01.25.68

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Bishop Asks MorePapers InParishes .

Religions

Hail Unity

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Response

"Something in our home should keep ilia alive, and alert to meet OUI!' needs to­ EmY for an informed faith," the Most Rev­ ~nd Bishop emphasized today, and, he

Leaders of several religious faiths in Southeastern ~assachusetts today foresee an' even greater ecumenical spirit in this area following the greatest manifestation

~inted

out 'the answer is simple: Subscribe to Anctior," as he launched the 1968 subscrip­ ~n campai,gn for the diocesan newspaper, "Our E\eligious needs can ,never btl satisfied by listen­ llmrg to a Sunday sermon," Bishop Connolly de­ ((;lIared, stressing the fact that a diocesan news­ ~aper is the l"ight-arm O'f a Bishop and his clergy fum strengthening the faithful. ' "Let us loyally help ourselves, o~r tfamily and <iil!e Diocese through support for The Arichor," ~e Diocesan Ordinary asserted, expressing the lJnope that this year "the greater part of the ~rishes in the Diocese of Fall River are 100 j}er cent readers of the The Anchor." The Bish­ ~'s statem~nt follows: "Many things are expected of a Bishop, by flllergy and faUhful alike. But none in his senses would expect t'he head of a diocese to do every­ ~ing himself. He simply has not the time, and, £lDr some tasks, he may not have the talent, So, 51 he is wise, he delegates responsibility to others. "Such is the case with 'The Anchor. It was' @ happy decision made 11 years ago to publish ~ur dioccsan weekly, which has proven its worth 0>yer and over again. It has brought us all closer 1;ogether, We are more closely knit as a diocese. OlDr knowledge is surer, our faith ,stronger, our ~tlook more truly catholic, pur sympathies more Turn to Page Eighteen

IF@~m ~5V'~r, Mass.~ Thursday, January 25, V@~o

]2, No.4

@

1968 The Anchor

,u. s. B~~~@ps ,to Make FM~d

Arrest Pri'esft's In Brooklyn Appeal fer Oversas ,Re!~~f For Sit-In DETROIT (NC)-The 22nd annual U.S. bishops' aid I

fund appeal for overseas relief will be held March 17-24. Archbishop John F. Dearden of Detroit, chairman of the ~ministraJtive board, U.S. Catholic Conference, announces in a letter to the bishops "z the UnIted States. The programs operated by Catholic 4'Ppeal week will end with Relief Services - overseas aid i. special collection in the and development agency of American Catholics - in 70

, BROOKLYN (NC)-Two Brooklyn priests have been arrested along with four wel­ fare recipients for participat­

1968 PRICE iOe

$4.00 ,per Yem

of support for unity at services in various churches last week. The feeling, of coi:lfidence is !;lased on an ex­ cellent laity response at services conducted in several communities within the. confines of the Fall River Diocese. Some have observed that the 'grass root' en­ thusiasm is running as high, if not higher, as any section in the entire nation. Congregations taxed the capacity of several churches of differing denominations from Mans­ field in the northern part of the diocese to Den­ nis on Cape Cod. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River, a leader in the ecumenical movement, will bring the octave, of prayer for unity to a close tonight when he speaks to a congregation at the Episcopal Church of Our Saviour in Somerset. The Ordinary addressed, a Newport Lutheran church gathering last week. And while the Roman Catholic prelate has been occupying the pulpit in Protestant churches, Bishop Anson Phelps Stokes, Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts, has joined in the Christian Unity Week observance. He spoke to a group in Turn to Page Sixteen

Superior General Speaks:

Melville Maryknollers Still Our Brothers: McCormack OSSINING (NC)-The head of the ~aryknoll Fathers -Father John J. McCormack, M.M.-has -announced that the U.S. foreign misSoion society will lift the suspension of two priests who have been linked to the leftist guerrilla . . movement in Guatemala if the two return to the sooi- dISCUSS the case. The prIests , h -Fathers Thomas and Arthur ety s headquarters ere 00 Melville, brothers frOm Newton,

ing in an all night sit-in at a local welfare center. Both priests are part of an ex­ mol' ethan 18,000 Catholic countries in Africa, Asia and perimental diocesan program which calls for direct involve­ ~i.ll'ches of the nation on Sun- Latin America. Aid is distrib­ ment with people in poverty­ cby, March 24. '. uted by the agency to all in stricken areas. Fathers William . Proceeds from the appeal h'elp need, regardless of race, color J. Duncan, 30 and John Hyland, ~pport the emergency relief, or religion, 29, live in :10 ,apartment in the iiocial welfare and self-help In his letter to the American Bedford Stuyvestant, area of bishops, Archbishop Dearden Brooklyn and run a neighbor­ , The new Nazareth Hall Pre­ hood action center. said: Vocational School at 707 High­ "In 1968, Catholic Relief Ser­ . According, to the Brooklyn land Ave., Fall River'will con­ vie.es will complete its 2:ith prQ-:­ D.ePllrtment ,of Soci8;l Services" duct· an open house from, 1:30­ Ann~unced gram year. This agency has be­ the priests Ie, about 40 welfare ' 5:30;' Sunday afternoon, Feb., 4.come the largest single volun­ '!'he C han c cry Office an­ recipients to the welfare 'center' . Located, on. the north east' ll!Ounced today the transfer of tary aid organization in ,history. for 'interviews on bids for' 'comer of Highland Ave. and "It has made available for Rev, Hal'old J. Wilson from as­ emergency' grants. The over-' President Ave., it serves' in llistant at st. William's Church, the relief of the world's poor, in night sit-in began wl1en the de- training the older exceptional !'<all River, to St. Patrick's cooperation with governmental ,mands of fuur welfare clients children of the Diocese following (Ohurch, Fall River, as assistant. ' and intergovernmental groups were answered with counter­ their courses at Nazareth Hall Father Wilson was born in Turn to Page Fourteen ' Turn to Page Fourteen at 887 Highland Ave. ~l Ri vel' on May 22, 1940, the lJQ>lll of Harold E. and Veronica Griffin Wilson. Heilttended the , Turn to Page Two

Nazareth Ha II Open House

Curate Transfer

Is

Asserts' God Speaks to 'Men'

WASHINGTON (NC) - The , U. S. Navy chief of chaplains, Rear Adm. James W. Kelly, a Baptist, believes there is "a deep religious concern" on the part of U. S. military-personnel in Vietnam. "In all of my 26 years in the miUtary community," Adm. Kelly has observed. "I have never before seen this concern so mature and expressed with such depth. There is a definite search for, and expression of, a dynamic and' vital faith in God. "It is evident," the; Navy chaplain chief continued, "from church attendance and counsel­ ing interviews, in courage, brav­ ery, good will,' loyalty, and through people relating to peo-

• In

[R<.®~5gious

Naval Ch5®f Cites 'Deep

/U:V. HAROLD J. WILSON

......

pIe. "I feel," he added, "the expe­ riences our people, are going through are genuine and ,last­ ing."· Adm. Kelly said that in the Vietnam theater of operations "more people are going to c~urch on a Sunday-to-Sunday basis than back home." The chaplain chief estimated that of the U. S, military personnel in Vietnam, nearly 90 per cent (about 400,000) belong to the 18-25 age group. Out of this numb'er, he said, about 18 per cent attend reli­ gious services on Sundays and 'holy days. "Back home," he added, "the percentage is smaller-about 14

Vietnam

Conc,ern'

per cent-for the same age group." The Admiral expressed his gratitude to the churches of America for providing military chaplains of high caliber and he commended the chaplains them­ selves lEor "giving a fine minis­ try to the young men and wom­ en of the armed services overseas." ' There are in Vietnam today 110 chaplains attached to Navy and Marine Corps units ashore. This is the heaviest concentra­ tion of Navy chaplains ever commited to shore combat in a single geographical area, the Naval Personnel Bureau's eccle­ siastical public affairs section has announced.

Mass.-had been ordered in Dec­ ember to return to Maryknoll headquarters here to dIscuss their Guatemala activities. They Qoarded a plane from Guatemala City bound for New York on "Dec. 21 but reportedly changed their course when they reached Miami and want to Mexico with ihtentions of attempting to re.. enter Guatemlila. Turn to Page Two

Priest in Virginia Lives to Relate A Close Call RICH~OND (NC)-A 36­ year-old priest here had an

experience with all the in­

gredients of a nightmare­

responding to a woman's phone

call for help' in the night, grap­

pling with a man for a pistol,

narrowly escaping being shot.

It happened to mild-mannered

Father Clement J. McClintock,

diocesain director of the Con­

fraternity Of Christian :Qoctrine

here in Virginia.

~ Father McClintock related that

Mrs, Dorothy S. Brinkman, 41,

phoned the: rectory, saying that a man, armed with a pistol, was in her first,~f1oor apartment. The priest trieCl to persuade the woman to phone the police but !ihe declined. "Ordinarily I wouldn't haV"ia gone on such a call," he com­ mented, "because we get 00 Turn to Page Ten

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'2 .,' 'THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFal! River-Thurs. Jan. 25, :1968 ',.

