from several denom inations are taking part in n series of cathedral selrv4ces.
Holy Cross community almost 37 small ones-depending on the haven; St. Mary Church, South 30 years. But her career as skill with which Sister Berna Dartmouth; Holy Cross Mission "baker of hosts" did not begin dette maneuvers the sheet under House, Dartmouth; St. Francis until she was assigned to St. Xavier Church, Acushnet; St. the cutter. - Anthony Convent 24 years ago. Tabulates Number Anthony Church, Mattapoisett, Then she discovered that in As she cuts the hosts, they and St. Anthony Church, East addition to caring for the altar fall through a hole in the table Falmouth. linens and priests' vestments and into a drawer. At the same time, Other 'area churches call on taking care of the sacristy at the cutter tabulates the number her for help on occasion. St. Anthony Church, she also of hosts cut. God's Service would be making hosts. Sister keeps track of the num-. When Sister entered the con "My superior helped me for bel'S needed to supply her reg vent nearly 30 years ago, she a week," Sister explained, bus ular parish orders. Then, when, dedicated herself to God's ser tling around her. "office-work that number is reached, she vice. shop" on the first floor of the packs the hosts in candy cans Today, she is making the convent. that hold approximately 1,000 of bread that at the Consecration is "At first I was taking a hand the small hosts. Each is labeled turned into the body of the ful of water and adding it to the with the name of the parish for Lord she serves. flour. But that was not very which it is destined. Her life is a busy on~. But it is successful... Priests from the various Now-with orders for 10,000 churches pick up their supplies a contented one, too. People to 12,000 hosts a week carefully on a weekly or every-two-week earn their way to Heaven in a variety of ways. Sister's is written down in her account basis. The hosts for some parishes book - Sister Bernadette has an outside the city are packed through her over, her humidifier and her cutter. assembly line pl'ocedure in op carefully for mailing. eration. Normally, Sister Bernadette 100 Pound Bags spends all day Tuesday and She buys her flour in 100 pound bags. One bag lasts her Wednesday baking her hosts and preparing them for delivery. "maybe four to :five weeks." "During Lent,". she says, "1 Her basic "recipe" for the wafers - calls for four cups of sometimes have to spend a third flour to two quarts of water, day because more are needed." " (0 (0 '" but I always double that." On a regular basis, Sister sup plies hosts used at St. Anthony, After she mixes the flour and water, Sister uses a ladle to pour St. Therese, St. Casimir, St. Jo it onto a small griddle that looks seph, St. Anne, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Hyacinth, Our Lady of like a waffle iron without the Mt. Carmel, Our Lady of the grids. The cover that clamps down has etched impressions of Assumption, St. James and Our the design used, on the large Lady of the Holy Rosary hosts consecrated and consumed churches and Our Lady's Chapel by priests. . . The flat sheets take only III minute or so to bake and then Sister stacks them in a humidi fying cabinet that can accommo date up to 500 "sheets" of host bread at a time. "It softens them so they can Ql be cut," she explains. "Otlier wise they would be too brittle." After seven (),l" so hours of "softening," the :>heets are taken out and Sister settles down at a table with two "cutters" that NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 115 WILLIAM ST. punch out hosts from the sheets. A. large size one cuts out the
House Un-American Activities subcommittee has voted to cite for contempt of Congress seven Ku Klux Klan leaders, including Robert M. Shelton, Imperial Wizard of the United Klans of America. The seven men have refused to testify or produce records be fore the subcommittee, which fa conducting an investigation of the Klan. Possible sentence for contempt of Congres is a year in jail and
a $1,000 fine. The subcommit-· tee's action be referred to the full committee for approval and then voted on by the House of Representatives. The H 0 use could authorize presentation of the charges to a grand jury nn U.S. District Court. All those named by the sub committee are officers of the tJ:nited Klans of America, the country's largest Ku Klux Klan organization.
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, _. THE River-Thurs. Jein. .. , ANCHOR-:;:Diocese ..' .". . of Fall .. ;,.. . .. ,., 20, -1966 ~.
~'
""
-
'
A Darkness Lifting
'
Reunion of Christendom
. .<..% .. ,,'
:' Octave of Unit,
~.
..1
.' r
~ For many years men and women, Catholic and Pro ,/~A: testant, and especiaJly Anglicans, went through the Unity The' first ecumenical c,~ ·~··I· Octave week with little expectation that their week of logue of the 1966 Church prayers would bring about anything substantial in the way Unity Octave brought t.. of encouraging the reunion of Christendom. They prayed gether members of t ... that it would, they hoped that it would, but most of them Ca~holic, Grthodox and ProtefJoo tant Churches for •. prayer-di... hlt that they were participating in merely the first pages l\!ussion meeting' at the Inte.. of a book whose end' would not co~e for many chapters, Church Council Center, s.. for many years and even centuries:. Dartmouth, Tuesday morning. And yet the last few years, and this year in particular, Nine o'clock' in the mornin,
have seen remarkable progress in steps toward unity ~as early but.the elergy and
}ay people involved made their
ecumenism, as it is called. way over the country roads 0;
Vatican Council II has called for cooperation by Cath So. Dartmouth to gratefully ae-. olics with all men of good will in cultural and civic and cept the hospitality of Rev. and community projects. Provisions have :beelJ. made for various Mrs. Sydney Adams who reside ecumenical services in which representatives of various at the Council Center. The morning program began religious beliefs, while acknowledging that there are, dif with a prayer service, resem ferences which separate, nonetheless gather together in bling a Bible Vigil, which conse joint prayer as children of One Father, as brothers and crated the morning's activities sisters of one another. and served to accent the serious ness and urgency of such a There has been a' remarkable change in climate over gathering. the last few years with a new spirit of charity evident '. The Rev. John N. McLaughlin, in the dialogues that have been taking place involving St. Peter's Episcopal Church, members of different faiths. So. Dartmouth, and the Rev.
No one would he doing the ecumenical movement any, Wallen Bean, Trinity Methodist,
New Bedford, then presented a
service by suggesting that the religious world is on the paper on "Co-operation in Com verge of unity or that divisions are slight and fast-fading. munity Projects." But it is a fact that never before' has there been such '~' Common Endeavor an atmosphere of good will and charity ~nd open-hearted I~atlona I~ame The discussion that followed centered on the urgency of a ness to the action of the Holy Spirit as is to be found now. common endeavor to probe the The Unity Octave has progressed from the first pages nsw~rs problem of "individual freedom in a wonderful movement and is writing a significant and public order." Besides the chapter in what all pray will become the story Qf ~he re NEW YORK (NC)-The national director of the Holy Bible, the Creed and the Our union of Christendom. Name Society has come up with a fe."' ~()rds of advice for Father" it was pointed out that those who claim the society now is outdated. Father Dennis "concern for people" was an other important aspect of life d "Th ose w h 0 d ecIare th e,H 0 I y, that B. Mc C arthy, 0 .P. , assert e: made' all Christians united. It .was the Protestant theologian Paul TiJJich who Name Society goals and pro. "For c;xample, there is often a A fruitful discussion on the 'd th t d h t b reborn. grams are out of date al- preference expressed, for family causes of the abuse in the us~ sal a wor save 0 e . I t of individual freedom to thGl 'k . ' 'It h h II . h most invariab y turn out 0 Communion, as opposed to cor- loss of order followed in which W ord s l I e sm, gUl , grace, eaven, e., pums bl~ the ones who are out of porate Communion of the men. ment, death, redemption, salvation, even words Iike God-. date, themselves." Lay membe'rs have pointed out it was hoped that somehow ;11 all have lost much of their meaning for many contemthat family Communion is not common effort of the Churcb porary men. Holy and sacred though these words are, , ;rhe Dominican priest obser~ed always practical, especially for might bring this to the attentioPil -that there are some who assume young'married couples-and the of the families and alleviate the . I b to vital and essenba though their concepts e many, that Catholic men everywhere beleaguered agencies of public . . b f h I k t h ' average age in the United States order who are not able to cope there are Increasmg num ers 0 men w 0 00 upon ese are receiving Holy Communion -', today is 30." words as remnants of another age, another theology. Many weekly or more often. He said Father McCarthy called atten- with this.
It was ascertained that thll!
a modern looks at one of these words and understands the fact is that in every large tion to the program adopted by not a specific idea but sees mere}y fossil. - _. . city there is a large body of the Sacramento Diocesan Holy primary responsibility lay witb
Catholics who receive Commun';' the family, but it was also recog " power t o ' Name Union. After meeting with. nized that the Church had a real F or many men, "'th e word's h ave'1os t th elr ion infrequ.ently, if at all. Bishop Alden J. Bell, of-Sacra convey meaningful concepts. . "Holy Name groups are mak- mento, the HNS executive board responsibility there also. The answer obviously is not to say that the concept ing a new examination of their listed three objectives: to give Decree is gone. This is the reaction of those who use such phrases effectiveness and the status of honor to the name of Jesus; to The second paper was read · d ea. d Th e answer t 0 th e pro bl em their programs and practices," sanctify the p'ersonallives of the Anthony's by Rev. John FoIster, and St. as are now heard - G0 d IS New R.Bedford .)s t h at th ese wor dsave h t 0 b e re b om. Th,ey mus t b e re- Father McCarthy said in an ar- members, and to have an organ- staff writer for The Anchor, ticle in the current Holy Name ized body of men ready and able f urbished, ,their contents set forth again in new and per- Journal, a magazine published to assist the pastor in any task who spoke on "How the Decree haps even startling terms. ,,' h ere by th e HNS na t'10na1 h ead - which he or the Bl'shop may , ticular on Ecumenism Cases." Applies to Par It is no good to say that it is up to men in the world -quarters. direct. After a brief history of the to find out the meanings for themselves. As the Vatican ecumenical decree and its ,im Council's Constitution on the' Church.in the Modern World port in the life of the Church, has pointed out: "The joys and the hopes, the griefs and Father FoIster pointed out that the anxieties ~f the men of this age, especially those who ~~~e~:ecree would bear fruit only are poor or i~any way a~fl~cted-these are the joys ~nd . ' 'VATICAN CITY (NC) -The Cardin.al Wyszynski's delegate 1) we all have realized the hopes, the grIefs and anXIeties of the followers of' ChrIst. -millennium of Poland's conver- for the spiritual_welfare of Poles scandal and' implications of Indeed, nothing genuinely human fails to raise an echo. sion to Christianity was marked in exile. Bishop Rubin was fill- Christian Disunity; 2) that' we in their hearts. For theirs is a -community composed of here with official ceremonies at- ing the place in the program have learned and appreciated men." , tended, by Pope Paul VI. scheduled for Cardinal Wyszyn.,. our own religious doctrines the , " C' b h' b ski. clearer; 3) that we have atIf words like God and salvation fail to arouse in the onsI;>lCU?US y IS a sence F ormer P ro. f 0 scar H aIec k'1 0 f. tempted to truly learn and :ap , ' . . " was the Pnmate of Poland, Stehearts of modern men the glorIOUS and exhIlaratmg con- ,fan Cardinal Wyszynski who Fordham University in New preciate the doctrines of other cepts that they truly contain, then it is up to Christians had been denied permis;ion to York spoke at length on the churches and their· reasons 'for .and all men of good will' to work that these words might attend by his country's commu- thousand years of history since holding them; 4) we have made be reborn their treasures uncovered so that the anxieties nist govern~~~t becau~e of al- Poland became Christian in 966 a sincere and charitable attempt . ' . . ' leged "activlties agamst the following the baptism of itS to reconcile seeming contradie and grIefs of modern men mIght be agsuaged by the knowl- state" during his last trip' to leaders. tions. "Selections of sacred music The whole decree· demands . edge that, as .the Constitution continues, the news of sal- . Rome for the ecumenical counv'ation is meant for everyman. cil. were sung by the Sistine choir: that we realize the implications Although political overtoneS under the direction _of Msgr. that, as baptized Christians ,'we were kept to a minimum, un- Domenico Bartolucci. The only are all brothers in Christ 'and doiIbtedly because of th~ Pope's special decoration in the hall, thus even more intimately presence, the cardinal's name ,filled with an audience of more united than, physical brothers. was 'mentioned twice during the than 2,000, was a reproduction of There will be, problems and ceremonies and -both times the icon of Our Lady of Czesto- ev.en mista~es in the future .but , . evoked a storm of applause. chowa' at the center of....the stage. from now on all attemps at -dis The original at the monastery ,cussion_ and understanding, ne . . . ,', .... , .... '.. ... : The second- of these references. 'in'-CUlstochowa, .which'tradition· matter how passionate, wilt ever OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER' OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER' -came. fro~ Pope ··Paul himself.. says was"painted hy' St.' Luke" be· fraternal dialogues and fra .', ' . , '.' . '., " : , . , . ,'" . who 1D bnef remarks at: the end -has 'become ,a, focal' point· of- - ternal.correctioll"--'-Ilothing more' ll'ublished weekly by The·Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River of the ceremony, during which Polish devotion and 'will be the and nothing less.. . .'.. 410 Highland Avenue he blessed the . Polish people, eenter 6f' the major millennium-· Others who: attended from the Fall River, Mass.' 02722 '675·7151 said: "May our blessing also go eelebration there on'May 3: Catholic Church were: From .the ,"- : PUBLlSHr:~. .' ' t o P o l a n d ' s spiritual head, Car-. .Among' -the' 21 cardinals' arnfDiocesan Ecumenical ,eomm'is':' d.in~IW?,~zynski, .w~om e con- other ~igh Church officials' in,. sion: Rev. Al.bertShoveJton,:St. , _ MQst, Re,v. J!Jmes l. Gonnolly,. D.D..,:PhD;, .:: GENERAL' MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER SIder. spIritually present. the audience were' four"Polish ' , ,James; New Bedford; Rev. ManItt.' Rev. Dan'icel 'F. Sholloo; M.A. ' . ~eV. JohnP. Driscoll ,' .. The' ceremonies, in theaudi-, bishops who have 'not returned. uel' Ferreira~ St: John Baptist, tori~~. of the Palazzo Pio near,. to . their .country since, the ecu- ,New Bedford; Rev;, John Bren .. " . " :MANAc;lNG' EDITOR ' .hie Vatican opened with a greet- : menical ceoi.mcil elosed hi Decem-' nim: SS.CC,; St. Josepft, Fair , ,Hugh J;, Golden' •.. , .' 'iDC' by Bishop Wladislaw'Rubin,' ber.·', . . Turn to 'Page Seven .
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A
I HI Lea d'er ,0 y ....• . SoCle - ty'SC rl-t-ICS
Words Reborn
a
Vat,itan' City Ceremonies Mark Poland's Conversion Millenium
'"
Prayer-Dia log ue In New Bedford
.OR ' @ dJ. Th-e ANCH
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Theologian Soys
Racia'l Injustice
Near Heresy
, .-
WASmNGTON (NC)
The Vatican council itself should be an example of the proper attitude of Catholics tow a r d interracial injustice,
. Father FrancIs .Connell, C.SS.R..
moral theologian and dean for
religious communities at. the
Catholic University of America
told priests and nuns here.
"The Second Vatican Council,"
he said, "in many of its decrees
has proclaimed that .all men are
equal in the eyes of God and oj(
.. the Catholic' Church, whatever may be their race or nationality
or color. Day after day at the
eouncil, bishops of every race
and every nationality mingled
and conversed with one anothel'
without any trace of discriminac
tion."
"Today," he said, "the Church
appeals earnestly to all hel'
members, clergy, Religious and
laity, to do their part toward
abolishing from the face of the
earth the venemous spirit of
prejudice and injustice involved
in every manifestation of racial
discrimination."
Father Connell spoke at the
"Holy Hour for Religious" at the
National Shrine of the Immacuc
late Conception. He said that for
Christians the basic evil of racial
discrimination stems from its
implied rejection oil certain fun
damental and divine truths.
"Does it not well nigh imply
heresy when a Catholic judges
any other human being as infe
rior to himself because of his
different ancestry or the differ
ent color of his skin?" he said.
Father Connell said that in
the Catholic doctrine of the
Holy Eucharist, Christ Himself
refuted r a cIa I discrimination.
"He has given. His flesh and
blood under the appearances ot
bread and wine to be the food
and drink of all His faithful fol
lowers without regard to such
unimportant qualifications as ra
cial or national diversity. He has
Dot established one type of Eu
charistic banquet for the white
and another for the colored,"
. . Furniture Wonderland·
Open Daily 9 A.M. to 10 PeM.
oft
of the' East
Including Saturdays
•
New ~~~Iandr$ Greatest FurnifureSaleJ Now Underway With Pri(e·Sla~hin~ Values
Prayer-Dialogue Continued from Page Six
haven; Attorney Maurice F.
Downey, St. Lawrence, New
Bedford.
Also, Rt. Rev. Magr. Hugh
Gallagher, St. James, New Bed
ford; Rev. Michael McPartland,
St. Mary, New Bedford; Sister
Charles Francis, R.S.M., Holy
Family High School, New Bed
ft>rd; Sister Anne Monica, S.N.D..
Bishop Stang High School, No.
Dartmouth.
Catholic laity was represented
by Prof. Anthony John, .Our
Lady of Purgatory, New Bed
ford; Mrs. William A. Burns, St.
James, New Bedford; Mrs. John
A. Tierney, St. Lawrence. The Orthodox Church was
represented by Rev. Constantine
Bebis, St. George Greek Ortho
dox Church, New Bedford.
The Protestant Church dele
gates were Rev. John Aalfs,
First Presbyterian Church; New
Bedford; Attorney How a r d
Young, Smith Mills Congrega
tional Churc.h; Mr. Lester'
Faulkingham, Advent Christian
Church; Mr. James Walmsley,
President, Inter';Church Council.
.' ·Also, Mrs. Eunice McCullough, President, United Church Wom. en, New Bedford, and Mrs. Eliz •. sbeth Wildes, Allens Neck' Friends Meeting, Mrs. Erma'· ~ --DeBoer, .Mattapoisett Congrega- ... .... tional Church. It was resolved that the JP'Qup . . 'would - reassemble in a month·· ,to further the efforts to pursue' . eommunity efforts that will.' make C h r 1-11 t 1 a D brotherhood something real, something truly Christ-like.
Nothing reserved, nothing withheld-Everything goes regardless of Cost, Loss or .Sacrifice. We're clearing out all Odds a,nd ·Ends, Floor Samples, Discontinued Styles and Hundreds of One and Few-of-a-Kind Items to make room for carload purchases expected soon from the' nation's leading furniture factories. Most items ore Orie-of-a.-Kind and subject t~ p~ior sole-Hurry for choice selections. FREE 'DELIVERY f'ONVENlENT
BUDGET'I'lERMS .. Jfo Banks or
PlDancoe
~~!lDies .', to,hi'
:S
,,~
, . "NEW, ENGLAND'S LARGEST FURNITURE, SHOWROOM
.
lJ
ACRES Of
FREE PARKING
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.. HHimr;c' .School ;T~ C19~ D(,wn
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.·It!s Bug Day 'Whe'n' I>;ost.ulant :Visits Family, Frie·nds·· ~.::
By Mary Tinley Daly
MONTREAL (:Me) - Histoltl V1lla Maria School for girls, fo.. merly a residence of Canadi811 governors, Win close its doors .. June after 111 years of teachin8 becauSe the Congregation dIf Notre Dame cannot afford ~ cost of repairs and required aci ditions. The school has been directe4 since 1854 by the Congregaticm.. It now has 600 students and li8 nuns. No arrangements for die posing of the building and r6' locating the students have beell\ announced.
The property belonged' tlIll James Monk, attorney general GIl! Montreal, in the late 18th ceJlloo tury, who developed the prop erty . anI! called it Monklands. Monk administe~ed the govern ment of Lower Canada for sis months after the Duke of Ricb mond died. When Montreal became fftIf capital of Canada, Monklandll was rented by the government of Canada and served as the vice-regal residence. The build ing used for' tbis became the central building of the Villa Maria Convent when the Con gregation de Notre Dame aoo quired the property.
v
. -My room looks just the same." Ginny's blue eyes fJeanned the dressing table with its perfume bottles, its battery of lipsticks, went on to the flowered chintz chair, the desk, stuffed animals, the Spanish doll still coquettishly poised with castanets. She. glanced at the pink-covered lated in the kitchen like so many shells at a circus. Potato bed with its overhanging peanut chips and cookies vanished like shelf holding the small snowfl~kes in the sun. '
white radio that had been silent Family dinner, built around for the past four months. 'Twaa Ginny's favorite roast beef, re
. silent no more. sembled many, many dinners A flick of a· preceding it. And so did that
finger III n d it
first evening: no early-to-bed
Iltarted belting <
deal that night. Heels and hose,
out rock-'n-roll
a pretty blue dress, makeup and
from, the station
charm bracelets metamorphosed
to wliich it had
"Mother Superior" into the Gin
been tuned
ny we and her friends so well
since last Gin
remembered.
DY clicked it 011
That was the end of the but
that morning in
terfly, lay clothing and accou- /
early Septem
. terments put aside for the dura CHILD CARE COURSE: At ceremonies marking ber. Our house tion. was waking up. Occasion wu a Redonning the postulant garb award of certificates to group taking basic chiJd care course post-holiday visit allowed our lor Mass next morning, Ginny at Mt. St. Joseph; Fall River, are, from left; Sister Rose postulant by her religious supe determined to use to the utmost' of Carmel, special lecturer; John McManus, president of riors, to the delight of our-house this one "real day" of her visit inhabitants, friends and relatives, home (the others were ''travel the New England Assn. of Child Oare; Sister Mary Ann many of them going to the plane time"). One highlight was a call Gertrude, O.S.F., St. Mary's Home, New Bedford; No~an
to meet her. Barlow, Children's Home, Fall River; Robert Rutherford, !Delegate to Bless on her mother's classmates, Sis "By golly, it's Mother Supe ters Ann Francis and Helen, Dean, Simmons 'College School of Social Work. rior!" exclaimed the Head of the long seasoned in convent life;. Miami Seminary Bouse engUlfing the blonde, another was a visit to the Sis BOYNTON BEACH (NG) black-and-white clad postulant ·ters who made her high school .Archbishop E g i d i 0 Vagnozzi, ill a big bear hug as she de years precious. Then home to lUI. Apostolic Delegate in the United scended from the plan0. informriI all-day buffet, a drop States, Will formally dedica~e a Small nieces and nephews, ae ill .o~casion for literally BeOrd major seminary in the Miami Kentucky Pastor Gets Candid Comments dimated to awe at the sight of of relatives and friends. diocese, first in the southeast, a religious habit, hung back' And, wouldn't you know it, From Parishioners Dext Tuesday. IlOmewhat shyly. we forgot to bring out the guest The nine-buflding comp~ Magoo Breaks l[ee book! LOUISVILLE (NC) - Father tween priests and parishionen &J)ened in 1963 under the direill=> Not so Magoo! Tail wagging, Third, final and "travel" day, Arthur .1: Hartman was told here was the announced aim. Father leaping 88 she hadn't leaped saw "~other S'1perior" onto. the that he is "too domineering" and Hartman urged those attending tlon of the Vincentian Fathem since puppyhood, Magoo gave plane again, headed back to the "sometimes dictatorial."· But he to speak out. "It would be a It accepts candidates for tlID@ priesthood from dioceses In t!ll>il "'Mother Superior" the most vio wasted afternoon if we pulled southeastern United States erii'.i) postulate and her chosen pursuit also heard' that he is "great" lent welcome of alll, Dearly of obedience, Rudy and prayu. "the tops." our punches and just said nice a. the Caribbean area. ' bocking her don The cOmments eame/Illt st. things about one another," De That broke the ice, rmd evel?" Augustine Church where some. said. . Fund Raisers body relaxed. Bicyde-built-forwtwo WO parishioners. attended a Despite the pastor'. urgings, "O.K. to call you Ginny?" St. Catherine'. Fund RaislEO . "beef session" called by Father the beef session was liberally Gift· to ' Sisters asked Lu Anne. "We don't have C:ommlttee of Domiirlcan Acadl=> mprinkled with praise. WILMINGTON (NC) - 'I'bJIl Hartman, the pastor. to call you 'Sister' yet?" emy, Fall River, will sponsOi' Ii) Increased understanding beAsk More Beat From then ·on 'twas like old should be a sporting year for the Valentine whist at 8 Wednesday Par is h ion e r '8 comments night, Feb. 23 at the school halL times: Ginny at the wheel of the BernarcUne Sisters who staff St Mary Magdalen School in sub up the thousand-and J'ed car, Magoo snuggled up be In charge are Mrs. Noela Melan Women's Council Board pointed one details of parish life. They son and Mrs. Raymond Banville. aide her, the car full of people, urban Fairfax. . Their Christmas present from ranged from more heat for early The next meeting of the unit everybody talking at once. ~ Mass to school problems to sev "I just can't believe it - rill pupils' and ·lay teachers was a To Meet Next Week ill set for '1:30 Tuesday Aight. home!"Ginny paused inside the bicycle-built-for-two and a WASHINGTON (NC) - Mrs. eral ./Iuggestions about mainten Feb. S. ping-pong table. Both were pur ance of the physical plant. front doorway. "I feel so tall, Marcus Kilch, presid~nt of tthe somehow, and the ceiling seems chased under direction of volun National Council of 'Catholic The event also included two teer gym teacher, Mrs. George Women, has announcea the surprises for parishioners. Sev so low. Guess I've become used McHugh, who was a physical annual meeting of the council's eral suggestions that a parish to the postulate, my new home." She picked up her small black education major from Temple· board of directors to be held advisory board be formed were IlUitcase, went up to her room. University. here starting next Tuesday. heartily endorsed by. Father "I guess Mrs. McHugh thinks To the accompaniment of fa During its sessions, the board Hartman. He told parishioners miliar rock-'n-roll, Gin n y we need more exercise," was the will discuss the forthcoming to make plans for such a board eomment of Sister Mary Cecel changed into "civvies" - knee national convention of the and he would set it up. Plans for ~EW BIEDFO~D high plaid skirt, yellow blouse, ian, principaL NCCW scheduled for Miarili in remodeling the church were also l!IWeater' and headband. Loafers October, 1966; the effect of Vat unveiled. INDUSTRIAL ican Council' II proclamatioms replaced the gruesome twosome Archb·lshop 011-. !Lead 01 sensible convent shoes. IU on NCCW structure and pro HEATING OilS "Did you let the troops know Pilgrimage to Poland gramming; the role of the laity Ask State Subsidy l'd be home?" in the. renewal of the Church; For Education i Ting-A-Llng CHICAGO (NC)-Archbishop' and NCCW's continuing partici TIMKEN The phone bell answered the John P. Cody of Chicago will pation with WICS, the "Women MADRID (NC)-5ome 1,800 Question. lead m "pilgrimage of thanks- in Community Service" organi OIL BURNERS delegates to the eighth Assembly "Ginny there?" Just like old giving" tc> Poland next Spring zation in the poverty program.. of Religious Educators called on , times. for t:eremonies marking the the Spanish .government to assist &, . Then "the troops," alerted via· I,OOOth anniverSary of ChrlstiaDparents who want to educate 1t:Iel(rapevin~, s~!l~dmarching , ity m that country. . ',' . Charity Bal1. their children in private schools. m:girls and· boys, .Blngly~ ill' The· pilgrimage wm leave'1t:Ie 50·1 COUNTY STREET .. They paSsed a resolution. say~ . . .groups. .' United New: 'Bedford Catholie Wom pai rs, JD '.. . . . ,.States ·.in .late.· April; It . ing 'the "public ·power 'shoUld' BE'DFORD Club Will bold itS Mnual· IJUbsidlZe With thenecessati ~ib-' Empty soda' bOttles acc~ will: be at the, Polish nationd .. . ... . shrine of the Blesseq .Vii-Bin 'at charity ball Saturday night, Feb. erallty,perS'onll o~ institutioM. Czestoci;\o.wa . fOr May .·3. cere-· . 12 in the Gold Room of the New that devote themselveS kJ ec:Iu WY 3-1751 . ~Clthonc Hospital Ha~ . be 'eati0n." .... . monies· celebrating . the millen.,. Bedford Hotel. Dancirig Dium. The gl'OiJPwiii' be_ frQm 8 to mi~night, aecording to First Coronary Unit':.', ~me .fJ'O~ May 12 to Bnnouncement . made: 'by Mrs. ~ ~.~ _ ~ ~~.~~~ ~ ~ ~ . ,'.: ArChbishop eodY,'.: not1r)g the Thomas E. Zipoliand Mrs. Hen MANCHESTER (HC) .... Hampshire's first coronaryeare large nwnber of Persons of Pol" . rique Bogers. co-chairme& ., :' $TOREHQUJlSc :. ~it has been .opene4 ilt Sacred 1s~ . anc,e~ry . JD ·~e,- CQic;~go Heart Hospital here.' . . , . archdioCese, called plans for· the , Mon. 8& Tues.' to 5 p•..,; .' Dt. L. Arldre ·PerrQn· of'Mana pii'grimage ''ParticUlarlY fittlni : We'd. , a.~; io 5p.m. :' .
.. . ehe~r,. itS cOordinator, said the ' ~d proper." lhurS. &' Fri. , to 6 p~"", .
New .Hampshire 'Heart ASsocili tiOD allocated $4,000 'so six' spe ~; '~'a·.~;, ~~ m/ •. '.
. : J~y~dot.h· Of . eial n,u~l!t: at· the.hospital c.an be given. strict tri1ining needed Hyacinth Circle, New.. Bedford . (;Iosed all day lundaj ~ staff the unit 24 hours a day. DaugQters of Isabella, will' hold : The $15,000 unit, will care for a calendar party and penny sale four patients who liave mania . Tuesday,. .18J;l. 25 at their ~obe fested cardiac problems durinl son Street clubhouse. MrL ue.ne U'~ION wHAR., /.FAIRHAVEN, and after Buriery. ' O'Neill 18 chairman.