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Parley to ,St:"dy

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Youth Awards',

OFFICIAL

Diocese of FaII' Ri.ver . ASSIGNMENT Rev. Harold 'J.' WilSOJ..l,' assi~iant St. William Parish, ' Fall'River, to St. Patrick Parish, Fall River, as assistant.

at'

Assignment effective Wednesday, January 31',1968.

~~"';O~~" Bishop -of Fsll I l i " , r - - a ­

M«lHlvknoll SlliJpeI?D@[f' Continued from Page ·'One When their fHght from Guatemala and their disagreement with Maryknoll, superiors there were revealed in the' Guate­ malan press, Father McCormack, issued a statement reporting they had never come~ to New York and announcing their sus­ penSion. That statement explained only that the Melville' brothers had btterferred "in the internal af­ fairs" of Guatemala. It said they bad been suspended because they "refused tx> comply with the re­ quest of their Maryknoll super­ ior in Gatemala" to return to New York and diScuss their ac­

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'. CURIA ClHlANGlES: Gabri~l Cardin'al a'a~on~~"l~it/has been appointed by Pope Paul VI' to, head the Vatican Con­ gregation on Catholic Education, succeeding Giuseppe Car­ , dinal Pizzardo, right, in a cOJ;ltinuing series of ~hanges in 'the Roman Curia. NC Photo.

A symposium ror leaders all Girl Scouts, Boy, Scouts and Camp Fire Girls of Catholic faith will be held at St. Wi}.. liam's Center, Fall River, from 2 to 6 Sunday afternoon, Jan. 28t under the auspices of the Cath­ olic Committee on Scouting and the Marian Committee of the Diocese of Fall River. Program chairman is Joseph F. Murphy of Mansfield, and moderator is Rev. Walter A. Sullivan of Fall River. Featured g u est speakellil will be Edward Finney of 'Wash­ ington, D. C., for the Boy"ScoutB of America; Mrs. E; Vincent Brimley of' Berkley fori PlYm­ outh Bay Council,' Girl' Scouts of America; and Miss Ruth E. Dowdell, New York City,: fOlr the Camp Fire Girls. ' Panel discussions: will, ' high­ light tlhe afternoon program. They will be for the purpose Cl2 ' distributing information. on youth awards; and will take thJ8 form: Explorers, Pope Pius Xl][ Award-Rev. John F. Moore and Francis Frazier. Boy Scouts, Ad Altare, Dell Medal-Rev._ John F. Andre. and William N. Guilmette. Cub Scouts, Parvuli Del Medal-Rev. William '1'. O'Con­ nell and John D. Silvia. ' Girl Scouts and Camp Fire Girls, Marian Medal Rev. Roger J. Levesque and Mrs. Harold E. Ward. The meeting will be open .. the public.

Father Nevins also clarified the Maryknoll Fathe,rs' position, on Sister Marian Peter Bradford, a Maryknoll nun: who was in­ volved with' the .priests in their political activities' and left, ' U.S. C<aJ~lhlolic Relief Services Is Pi'o~.~ing Guatemala with them. She has not returned to New York either ' 'Aid for Sic:iHan Earthquake Victims and is ·reported to be with them' in, Mexico. NEW YORK (NC) U.S. the earthquake victims :175 tons The original statement by Fa- ' Catholic Relief Services is pro­ of clothing from ,the, 1967 ther McCormack regarding sus- , viding both supplies and emer­ Thanksgiving - Clothing Collec­ pension said in part: gency funds to aid victims of tion, that were unloaded in "Because Fathers Thomas and the earthquake that took more Naples. Arthur Melville have refused to than 300 lives and le# about It will also send an additional, return to the United States and 10,000 persons homeless in Sic­ ily. . 90 tons of clothing due to arrive discuss 'their work in Guatemala this week in Naples. CRS is try­ and because, they have refused It is also making available to ing to divert the shipment so to comply with the request of Continued from Page One that it goes directly to Palermo, University of Massachusetts. tivities~ their, Maryknoll superior in " The release said that Father' Guatemala, it has become necesNorth Attlelboro Area Sicily. Amherst; St. Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn.; and St. John's McCormack "expressed his con- sary to suspend them ,from To Hear Drug Lecture The overseas relief agen'cy of seminary, 'Brighton. cern for the safety of Fathers priestly functions." U. S. Catholics is also sending Thomas and Arthur, Melville" The statement also outlined Capt. Joseph M. Jordan, com­ Ordained on May. 21, 1966 m and that their suspen~ion from the work of Maryknoll in Latin manding officer of the ,Vice a special shipment of blankets j St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, arid is ,making available $5,000 . priestly duties will be lifted America and described some of Control Unit of the Boston' Police by Bishop Connolly, the newly "when they retu'Iil to ,Maryknoll, the mission work. done by the Department, will address youths' for emergency relief to Catholic assigned assistant at St. Patrick'lI and discuss their activities in, two .suspended , prIests. of the No. Attleboro area at Charities organizations 'in, ~iCily. Parish, Fall River, alsO se~ed Guatemala." , ' Father Thomas, Melyille, 38, 7:30 Mon'day evening,. Jan. 29 , The Rome, office' of' CRS has at Holy Family Church; Taun­ "These men are brothers,~" is,. the older ,of the two ·priests., il1c,~t.'MarY~s S~hoOl. Hall, been -informed that' it 'can-'make ton, and St. Mary's Church" No. Attleboro." '., ' ,, ' I ' Father McCormack siud. "While .. ,B9rn ,in Boston il1c ~930, ~ ~t-, "4~tl~~~., ' , '., ~'. ' additional ..funds" available i,f The 'trarisfer 'Will become ef­ we don't agree with the c;our,;e .tendE:d St. ,Thomas" Aquinas The CYO.; and, CCDunits of necessary. ,.',:,: .....:' fectiveon' Wednesdili. ,. Jah: 31. they are taking we are concerned grade school. and Boston" College_ I St.. Mai-y~s Parish are sponsoring for ~heir safety." ' High School in that city. He en,." the affair: , Ao~se, S~~ay , The press release also said Fa~ te~ed Maryknoll after ~aduat-:, " Capt. Jordan, 'a Navy veteran," ther McCormack '''wished to ing from high school and· was ",is a member of,tqe International' Brother Ronald Rocha, sqn of .~tCOn"oUY,Jiigh clarify two points regarding the ordained in 1957. Narcotic' Enforcement· Officers ' Mr. and Mrs. JoSeph, :Rocha, . An open, house will ',be ,'con­ suspension," The release, said: His younger brother, Father Association and the Drug Ad­ "The ,suspension became effec- Arthur Meiville, 35, was also • diction Rehabilitation, Board of dueted 'on Sunday, aftemoo,Q, , Acushnet, took temporaO' VoWll this' month at' 'the Wa"t~liam no­ tive on Dec. '23'which was 48 born' in Boston 'arid" entered "Massachusetts. He is now~at-', Jan.. 28, at Bishop Conoolly'Higb hours after they had agreed to Maryknoll, aftler one year lilt.· tending the Northeastern. ,Uni...'. School, Fall River.: AlI,prospec'-, vitiate of the "Sa~red Hei&ts of tive students and their 'patents Jesus and Mary. After '8" brief ' be at Maryknoll, N.Y., but had Boston College. He was ordain,." \' versity Law Enforcement Pro­ borne Visit, he will be stationed are invited to the affair. in fact not arrived. , . ' ed in 1961. . I gram., ',Ii . in Washington, D. ''The second point of the ~~:-. In Guatemala, the two Priests. \ 'A member of the Boston Po­ 'Rev. John.'G. Co~~liier, S.J., pension which was aI!no~<;ed' .. y.rere' active in improving-living; lice Department for ,22 'years, principal, will give.an ,orienta­ on Jan. 18 was thaJ .it~ Was in­ ~n<iitions for Indian famers ,Capt. Jordan has lectured over tion talk at,.2, .3 and, 4 o'clock. yoked because the ~athers Mel-.. ~d' 'joined forces in 1964 - to • the' radio and TV on his sub­ All, both students and parents, ville had disobeyed the.i! local bring a group of people from the ject of "Abuse of Drugs". will then be given the,opportu­ 'FUNERAl, superior's order to -leave Guate­ mountains to the 'nation's low­ nity to inspect the school com­ mala and return ~ Mary~noll, la~" :area. Here the priestS 469 LOCUSY'SiRUT plex: and faculty me~bers will in New York," the release said.' taught· the people how tp use fALL RIVER~, ~st:,: be 'available to ansWer any Father Nevins 'told. NC News' ' fertilizer' and introduced a new Service that this meant that,Fa­ hybrid: corn. Father Thomas ar;-.' FRIDAY-St. Polycarp, Bishop, questions that might be in the 672-3381 - ;;.. ther McCormack did not, judge rived in Guatemala in 1957 arid: MartYr.' III Class. Red. MaSs minds of future students or their Wilfred C.:-James 'E. parents. ' ,: I the priests' political activities, Father Arthur in 1961. 'Pro~er; Glory; Common Pref­ Driscoll: Sullivan;' Jr. /but had suspended them 'ror ace. their disobedience in failing to ' SATURDAY-St. John Chrysos­ report to headquarters., Ne«:f1'ology 'tom, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor- of the Church. III FEB. 2 . .. . 'Class. White. Mass Proper; Funeral Home' Most Rev. 'William Stang, Common. Preface. D.D., 1907, First Bishop 0.£ Fall SUNDAY-Fourth Sunday after e=Ul!l'!l~g'al 571 Second Street DEVOTION