Hold
Session'
and .
~ATHt\WAY
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CO.
~M(.
on.s
Sales
NEW
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will
New'
Service
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MacLean;s Sea Foods'
"Sug~'r,<'Spice,
Eve rYthi lig': ':Nice
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~M"ANCHOR Thurs.; , Jan.' 20. 1966
Impof'ta,nt'inFoods, T.:>o
·'·9
Governor Vetoes ·Anti..;$mut Bi lis
. By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick . Last week I wrote about starting a Mary Garden and suggested that two things were central to its planning: (1) the correct choice and placement of a statue and (2) the selection of colors and types of bloom for the garden. This week I should like to ca; one of Magellan's ships did discuss statues. We do not survive the trip around the have a statue for our garden world and bring back enough as yet, although we have spices to pay for the entire ex
TRENTON (NC) -New. Jer sey's Gov. Richard J. Hughes has vetoed two bills adopted by the legislature to curb obscenity. He said they were too vague. One, measure, seeking once and for all in New Jersey to de fine obscenity in a manner that would win approval In the courts, described obscenity by listing parts of the human body and certain acts which may not be shown or described to persons under 18 years of age, "so as to exploit lust for commercial gain." The governor said the stand ards set up in the bill are "so vague as to tender their appli cation on any given occasion a matter of wide conjecture." The other vetoed bill would have created an obscenity study commission. Hughes held that there were too few public citizen members and objected because there was no appropriation to finance the commission. . The governor announced that he will take the initiative in drafting new anti-obscenity. leg islation and also will submit a study commission bill which meets his standards and requests at the same_time ~. ap.proprla tion of $25,OO().
searched diligently for a few .pedition, and overnight Portu years. We have finally selected gal became one of the richest one--and now we are saving the nations in the world, all because money to buy it! Our choice flavorings for foods became a Is a statue called "Mary, Seat commodity as precious as ·gold. of Wisdom, designed by Ade Not only were such spices as Bethune of Newport. This nutmeg, mace, cinnamon, clove, Is an all-weather statue of' ginger and cardamom used in 8 seated Mary holding the the flavoring of food, they were Christ Child, designed in such also use for medicinal purposes • way that no water can be re and, as in the case of cloves, for tained in its hollows to freeze scent. Portuguese women dis ar.d split the statue. It is approx tilled the cloves to make a imately 30 inches high, just the "sweet and delicate water" in the 15th century and even today right size for a small garden. In addition, Miss Bethune has this particular spice is still used designed a companion statue to give perfumes a carnation ealled "St. Joseph The Worker" scent. It is generally recommended which we would also like to ac quire at some future date. Both' by gourmet cooks that yougrlnd statues may be seen at the. St. your own spices fresh each' time you use them. I have found a Leo League, a non-profit organ ization specializing in religious' great difference l.nthe· pepper art on Washington Street in that I grind in my pepper mill . and that which I use from. a can, Newport. ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT: Bishop James P. Shan- . Regardless of what statue is but in this area it is difficult non, president of the College of the St. Thomas, St. Paul,' selected for a Mary Garden, it to come by the whole form of should, of course, be worthy of most spices and therefore we ~inn., receives the symbolic gavel as he assumes the presi dency of th.e A;lsociation (}f American Colleges from the re- .. display and some thought should must be content with those al be given to its placement. ready ground. However, because tiring chairman, Dr. Rosemary Park, president of Barnard Si~ter Praises Parish Should it be in a quiet, secluded these spices do lose their flavor College, New.York)Jity. NC Photo. nook, or on public display, hear very quickly in the ground form For Tithing, 'Program the children's play' area?'There even on our kitchen shelves, our ARLINGTON (NC)..-The ae are personal choices. In our supply shOUld be changed fre complishments of St. Agne1J garden the statue will be placed .quently even though the con parish tithing program .for tho dose to the house and near the tents of the can are no~ us~d up.. foreign missiQ~s cllple. home in This is a particularly tasty· children's play area so that they Program in New Jersey Dt::signed to' Develop the person of a native da~ghter. may be reminded to act as they pot roast recipe that derives should, although thIs Is probably much of its tastiness' from the Sister Kieran of the Medical S~nse of Unity and Brotherhood
wishful thinking. . use of cinnamon,' and ginger Mission Sisters returned to Vir along with the unusual addition . IRVINGTON (NC) - Priests lem. A series of weekly meet The important thing to reo ginia after six years in West . . member is that careful planning of a can of beer. and lliiiy at St. Leo"s parish here ings which are still going on. Pakistan to visit her parents, Bavarian Pot Roast is involved in the selection and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Foley. in New Jersey have embarked evolved "Operation Family Par 4 pounds of beef chuck, nunp on it program to bring a sense of ish." placement of a statue. 'Ehe im At a parish reception held In her .. . .. age must be supported· by, the or rourtd Unity and brotherhood ·to the If it works-and the planners . honor, the nun told the ~ople 2 Tablespoons bacon d'rippings parish. . use of the proper location ,and figure it will take two years to of St. Agnes .that their offering 1 Tablespoon sugar . auitable flowers. More about the' Dubbed' "Ope~ation Parish, organize the program efficiently provided .the Sisters with a jeep 1 Tablespoon vinegar· use of flowers and their selec Family," it envisions making . -St. Leo's, through parislrlon station wagon to bring medical 2 teaspoons cinnamon .\ tlon next week. . contact with every. one of the era, will be 'able to offer its care to remote Pakistanl . vil 2 teaspoon!! ginger In the Kitchen 4,000 families in the parish. people assistance during illness lages. 1 can (12 ounces) beer "Sugar and spice 'and every Six months_ ago st. Agnd Father Edward G. Price, parish or other einergencies, organize
1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce administrator, will direct the cal' pools for Church attendance pastor, Father J. Bernard Moore. .thing nice, that's what little ¥.! cup chopped onion girls are made of." There· are program. and voting, provide baby-sitters began tithing the Sunday Of 1 bay leaf days when you would have to The project will' involve the when needed, comfort the aged fertory contribution and chan 1 ¥.! teaspoons salt convince me of the truth of this division of the parish into four and poll parishioners on ques neling a portion of it into a fund dash pepper statement, but nevertheless one for the missions. He also began areas, with one priest and either lions of general parish iiJ.terest.
1) Brown meat slowly on all' one or two "mission couples" must admit that spice and every the weekly practice of earmark thing nice go hand in hand, not sides in the bacon ~rippings. ing the contents of a poor box depending on the size of the area
2) Combine the sugar, vine only in young misses but also Supper, Dance
for the same cause. In the span -res,Ponsible for each area. In food. Spices, properly used, gar, cinnamon, ginger, 2 cups of Father Price said the plan Wives of McMahon Council, of half a year the parishioners of lend that subtle differeQce to a water, beer, tomato sauce, onion, stemmed from a rectory discus New Bedford Knights of Colum St. Agnes have sent more than dish that makes it rise above bay leaf, salt and pepper,mix sion which revealed that among bus, will sponsor a spaghetti sup $15,000 to 33 miasions in some other recipes, but improperly well; pour over the meat. the four priests at the parish per from 6 to 8 Saturday night" 16 countries. 3) Bring the liquid to a boil, they knew personally only about Feb. 12 in the Council Home,
1lSed they lead to talk of spicy reduce heat to simmer, cover 300 families, roughly 7% of the followed by dancing. Mrs. John
food. Some of· the most horrible . and cook at this low heat for parish membership. They called F. Mello and Mrs. Wilfred J.
wars, including the Crusades, four hours, or until tender. in laymen to discuss the prob- Poirier are chairmen.
have been fought for the .pos Maintenance .Supplies session of spices. The continent Gives College Island Kansas Plans Exhibif. of North America might have SWEEPERS· SOAPS been sitting here undiscovered For Biology Center .DISINFECTANTS
Of .EcumenicCJI Art for many years more if Euro SHEET METAL FIRE EXTINGUISHERS.
NEW ROCHELLE (NC)..,.....C~ WICHITA (NC)-An ecwneni pean traders hadn't been search J. TESER. Prop. Ing avidly for a shorter, safer median. Peter Lind Hayes and cal art exhibit sponsored by the art committee of' the Wichita trade route to the spice treasures his wife .Mary Healy have pre INDUSTRIAL sented the College ,of New Ro diocesan liturgical commission" of the East. RESIDENTIAL , 1886 PURCHASE. STREE(
chelle an island in Long Island' will De held here at' the PreCious Vasco da Gama,sailing under Sound for use as a marine biol COMMERCIAL Blood Sisters" motherhouse NEW BEDFORD
the fiag of Portugal, did reach ogy s~udy center. .' MarCh 27':'31; . 253 Cedar Ct., New Bedford WY 3-3786
India by circumnavigating AfriWY 3.~222 Hayes· acquired·the 'island, a' 'All artiSts :in the continental short distance from the' college' United Stares are eil.gibie to sub from the Columbia Broadcasting . mit works to' the 'eXhibit. Archbishop Krol Plans System .as a hideway for his '. ··.''The shoWing is'both to 'recog family several y'ears ago. The' nize .:. the cQntribution: of 'Past .. Pilgrimage to Poland one-acre island ·has held a CBS Chrlstianart to our l1enta-ge and PHILADELPHIA (NC)"':-Arch transmitter. to encourage more and more bishop Jotul· H.Krol and 1\uxil Savings Bank .life Insurance 'Mother Mary Roberl .Falls, ., Christian artists to enter the .. iary Bishop Gerald 'V; McDevitt Reeit Estate Loans president of· the college, said ·the ' field of sacred art," said Siliter of Philadelphia will le~d a pil ., . , grimage, to Poland in '.llite AprU . land, Little Pea .Island, has 'an Marieila, 'art director at Sacred Christmas and Vaca.ion Clubs· to celebrate the milleriium of eight-:room concrete" building ; Heart College here.' . which will 'house research llib- ~. Christianity in that country. Savings Accounts Nursing Alumnae The pilgrimage will go to the .oratoties and will .be named ·for :: .' .' ':' 5 Convenient Loccitions shrine of the Blessed Virgin or the Hayes. Alumnae of St. Anne's Hos pital '..School of Nursing, Fall Jasna Gora in Czestoch6wa for She said the college is pres the national May 3 celebration. ently conducting a' number of River, will hold their annual . It will then continue on to Rome, pn>jects on the study of Long schol!lrship fund dance at' .8 where it will sta,y from Ma:7 13 lsland Soui:l.d water and marine , Saturday . night; Jan. 2Z' at . . . to 16. ... . .... Stevenson's restaum.nt.
Parish Family
SCHOOL
Norris H. Tripp
DAHILL CO.
Check .Tlte$e Banking Services
•• • • • NEW
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B.EDFORD·
INSTITUTION for,SAVINGS
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AT BISHOP'S BALL: Studying souvenir program, at l'ear, Mrs. Robert J. Hill and Mr. Hill;. f~ont, Mrs., Francis McCabe, Mr. McCabe and Rev. Norman-Ferris, all of St. Mary's parish; Taunton. Center,Miss Nancy Wiles,, .student at 'Bishop Stang H~gh School, escorted by her godfather, ' . '
Governor Uraes, Inte"tive' Gra nts . For CoUe.q.es .'. '.
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.'P'~otestc".nt". Cleric~
William Simmel, awaits presentation to Bishop. At rear, Vincent Lopez and William Fagan, announcing names of those presente~. Right, H~ Excellency with Dr. David Costa Jr. and Mrs. James A. O'Brien Jr"f Co-chairmen of ball.