River, 1904-07. ·Epiphany. II Class. Green. Rev. Patrick F. McKenna, Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Jan. 28-St. Anthony, Taun­ Foil River, Mass. Broadway ~913, Pastor, Immac~late Con­ Preface of Trinity. ton. " . 679-6072 ception; Taunton. . MONDAY-St. Francis de Sales, Sacrell Heart, Fall ,River. MICHAEL J. McMAHON Rev. John L. McNamara. 194'1, Martyr. III Class. Red. Mass Bishop Stang Convent, VA 4-5000 Pastor, Immaculate Conception, Licensed funeral Diredor Proper; Glory Common Pre­ North Dartmouth Fall River. Registered Emba1mer face: Our Lady of Mercy Con­ Rev. P. Roland Decosse, 1947, Bishop, Confessor and Doctor vent, Attleboro, Pastor, St. Hyacin'th, New 'Bed­ Feb. ~H 0 I y Name, New TUESDAY-St. Martina, Virgin, .ford., ' " . , Bedford. of the Chur,ch.' III Class. ~anUVAN FEB., '3 St. Joseph, Fall River. ' White. Mass Proper; Glory; ;, Rev. Antonio 0.' Ponte, 1952, Common Preface. ' St. Anthony's C9Ilyent, ~UNE~AL HOME. INC. Funeral Rome PaStor, Our 'Lady of Angels, WEDNESDAY-St. John Bosco, Fall River. It Marcel Ray,-G. Lornllne,Roy .550 Locust Street· Fall River." Confessor. III Class: White. • Roger LaFraAce Fall River, MaSS. FEB.' 4 Mass Proper; Glory; Common fUNERAL DIRECTORS, THE ANeNDS Preface. ' ' Rt. Rev. Hugh J. Smyth; P.R., 672..2391 $ecC!nd Class :Postage Paid llt. Fall River, ' 1921; Pastor, St. Lawrence, New THURSDAY-St. Ignatius, Bish­ 15 Irvillgton Ct•. Mas~,: Publlsheo every Thursday at 410, op, Martyr. III Class. Red. Bedford; 1st Vicar General, Fall Rose E.SuWvaa" New Bedford,., . . .' 11 : • • _, :igtl~~n'ba::~I~~ePr::sll01R~ Mass Proper; Mass, of ,preced., River, 1904-07; Administrator.of " 995~5166:,:,', Jeffrey E. Snl1i:v."": RIver, SUbscrlptioa price bJ IOaII, postpaid Diocese. Feb.-July,' 1907 ­ , ing Sunday. &4.00 per ,..,.' ,

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me ANCHOR-Diocese of ~an River-lhurs. Jan. 25. 1968

Holy Father Asks ,Support Of Wored Catholic Press

3

This year, Oatholic Preoo Month witnesses a signifi­ pam of our religious news media. lI'he Holy ~atheZ', united with the entire hierarchy of the ~rld in the great council, has given·to thIS Catholic press a charter ·and clear mandate Thus he is empowered to be­ h the conciliar Decree on the Media CYf Social Communica- . come with bis Church the "an­ nouncer and witness of great iron, in which we read: news - the resurection of man

liant forward step on the

Duty of AU through the Gospel." "'To instill a fully Chrisitian The truly educated and well lIPi-rit into readers, a truly Cath­ informed Catholic will find in _c press should be set up and his Church's press the answer iincouraged. Such a press­ to his desire for that trutb and ~ther fostered and directed by that love will give both buman ~lesiastical authorities or . and Divine dimensions to his Catholic laymen should be hopes and _ eff'Orts to' create a !l!dited with the clear purpose IJIf forming, supporting and ad.., better world. A New Age ~cing public opinion in ac­ eord with natural law and Cath- ' The Caholic press bas merited lillie teaching and precepts. wen the confidence of the Vati-· ''It should disseminate and can Council. In faithfully trans­ properly ex;plain news con­ mitting its news, it ;has given the .rning the life of the Church. ~ world a new vision of the uni­ iMoreover, the faithful ought to versal love which is in the ~ advised of the necessity both Church of Christ. In. the ful­ I!D spread and read the Catholic' fillment of his great function it Il)ress to· formulate Christian has become the leader instead of ijadgments for themselves on all the follower of the secular jour­ ~nts." nals. They have eilrgerly made Further study of the decree use of the Catholic press services lieVeals the dignity and the duty and candidly expressed their ~ "Catholic journalists," as well gratitude for this help. as the opportunity and obliga­ . Through continuing dedica­ tion of all the faithful to enjoy tion and ever-increasing techni­ !file Catholic press and the obli­ cal slcllls, the Catholic journalists ~ion to promote it. and the readers of the Catholic Symbol of lFaith preSs wiH join hands as mission­ With his fellows in the pro­ aries of that truth and that love' lkssion the Catholic journalist which seeks, announces, and s:»ill be a keen observer of fallen promises to anxious humanity a new age of justice, security, ~an in the paradox of his earth­ [ly environment. When, in the freedom and peace. oorvice' of truth, he must narrate moral evil, he will do so in the (Interests of "a deeper knowledge P~rish ~d study of humanity" and with I1be hope that he will thus "re­ ~l and glorify the grand di­ Rev. Leo F. Curry, former IIIllensions of truth and goodness." pastor of St. Joseph's Church, : His special oharacteristic as a No. Dighton, and now on sick ~tho.lic journalist, however, leave !l.t the Priests' Hostel, Fall ~);l be to ·"lift up his head," as River, was honored at a testiPope Paul VI exhorted, to look , monial conducted by parishion­ apward to the light which comes en 01.. the No. Dighton Parish ~m the altar as "a symbol off and- attended by relatives and ~r faith and of the Church friends. ~ you, are bent o.u serving." Hobert McGuirk, served as toastmaster and William Bleau, ebainnan of the social activities committee lY.f the parish, pre­ sented Father Curry a gift as a ROME (NC)-The eOUl\cil of token of appreciation by the "e- presidency of the Italian parishioners for the work con­ Bishops' Conferences has de­ tributed by him during his pasktrste. ~ed that all parish Masses in lIaly will be celebrated com­ Plresentations were also made pletely in Italian as of March 24. by representatives Of the The council, headed by Gio­ Di/rbton Lions' Club, Women's ~ni Cardinal Urbani of Ven­ 'Guild, Church Choir, and the iee, is composed of 14 archbisb­ Girl SCouts. ops who are beads of regional Entertainment was provided diocesan councils. The council ruled that LatiD ,by the parish choir \lnder tbe Iftay be used by priests celebrat­ direction of Thomas Marsden. ing private Masses, but that it is eompulsory to use Italian for parish Masses and for all Masses in which the people will take Notes Centenary part. Until the present, the Can­ Saint's Death on of the Mass in Italy has been VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope m Latin, but the councll has Pad VI has sent a letter mark­ DOW approved a translation into iDg the 16th centenary of the J.talian of the Canon. The council also approved death of St. Hilary, who was the two other documents, one con­ first bishop of Poitiers, France. eerning pastoral problems of the The letter, addressed to Bish­ post-conciliar renewal in Italy, op Henri Vion of Poitiers, reo ~pecially concentrating on the called that St. Hilary was the clergy and another on the need first doctor of thll Latin Ch\lrch, tor political unity of Catholics earlier doctors having written in the light of the approaching in Greek. The Pope noted that political elections.­ the saint was a figure who is . The latter document, which still very real and· with signifi­ will be released later, is re­ cance. He q\loted the saint, who stricted to a pastoral exhortation WI'Ote: addressed to the "consciences of Catholics." While its exact con­ "It is not lawfw tJo detach tents were not immediately onself from the divinely re­ made public, it is known that velllied faith, which the Church, the bishops discussed at length its custodian, gives us nor is it tile problems of the proliferation lawful to interpret it in a sense differing from that which bas of pornograpby and the' cam­ paign to legalize divorce ill been taught to 1&S by the

Fr.

Hon<Drs Leo Curry

Parish Masses In Italian

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. NORTH EASTON TRIDUUM: Members of the Parent Educator Group of the CCD in the Immaculate Conception Parish, No. Easton, preparing for coming Triduum are:

JosePh Camara, Evangeline Crocker, Francis M'ahoney,' Esther Mahoney, William Duke.­ man, and Evelyn Dukeman.

Plan'Three Days of Thinking Together' '20th Century Renewal Program at No. Easton A Renewal' Triduum will be beld in Immaculate Conception Churcb, North Easton from 8 to 10 S\lnday thro\lgh Tuesday evenings, Jan. 28 to 30. Entitled "Three Days of Thinking To-. gether," the program will in­ clude talks, instructions, con­ celebrated Masses, panel discus­ sions and question and answe~ sessions. Its purpose is to contribute to a clearer \lnderstanding of the Catholic faith, especially during these times of change and confusion. Talks and discus­ sions will aim at helping Chrjs­ tians discover their role in the Christian renewal of the 20th century and to carry that voca­ tion from the church into the home, the marketplace, the

neighborhood, the community, t;he parish and the world. The triduum will be conducted by five Diocesan priests and a layman. They are Rev. Francis T. McFarland, secretary of the Metropolitan Tribunal of the Archdiocese of Boston; Rev. Richard G. Cunningham, curate at St. Joseph's parish, Medford; Rev. James F. Hawker, assistant headmaster at Cardinal Cushing Academy in West Newbury; .Rev. Richard M. Horrigan, cur-

AustraHans Adopt Vietnam Orph(t!lns

ate at Holy Family parish, Rock­ land; Rev. Leonard R. MikulskI. curate at St. Christine's parish, Marshfield; and Mrs. Charles J. Cabral, marketing director of Industrial Steel Corporation of Cambridge and member of the Archdiocese of Boston Confra­ ternity of Christian Doctrine Advisory Board.

InstaUation Set GREAT FALLS (NC)-Bish­ op Eldon Bernard Schuster was installed as spiritual head of the Great Falls diocese Tuesday in St. Ann's cathedral here in Montana. Archbishop Luigi Rai­ mondi, apostolic delegate to the United States, was the installing prelate.

SAIGON (NC) - Two Viet­ namese orphan children, aged two and three, have been adopted by two Australian families, one in Sydney and one in Melbourne. Organization Traveling with them from Cardin~~ Leger . Saigon was Anna C. Forder of PLUMBING & HEATING, INC. MILAN (NC) - Paul Emile St. Louis, an official of U. S. . Sales ana Service Cardinal Leger was awarded Catholic Relief Services, who fOl Jomestic tbe Golden Heart award and a has had charge of the adoption . ~ and Industrial check for $10,000 by an 'Italian . program since arriving in Viet­ Oil Burners philanthropic organization for nam in late 1966. 995-1631 Miss Forder said that the two his decision to leave the Mon­ 2283 ACu.)HNET AVEt-WE treal archdiocese and work' with little girls are the first Vietnam­ NEW BEDFORD ese OrPhans ever adopted by lepers in Africa. The' award was given by Australian families. the. Christmas Night Founda­ ~ ··ut:~~~lOn~~·-·-·""~-·--r:::::::;;::rl tion, which eve r y yea r chooses some outstanding public leader whose work or actions have given special inspiration to brotherhood and goodness. Cardinal Leger was not pres­ ent to accept the award. How­ ever, it was accepted for him I! by Father Roland Duhamel, rec­ I! i\ tor of the Canadian College in ~me. '

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Jan. 25, 1968

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A~®~ W@M~~'~ ~@@OC rP>D~frMrr~

Of!E~g~Q~~ l~ff®,~@[fW W@~~d

By lRt. lRev. Msgr John S. Kennedy

The English novelist Alec Waugh bas put together a book of reminiscences entitled My Brother Evelyn and Other Portraits (Farrar, Straus and GIroux, 19 Union Sq. W., New York, N.Y. 10003. $6.95). The 'subjects of most' of the portraits are men of letters; ,life, the two met fewer than a many of them deceased and dozen times. all of them yesterday's em­ • 'War~, Tender inences. The author calls the Evelyn W aug h impressed

book "an attempt to present a many people as being snobbish, picture of the English literary pitiless, and tough. No, says his world as I have brother. This was all a shell, a known it," but persona he wore for the public cautions t hat ·eye. In actuality, he was "gentle "it is in no warm, and tender." sense compre­ Evelyn believed, with some hensive." Much reason, that' their -father 'pre­ of it makes ferre'd Alec to him, and· this left rather'sad its mark. Once, as a child, he reading for observed to their mother that anyone who their father loved Alec more. has been inter­ than him. There could be no ested in English dsmur. But, he wanted to know, w l' i tin g' and d'idn't his'mother love him more writers for sev­ than she' did Alec?' She loved eral decades. It shows how them alike, was the reply. frail and brief is fame. Some of "Then," he said; "I am lacking these men were celebrated, in love." even dazzling, figures in one's He was always devout. When; own youth. But their careers de­ again as a child. he was told by clined, and their output has his mother that his besetting sin been downgraded _with the was his quick and unkind passing of time. tongue, he asked her whether Two of' the subjects, for ex­ she knew what her besetting sin ample, are Hugh Walpole' and was. Startled she said, "No. Somerset Maugham. One re­ What is it?" "A lack of faith in members the heyday of Wal­ Catholic doctrine," he said . .In pole's success. 'He turned out later years, recalling that ex­ solid novels with machine-like change, she remarked, "He was regularity. He sporisored young -completely, right. I do lack writers, heartily recommended faith." new books, lectured all over the Alec Waugh gives some fresh place, worked in Hollywood, details of Evelyn's stay at Ox­ even appeared in a moyie ­ ford. He. tells us that, although David Copperfield, if memory obviously gifted, Evelyn had no serves. He was the very epit­ inclination to write. In fact, at ome of the popular and pros­ , one time he considered ,becom­ perous literary man. ing a carpenter's apprentice. Yet always there was some­ Their mother, unimpressed ·by thing synthetic about him. He the fame and fortune which he was a literary careerist, a att,!ined as a writer wQ.uldsay, poseur as much as 'a producer. "But furniture is so useful; And when he proudly stood at besi.des he would have ·been the peak of his renown, he was happier desi['ning furniture" cruelly cut down by Maugham, Clumsy Speech by means of a devastating take­ 'Alec Waugh says of Evelyn's off in the no'vel Cakes and Ale. conversion, "Mentally and spir­ The story of that murder of a itually he would be at peace. reputation is to,ld by Mr. Waugh. ,Socially, too his life would '-ShreWd, Cleve.r have a different focus. He was If Mr. Waugh is approximate­ to find himself increasingly at ly right in his estimate of Wal­ ease with fellow Catholics, and, pole, he tends to exaggerate less at ease with members of Maugham's powers and accom­ other faiths." plishments. Maugham strikes During the last year's of their one as having been personally father's life, Evelyn and this far more disagreeable and dis­ parent were closer than they tasteful than Walpole, althQugh had ever been before, and Mr. Waugi'. is easier on him. His reached an easy harmony. belief that some at least of Alec Waugh provides many Maugham's work will have a signifcant notes concel'l1ing his permanent place in English lit­ brother. For example, "He was erature is hard to accept. Maug­ as sentive to clumsy sp~ech as ham was immensely shrewd and is a mOan with an acute sense of clever. But he was far from smell to odors that the majority being a first rate writer. of us do not find offensive'" '" * "The most engaging and the I, remember * ,,'* using the wOl'd best done, part of this book is 'you' when I should have said the section dealing with Evelyn 'one.' I was referring to the way Waugh, ·Alec Waugh's only, and in which ~wo people arc so younger brother. This is not a close that they do - not need' to full-length portrait, nor does it explain _themselves to one an­ purport .to be such. It deals other. 'You'd say,' I remarked, with Evelyn's life only up to the 'that they could talk in short­ time of his reception in the hand.' 'I wouldn't say anything Catholic Church. of the kinrl," he snapped." Why so? Alec Waugh ex­ Duke's Downfall plains "I cannot enter imagina­ Good novels about sports and, tively into the mind of a person athletes are extremely rare. A for whom religion is the domi­ fairly good one is Robert Daley's nant force in his life, for Only a Game (New American whom religion is a crusade." Library, 1301 Ave. of the Ainer­ Moreover, Alec Waugh saw.lit­ icas, New York, N, Y. 10019. tle of Evelyn during the latter's $5.95). It concerns the making childhood, because being five and' unmaking of a -pwfessional years the older, Alec was away football star. at school in Evelyn's early days. Mr, Daley is the son of the They were really close, he sports columnist 'l.rthur Daley. says, only during the decade . He has spent six ~'ears as a for­ 1922-1'932, at the start of which eign correspondent (mostly 9n Ev~)~'" ".~." .,. '- f/xford. Dur­ sports) for The New York , ing the Hltit LJ y"",'" ?f ,Evelyn's Times, another six years as pub-

BISlHlOP OF CAMDEN: Auxiliary', Bishop George H. Guilfoyle of -New York has be~n named by Pope Paul VI' to.be bishop of Camden, N.J. The see has been vacant since the death last October of: Archbishop Celestine J. Damiano. NC Photo.