.in Catholic ~ulpi'~·
A.nglican p'rimcite :,.~ Visit . ' PQpe
.Bible·Services· Held ., in' Worcester'Ch·.,rcl1
. WORCESTER (1"fC).",,""Pr6tes~ . tian Unity, are specific' direc tant clergy pi:~ached fo~ the firSt tives. regarding. marriages, funer tim~ f~om,a Catholic pUlpit here: a~s ,and. other public 'liturgical And tpeir. ,c()ngreg~tions.. were . services.' It.also establishes rules made. u'p" entirely of Catholic· for the' conduct of "ecumenical inceiitive grants, graduate sch61- priest,s..,·. .' " . . :. ,services" . and other ecumenicai arships . and dormitory aid' for. The occasions were Bible ser.. activities, both in Cathoiica~d higher education. vices' h~ld .in St. B'crnard's non-.catholic churches,' as well Iii"his annual message to the Chur~h .irri. conj).lnc~ion . wit~ as in other places.. . . legislature . he asked that 1;500 . cll~rgy conie):ences. called ac,. . Prima.ry Job incentive grants, valued' at $500 quaint priests of the .Worcester , Sever'al existing diocesan stat flach," be ·,.Hide available .each, ,diocese with contents. of .the utes,' particularly regarding year. The grants would supplenewly-published dioc.esan Ecu mixed marriages and funerals, meet the current. state ·scholar-. menical D,irectoI.'Y. ' ... , " " have been abrogated as' a result ship, ,program which ·finds· the ,Th'edir~et<lry-'officiall:ytitled . ,of the cii'rectory's promulgation' sJ'li te paying $500,' annuaily the "interim' DireCtory "f~r . the' by , Bishop.. Flanagan, who is a toward the college education ..of· .·Practice of Ecumeriism" hi the member ,of the U. S. Bishops' '. . five Per cent of each year's high . Diocese. .of- Worcester",.....,..presents Conimission ,on ~cumenism. school graduating .cla,ss.. . II sweeping outline of the··co.urse ,The Bible, services concluded . of ecumenism in' Worcester each Qf t4e. day-long conferences, . 'l'he.n,ew proposa~)s, inli!1~ COlinty'withili'its'35 pages. " with recol1)mendations ·made· by 'Publishe<Iby the Diocesan Preacher at· the.. one· conducted . the state 'department of educa- '. for.. pastors.. was Rev. ¥alcolm iion. " . .. . ..".. Ecumeilical COmIDlssion, the di'" Matheson, pastor 'of Worcester'i .' . rectory covers a'l i~e i~PO.~p~ . . .: New Proposal" '., " The proposal for 'state gradu-. ", P.!tllS;~: .of. ecuI.,lle~lcal ~a.ct~'r-t~,. ' .' . ' ate" scholarships·.is new, but.;the}· leaYl!1~ ro()m, as ~~S~Q:P ~~11lar~. "Holy ~am:e Soci~ty . request.for legislation setting up. . J:... Flar;l,~gap strtt~s~s'm blS f9 re - . :Rin~wai: .: a, state' d<?rmitory. authorityfol-" ,~ord~ (O!;" fr,ture ~.eye~opme~ts., . .. lows proposals for such ~a,pro- ~n Jhll~f1.eld. ' . .'. , . '. Mu~w:kp.KEi;:(:NC)-A··sur.;. gram by the' state ~oard and a' '. .Included" lles!de~ .b~oad:.·,out-:. ·vey ofarchdio.cesan,Holy: Name .... 8peci~lcitizensgroup; as well as: '. I.inell.of..course~ o~ ,~c.tlon to .~e· officers indicates .thatmost feel (ifficials of private colleges and: ~onowe~ ~y. th~. cl~r:o.". . and l~ty. the' sO,ciety: should' undergo' a universities. , ip furtheJ:mg the ca.l,ls~ of <:~rls-.. revision of, objectives. and. acIt would be' designed to be . I. " , . . ~viti~s, inlin,e :wit~ the. current, leIf-iiquidating. ~nd would help Catholics, Orthodox . tide of renewal in the Church. with' the financing of the"con' ' . A majority of the 200 respond , struction 'of auxiliary facilities Planning Magazi~e. . ents to-a questionnairecircu as well as dormitories at both NEW Y9R~ (NC)-A quar- lated .bY.Jhe Archdiocesan "'jiubiic and private instituti'ons. terly journal to foster better re-'. 'Council of .catholic Men agreed· lations and understanding be- that objectives should be "c1ari tv:een U.S. Orthodox and Roman fied and updated," with a strong Joint Drive to Aid, Catholics is scheduled to appear emphasis placed in the direction later this month. of public probleqis and social Vietnamese People affairs. Called "Diakonia," the Greek BONN (NC) - The Catholic word for service, it is to .be the and Protestant churches of Ger many are organizing a major work of members of the Ford ATTLEBORO'S
ham University John XXIII drive for aid for the war Leading Garden Center
stricken people of both North Center for Eastern Christian S'tudies and of Orthodox co and South Vietnam. editors. The first relief drive under taken jointly by, the two It will feature .documentation, ~hurches, it is being organized . news coverage, reviews of lead"" South Main & Wall Sts. for the end of January by the ing articles, along with original national Catholic charities 01' articles by· experts .in the ecu ganiz;ltion and itsProtest:\Ilt menical dialogue between Cath CA2-o234 c~unterpart. olics and Orthodox. TRENTON :(NC)'--Gov; Richard 'J. ·a:.l1ghes· ha~c;:ili; ed on,' the New Jersey legis'latui:'e to enact a program of
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VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arch
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Greater Worcester Area Council glican Co.mmunionj will vi~ . Qf Churches. He, called, upon his.Pope Paul VI on Wednesda~ . ~'brother-pastors" .. to . commit .March 23: '. ,themselve.s totally to' "leading ,Archbishop Ramsey will cOIM our people to Jesus Christ.'~.~ .to Vatican City in his' capacit,. "As ·commmitted pastors,'·' Dr. as head of the Lambeth Confer:' Matheson ·told the Catholic· ence of Anglican bishops. priests "our primary job is'not to / Archbishop Ramsey's prede raise money; or to be great intel-' cessor in the Canterbury' See, iects, or. political hucksters, or . the -late Archbishop Geoffrey social prima donnas. Our job is' Fisher, .visited ·Pope John XXIIi to lead our people... ~ What we' here' in 1960. -It was' the' first are,.· and. what we pastors 'do, meeting between' a' primate 'of 'speaks louder than: anythiilg we England and' a· pope' since the , can ·say or shout from our pul- . Reformation. ·pits.", . The Vatican Secretariat {or Promoting. Christian Unity said 'in announcing the archbishop's Child: visit that last November he hatt '. ,BROOKLYN (NC)':-Financing "expressed his .desire 'to 'visit f~ the ·WilliamT. Dilion : Child . 'Holy Father/' .. . ' . . .. StUdy' Center' is the first project In the annual giving 1>rogram .of ·the·alumnae of' St;Joseph's Col:: "V~~:~~· . lege:.for Women. . ... ';"" ',: .! ,
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PRELATE SPEAKS: Bishop Connolly addresses throng 'at glittering social event, the annual Bishop's Ball. He disclosed plans for third Nazareth Hall for exceptional childi'en in New Bedford area. Right, Mrs. Ronald
New Approach,
For. Missions.
In Japan
Achin and Mr. Achin chat with Rev. Roger LeDuc, curate of their Sacred Heart, North Attleboro. .
paris~
Here's Summer Opportunity for Students to Serve Israeli President
·Asks Bias End'
Chutch, See ' Latin America . JERUSALEM (NC) - Israel's President Shneor Shazar said
DAYTON (NC)-A Mari .MARYKNOLL (NC)-In two weeks over 800 U.S. and .Canadian college students at anist ·Brother who s~rved as . over 60"colleges ~ill begin' the final four month training pI:ogram that :win- ready them a missio.nary in Japan and for special work this Summer in 'Latin American towns and, villages. These. students as an official U.-S. interpret .belong to the. largest over~eas service program in North America directed and run by er at the surrender of Japanese students. They are members troops at the end of .WorldWar : of the Conference, on Inter- - "One thing l4lckipg in many meeting. of leadl,lrs'ip all three
here .he hopes recent Christian pronouncements . against reli gious and racial discriminatioo -i\,m "most Speedily be translaied. into' the practical language .. lood deeds." ,~eceiving leade~s representiJ~ 16 Christian communities and in':' stitutions in Isr~el, Shazar re . -ferred specifically to the "en':' lightened intentions" of the Catholic Church a's exprcsscd il!l the decisions of the Second Vat ican Council. He said. however that religioWJ .persecution and racial hatred are "once again poisoning hu man, life in many parts of oUO!' : globe." , The Christian representativefJ, led by Melkite-rite ,Archbishop Georges Hakim of Acre, includ- . cd Bishop Hanna Kaldany, vical' general in Israel for the Latin rite patriach of Jerusalem.
II hopes to devote the rest of .' . ' private arid government pro- groups emphasized ,cooperation his life to the spiritual and' in AmerICan· Student ProJects grams is student leadership," he with local Latin programs and telectual welfare 'of that nation's' (ClASP). Their group serves said. "This point was well made continuity in project work. "We youth. . ' a s a coordinating'agent" for the . last November by'a Committee 'go to Mexico and other lands," Brother Aloysius M. Soden, increased interest by students in on Youth Activities organized 'RonD'Aloisio stressed, "to serve 8.M:, who is leaving the Univer-" engrtging in Summertime educa- for the White House' Conference iii. the revolutionary, social and' sity' of Dayton to resume his .tion and community develop~for 'International Cooperation religious programs of those work ,in the Far East, regards· ment projects in Mexico and -Year.' , i ' countries, .riot to bring 'gringo' the future prospects of Catholi other Latin American'countries.
attitUdes or, advice. We are . He referred, to the statement cism ,in Japan as "the big ques Varied Programs
' , working for the aims and ideals tion'\ to be answered' by mis. '. About half these 'gtudents will by that commission' that there of the Mexican Revolution when we are guests hi Mexico." • Sionaries formed in the spirit of be returning to project sites that was.a "tendency' .of youth-seY'v th ey work e d on.. 1~IS t 'S ummer; ' 'ingor~anizatif:>ns,al1d govern:-. · C "In the past many overseas' t t t he Second Vahcan ouncil. '11 b t . f men agencies ,0 regard youth as An authority 0 f Japanese cu1-, . 0 th ers WI f e re urnmg or h a, a sub"Jec; t" and . . that "things, . p'rograms have p'erhaps '.negated ture, Brother Soden disputes'the' .third' or ourth' ~ummer. T e 'were done for youth and to help .the good.' they were doing' by , rathe,r " . ,than " ,,py erlcour . fOI'gettl'ng that they were, theI'e' belief that Buddhism is on the type of work done- depends on· .:youth, decline. the "local situation of each town aging youth to, act for them- to assist and cooperate' and not "On the contrary, it ,is experi and the community development 'selves.'" ~o take over. ClASP tries to as encing a' resurgence,'" he said. or pastoral plans that'might al sist and to help its members '~Buddhism appearS to be at· the ready be in progress there. Some that ClASP, by "He '.felt . ' '. . "en.,.' grow in appreciation 'of,the peo..: 'dawn of a new era." ' have helped ·to build schools' and couragmg leadershlp on all , , The Catholic Church haa 'community buildings.' 0 the r s levels allowed for more student pIe we're serving.'.' , TAVARES many Converts following World . have, literacy' health programs 'development. Responsibility for . :rbis- year's' emphasis in. the UPHOLSTERING SHOP, \Var'II;'but a sizable percentage, to 'follOw up on this.Suinmer. . :trajil.jpg and fund,ra'ising whieb-' U. S. has been, he noted, in in The' training program .in· the ~s c(,msiderabIeis Shared by, all ct:easing tl,1e quality' of tr.aiJ;ling. . &.sl.~ Made ,Upholsterld. Farnillf' . did not persevere in the practice" Ie:wphelsterinl '·Qualit, WorlllllaAshita .. ,or their' religion;'" according' to·_- ""E". S.~ whieh takes "place on, the" students.'! . for ' participating members.' A . :. Broth-er Soden:' ,.. : •. ' , : ' college campus of . each ·'€ I ASP' ..,. ClASp· is ach,lally' par.t ,of an .. mini'mum requirement for a st'u Large Selection Fine Fabrics . . 'Although 'the 'Church exerti(' group emphasizes·the study· of international movement of stmc';; dent to' assist' in' 'a' Summer'
Work, Guaranteed - Free Estimates 'an hifhien~e (ar"beyoIid'her' nu- ,. 'Spanish' ·and: ' Latin American· ~urally.independent'g roup s·. 'project is to have been a mem"'
..lREMOLDElING OUR SPECIALTY" merical sIze, 'the .oiitiook for all" ,cultur~ for t~ose g9i.D" for. the' While, ClASP' directs the U. S.· berof'a: group by January of
992·2891 . tr.ainhlg. artd screenipg' prograin, the year 'he wishes to ,work in
increase' in converts is not' es- " firs~ ~ti~e" :Every,o.ne I.n:tpe' pro' 1~' Aclishnet Ave.. New:, Sellfer. pecially bright, he obs~rved: The ' gr.am stl,1die.s the basic. principles Coordin.acion· Internacional de . Latin An-ierica.
Church has .been . too closely of communIty development and ProyectoSEstudiantiles (CIPE)'
identified with European' citl_oth~r technical- skills, according directed' by 'Rev. Placido Reit-
ture. to the nature' of. the work they mier, O.S.B., ,determines' the' Th C th l' ..:" will engag~ in. . ' projects in· Mexico an'd arranges e ~. 0 lC mlssIOnary s new Strong emphasis in the' train the Summer orientation and ~pproach, ~s a !esult 9f 'the Vat ing program -is given to leader ' procedures there. lCan councll, wlll be to acknowl h' f t· , db' ' . edge more readily whatever is S. Ip orma IOn an aS1C ' prlI~- 'Canadian students, who num ' d t t clples of team work. Student dl ber about ol)e-quarter of the t . B ddh' rue ill u IS,m ~n no. 0 rection of ClASP is shared participants have their own na coun~ the Church s pr~gr~ss Sl~among the grouJ) leader on tional chairman of Conference ply III hterms. d of nUl!1encal m campus' the area (','hal'rman who Etudiante des Projects Interis in charge of many groups and Americains' (CEPIA) who at crease, e sal . While the missionary will try the regional directors of the present is Anne Harris of St. to lead non-Christians "to the East Mid-West and West Michael's in Toronto, Canada, fullness of the Church," he will Regions. n?t n?glect developing CatholiSpecial Values Maryknoll Aids Clsm m depth ?mong those al The National Chairman of The National Secretariat for ready of the FaIth, he stated. ClASP, Ron D'Aloisio, gl'aduate both the American and Cana student at Berkeley in Califor dian groups is at Maryknoll, Unity Services nia, at a recent national board N. Y. There the editors of World meeting in Evanston, Ill., said Campus magazine publish the DAVENPORT (NC) - Catho ClASP newsletter and assist in lics and Protestants in this Iowa that because of its student lead diocese are observing the VVeek ership ClASP has certain values the screening and training pro of Prayer ,for Christian Unity that other overseas sending grams. .
wi.l;h a special series of events.. Iroups do not have. . The recent National Board
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God Love:" 'Y011., ",", '
Lauds' ,Capote E~perim~'"t 'WithcINon~,Fiction Novel
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D~
'Nothing makes one 80 Catholic 'as' to love the Missions. He must rise above nation, race and color before he can throw his arms around the world. It seems that this ges:ture of embracing the universe is the echo of the Incarnation when God becomes so small that a woman could hold Him and even kiss Him (which even the angels could not do). One wonders if our church-life has not lost this quality of embracing humanity on the one hand, and divinity on the other. Humanity escapes us because we think In terms of our parish, our diocese, our orders, instead of the JDillions who have. hungry stomachs and faJDished hearts. Divin Ity escapes us because' we see the Church as an "it," something over and' above us a building to which we ride on Sundays, an Institution by who~e laws we live. But w an \Cit" a "bride," a "body"? For these· are the two ways that Scripture describes the Church.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John, S. Kennedy Truman Capote's In Cold Blood (Random House. $5.95) sure to be one of the big selle:t:'s of 191>6, and one of the most discussed books of the y~ar. Its serialization in the New Yorker has made it celebrated before its appear ance between hard covers. ][n a ddition to its being the about •everyone involved and to seare~ both the people and the work of a gifted and thor- events to their utmost reaches. oughly practised writer, it He is not content with a solu introduces a new form;. what tion, but wants an explanation. Mr. Capote calls the non-fictioDIn searching for that, he has re novel. Although constrUcted the contrasting, but he does not de strangely bisecting, worlds of the , We do not see Christ In the Church or, If we d~, we see fine this term, killers I and the killed. Him as our eyes see a daffodil ,by the river's edge as an obJ~Clt. It would appear Brilliant Picture W'edo not see 'BiDias looklngtlnrough to mean report It is obvious that he spent a our eyes, as feeling with' omr hands, as age of'an actual long period of time in and hearing the le.pers moan with our ears. event, put done around· Holcomb, interviewing He Is not behind our· eyes colQring all in such depth. anyone who had the slightest we see, fighting His fight. clwnpIoning and with such connection with the case: The His cause. He Is In front of our eyes, an an arrangement picture that he gives us of this object rather tha.n a subject IlS He of material as locality and the people who in . should be-"I Uve, DO, not I but Christ to make it some habit It, is brilliant In Its color Uveth In me" as St. Paul says. _ TO VISIT HERE: Sister thing of a cre ing and shading. We come to ·Claire Marie. S.M.I.C. will ative work. The know It as if we had lived there, For~ver ·15 years we have written event chosen by, Mr.; 'Capote for and we come to know dozens of visit her mother, Mrs. Jos this column seekirig to-deepen the pool· this first non-fiction novel is people 'from principals to minor ephine Just of 111 Fielden of oUr responsibility to the world. We see a horrible and appareI1ltly sense characters. , ' Street, Fall River, next, more and more that ·this cannot be ·.done less multiple murder which ·oc In particular, the Clutters, al except by makin·g ourselves other Christs. curred near Holcomb in western though six years dead, become month, prior to her depar- " One JDight almostformUIate· this law: o~y those who suffer with Kansas 'on Saturday, Nov.· 14, as faJDiliar as figures in a. first ture for a missionary post in all humanity have Christ in their hearts. Once Christ Is not "way 1959. The victims were'members rate novel: the sober, just, Guanay, Bolivia. The Fall up there'; but' "in" us will we begin to feel towards. the hungry of the Clutter 'faniily: the mid wholesome, rational Her b e r t River religious has been and sick ·as He did, agoniZing with them. This missionary work dIe-aged parentS and their teen Clutter; his kindly but haunted Is hard because the ·world is at our doorstep. But thank God our principal of St. Peter's age son and daughter. ' wife; the versatile,generous, work is not for' Ii· part of the world· but for, the whole world Herbert Clutter, at 43, was a 'populat Nancy; the 'quieter, Scho()l, Spring G~ve, Ill., the world that Christ died to "reconcile to· Himself." You reade,rs very prosperous fanner~· ~His 'more introspective, ·but no less and prior to that taught in are good to ,particularities; ,this parish, tha~ school, this society. large holdirigs were extremely , admirable' Kenyon. They, their Texas. But every now and then become ·"catholic, become missionary, ,·well managed and, produclfve, associates, andthelr setting are become cosJDiC. Let the little things you love slip through. your He, was generous to his' help conveyed with an' art reminis-. fingers and use your arms-:-make them circle the globe of· the and respected by all who knew cent of 'that of Willa-Cather. earth. You Win filld that they will not fit around the earth until him. His large house was half a But it is the work of Flannery P~@mJ (COffi;lvell'1ltl'o@{m you have. let .tlie arms of Christ embrace you..If He does not ,mile off the road, and there were' O'Connbr which comes to mind possess all of yqu, you will not love all mankmd. If He does no nearby neighbors. when Mr. Capote turns to the PITTSBuRGH ,(NC)-Bishop possess all of you then you will so give that your alms do not Normal Day mutderers. They are .botP gro John' J .. Wright of Pittsburgh end up In stocks and bonds or in new buildings but In the arms Two older daughters were tesques, intensely but twistedly will speak at the·· convention '. of ·the poor. If· we d~ riot see Christ in the poor we may not see away from the homestead, one human,!the very reverse of 'what banquet closing' the 13th bien- Christ at all. It is the glory of The Society for the Propagation married, the other at school T~e we would call norinaI. nial convention of the National ' of the Faith that It never invests your alms but everything you teen-agers, Nancy and Kenyon, ; Mental I1lness Council of .Catholic Nurses, give is spent on the poor. within one year. If you send us your were straight-A students at l!igh They: were . both maimed. ·April 28-30. here. ' . stocks· as' alms ·(and. many do), 'we sell them immediately ·and school, and Nancy was probably Smith's legs had been· smashed Theme of the convention will . give the money to the poor. This kind of charity is Christ~llke, the most admired and best liked . in a motorcycle accident", and . be "The Catholic' Nurse in the It Is pontifical, It Is· the work· of The Society for the Propagation girl in the area: ' ,were dwarfishly. shon, tnis . Winds of Change." The'keynote __._. . ..:; Mrs. Clutter was a sweet, gen-, shapen, I and weak. .Hickack's speaker, will 'be Mrs. Grace .of the F!1it!l, .. tie woman who was chronically .face had been SMashed in an ·Gould, .supervisor of psychiatric GOD' LOvE YOU .to 3. A. S. for· $5 sent· In reparation '."'1 In, suffering frolD depression. autom0li>i1e. accident" and the ·nursing in the mental health di- '., refused a hearing, to a poor blind man who was trying to earn Her condition was the only two halves did'· not fit properly ·vision of the State of Washing• Uvlng by se1UDi from door to door." ••• to M.P. for $10 "I eadow on the faJDily's gleaming 'together. It was. only when he ton's Department of Institutions. ~oald have paid this mach for a new permanent but there are liUccess, happiness and normality. smiled that a kind of unity was One seSsion during the conso many people· In the world who need help more than I Deed That Saturday was 11 normal briefly established. But he D~ver vention will deal with "great curls." ~ •• to the· friends and ·customers of Canty's Cafe who clay for the Clutters. A. number smiled Spontaneously. . , soclety" issues in the areas of eollected $74.79 for the sick and starving mission lands. of people were in touch with A psychiatrist declared that poverty, population, the family and human relations. Chie or another of them and saw, SJDith was suffering from 'severe The GOD LOVE YOU medal, a lovely, cameo of the Madonna .Another sessionwlU consider nothing in the least out of the mental ii11ness. This is believ , of the World, is 'one you would be proud to give or delighted to ordinary. But when, Olll Sunday able In view of his background. ,opportunities for service with receive. Designed by the world-renowned jeweler Harry Winston morning, a girl who W8.lJ Nancy's He:was the child of ,m Cherokee such groups as the Papal Volun and blessed by Bishop Sheen, it is available in a classic Florentine friend and who regularly went Indian ,woman and an Irish teers:for Latin America, the gold finish or sterling silver. Send your request and correspond to church with the faJDi!y,' called father, both rodeo performelTl Peace Corps, the Volunteers In Ing offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 at the house, she found it eerily who ,bitterly battled each other. Service to America,' and the Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. $2 small sterling silver; silent. .Investigation disclosed His sliltternly, itinerant home Cath01ic Medical Mission Board. $3 small 10k gold filled; $5 large sterling silver; $10 large 10k that all four Clutters were dead. was broken, and he was In insti ~d~~ , They had been bound and titutlons from an early, age. His office safe. He relentless quizzed 'gagged, ~efore being brutally schooling stopped .at the third' his, cellmate, day after day. cUt O1It this column. pin your sacrifIce to It and maD It dispatched. grade. He was first arrested at' about every detail of the C1ut- ' -to Most Rev. Fulton 3. Sheen, National Director of The Society Arrest Ex-Convicts at the age of eigh,t. ' ter establishment. , for the Propagation of the Faith"366 Fifth Avenue. New ,York. Mr. Clutter ,and Kenyon were Met hn Prison Incredible Journey N. Y. 10001 or to"your diocesan dire0tor. Rt. Rev. Magr. Raym0n4 In the basement",the former. with, Hickock's parents were poor How Hickock and Smith pre T. Co~ldIDe. a~8 North MaIn Street, Fall River, Massaehusett&. bis throat cut and his face de 'Kansas farm folk.·. He .finished pared for what was to be a rob lItroyed by a'shotgun blaSt; tlle . high school,' was an all-around beJ'Y Which, incidentll,,; brought latter disposed·· of by shotgun. athlete, but began stealing when ,them less than $50,is fascinat THE SISTERS OF ,THE SACRED, :, Nancy had been s~ot In her bed, ver-y"young and·weB-regarded' by· ingly set ,out·byMl'-.Capote. ANI' OF PERIPETUAl ADORATION"
Mrs. Clutter in ,'hers. The only neighb9rs 'as' 'a completely"un- ,And so·is t!le'incredible jour lIrtIte pneraul ,alllll 1lIdIe. io lGlD am lII'IIadI!IK'.',iS dues were a single bloody foot trustworthy scoundrel. He was ney which engaged them for si:Jr:: rellglOlJll life lit lave, adaratlull, -1/1I reparatl~ l!..!,It. .. print ·on the basement floor, and consumed by' envY of people ,weeks after, the ·crime, a journey , . tlII SIsters dllYatll t1telr'tlme to tile edlll:lltl.. · ill . - _ ,--.,' .., dlllllestlc dirties. ' " . "",' footprints, visible only to a spe who had more'·than he. Twice of ~n thousand·JDiles.toMexico, '. For furtltor lIIfonnatioll. aPPlJ' 10 " cial camera, in the dust on that married, .twicedivorced, he ex- .' to California, to' Nebraska,. to·· Sisters of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, Mass. lIllme floor. No motive wasJndi celled in passing worthless ",Kansas, ,to Florida; finally to eated; , , , ' checks. Nevada, 'a journey which' saw .A solution was reacilied less: The two met in' prison, were them, committing lesser' crin'l.es I than ~ven,wee¥,la~~r,with the' eellmates: for awhile, were de- .ai' along the way, yet always , arre!;~"Jn' L~ Vegas, .of-two ex- ',ceived' i~' and·, by·, each otqer, . escaping apprehension,' a' jour convicts, ,.who had: ,never. been agreed that when released they ney which ended in their cap in HolCqiDb until the 'night of would somethow 'secUre' enough ' lure only by the sheerest chance. . .:'" , . '). . th~ murderS" aJ;id' who had never money,.to go off to 'Mexico and Mr. Capote's experiment suc zeim the Clutters' until' 3n .hoUr live a leiSurely '~xisteiiCein the cee~, magni#cently., ~uperla AUTOMOTIVE' ,. '. ',., . . ' before' killing . them~ 'The two sun.. .,' ,. ,. ;;, tively written, this is a marvel- ' AND were Perry SJDith:, 31, and Dick Smith got out first, and HiCk- ously, 8ustained"adveI.lt!,U'~ ~ot' Bickock,28. . oel< then :celled with a prisoner. Oluy as a story of crime and de- ,This framework of .fact. avail- who had' once, worked on the tection but also,· and much mQre " able to anyone· who cored to ,Clutter farm. AS t~is ·m;m rertrl..; importantly" as a .J'ans~ckiIlg' of • GENERAl DElCO BATTERIES glance through newspaper files nisced about theClutt¢r's pros- the depths and complexitles, of " •. PERFECT CUlm RINGS , provides no more than m, start' perliY., Hickock came to believe' human beings the strange t.?J;' Mr.. Capote. He has.sQught~o , baselessly. that Mr.~€lutter kept chances which p~ay so large a. FAll NEW BEDFORD. -MYANNIS 1, tiGd ou~.as mu,c::h ..' as pOMib1e. fl0,OOQ"iJl. cam.in a 1armhouse ' pm hi human lives.
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Priority 'List' As 'Midterm Exams Take Place At Diocesan High Schools "
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20, 1966 ,
.
Montfort Priests To Move SectioD Of Seminary
\
Shh! Scholars are studying. Extl'a-eurricular activi ties are a.t a minimum at Diocesan schools as midterms are in progres·g; and even on the home front, things are relatively quiet and still as far as the teenage segment is ooncerned. At Bishop Fee han in Attleboro, senior / council president, and Pat King, class president, gave her girls, fresh from their closed. senior a "Horace" doll. "retreat, spoke to fellow stu At DOminican Academy senior
ST. MARY (NC) ~ The M 0 n for t Missionaries are moving the college depart ment of their seminary 00
St. Louis, where the seminarialli' will attend St. Louis University." dents on the benefits they de Cate Griffin has been accepted Father Roger M. Charest" rived from the spiritual exercise. at Regis College, and Barbara S.M.M., U. S: provincial and tl Other students will make their Bounakes has her sights set on Fall River native, explained the retreat under a La Salette mis Chamberlayne Junior College. seminary coli e g e department sioner, while seniors will assist Also at DA, memory book staff presently is located here, with by acting as discussion leaders. members are busily assembling students attending classes at the Dominican Academy students pictures to meet their deadline., Vincentian Fathers' St. MarY'B viewed a film on safe driving, !TED TflSts Seminary in nearby Perryville. while Jesus-Mary girls saw the Juniors at Mt. St. Mary's re Fat her Patrick Berkery, last in a series of movies on S.M.M., seminary superior, said medical self-help. The JMA'ers ceived results of their Iowa all of the seminarians have beeD will shortly receive certificates Tests of Educational Develop admitted to the university's de attesting their completion of this ment at a parent-teacher-student gree program. session in the school auditorium. first aid course. Sister Mary Mercy explained the The seminarians will live itli A Father-Daughter dance Irl testing program Brld took ques the Coronado Residence Cent~ upcoming at Mt. St. Mary Acad in St. Louis. emy in Fall River, with juniors tions. Pamphlets on testing and' and seniors hosting their dads college requirements were avail Monday, Feb. 14 and freshmen able. And in Mount sports, the 'a".. and sophomores taking their themselves generally useful.' vees defeated the Somerset ditto Wrn Tuesday, the 15th. Mount students, will attend • and the Mount varsity defeated Student Council Maronite Rite Mass in the school Durfee High. A student council has been or auditorium tomorrow as part o.i! Coyle debaten opened their ganized at Fall River's Prevost their observance of the Church season yesterday, meeting SHA High. It will include representa Unity Octave. Celebrant will be tives of each class and club, anel Fall River. Rev. Kenneth Michael of st. Meanwhile, at Prevost High an class presidents. Anthony of the Desert Churcm. "Raisin illl the Sun" 'WU ,the National Honor Society is Fall River. promoting the Memory Book, viewed at Sacred Hearts Acad And 2'Z senior government with members visiting each class my, Fall River, and at Mt. st. class students plan attendance • to solicit orders for the volume, Mary's, Both showings were a mock UN session at Salve planned for Junc~ publication. sponsored by the Diocesan So Regina College. The day is spon SODALITY,LEADERS: Sodality leadel'6 at Prevost The NBS i8 also volunteering dality Union. The film, starring sored by the Salve Regina Inter- Sidney Poitier, deals with the tutoring to underclassmen in High School, Fan River, are, from. left, Edmund Tremblay. JIlOtional Relations Club and ill math, history, science, English, ' Paul Dextraze, Paul Carrier, Richard Charland.. themes of race prejudice and open to all area students. Latin and French. poverty. Mount scientist. heard Mi. At Coyle High in Taunton the JeSWl-Mary soda1istB will Bedard has been named a semi Marjorie Morin, Min Margo prefect; Richard Charland vice school paper, ,Warrior, and the sponsor a pizza party Friday, finalist in the National Merit prefect; Paul Proulx secretary; Lavoie and Sister Regis Mary Jan. 28 to celebrate the end of yearbook, Viking, have been midterm exams _ and inciden~ exams and freshmen have held and Roger Bouchard treasurer. ,at their monthly meeting. The entered in a high school press tally to raise money for sodality their first class meeting with Paul Proulx and David PoisSOll , apeakers', topiCl, respectlvel3lll contest conduded by St. Bona were medical technology, physi will be Union representatives. projects., president James Pekoski presid venture School Of JournalIsm. eal educatioa 8Dd lleemed prae And Stang Junior Boys' So Also at .JMA, sophomores aN ing. Also at the Taunton boys" planning on open house tomor Student councils of Attleboro dality members "plan an assault tieaI nursing. IlChool, qualifiers in a National row for area eighth graders. It'D. area schools, including Feehan, OIl all non-members."' At least Honor Society contest were Den be based on the theme of the are meeting monthly in the in-, 30 new members is the group', nis ~lahan and Walter, Sylvia. Broadway musical "Oliver." terests of Inter-school coopera goal. The boys plan discussion In inter-school bowling Pree Also on the day's program wiD tion. An "exchange of talent" is sessions on apostolic, activitiea vest High and Fall River's Dur and also have on their agenda a be a basketball game, skits de planned for the future. fee High are ,tied for first place; scriptive of school activities and Jesus-Mary's new French club communion breakfast and a Je also on the Prevost sports scene, organizations,. and a "scrumpe has as officers Connie Gagne, treat. both varsity and jayvee hoop tious refreshment hour." president;- Pauline Dugal, vice The stage crew for "Camelot," &ters lost III game to Somerset, president; Anne Marie Grillo, to be presented at Bishop Fee WYman while the Maple Leafs defeated Student Councils to Meet secretary; Janet Pouliot, treas haf.l, is busy making scenery, Seekonk, and Dighton-Rehoboth. In addition to upcoming stu-. mer. 3-6592 while actors and actresses have Westport defeated the Prevost dent council elections, the Stang At the Mount a calendar party CHARLES F. VARGAS ' varsity, but Prevost jayvees Student Government Association is being organized by Sister 'moved into night rehearsals for the production. Also at Feehan, turned the tables on the West is making plans :for May, when Marie Lorraine, musical advisor, sodalists were active in prepa 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE port junior team. the Mass. Assn. of Student Coun for an open meeting of the Directed by Mother St. Ste~ cns will meet on the North Mother McAuley Guild' to be rations for the opening of Ma NEW BEDFORD, MASS. phen, coach, and Yvette St. Dartmouth campus. More than held at the' school this month. donna Manor. They did such behind the scenes chores as bed Pierre, captain, Jesus-Mary 450 representatives from all The program will be a "family Academy's basketball team has parts of the commonwealth will affair," with various family making, dusting and mopping begun its season, and has already attend the three ciay convention. groups displaying their talents and also were on hand at the open house to guide and make met Somerset and Case. Council moderators Sister Ber~ while representing the 12 months Science Fall' nadette Louise Brtd Sister Marie 01 the year. ' 'Young scientists at North Adrienne are making prelimi~ Also at Mount, eighth grade Dartmouth's Bishop Stang High nary preparations with the stu students will attend an open are hastily adding finishing dent council. house at which the orchestra, touches to projects due to be And students Illt Cassidy win glee club and cheerleaders will shown in the school science fair lllO longer have to combat present a program and the to be held Monday through "eleven o'clock droop," says our 'school's hootenanny group will Wednesday, Feb. 7 to 9. Those Taunton informant. Revised perform. allergic to animals are warned class schedules ere designed to Bere, There away, says William Sullivan, keep girls on their toes, with' Cal Raye will s~ng at the Do Stang's Anchor reporter. "There first and IecOnd periods un mlnican Academy Junior Valen will undoubtedly be a large rep.. ehanged, but the remaining fiw 'tine dance, to be held Friday, mentation of the innoeen& elasses of the day shifted., Feb. U' at St. Anne's AuditO 1M Falmouflt HafionoI s-It ereatures, to he opines, "since ' French W: students at Prevost rium; 'and also at tile ,Fall River Falmouth, Maa.