~~MfTch

Reports Incre@!5e M'embersh5~

NEW YORK (NC)-CathoJics in the United States now nUmber' 46,864,910, including all familieS of the armed forces, both .. at home and abroad, the diplomatic and other services overseas; ac­ cording to the ,1968 YearbQok of American Churches, published by the National Council of Churches here. The council's Yearbook quoted the 1967' edition of the Official Catholic Directory, and stated. that the new total reflects aq increase over 1965 of 6]8,735 or 1.3 per cent and just 0.2 percent more that the general popu)a­ tion increase. The latest information com­ piled by the National Council of Churches reveals' that churoh membership in the U.S. is up just under' one per cent over' figures reported a year ago. 'The total given is 125,778,656 coni-, pared to 124,682,422 recorded' last year. The Yearbook qualifies mem­ bership and other church statis-, tics by pointing out that ·they , "are not all current but are the latest available." It warns the 'reader not' to consider them , more than "a general indication" , of 'church membership. IDefinitions Vary Dr. Lauris B. Whitman, Year­ book editor, said that church statistics have always suffered from inadequate computing and reporting facilities. Definitions of membreship vary from de­ nomination to denomination, as do' fiscal, or .reporting years, 'he said. Departing from the practice followed for most ·of its 50­ year history, the current Y-ear-' book prepares the way for more accurate reporting by separating current and non-current data. Of 241 religious bodies listed, 124 reported their most r.eceot,

licity director for the New York FoOtball Giants.. Duke Craig, aged 30, is a half­ back fOF a National Football Le~gue 'team identified only as the Big Red, He is a kind' of na­ tional hero, a symbol for the youth of the land. Football has be.¢n his life since high school days. Playing for Texas, he was an All-American. Before joining the Big Red, he married Carribel, a co-eel. at Texas. To all appearances, he had h~d a ·good, rewarding life. But the truth is other than that. Carribel is a shrew and vicious. She 'tricked him into.' marriage, has' never gi ven him love, is a slovenly hou~ekeeper, <\' constant complainer, shows no interest whatever in his work.

Archbishop Pleads

For Underprivileged!

statistics, adding up to a totlllll membership of 104,867,944. Non-current tables carry £ig­ ures ranging from 1936 repor~ to reports that are year or two out-of-date. The combined total of 125,778,656 is published only to permit comparison with former years. The Yearbook reported that while the upward trend in Cath­ olic college and university en­ rollments continued, the number of full-time pupils in Catholie . elementary and high schols de­ creased. Catholic enrollment ila out-of-school religious education programs is reported in third place at 6,155,742, while the Southern Baptist Conventi01ll reports 7,601,095, and the MeUl-­ odist Chureh 6;758,905. "

a

LoneU~®$S

PrO~I?@M

3.Day. ,­

Theme

Loneliness was the theme of 0 three day experience in Chris­ tian living conducted tliis week· by Rev. Harold Wilson of St. William's parish, Fall River, at Packard Manse, Stoughton. Stu­ dents from Bristol County Com.,. munuity College' Newman Cll;lb ,:and Bridgewater State College ~ 'were among those in attendance and an .art program was pre­ sented by Victory Noll Sisters from North Easton. Rev. George Coleman of St. Louis parish, Fall River, assisted Father Wil­ son, as did area Methodist and Lutheran clergymen. The program emphasized io­ f-ermal discussion and the art presentation ,was aimed at en­ oouraging participants to con­ front themselves and theill' hopes for the future. P-ackard Manse is an ecumen­

.jcal bouse· of study and ~etreat._

President of its interdenomina­

ti6nal board of directors is Rev.

£harles K ..Van Euw, professor

of ,patristics and Oriental theol­

ogy at St. Jobn's Seminary.

Brigbton.

. KINGSTON (NC) - Kingst-on Archbishop John J. McElent;!y, S.J., appealed here for increased aid to the underprivileged of the world in a sermon preached at ONE STOP

the. opening of Human Rights SHOPPING CENTER

Year in Jamaica. The archbishop, born in Wo­ • Television • Grocery Exposes Reality burn, Mass., emphasized that • Appliances • Furniture "w.e should live lives 'of faith Craig becomes involved with W04 Allen St., 'New Bedford another woman, Margie Berger. marked by the generosity of Christ and His perfect charity From her he gets the sympathy, 997-9354 * Co • It should never happen understanding, 'and love his wife that we 'have plenty while has never 'given him. The affair puts his career in jeopardy, but, others are underprivileged and lack many of the elementary ELECTRICAL he i persists in it. Suddenly, as human needs." Contractors his' Wife,' learning of his infidel­ ity,. takes spectacular revenge, scandai flares and Craig is broken. This novel is best in its de.­ piction of the inside of one pro­ ReliqioUl fessional sport. Mr. Daley is Toachen very knowledgeable in the field in the service and he writes of it incisively of the Church and colorfully. The glamor is' " rlw. Brotb"r Gay. V.I' .JL .stripped away and the harsh, 601 Wiacbester Street grhjIding reality exposed. 944 County St. Ii"",toa HDgbJaada. II.... 0Ill1. The principal characters have New Bedford little' substance. Mr: Daley goes miqutely into the love-making of Puke and Margie, but does ~ illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllll11I11I111I111I11111111111I111111111111111111I111111111 not' make them, or Carribel, come alive as persons. His best portrayal is that of old Francis Xavier Boyle, owner of the INC. E team, a pietistic cynic whose .~ chief concern is money. Mr. Daley is properly. severe about the religious trimmings of a materialistic enterprise. -

COR~E~A & SONS

XAVERIAN BROTHERS

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Better

Re~ations

NiEW YORK (NC)-President Lyndon B. Johnson called ~for year-round education for better human relations in a message rele.ased here by the .National Co~ference of Christians and Jews.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaR Rivv=.UN. Jan, 25, 1968 ,......

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CCD WORKSHOP: Demonstrating use ofaJ:t in religious education, Vietory Noll Sisters conduct series of workshops in Diocese. Left, women register f'Or recent session. at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton. Jean ]Bouchard, Oassidy student, aids. from IeH, Miss Madeline Wojcik, St. Joseph's parish, TauntOn; Mrs. Gertmde Norton and Mrs. Thomas Ross,

Canada Hospitals

Oppose Proposed Lega I Ab~lftio~s

St. Ann's, Raynham; and Mrs, Glenn Walker, St, Joseph's, Taunton. Center, dynamic Sister DePorres, OLVM, demonstrates puppet creations. Right, participants make their own puppets, attired in colorful ponchos supplied by Sister DePorres. to help create festival atmosphere. Next workshop will be held Saturday at Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth.

CCD Workshop Session Learns to Celebrate 'Everyday Festivals of God's Presence ,.

By Dorothy- Mitchell Eastman OTIAWA (NC)-The Ca­

Miss Blue is on foot two. She wears black hornrimmed glasses on her round little !J1ladian Catholic Hospital As­

troCiati9n, which represents nose, and atop her tiny head sits a mortar board, badge of her impressive academic cre­ 300 institutions-providing dentials. Miss Blue has some very definite-opinions on the place of art in religious edu­ cation and she is sharing these with Diocesan CCD teachers this Winter in a series of work­ 4@ per cent of the nation's shops run by the Victory esses-to get" quick, colorful ef- of festivitiy in the workshop Ilnealth service-has launched a c:eampaign to defeat a proposal Noll Sisters. Teachers in the fects, full of movement." . were the ponchos that Sister ~ legalize abortions. New Bedford area will have To prove how easy it really is DePorres had made for each The abortion measure, which an ()pportunity to hear some . to make puppets, Sister chal­ participant to wear. Made of lllTould permit the operation to

words of wisdom from the perky puppet and her creator, Sister DePoHes, OLVM, at Stang High School on Saturday, January 27th. _ At a recent workshop at Bish­ op Cassidy High School" given foq' catachists in the Taunton area, Miss Blue explained why we need· the arts in religious ed­ ucation. "To quote George Bem­ aI'd, Shaw-'Education without the arts can be torture'," she said, in a voice that sounded- re­ markably like Sister DePorres'. "We've' got to use every means of visible communication we can. We have talked too long." Sister DePorres added. "If you just say everything, your words are unseeable." Puppets a Tool "As people of faith, we want ~ express our faith. The big t!'l.ing. is to allow ourselves to enjoY' ou I' religion. Ar:t can make both, of these possible." , Miss Blue wanted to get the COOlversation back to ·puppets. "In her book, The Child in the Church, Montessori says that our main purpose is to help the child RUWe freely with and 'for others," she SQid. "Puppets have a unic;tue and Catholic Services W0nderful way of bringing joy _To Supply C@mels and, color and movement not only to the sharing of the Good AHMEDABAD (NC)-A Jesu­ News, but also to the new exper- . llt priest of the Ahmedabad dio­ lOOse here in India has obtained ience of working and cooperat­ ing within a group, working . oupport of the U.S. Catholic Re­ Hef Services (CRS) in a project toward the presentation oj( a Co supply camels to the Rawal story or song for others to en­ joy." oommunity. "Aren't puppets d'ifficult 1Jl) A community of camel drivers along the banks of the Sabar-' make?" we asked. "Certainly not," Sister assert­ Ci1Qti river, Rawal was hit last 17ear by flood which left the ed. "There. are many simple, m­ BJ!eOple homeless and destitute. expensive ways of making P\llP­ Father Diaz Garriz organized pets-and easy to make stages or mcting platforms. You mtnst ~lief operations and then pre­ 32nted to CRS a long-range pro­ /coop the techniques simple ­ i)ect for purchasing camels and don't let the children become bogged dowJIl with ted!OUB pn»­ ~e cultivation of the river boo.. ~rotect

a woman's mental Of' physical health, was part of a aweeping revision of the na­ ~on's criminal code introduced Dec. 21. The Catholic Hospital Ass<>­ cr:iation information director, Father John W. Mole, O.M.I., @aid the group would present its !reply to the abortion measure Feb. 8 before the House of · Con~mons' Health and Welfare Commi.ttee. Grave Subject He said the association wilt tlSk creation of a Royal Cam­ · mission to examine "this com­ plex and grave subject." The association also charged Utat Justice Minister Pierre Trudeau "abused his office" by_ backing the pro-abortion move­ - rnent without .first hearing fram · oponents. The abortion legislation the · 118S0ciation said, will also divide Ute country at a time when · Canadians need to reestablish tlnity. This was a reference to the growing sentiment in large­ lly C.atholic French-speaking Quebec for independence from · ehe rest of the country..