last year'1l fair saw everything , are analyzing teenage psychol:" schOol freshmen made a killing ... tile "'.... cr... IIIIa ....
from \D1hatched chickeft eggs and ogy-in French, of eourse. The 1ft a Biblical Iiong writing con mice toc:aged rabbitll." objed ill to increase oon9ersa test, sponsored by the' sodality. Also in the realm ,of sclenee ilonal abiUty ba French and. First prize went to Virginia ~rs, the ,Massachusetts Regia JIlBjor topie di~ has been Rivard and second tci, Eijzabeth m Sciene Fair Conimlttee met eteady dating. Toi1jours l~amour! ,St. ~d, bOth freshnien. at Bishop Cassidy High in Taun $HA J'all River ~ 8Iready, 1ft sodality e~ection~ at Pre 10 plan tile' annual regional held its ~ual' eigiith grade' wst, Paul Carriei' ,wu moRa DADSON (;)ft, 8URNERS , "" lIeience fair, to be 1,leld Frid~ open house. 'Jt was" h.g~ghtecl" .' through Sunday, Aprl11througll ~ • gym meet md School,'~ r--...............- .............- ..
'4-Hour 0it Burner Service I, at Dwelly street ~ory ill Were eOnducled. Also at SRA FomOVl ReadIng ,"ARt) ,CO~ Fall River. I nrsity and jS7vee' bUketbaD Casey.S~xton. AlsO at C888idy, students wel teams haVe defeated Bishop Cas ~W ENGLAND COKE eomed a Visit from Rev. Mother sldy and the SHA girlS weN :Mary Regis, a Taunton native downed by the MoUnt varsity. who ill 'now Mother General of although SHA ~ beat tile ' the Holy Union commUnity. In. Mounties. M TREMONT STREEt' speech, she urged Cassidy girls AncJ 9D ~ ,Sl!IA ,debate team, to 'concentrate on the intellec freshmen met Bishop Cassidy lAUNTON, MAS$. , taal aspects of IlChool life. & . Birls in • DOvlee tournamept. 640 Pleasant Street Tel WY 6-8271 New Bedford. T.t. VAndyke 2-0621 -.nlveDk, Car~ Jillvia, mICleD& Ai BiBbo» Wah. ~
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THE ANCHOR-Di0c:e9. 01 FaII.·RiYw .- . ....... 19d6
Bishop Issued Interim Directives for Ecumeni.cat Activity
Continued from Page One toward blI'eaking down precon - DO active part in the eeremonles. 'speet for their freedom el eoBVI. The Saeramentll VB. Christian Burial . .science, a desire, nourished Rev. Henri A. Hamel, Secretal'1' eeived notions of each other and Jaev. Edward .1. Mitchell, J.C.D.. towa~ds promoting true under 12. Cath~:ar::mnyattend BapZOo For reasons .of family ties,' by prayer .and example, that all Catholics may be buried in cem- . the scattered children of. God. Jat. Rev. Thomas F~ Walsh, Very standing, the clergy and laity Rev. William .D. Thomson, Rev. are encouraged to partic:!-pate in tism services in other Christian . eteries other than Catholic cem- might one day be united lri the them, and even to initiate them. churches. However, since this. eteries. Also, for the same rea- bond of true communion. Edward A. Oliveira, Rev. Cor sacrament involves a spiritual sons, non-Catholics may be' 27. Catholic schools at every nelius J.' O'Neill, Rev. Felician relationship, and the sponsors buried in Catholic cemeteries. level should manifest a true ec Plichta, O.F.M. Con., Rev•. AIEcumelllical Services 21. Priests are permitted to umenical spirit. Especially in bert F. Sho'velton, Rev. James F. 4. "In certain circumstances, incur an obligation to see to the Kelley, Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira, such as in prayer services 'for e h i 1 d's religious upbringing, officiate at funeral services for hfgh schools and colleges, how Rev. Bento R. Fraga. Rev. John' unit~ .and during ecumenical Catholics may not serve as·· members of other Churches~ ever, courses of an ecumenical sponsors at Baptism ceremonies either in the funeral home or at 'nature should be' presented, 3. Brennan, SSt CC., Rev. Joseph. gathenngs, it is 'allowable, in .A.. . Nolin, . . M.., S Robert . V .' M c- deed ! desirable that Catholics in other Churches. Those of the family home, arid/or at the along with' occasional lectures ." F Dow should join in prayer with their other religions are welcome to graveside when requested to do by and dialogues with experts ,Go' . wan, K .S.G . , MaUrlc~·· ney, Hon. Philip M. Beaudreau, Christian brethren. Participation attend Catholic Baptism ser- 'so by the family of the deceased: from other faiths. Besides sacred vices; however, for the reasons Clergymen of other faiths may theology, "other branches of Richard K. Martin, and Hon. of Catholic,g in such non-liturgi knowledge, especially those of Beatrice Hancock Mullaney. cal sE!rvices, whether they are cited above, they may not act officiate at the graveside ser vices for members of their a historical nature, must be mtIl'oductiotl held for the sake of promoting as sponsore. churches who are being buried taught with ~ue regard also for Since the "restoration of unity' Christian unity in accordance lBl. Confirmation .41 Catholic cemeteries;, the eetimemcal point of view, among Christians is one of the with the Decree or, in the spirit 13. Catholics may attend Con VID. Sacr~mentals . ,so that they may correspond as principle concerns of the Second of the Decree, for some other firmation ceremonies in other 22. Whe~ requested to' do so, exactly as possible with the Vatican Council'" (Decree on purpose (e.g., for peace, in time Churches; however, they may Catholic priests may 'provide facts." (Decree, 10) These same Ecumenism, 1), it must also be of public nee d, mourning, not act as sponsors at these cer the concern' of the People of thanksgiving, etc.) is encouraged emonies. Those of other Faiths the sacramentals of ,the Church, principles are appllcable to such as blessings, ashes, p.alms, classes of the Confraternity of God everywhere;' in all: our communities." (U.S. are welcome' to attend Confir As an aid to implementing the Bisho~s' Guidelines) mation in, Catholic churches; religious articles, to those who Ch'rfstian Doctrine. ,Xi. Ecumenical Study Groups Council's Decree on E;cumenism, 5. Special programs for the however, they may not act as are not ·Catholics. the following interim directives Week of· Prayer for Christian sponsors for ,these ceremonies; nt. Attendance by CUergy Catholic Study Groups are submitted to the clergy and Unity :(January 18-25), prepared At Services in Church 28. Catholics are urged to laity of the Diocese of Fall River. by this Commission in co-:opera C. 'lrhe Euch.arist .~\ 23. When- cle~gymen of other form study groups to discuss the These directives are "Interim" in tion with 0 the r Christian 14. Our separation from our faiths attend Catholic services, Ecumenical movement and es that they may be modified or Churches, have already been is · brethren at the Lord's Table such as funerarll, weddings, etc., pecially the Decree on Ecumen amplified as circumstances war- sued by the Most Reverend Bish remains as one of the chfef signs they are to be ·welcomed, may.' ism. nnt. " OPt This week is intended 'only of our present disunity, and Ii' ,wear- their customary robes and ~oint Study Groups . Ecumenism Is' not simply a as a focus and stimulus for that stimulus to our zeal In promot- may be seated in the sanct~ary• 29. Catholics may be members matter one may take or leave; prayer whfch should be. an ur ingthe cause of ~ty. Catho- . . . 24. Catholic priests may at .of those inter-faith study groups 'it is rather a concern for gent part of our petition as lics, .therefore, may not parti", tend services ]n other Churches whose topics and personnel have
Catholics. "The sacred' Council Christians all year long. . cipa~e in the Eucharistic cele-' ~ch funerals, wed~ings, etc.; the' approval of this Commission.
exhorts, therefore, aU Catholic 6. For the present, it is deem bratlOns of other Churches. For on which occasions they may :XU. Open House In Churches
faithful to recognize the signs ed wiser not to' 'hold these unity reasons of friendship or cour- wear cassock arid s~rplice, or , 30•. Visits of this tyPe,whether
Of the times and' to take' an ac- serviceS in churches, whether tesy, however, they may be·' choir. robes if they are prelates;. to Catholic or other, Churches
five and 'intelligent part' in 'the Catholi'c or Protestant. The use present at ,these services. ' and may be seated in the sanc- are permitted. It is' recommend
~ork of ecumenism." (J;>ecree, 4) of a netttral place for joint unity . 15. ~athol~cs ,may not parti-' tuary if 'their host desires. . .eel that no' worship service take
A careful study of the De~ee. services is recommended; such Clpate in t~e Eucharist in other 25. In neither of these cases. place in connection with such an ~ Ecumenism, along with a as: a ~vic /iluditorium; the Par Churches, . ~or may those of·· may the'. visiting clergymen take 'event in either a Catholic church use of some· of the extensive - ish Hall of a Catholic church; other Churches participate in any part whatsoever in the cer or other Church. It. is further permissions contained in these the Parish Hall:of a Protestant the ... Euchaz:ist . In ' Catholic'_em.onyhe is attending; this does . recommended that visits of this directives, should hop e f u 11 y. church. If in doubt about the churches. , . not include the procession at the type. be worked out In consulta prove to be a positive step place "(here. serviceS. are to be 16. Because of the close con-' , begi~ning nor the recession at tion by the clergy of various towards healing a "division held, the Commission may be ne,dionbetween the homily of' the end; both of which' are per faiths in an area, rather than by twhich) openly contradicts the' consulted. mvitations being issued unilat th~ Mas~ and t4e Eucharist, the': mitted. will of Christ, scandalizes the T. The order of such services homily is reSE!rved strictly for X. Ecumenism at Ho~e and .erally. (Cf. the "Principle of world, and damages that most should lbe mutually planned, by · the : Catholic clergy; and the" In the Schools , . lReciprocity!', above, T) holy cause, the preaching of the both sides beforehand and should · CathoUc clergy are forbidden to, . 26. Since. life-attitudes are .xm. Diocesan Commission gospel to every creature." (De- be agr~ on by all 'concerned. · deliver the sermon at Protestant' formed at an early age, the fosFor Christian Unity cree, 1) In preparing for' and conducting Eucharist services. ,. tering of' a true ecumenical 31. In doubt about the inter Although these gutdlines have these Ecumenical Services, the pretation or applicatioil of any spirit' will depend greatly upon D~· Matrimony . as their primary aim the unity "princip,le of recipro~ty" should education both at home and in· of these directives, the Ecumen 1'7. Since the' witnesses' at· tlie schools. Catholic parents Ical Commission should be con of Christians, many of the norms be kept in mind: to accept an are valid also in our relationship invitati~n may often seem to' marriage fulfill more of juridic should trY to develop in their, sulted, either through the Sec with members of the Jewish' entail an obligation to extend' and social duty than a religious' children' a genuine' Christian· retary, or in his absence, faith. In the spirit of the Second a similar invitation, ahd to prof- . one, Catholi~s may serve as ~ove .for men of all faiths, a- re-, through the Chairman. Vatican Council,. we commit our-' fer an invitation may imply a . witnesses to marriage in other Churches providing' the mar--' se~ves to a closer association with readine~ to receive one; one ,:.,~>.,#).'#).·t)·.t).e.,.)~,#).t}· the Jewish community· an!! other should ~ot, ther~ore, accept an · riage - is . lawful.. and. valid.' In doubt about this,a Catholic. religious c<imiininitieS ~ welL invitation if, according to CathL Councll of Churches olic norms, one cannot proffer a shouJd consult a priest, who' will. evaluate. the. situation in the. 1. Individual parishes may similar .invitation." (U.S. Bish light -of Church Jaw, on mar-' l!Iend observers. if invited" to ops' Guidelines) '-~ IIDJI local Councils of Churches. But' 8. Catholic priests may accept rfage.. Those of o,ther Christian: ~_l;';i .-~ since membership iIi such groups invitations to preach at unity Denominations. 'may serve as' on world and national levels is services j in 0 the r Christian witnesses at marriages in the now under study, membership Churches, with the approval of Catholic Church. 18. Mass inay be celebrated at~· in these local Councils is not the Most Reverend Bishop. Oth recommended for the present. er Chris~ian clergy may' be in . mixed 'marriages in the Catholic' . Church. '. . . . II. Clergy Associations vited to speak at unity services 2. Since personal contact be in Catholic churches, with the , . ' ] g . JBroly Orders tween the clergy of a communi approval, of the Most Reverend . 19. Catholic~ may attend' Or-' . ty will. help to break down the Bishop., dinati9ns in Churches other than' . wall of misunderstanding and to V. WOi'Ship In Comm Oth t~e Catholic Ghuich. but they: promote the work of Christian ....__ 40 • on er may take no aCtive' part in the unity, priests are urged to be .....- a .. EC1IIDlenieal services ,~ ceremoni~s. Those of other faiths come acquainted with the clergy 9. Since Public Worshfp is in are welcome to attend Catholic of other Churches, and to work itself a profession of faith and ordinations; but they ~y take with them for the common good. by implication an expression of Priests, therefore, are free to Christian! commi~ent,. such .. :&HUL.l.· '. ,..~ join local associations of clergy worship· in common ',with those' men, e.g., "clergy assOciations'" . of other ,faiths is. lil general,' NO JOB TOO BIG' or "ministerial associations" or forbidden'to Catholics. ' . . . ~THOLIC PROGRAM . NONE. TOO SMALL to co-operate in the formati~'of '10. The· Constitution' on the lIuch associations if they are not Orienta~ Churches (nos•. 26-29) '8) 8lready in existence. _ established a "new conciliatory m. .CommUDiiy Boeial ACUOD policy wi~h regard to 4:C)mmuni C} Programs eatio in sacris With tJ>,e brethren PRINTER.S. A/RUNES .. 3. In our pluralistic: American of the s epa rat e d Eastern Main Office and\ Plant . society, one of the most obvious Churchesj"Since, however, this ,Ca.i;:I101Ic· Travel. O'ffloe and fruitful fields of ecumenical is.a 'iJiattei' of ·utm.ost· dellcacy 95' aridge St.,loweil, Mass. WASHiNGTON CHICAGO lOME LONDON ' . activity is co-operation between and is at the present time under . '". Tel. 458~6~~3 . ,.{ Christians ,In social and civic study by I the 'Bishops'; eommis qgp' .CATHOLIC TRAVEL OFFICE . FRY 'I., matters~ "Co-oper~tio~- among .sion for ~cumenical Affairs, no. " .' Auxiliary Plants C~ Dupont Circle Bulldfng, Washlngtlla, ~ Co 2003& .. Christians vividly expresses that action should be taken in this BOSTON .S Please send me your free.. IlIustrated~. ~ fa ~~ bond which already unites them, . ma~ter.,without.permission of the . . detail the "WDltd'«MIktgN plIatIm~ . '. .. . .... and it sets in clear relief,'tbe .Bishop. " . . CAMDEN;- N; 'J. C~· 'Name' ~atures' ofChrfst the. senrant." ,1·1• .Mtendance of catholics at , . OCEANPORT, N~J.