lenged the workshop class to red, green, blue and gold jersey, make several of their own. She they lent an ail' of gaiety to the distributed styrofoam balls for class. heads, brads for eyes, assorted Spontaneous Vision pieces of colorful cloth and yarn, Sister DePol'res borrowed the plus glue, scissors, staples and idea for the ponchos from Sis­ other arts and cra~ts items. ter Corita, with whom she A sign on the puppet screen . studied for five years in Los had announced at the beginning Angeles at Immaculate Heart of the class ,"All People Are College. Makers." If the class had any "Sister Corita feels that art, doubts on this point they were and this includes puppetry, gives soon dispelled amid the cheer­ us a sort of spontaneous vision ful bustle of activity as they of the festival values of life. created their puppets. The· artistic phenomenon par ex­ The comments flying back and cellence is 'feast', and this phen­ forth in the classroom would omenon is universal." have startled a casual observer. "Every created being, like "My nose is. ·madeof a pipe every event, whether joyous or cleaner. What did you use to sad·, grandiose or trivial, always make yours?" possesses an aspect of celebra­ "1 think I'll use that red yarn tion, a kernel of grace. The re­ to give my little fellow a beard." ality needs to be grasped in its In the short space of 15 minutes depth, its inward or outward 30 people' had made 30 puppets, intensity, its intimate or collec­ each as unique as its maker. tive fervor, its innocence, its Adding to the color and air f~tasy, its sooden explosion o£

Mozambique Bishop Prays With Moslems VILA CABRAL (NC)-Bish­ op Eurico Dias Nogueira of Vila Cabral joined Moslems in their mosque here to pray for peace. The bishop had removed his shoes, as is the custom in mosques, and after the prayers preache.d a sermon in which he appealed for prayers for peace, frequently referring to the Koran, the book that Moslems believe contains the revelationll made to Mohammed by Allah. Bishop Nogueira concluded his sermon b)' praying in Arabic to Allah for peace. . meaning, its contagious strength and finally, above all, its poetry." "There can be around us a climate of creativity and joy, a world of little everyday feasts. This is essentially what creation means-little everyday festivals of God's presence." "All these things," Sister said, with a sweeping gesture at the room filled with colorful dis­ plays of psalm banners, mobiles, TV murals, cpllages, paper bag 'cities, dioramas and clay models, "are to help the children ex­ press their faith. We must learn now to celebrate our faith in Christ Jesus and to do this we use all the color, music and movement we can." Even Miss Blue couldn't have expressed it better.

POPE JOHN XXIII:·

"The Catholic P1'ess is not only impo1·tant but necessary. Its activities in

the United States a1'e vast and vital. The Diocesan paper belongs in eve1'y

home." 0


6

THEANCHOR~iocese,ofFall River-Thurs. Jon.

25,1968

The Price of 'Peace

Gamaliel's Words Still Valid

Priest Stresses Complete Change - In Newman Goal

The past few days have made interesting reading for NEW ORLEANS (NC)­ anyone conscious of the travails of the Church of God in An official in National N ~ America. Religion always makes for a good press. The new man Apostol-ate work saM year has already witnessed some rather startling events. here: "The whole emphasis of Newman is changing. We 8ftI The recent pastoral issued by the American bishops has getting rid of an organizatiod evinced comments pro and con from both the secular and 'that has been in existence siDed the religious p r e s s . ' , ' 1946, and we are changing OUII , The iI,sual spate' of editorials urging a just and equi­ goals." , table solution to the vexing Viet Nam question have been \ Fat her Chades Forsyu.. O.S.B., of Boulder, Colo., vice­ dutifully read and digested. An offering in the current president of the National Ne... LOOK magazine attempted to ,evaluate the impact of the man Chaplains Association, saJGI Dutch church on American Catholicism. 1'he question was a Newman chaplains stu«t;, asked ,"Will :the Dutch change Catholicism in America?" workshop here "is the' best ~ , ample of the changing Newm~ There are many subjects pertirient to the moment discuss:. goals,~' ed in this report. "Rather than an administraoo The minds' of serious contemporary, Christians are the meeting, this is just a studJ! troubled. Just where should we stand on Viet Nam? What meeting;' with no business ~ about priestly celibacy? Can I follow ,my eonscience re­ sions involved," he declared. The workshop, funded by,. garding birth control? Is the Catholic Church going to allow grant f~om the National NeWlo\l divorce and remarriage? These, and similar challenges form man Foundation, dealt w. the basis of many a convers'ation at the office or factory "Problems of Faith and Mini900 coffee break. try Today." Principal speakeill 'were Dr. Eugene FontineDt The Dutch Augustinian monk, Robert Adolph, author of chairman of the philosoiphy de­ the much discussed and controversial book THE GRAVE partment, Queens Universi_ OF GOD, speaks of the irrelevancy of' the church. Is God New York, and Father Dav:i4 really dead? To the average' man in the street, the query Burrell, C.S.C., Newman chap:.. is an enigma. Sad to say, lor most Godless souls, the in­ lain at Louisiana State Univeio­ sity, Baton Rouge. , quiry has no e:ff.icacy at all. They could care less. :':cw Outlook ' It is true, the Church of God has problems. This is noth­ "This is the new outlook ~ ing new for the followers of the Nazarene. We are in the Newman," contin~ed Fat h e«l process of renewal. All change involves adjustment. The, Forsyth, "the emphasis is away' ,Church exists, as always, to serve mankind. The question is from organization and towa~ creativity, activity, and thti -how can the church best serVe the people of God in these - .--.... apostolate. Everyone 'is now. troubled times? doing his own work. The Dutch' Catholics seem to, believe that liturgical "Another example of this ft)oo Rev. John F. Moore, ,St. Joseph's, Taunton and doctrinal innovations will lead to, a more sophisticated' organization is that the NeW"<> man student federation no 10Dlt" and spiritual vitality. Whatever opinion we have of the erhas national officers. Whe18 efforts of the Dutch, we cannot deny that they are differ­ the term of the old offtcers e»o ent and interesting. We need more than just a theology 'pired, no elections were held,'" of divergence. The'Church needs bold dynamic hOpes blend­ he conti!lUed. that ~- ed with sincere concerted action: The Church of God has , "This we call our re-nOllo=! 811~ays had a deep, maternal, abiding interest in pastoral structuring. We are mov~ toward: each group getting 10-0 concerns. Somewhere betWeen the intelligent but restrained gether on a local, diocesan, Cl!l! offering or' the American bishops' pastoral and the agoniz­ state level, and. are trying tal ingly ,different yet fascinating Dutch presentations, there What has happened to laughter? Why has the sense avoid getting top heavy. BufJ lies a warm and universally aeceptable solution. , , of the true comic disappeared? Laughter is infectious. It we have not yet figured a wBIJ: to maintain a national voice The Church's present labor 'Ix> adjust and identify in bi~ds people together in a sense of good will and fellow­ without involving the who~ these waning years of the twentieth century, is withal ship. In times of darkness and trouble the comic, bumor. structure, which would put till a healthy indication. Were efforts of, the Church of God has always helped people to ' back where we began," htI at this critical hour apathetic, then we would have reason fotget their woes. Yet, in today's stage he certainly would , added. be accused Qf being a fasciSt or to worry. We must have hope. The Spirit of God will see these days, it seems as if we, some A commission of 20 studen1lil other type of extremist. the Church through these catastrophic times. The words, are unable even to smile. - The so-called comedy that we and 10 priests met three times of Gamaliel in ACTS OF APOSTLES are more germane There can be little doubt do have is so sick that it Is foreed within the past year, working on the "nonstructuring," and i1J th~n ever !-"if this is man's design or man's undertaking, that a good laugh would cer- to rely on the lurid and lasdv­ will meet again in 'April at thG tainly help cast away some of ious. it will be overthrown: if it is God's, you will have no power National Catholic Educational the gloom that surrounds all of The sick 'joke only renects a to overthrow it." " Association convention. us. The national scene seems so ,sick mind. But it is no wonder.. Total Development self-conscious that even a smile Society has rejected humor New emphasis placed recentl7, . creates a crisis. Everyone is so even on the cultural l~ve1. :N9 , thin-skinned that we are suffer- _ good work of humor, is ever to has been to try to awaken the university's concern for reli-t ing from a national psychic de- be found at the top of the best­ gious studies as part of the total One way people know how much' they appreciate any pression. If Will Rogers ",:ere on seller lis~. educational development of tbci service is to imagine what would happen if it were no longer student, 6 provided. D'fhank God for Pea'nuts "Rathel' than placing our em-­ phasis on getting official credNl The Anchor has been a serviCe to the people of this The Academy Awards reject ' all culturallevels, what 'a trans-,­ for courses that,' VRl aTea for 11 years. It has served not only to draw th.em any film that is based on com­ formation, would take place ill wouldreligious teach," said Father For­ closer to one another' but to help them form a truly Cath­ edy. Television has been reduced American living. syth, "We are now trying to! ' We must remember that com­ olic mentality by giving them the principles and helping to 'a humorless and neurotic have religion treated as an aca­ philO6Ophy medium. edy only reflects a them make application of principles to present situations. demic <;lisGipline within the Have we become so depressed of life. A people who, have lost In all modesty, we would like to think that if The An-, by the events of our times such their humor have lost a way of framework of the university. 0 "Religion treated as a dimen­ chor were no longer around, it ,would, be missed; since it is as the war in Vietnam that we living. sion in human existence as opo. have lost this vital human gift? All we can say now is "Thank here, it should be supported and read. posed to a credo of faith in­ Has, the violence and crime in God for Peanuts"! volves many UIDVerS\ty depan­ LET YOURSELF GROW. READ THE ANCHOR. our cities destroyed American ments-anthropology,l sociolo§, hu~or? If this is the case, we 'Officials Return behavioral 'sciences," he said. are well on the way to destroy­ With the increase in the nUJDoo "opal Documents ing ourselves. , ber of Cahtolic students on see-­ It is about time that we BONN (NC)-Copies of Pope ular college campuses, the num-­ thought about this situation. To Paul VI's -encyclical On the De­ bel' of students involved' in tbIt those caught up in the world of velopment of Peoples as well as ,'Newman Apostolate has corre­ their own grim material pursuit copies of his appeal for a world spondingly increased, in both A , this might seem to be an insig- : Day of Peace, have been Ie­ numbers and percentages, he I"\I:F'CIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE __DIOCESE OF FAll piVER nifjcant 'problem. To those so turned to Vienna by officials of commented. Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River blinded by their personal ten- the Czechoslovakian post offiee sions such an issue is lost in 'the system. 410 Highland Avenue , stamped "Not Permitted, ill lPOfPle Aids Victims gloom of their own humorless Fall River, Moss. 02722 _ 675-7151 liy~ng. , the Czechoslovak Socialist Re­ "VATICAN CITY (NC )-:Pope , PUBLISHER 'If we - only could restore the public" by 'Czech officials, the Paul VI has sent a telegram oil Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. magic of humor to our living materials had been mailed to sympathy and has ordered GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER how'much better off we all Catholic publications and buD­ emel"gency aid for hundreds CIII It. Rev., Daniel F. Sholloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll W:Obld, be. If comedy could only viduals in, Czechoslovakia, ae­ _ families in Sicily who are the MANAGING EDITOR' revive itself as a new art form, cording to KNA, the '. German victims of 'an earthquake tbaI H1ueh J. Golden , has claimed at least 12 lives. and be appreciated, in i~eIJ: on - C?atholic news service.

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After Midterm' Examinatioltsu ' Busy­ :Weekend in' Store for Students :' "At Diocesan High Schoo~s

1968

;: .

~~ Top, 3 Million

It looks 00 be a busy weekend around Diocesan highs. :At Stang High in North Dartmouth the fifth annual South­ eastern Massaohusetts Folk Festival is slated for 8 Satur­ day night in the auditorium. Sponsored by tlhe alumni association, t~e event has tude tests they recently 'under­ eome to be an eagerly went. Areas ranging from elee­ awaited item on the Winter tronics to vocabulary were ex­ calendar. On Sunday after- plored.

- , ' '!

DOOn, Bishop Connolly High in Eve~here,everywhe~,mid­ , l'a11 River will hold open house terms thIS week, ,a~countmg no for prospective students and doubt for a scarcl~ of. other "Cheir ·parents. Orientation talks news, ~ut at Prevost High in , '. 'lrill be given at 2, 3 and 4 Fall River! P~ul Lizotte man~ :,' 'O'e1ock· in' the auditorium, aged to' ,Win cIty ,honors ,in the' .. there1ll be guided tours and fac­ ann~al- Vooice of Democracy ulty members will be on hand to 'speech cOntest before buckling 'llUlSwer questions regarding the down' to regu~ar studies. "I'admissions program. And Jesus-Mary reports that , ',.. SOphomores at Jesus-Mary high0r, 'edu~ation acceptances Academy in Fall River are wel­ include D~mse Macri, Vernon coming area eighth graders Court :JunlOr Col~ege; Jac~ue­ from 3 to 5 tomorrow afternoon lin~ Robert, Me~mack; DIane to give them a bird's-eye view Ratc~e, St. Ann.e s School ?f of high school life' and a penny Nursmg; Mildeleme St. Dems. . " Northeastern and UMass. sale WIll be sponsored by the At St th .' f .' .' S t rd . th h I ang e wmners 0 a t>eDlors on a u ay In e ~c 00 poster contest in preparation =~~~pr~~~d~u=~ benefit the for that Folk Festivat were Joan , p Conway, Allan Travers, Jayne :'", ' Entrance Exams Conway, Elizabeth Morese and Paul Leahy. Next year's high schoolers Tum to Page Ten will take entrance ana. place­ ment exams' at 8:30 Saturday morning, Feb. S at the school of their choice. The test w111 take three hours and results will de­ termine the scholarships award­ , cd by, most Diocesan Highs. No BChool records are needed at . WASHINGTON (NC)-What­ that particular time arid parents "ever, opportunities exist for need not accompany students. members of minority groups in Good luck everyone. low-level jobs, the title on the Bishop Stang's Junipero Club door and 1he carpet on the floor has announced plans for an are st111 usually reserved for Area High School Invitation white Anglo:'Saxon Protestants. Day to be held next month. The In a series of reports issued program will include a liturgi­ by the U. S. :equal .Employment eat celebration, a "rotating dis­ Opportunity Commission, ,New cussion" (what's that?), a cater­ York City's financial and corn­ ed supper and evening enter­ munications industries h a v e tainment. William Kavanaugh is been. charged with shortchang­ ehairman fur the event and all ing Negroes, Puerto Ricans and cJunipero Clubs in the area will Jews when they try to fill top­ be specially invited. , level 'jobs. Hard work is paying off as ,The report is expected to add S'tudents are inducted into the that: Although. the New York National Honor Society. At Mt. City population 1s about 18 per St. Mary's the bright ones in­ cent Negro and its total work elude 17 juniors and two seniors. ,:force' is 6.8 per cent Negro,' They are Christihe Coffey, Mar­ Negroes represent only 6.7 per gery Qazzero, Anne Bibeau, .cent of white collar employes in Mary Tyrell, Jane McDonald, banking and 5 'per cent in insur­ «::arol Costa, Suzanne Paquette.­ alice. Puerto Ricans, with 10 Donna Cabral, Cheryl Fur1 t' h Id tado, Jean' Howard, Ann Hefko, per cent of the popu a lon, e only 5.1 per cent of the white­ Ohrist~ne W~lding, Diane Lflvoie, ,collar banking' jobs and only CynthIa 0 Connell, M 0 n i c a: "2.8 per',cent 'of insurance jobs. Grace, Mary Cros,son, Pat Tal- : Most of these were low-level bot, Maureen Jaruck and Alice ' clerical positions. ' McManus. Business S~tistics At' Sacred Hearts Academy,' The 100' major companies in I'airhaveri, eight girls have New York City' "fail to match , joined the senior honor society. their economic leadership role They are Cynthia De Mello, with leadership in equal em­ 'Paula Pilot, Cynthia Sylvia. ployment opportunity." Negroes Rolande Cormier,' Patricia held 2.6 per cent of their white Kalife, Catherine Tourtelotte, collar jobs, and Puerto Ricans Doris Tremblay and Layne two per cent. The commission SYlvia. added that while the large firms have the resources to recruit Government Day on a large scale, "they are, in Upcoming for the Fairhaven fact, laggards." unit is a trip to Washington in The comunications industry was found to provide generally April. Moderator is Si~ter better opportunities at all levels Julie Louise, SS.CC. Cindy Rego, student council than business corporations. president at Holy Family High Data shows that the city's Jewish population-25 per cent in New Bedford, has added an­ other laurel to her crown. She'll of the total-is underrepresented at the management level in all represent HF at Student Gov­ Grnment Day in- Boston this industries' and that its tiny rep-' Spring. Also at HF, boys have resentation among business ex­ ecutives contrasts sharply withlreCeived results of Army apti­

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L - _ - - - - ' - __

LONDON (NC) - Lapsed Catholics in England and Wales may total three or four million, according to Father Kevin O'Brien, superior of' the Catho­ lic Missionary Society. "Our lapsed are an enormous tragedy," he wrote in his soci­ 'ety's monthly journal. "We make little headway hi getting ,~hem back." The Catholic Missionary So- \ ciety' iSa sinall group of dioc­ 'esan priests who' work on the home missions seeking converts and the retl,1rn of the lapsed. They. oVE\rride diocesan bound­ aries, taking the Mass and the sacraments· to remote ' rural backwaters, preach in halls and marke't :places, and devoted, their whole time to this work. Father O'Brien said he and the gl-oup's other priests find that a personal visit pays great 'dividends. The pessimism of practising Catholics - "it's no use going there, Father. They ne,ver go to church" - is un­

.-...."~•

STUDENT' COUNCIL: Student Council members at St. Anthony High School, New Bedford, are, f?eated, Diane Allain, parliamentarian; Loui~e Machnik, president,: Diane Bostarsche, treasurer;, standing, Elaine, Bousquet, chap. lain; Daniel B~ule, vice-pr~~den~; Di~ne' ,~Ch~~~f:'sec­ cretary. '

found,~d.