(Decree, 1~ Since eOinmon in Marriages; Baptisms; Confirma . . Address .'.' MIAMI:
volvement in suCh projects tions; FbqeiaIS, etc., for reasons' PAWTUCKET,R; L
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lHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fatl River-Thurs. Jan. 20, 1966
15
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil' River";"'Thurs. Jo" "'. "
Miss;oner Says' 'NoW'~~. _ bb For legion ~of Mary Wor~
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Get Choice GIf,s for.
PROVIDENCE (NC)-"One would never know there was a war in Vietna~, to judge from the Legion of Mary. reports coming from there," a priest-devotee of the Marian work among the laity observed here. Father Aedan Mc Grath, 8.8.C, Columban misIn thanksgiving for his well sionary from Dublin, Ire- being, Father McGrath vowed land, came here as part of ,that he would spread the mes a cross-country lecture tour - sage of the Legion' of Mary wherever he was. He said he was convinced that it was the~ pra)'ers of his Chinese legion.)' aries that kept him saf~ and sane. The Irish missioner has a spe cial reverence for his mission vocation and the work of the Legion of Mary. Irishmen are born missionaries as history at tests, he said, and each land they visit_ (becomes a vineyard for Christ. Irish Founder The. Legion of Mary was founded by an Irishman. "Frank Duffin Ireland founded the Legion 30 years ago and no~,jt is a work in every country in the world-and I do not exclude Russia," Father McGrath said. Although founded in 'his hometown of Dublin, ironically Father McGrath was not hit Continued from PlIge One with the powerful impact of the His' Holiness, the late Pope John legion. until he was stationed in XXIII, was invested MondaY ~ China. Despite both Japanese a Magistral Knight of the Sov and commmunist occupation, ereign Military Order af Malta and during the cgurse of nearly, by Francis Cardinal Spellman in two decades including his exile New York's St. Patrick's Cathe and imprisonment, the Legion . .dral. work continued. If Catholics do As a Knight of St.' Gregory not appreciate the Legion of and Kni'ght of Malta, Kearns Mary or know of its power, the holds two of the highest honors Reds did, so did the Japanese, conferred on Catholic laymen. he said. It was for his Legion In addition to members of his of Mary work particularly that . immediate family the ceremony both occupation forces opposed was attended by Most Rev. Father McGrath. lames L. Connolly, D.D. Bishop Work 01 Laity of the Diocese of Fall River, and The Legion of Mary's phenom others from the Diocese. enal accomplishments are "proof Following the investiture and that the laity can and will do Pontifical Mass celebrated by anything the bishops and priests Cardinal Spellman a private din- . ask of them - but they must ner and reception was attended ask." . . by Bishop Connolly, lIlnd mem Father McGrath's real love is bers of the Knights of Malta for' the Chinese. He' said he is from various sections of the confident that his legionaries are oountry. active yet behind the bamboo Long active in Diocesan and curtain. He was assigned to Han community affairs, Kearns has yang in central China, where he been public l'elations director of worked, under the direction of Diocesan Charities. for many Bishop Edward Galvin,' S.S.C., years. He was also active in sev f 0 u n del' of the Columban eral diocesan regional high Fathers.' He also worked with school fund raising campaigns. Bishop James E. Walsh, M.M.. He is a charter member of the the Maryknoll prelate who still, Fall River Chapter-Serra Inte·r.,. is imprisoned by' the Chinese national and is a director of St.. communists. Vincent's Orphans' Home., More than ever, the time for In 1948 Keams received a na the Legion of Mary is now, with tional citation for a newspaper the emphasis on the laity, Father advertisement he 'created com McGrath said... bating racial intolerance' ... President and treasUl'er of A. ~"""-"""_0'#4"""-""" J. Kearns Company, Advertis ing a'nd Public Relations Coun sellors, Kearns holds member ship in the Fall River Queque Aluminum or Steel chan Club, the Boston Clover 944 County Street Club, New. York Athletic Club NEW BEDFORD, MASS. and the New York Manhattan WY 2-6618 Club. He is a member of the
Fall River Chamber 'of Com
merce, a charter member and
former director' of the G~eat~r
Fall River Development Corpor
ation and 'is advertising coun
sellor for the Fall River Indus
trial Commission.
Kearns i~ married to the for mer Kathleen A. McGinnis of .. New .BedfOrd 'and has 'four' chil..;. dren, Kathleen A., a student at
Marymotint College, Arlington,
"SPECIAL. MilK Va., James W. and Michael A.,
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on the Legion of Mal·Y. Lecturing is far dlfferent from the life to which the Columban missioner .has been accustomed. When ordained in his native Ireland in 1929, Father McGrath was assigned immediately to China where he work:!d for 18 years. 'He was exiied by the Japanese, then imprisoned by the Reds and' sentenced to three years of 'solitary confinement. Father McGrath said at first the sentence terrified him. He detailed: "I thought it would be terrible but I found ,peace if no comfort ...... I left the cell after two years and eight months with a pang of regret. I had been happy there."
'Kearns
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THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 20, 1966
The ,Pan§h ,Parade
17
SANTO CHRllSTO, FALL RIVER A malassada supper is pl:mned for Tuesday, Feb. 22 at the par ish hall by the Council of Cath olic Women. A penny sale will follow, under direction of Mrs. Margaret Dyl and Mrs. Del Fur tado. New council officers will be installed at 3 Sunday afternoon, Feb. 13. In charge of arrange ments are Mrs. Mary Medeiros and Mrs. Virginia Brown.
ST. KILIAN, NEW BEDFORD A potluck supper for members and guests is planned for Wed nesday, Feb. 2 by the Women's Guild. Chairmen are Mrs. Herve Caron and Mrs. AnHa Neron.
Je$fJJ~ts' MD$Sg«!~
OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL, NEW BEDFORD New officers of the Woman's Club will be installE~ at a din ner Saturday, Jan. 29 at Thad's Steak House. TickE~t chairman is 'Miss Leonor Luiz.
Twenty-six Jesuit superioro and oDservers from around the world will meet at ~
OUR LADY OF ANGELS. FALL RIVER Parishioners will sponsor a pre-Lenten malassada supper and dance Saturday night. Feb. 19 in the parish hall. In charge of arrangements are Manuel C. Hilario, Lawrence Benevides, Arthur Rego and Mrs. Mary B. Silvia. A planning meeting for the event will be held Sunday, Jan. 30.
ST. THERESE, NEW BEDFORD The Couples Club annouces a bean supper Saturday night, Jan. 29; a Valentine whist for Saturday, Feb. 12; and a pan cake supper for Saturday, March 19. The Couples Club will serve a bean supper Saturday, Feb. 5. A pancake supper is slated for March; and a regular meeting is scheduled for Monday, Jan. 31.
ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER Mrs. Louise Goyette is chair man of a whist planned for Sat urday, Feb. 19 by the Council of Catholic Women. A meeting Monday, Feb. 14 win have as chairmen Mrs. Aldrich Bamford ;nnd Mrs. Stanley Bielusiak. ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild announces its annual mid-Winter gala for Saturday night, Feb. 12 at" Venus de Milo restaurant. Mrs. Alfred Medeiros and Mrs. John Steele are chairmen. A buffet dinner will be served beginning at 6:30 and will be followed by dancing and entertainment. The guild will sponsor a cake sale follow ing all Masses this Sunday and also announces a whist 1M Thursday, Jan. 27. Senior CYO members wlll lerve a bean and frankfurter lIupper in the school hall from i to 7 Saturday night, Jan. 29.
ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold a tea from 3 to 5 Sunday after noon, Jan. 23 at the Catholic Woman's Club. A meeting Wed nesday, Feb. 2 will be high lighted by a floral demonstra tion.
He@d]s
~n SYlI'aCM~<!;l NEW YORK
BOYS REGISTER: At registration for Bishop Connolly High School, Rev. James A. Woods, S.J., provincial secre tary for Society of Jesus, which will staff school, inter views Thomas Kroger, St. Joseph's parish; and Donald Oaswell, Sacred Heart Parish: both of Fall River.
ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER Holy Name Society and Wom en's Guild officers will' hold joint installation ceremonies at York~Firm 7 Saturdaly night, Jan. 22 in the parish hall. An entertainment' and buffet meal will follow. The guild announces a malas CHICAGO (NC) - Winner of sada supper from 6:30 to 7:30 the Thomas More Medal for Sunday night, Feb. 13 at the hall. "the most distinguished contri A penny sale will follow. Dona bution to Catholic literature" tions are requested by the pre during 1965 is Farrar, Straus & vious day. Giroux, Inc., of New York, for New Holy Name Society offi . publishing "Everything T hat Rises Must Converge" by Flan eers are Rudolph Cantin, presi dent; Gerald Cyr and William nery O'Connor. Letendre, vice-presidents; Jo The medal is sponsored by the seph Almas, treasurer; Louis Thomas More a.Association, 'a ST. ELIZABETH. Soares, secretary. non-profit organization of Cath EDGARTOWN olic laymen for the promotion Oak Bluffs and Edgartown ST. JOHN OF GOD. of literature and the arts. Holy Name Society members SOMERSET Dan Herr, association presi will hold an auction at 7:30 to The parish unit of the Con dent, announced that the medal night at Sacred Heart Hall. New fraternity of Christian Doctrine will be presented in conjunction officers of the society are Free will be canonically established with a Critic lecture at Munde man Willoughby, president; An at 7:30 Sunday ,night, Jan. 30, . lein College here Sunday, Feb. thony J. Rebello, vice-president; in the church., Rev. Richard P. 27. The publisher will be repre William Norton, secretary; Al Demers will conduct ceremonies, sented by Robert Giroux, vice fred Doyle, treasurer. beginning with a Bible vigil and president. , closing with Benediction. All "Everything That Rises Must parishioners are urged to attend. Converge" is a collection of the late' Flannery O'Connor's short SACRED HEART, Continued from Page One stories, the last of her writings NORTH ATTLEBQIRO A variety show sponsored by to be published. The author, who place in Bishop Cassidy High died in 1964 at the age of 39, also School, Taunton, on Friday, the Home and School Associa wrote the novels "Wise Blood" tion will be held at 8 Thursday March 18, and Saturday, March night, Jan. 27 in the Community and "The Violent Bear It 19. Away," as well as another 001Represented in the program Theatre, Sou t h Washington will be 29 religious communities Street, North Attleboro. of both men and women, and six Headlining the program win lay groups. be "Raynard the Magician," Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson and from Mansfield, who has per :Rev. Roger D. LeDuc,' both of formed on U.S.O. world tours. NEWARK (NC)-A series of Sacred Heart Church, North At Also to be seen are the Har instructions ,on the decrees of tleboro, are in charge of pub monettes of North Attleboro, the Vatican council will be pre licity for the program. four times international choral sented for the laity in Sa~ champions; .Clin Fuller, folk Heart' Cathedral during Lent, it singer; IUchard Lavache, West has been announced by Arch Roxbury organist; several piano bishop Thomas A. Boland of artists; a sketch by the La Newark; Continued from P~ge One pierre family; a brother-sister In a letter to priests of the accordion presentation; and mu New Bedford Area: Wednes archdiocese the Archbishop also sical comedy selections by stu day, Jan. 26, 7:30 P.M., Bishop announced that a special com dents of the parochial school. 'mission would be organized to Stang High School, North Dart General chairman is Paul arrange for instruction of cler:' mouth. Fournier, aided by Edward Su gy and Religious of the archdio Fall River Area: Wednesday, prenant, program; and Francis cese. Feb. 9, 7:30 P.M. Mount St. Mary Ouellette, tickets. Proceeds will Academy. benefit the association's scholar ship fund, which sends one pa Taunton Are a: Wednesday, rochial school graduate yearly to March 2, 7:30 P.M., Bishop Cas Bishop Feehan Hi gh School. sidy High School. ST. PETER TH£ APOSTLE, Attleboro Are a : Wednesday, Prescriptions cclled for PROVINCETOWN March 16,7:30 P.M., Bishop Fee and Delivered Newly organized is a Guild han High School. LOFT
of Parents and Te<lichers, which CHOCOLATES.
Cape Cod Area: Wednesday, will cooperate with the parish's March 30, Barnstable Junior new school. Rev. Thomas C. 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 Mayhew will be $Jliritual diree High School, High Schoo! Road, 'New Bedford Hyannis, • P.IlL
Honor Publishers
New Wins Thomas More
Medal for Literature Contribution
Vocation
Council Instruction Planned for Laity
Msgr. Medeiros
LAIIVI ERE'S
Pharmacy
...
jf@ Me~fr
lection of short stories, "A Good Man Is Hard to Find." In the citation accompanying the medal, the association says in part: Al'ainst Indifference "Flannery O'Connor set her self a tremendous task, one, as she said, that was not easy to make transparent in fiction, es pecially in our day when most people consider words like 'mys tery' and 'supernatural' to be merely quaint. "Nor was she dismayed when her work was not understood or misunderstood. Her long and trying illness gave' her a first hand knowledge of what it is to live and work against long odds. She fashioned her writing style into a bludgeon against indiffer ence. 'When you have to assume that your audience does not hold the same beliefs as you,' she said, 'then you have to make your vision apparent by shock-to the hard of hearing you shout, and for the blind you draw large, startling figures.' "
ELECTRICAL Contractors
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Moyne College,' Syracuse, next Tuesday to reappraise Jesuit mission approach in the light ctl the Vatican council. Father James P. Cotter, 8.J.. director of Jesuit Missions, Inc" here, said the four-day meetin{l, sponsored by Jesuit Missions and the Jesuit Mission Procura tors of the United States and Canada, will be the first world wide meeting of the society'e mission superiors. Position papers for the meet ing will cover the mission struc ture in the United States and Canada; the use of Jesuit man power; the use and development of financial and material re s(,urces; auxiliary sources o! manpower; collegiality and the missions; co-operation with di ocesan bishops in the missions and with religious orders anlll ~ongregations and ecumenism and the missions. 'Deformed Ideas' The unprecedented meeting of Jesuit mission officers was given added impetus by the recent dif> cussions in the Vatican council on the missionary activity of the Church. In those discussionlJ, Fajher Pedro Arrupe, General 01 the ,Society of Jesus, criticized what he termed "deformed ideas" regard~ng mission work. Too often, Fat her Arrupe claimed, the missionary teacb ing seemed to be geared to chil drell and the uneducated, thUl!l holding llEl appeal to persons of Il higher cultural level. He called for a greater caution in the Be lectioll of missionaries and 11 better appreciation f)f non Christian cultures.
'Aid Injured Hindu BOMBAY (NC) - President Heinrich Luebke of West Ger many as well as the Catholie charity organizations in that country and India have cooper ated in donating a wheel-chair to a Hindu who lost both hi!! legs in a railway accident.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Jon .. 20" 1966
Board Helps Bishop In Diocese Affairs
RENO (NC)-Bishop. Robert J. Dwyer has ordered a reform in the government of the Reno diocese in keeping' with the spirit of the Second Vatican Council. The bishop said that an eight SAN FRANCISCO (NC) member board of diocesan. _ The University of San priest-advisors, six of whom will ' Francisco has announced one be elected by the clergy of the of' the 'largest gifts in its diocese, will assist him in deci sions on clerical changes, forma history. It will benefit theology tion of new parishes and discus studies. Father Charles W. Dullea, S.J., sions of 1411 major problems fac president, disclosed that under ing the Church in the state. the terms of a trust and the will The vicar general and chan made by the late Albert Jose cellor of the d{ocese will be ex Zabala, the university's Depart officio members of the board, ment of Theology will receive the bishop told a conference of immediate annual income of clergy. The other six, four pas $.45,000 and eventually the entire tors and two non-pastors, will be income from 2,100 acres of Za:-. elected by the diocesan clergy. bala's Rancho Arroyo Seco near He said the first election will be Soledada in Monterey County. held in the nearfture. The land is valued at more than tiRE $2 million. Zabala, who died July. 22, 1965, was a descendant of one Of Spanish California's firs't fam ilies. Under his will the Zabala Family Foundation has beel! es tablished for the support of the ological studies at USF. 'Father Dullea said Zabala had expressed hope that through the foundation the university would become the West's leading theol ogy center, with resources avail able to scholars of all major faiths. According to Father Dullea, funds from the Zabala F01Jnda tion will provide for: Largest Collection Purchase of Protestant, Catho lic, and Jewish theological books and periodicals for the theology collection of USF's Gleeson Li brary. The collection is already the largest on any Catholic cam pus west of the Mississippi, thanks in large part to earlier assistance from the Zabala fam ily, he said. Establishment of a chair in theology to be named in mem-' ory of Honore F. Zabala, a son killed in World War II and to be occupied .by theologian of national or international stature. Establishment of the Albert J. Zabala Fellowships to assist lay men engaged in graduate studies in theology. Chairman of the theology de partment is Father Albert J. Zabala, S.J., tbe late rancher's eldest son..
Gift to Benefit Theology Study At' University
(
lOr. Raver Recital Set in Taunton World-famous organist Leon ard Raver will present the sec ond of a series of recitals mark ing the installation of a" new organ at Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, at 8 tonight. Assisting him in parts of the concert will be "students from Coyle. High School, Taunton, trained by R~v. Joseph P. Delaney, curate 6.f Sacred Heart Church and assist ant superintendent of schools for the Fall River Diocese. Dr. Raver's program will in clude Three Noels by D'Aquin; the Gloria from a Mass by Cou-
TOPEKA (NC) - A district judge has ruled the Kansas mo tion picture censorship s)'stem is unconstitutional. 'Shawnee County District Court Judge Marion Beatty noted in his ruling that the U. S. Supreme Court has. held that_ IIOme forms of motion picture censorship can be constitutlonal•. He held, however, that the pro visions of the Kansas system did not' provide adequate !'safe guards" for unobjectionable films. State Atty. Gen. Robert C. Londerholm indicated that the ruling will probably be appealed. 'The case originated when the Columbia Pictures Corporation refused to submit films to the Kansas Board of Review for licensing.
.Catholic Cent<ell'
..
SAIGON (NC)-The corner stone of the National Catholic Center of Vietnam, to be bl.\ilt close to the" cathedral here, was blessed by Archbishop Angelo Palmas, apostolic delegate in Vietn!lm. Construction of the building, which is to have four stories, is expected to begin in February.
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NEWARK' (NC) - Spedal Masses were scheduled in most churches of the Newark arch diocese during the observance of the" Chair of Unity Octave at the request. of ArchbishOp Thomas A. Boland. The archbishop asked that the Prayer of the Faithful speCially composed for the octa've be re cited at all Masses during the period. He also gave permission for the scheduling of an eveninl Mass each weekday during 'the octave at all parish churches and suggested that other special de votions be held. -. Archbishop Boland noted'that
the Vatican council's Decree on
Ecumenism states that "public.
and private prayer for the unity
of Christians should be regarded
as the soul' of .the whole ecu
menical movement."
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perin; Fantasia in F Minor, K594, by Mozart; Flourish and Fugue by J. Cook; Clavierubung, Part 3, by J. S. Bach, including Prelude in E flat, Three Chorale Preludes (in German) and Fugue in E flat (St. Anne). Varied Career "Dr. Raver's varied career has included study and concert work abroad. He holds degrees from the University of Puget Sound, Syracuse University and the Union Theological Seminary. He is director of music at the sem inary and is also organist for the Church 0;: the Incarnation, New York City.
Sacred Heart's organ, origin ally built in 1879, was rebuilt in 1965 and dedicated in November in an inaugural recital by Dr. W. Raymond Ackerman of To ronto. The parish organist is Mrs. Joanna F. Alden.
Hold 'Unity Octave Special Services
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By Fred Bartek Tomorrow night marks the beginning of the seoond round of competition in local high school basketball leagueEl. After having played each team once, Bristol Ct>unty and Narry League teams now have some idea what io expect the second time around. In the N a r r y League Holy time these teams meZ saw Attle boro the vicioR". But sinca then Family of New Bedford got the Fairhaven B]ue Devils have outside help last week when dropped only one decision and
Westport knocked off second place Old Rochester. This gives the New Bed ford Parochials .n two game lead rounding the half-way mark. Durfee High has only a one game lead in the BCL. Stang High of North Dartmouth and Coyle Bigh of Taunton ore still very much in the ruuning in the Senior Circuit. In the Hockomock League Oliver Ames of North Easton. riding high on the talent of Tom Clay, dumped Sharon from the unbeaten ranks and took over first place by half a game. The OA Tigers at the same time pre served their undefeated status. It is a case of jumping from the frying pan into the kettle for Durfee. First place Durfee just played Stang .last Tuesday to take sole possession of the top spot and now has to face Coyle tomorrow night. The Coyle Warriors tied for the championship last year and would like to get back into con tention. The Billtoppers took the Warriors earlier in the year and DOW have a slight advantage in that they win be playing on their home court. Coyle at this time is still minus the services of big Harold Cromwell who was seriously ill and hasn't played in two weeks. Cromwell is a doubtful starter in tomorrow evening's contest. Stang will face Ne,w Bedford Vocational tomorrow in a tilt that should give the Spartans a little edge but will be by no means a pushover. These two teams have built up a tremen dous rivalry and anything can happen. Vocationill will have a serious height disadvantage but only lost to Stang by 10 points the first time these teams met. John O'Brien's Stang boys will Dot take this game too ·lightly as they no doubt remember what happened when Voke played Stang last Fall in football. It was one of the biggest upsets for the Artisans in recent years. Two teams fighting to stay off the bottom of the league will meet as North Attleboro hosts Bishop Feehan tomorrow night. The North forces upset the Shamrocks the first time they met but neither team has en joyed much· success in league competition. Leading scorer for the North Rocketeers is Bob Di Fiori who in one game -last week tallied 32 points. Peter Phipps leads the Shamrock attack and has been averaging 18 points per game. Fourth place Attleboro will host Fairhaven. The Attleboro club has had its good and bl;ld nights. Last week the Jewelry City quintet lost a one. point de cision to Stang. Fairhaven faired o bit better by downing Bishop Feehan by 12 points. The first
that Wall ito Durlee. Aclion m the BeL next Tues day ev<::ning ands Feehan at Coyle, Atllebol1'o at Taunton and North AttZebol1'o at New Bedford Voke. That Attleboro-Taunton game could be an interesting contest. Taunton downed last year's co-champions by 17 points in their first meeting. Durfee High will have an off night and the Stang hoopsters will travel to Fairhaven in a non-league game. The Spartans will be seeking to reverse an earlier set-back at the hands of the Blue Devils. New Bedford High has been doing surprisingly well in the Greater· Boston League. The Crimson are in excellent posi tion to challenge the leaders and tomorrow night will visit Chel sea. Tuesday the Whaling City five will travel to Somerville to face one of the perennial powers of the Boston area. Old Colony action has Wareham at Hingham tomorrow and Abington at Wareham next Tuesday evening. Last year's champions of the Tri-Valley Conference, Norton Bigh School, have been having a rough time. Presently the Lancers are 4-4 and will host Dover Friday night and travel to Millis Tuesday afternoon. Whereas Holy Family got help last week from Westport (the Villagers beat second place Old :Rochester), this week might see the Westport hardwood combine hurt the Parochials. Westport will host front running Holy Family tomorrow night. West port did not fair too well in its first meeting with Holy Family, losing by 20 points. However tomorrow is another day and the way the Westport team has been pulling upsets it could be an interesting game. Holy Fam ily has been relying upon its five iron men (Coach Jack No brega has made no substitutes in some games) Richie Jalbert, Dennis Kennedy, Barry Har rington, Glenn Harris, and Mike Carr. Westport gets its scoring punch from Frank Silvia and Bob Pierce. Second place Old Rochester will face third· place Case of Swansea at the latters home court tomorrow night. The Case Cardinals have been coming on strong lately while the Old Rochester Bulldogs have been fading slightly. This game will tell whether Case will continue on the upward trend or whether Old Rochester will get back into the groove. In other games ·Somerset is at Diman Vocational of Fall River and Prevost of Fall River is at Apponequet Regional in Lake ville. Both varsity games are scheduled for 8 tomorrow night. Next Tuesday evening finds Dighton at Somerset, Diman at Old Rochester, Apponequet at Case and Holy Family at Prevost.
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HOSPITAL VOLUNTEERS: St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, presented awards to Friends of St. Anne, hospital volunteers. Shown, left to right, Mrs. Joseph C. Giblin, President, Mother Marie Ascension, Mrs. Emile Cote, Mrs. William Dechesnes, who volunteered most hours, and Mrs. 'Patrick J. Hurley, Chairman of Volunteers.
No Medical Aid Iowa Community Refuses Service Program For 4,700 Parochial School Pupils DAVENPORT (NC) - The Davenport Board of Education has rejected a request to provide medical services for thia city's
parochial schools.
A resolution was introduced by the Davenport Board of Health, which has provided health services for the city's private schools since 1929. It stated the city health budget is no longer able to handle the in creased number of parochial students who now number 4,700. The Board of Education re jected a plan to provide dental, nursing and medical services for parochial school students after hearing an opinion from an Iowa Department of Public Instruction official that such a plan would be illegal. The board's attorneys also had questioned the arrange ment. Board of Health ·officials said the plan could be wor~ed out under pr ovisions of the Iowa Minimum StandardJI Law. Ac cording to the legal opinions pre sented to the Board of Education, provisions on health aid ~ pd
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VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul V1 prayed on the eve of the feast of the Holy Family for the well being and defense of all families. Appearing at his window to bless the thousands gathered iD St. Peter's Square - many of them remaiiting in their cars because of the freezing weather -Pope Paul noted "how impor tlmt is this fundamental institu tion of society, how worthy, how dear, how sacred," He also noted that "all see IllS well how it must be defended, in its true concept, in its affec tions, in its authority, in its functions and in its rights and
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New Head PONCE (NC) - Msgr. Theo doreE. McCarrick, assistant to the rector of Catholic University of America in Washington since 1963, will be installed as presi dent of Catholic University of Puerto :Rico here on Wednesdq. Feb. 2 next.
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Jan. 20, 1966
Be, Narry League Teams Ready for Second .Round
WYman 9-6984
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vate schools apply only to spe cial courses in health, not to
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"We pray precisely that the family, this little society found ed on love, may always be un derstood in terms of the laWfl of God, that it may be honored, united and happy. May Mary bless the ever Christian family."
1m2] ,~©@ VasDl!' ~~1J'5m)e Cf- !Ble$~~d Var$Pun . BELLEVILLE (NC)-A ree~ ord number of 821,000 persona visited the Shrine of Our Lady of the Snows last year, Fathe1i' Edwin J. Guild, O.M.I., director. has announced. The number· of visitors in 1968 represented an increase of 93,000 over 1964, he said. Opened in May, 1961, the shrine near this nllnois commu nitr features an outdoor altar and an amphitheatre capable of accommodating 20,000 persons. ~
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs. jan. "
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