Urging parish councils to take an active interest in the prob­ lem, he said "there is too often much talk about parish finances or organizing this for others in many of the councils I have met. There seems to be little talk about doing something for those who have wandered or indeed fur those who have no faith at all."

'Survey Shows Strong White: Collar Bi~s Hit Gotham Financial, Communic:ations Arecas' o

la}/men Orgti!nize ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) -After almost a year of prepa­ ration, laymen and womeh of ,the RockVille Centre diocese have formally established the· Long Island Association of Lay-" men, an. organization dedicated :to "Churcn renewal in the spir­ it of the Second Vatican Coun-" dl.~ ,

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the generally high educational the difference between work level of the city's Jews. About and DO job at alL half th~ city's college graduates. are Jewish. The commission findings are based on information which, employers were required by law to submit in 1966 and 1967. The four reports focus on New York City and will provide the information upon which the commission will base its general: question to the city's business: Why have they not done more to eliminate employment discrim­ ination based on race, religion sex?

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PLUMBING &- ,'HEATI~G ~<9)~ ~<9~~~D~~@ £Q\~@[j'\)\1D®

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One report deals with the em­ ployment patterns in 100 major New York City corporations which account for 16 per cent of the entire nation's total out-" put of goods and services and. employ about 10 per cent 'of the 26 million' workers covered un­ der the commission's reporting system~' . Other' reports co~r the finan­ cial industry and the communi­ 'cations industry, and 'discriinl­ nation against' Jews. Most of the commission's work has concentrated' on racial discrimination rather than reli­ gious since, only about one per cent of the complaints it re­ ceives concern ,'the latter. A commission'spokesman said an­ other reason for the concentra­ tion was that religious discrim-' inaticn is usually at high levels, while racial bias often means

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8

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Jan. 25, 1968

Social Work

If You're Victim of Virus, Don't Share Your Germs By Mary Tinley Daly

This German blessing, meaning. "soundness" or iIi our Irish household after every sneeze. The proverbial "thief in the night" is no more sudden, unexpected and unwelcome than the bug,' by whatever name it goes this early 1968. diately respond, called up his "Why; you have Asian flu," reserves: the M.D. and the R.N. promptly diagnosed the Head iIi our familYL who coolly took of the house, who has been over. So, from folklore medi­ ~ealth," resounds

practicing medicine without a license around here for a long, long time. From there on, the M.D.-less med­ ico went· into his treatment­ stage. "N 0 w , 'you go to bed and stay there. rll bring up your meals and your medicine,." 'T h e go-to-bed bit was perfect. Indeed, there is no alternative when you ache in every bone, are shivery and at. the same time feverish, have a don't-care Dumbness permeating every sense. , But meals? The very thought was repulsive. There was a BOundless hope he'd forget ~ll about meals, even the tea-andtoast variety. As to the "medicine" he was preparing downo lltairs, it didn't really matter. Sure enough, shortly therelifter it appeared, rock-n-rye:_ the old-fashioned rock sugar' candy my grandmother used to keep on hand at all times and that now, can be procured only In the gourmet sections' of elite grocery stores, with rje whig­ key and hot water pOured over it.,

cine, we were switched to mod­ ern scientific treatment: a de­ congestant not nearly so pleas­ ant as ,our rock-n-rye, prescrip­ tion cough medicine that tasted far worse than a cheeseburger­ fluids, fluids, fluids; rest, rest, rest. One of the ~eatments worked, or a combination of the two. "Well, at least Asian flu is over!" I rejoiced, prematurely. "Mom, that's not flu," Markie, our nurse,' laughed. ''They've analyzed this virus and find it's not flu at 'all. Asian flu will be due in about a month!" Ugh, 80 this is just the fore­ runner of real Asian flu-like the alewives, those fish' which precede the arrival of the: shad each Spring? Whatever this virus is, it's nothing 10 court, rather a pklgue to be dodged; Stay Bome! According to reports, this virus is taking its' toll &very­ where: scl:Jools half empty, office forces reduced. As a sign in one Jarge office wisely advi~s, "When the bug bites you, stay home! We'd rather take on your work than take on your germs!" Same advice might well sp­ ply to Mass attendance. The ,precept of the Church requiring '''attending MaSs 'on all Swidays and holy days of, obligation'! should not be' ,carried beyond the limits of coJDJDOn sense and humanitarianism. We're all familiar, I'm with the holier-than-thou pro­ nouncement, "I wouldn't miss Mass on Sundays even H I had to crawl!" And this is INPposed .10 b,e the utmost in a plu-perfect Catholic? The crawling Part is O.K. but if the crawler is re­ duced to a weak .pulp of sneez­ ing, coughing, spraying a .whole congregation-fore, aft and side- ­ ways-with unwelcomeconta­ ginn, there is surely no virtue bu t a lot of vice in such pseudo-' sanctimoniousness. ­ One such, at .each parish Mass, can quickly reduce the congr~ gation on the following Sunday a~d cause, in between, it lot of DUsery.

The smoothing ,warmt1;l was .rood, very good. , "Now what would you like 10 eat?" The Head Nurse, stauilch­ l;y faithful to a' belief in "stuff-,' Jng a cold," ran down the menu: "Ha.Ql and eggs?" When this favorite dish was ,refused with a faint headshake, he trotted out further proposals: "A bowl of soup and a ham­ burger-maybe a cheeseburger?" The very thought was anath­ ema. '. Well, if this be Asian' flu, we thought', taking the impromptu diagnosis at face value, let's get on with it, adopting the adage of an old doctor we knew: "If you can ~eep -the patient alive long­ er than the bug, you've won!" Calls Up Reserves The Head of the House, be­ eoming perhaps a bit skeptical as to his skill in the healing arts when the patient didn't , imme­ Russian~

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IN LATIN .AM~RICA: Juanita, ~he daughter of an Ecuadorian "huasipunguero," an agricultural worker, usual­ ly of Indd-an lineage and economically a semi-serf, munc'hes on a corncob, which she calls "maiz." She and millions of other lirbtle girls and boys of the Latin American countries will be the subject of discussion in St. Louis as CICOP, the Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Program" holds its . fifth annual meeting. NC Photo.

There are definite tremors taking place in the fashion world and everyone who's any­ one in the dressmaking industry is watching London and Paris with telescopic lenses and op'en­ ing, his daily edition of Wom­ en's Wear Daily with more than usual interest. The item or in­ dication they're' 10 <l"k i n b,f 0 r .wit'h bated' breath is some­ thing that they an'd all fashion followers feel is t r ,em e 111 ­ dously important' and, that is whether the hemline is going to Block stay; on the "rise or fall to midi . length.,·' Sovie.t Paper Doubts Peace! Trip to China . Jtlsdoubtful that the active, WARS4W (NC)-Qn DeC'i> 11,. free-swinging woman of 1968 Religion Poll Results Pope Paul VI ~ve' 10 Italians will allow herself tobeforce'd into: the street-sweepjrig "new BONN (NC)-Prawda Ukral'ny, a message Cl'f peace and brother­ , . look" of post World War II days a Ukrainian' commun[st pa'per, ' hood as'hthey bee departed ' on what . but all indications point toward has expreSsed doubts about the' was to ave 0' an auto tnp . a change of some sort. The mini fr R h firidings of a religion poll con­ om orne t rough the SoVlet look has been with us for quite' ducted by the magazine N'auki Union to 'Peking. ' a few years now and ,the designi Religia. / • ' By N ew Year's Day they were ti ' , e r s know it isn't good business The poll's results showed that s II going to Peking, but not to allow the women of the world only 15 per cent of city people \'through Russia. The Soviet gov:' to 'get complacent about their 'and 30 per cent of the rural ernment toId the group that wardrobes. This certainly isn't population in the Ukraine heavy snows had made the , road ~hite Russia and Kazakhstan s 'ImpaSSl'ble an d ref used the way to sell dresses. The h 'f fashion industry may be a bit practice their religiop. . t em permisslOn or that leg, of more romantic than the com­ Prawda Ukrainy claims that the journey. putet business but in the , long these figures are inaccurate re­ The group had planned to trarun its goal is the same-profit.' flections of the extent of reli-' v~ through the Soviet cities of gious belief in the area, because Minsk and Smolensk to Moscow, London Watched many, believers refuse to admit then through Kiev and Odessa LOndon (8 compartive baby as that they practice religion. Ac.: - into Rumania. Instead, they will '8' style setter) is nevertheless eording to Prawda, fear of fines how travel through Czechoslo- being watched very closely by and imprisonment had driven vakD.a, Hungry and Yugoslavia, thpsEi! in the know (don't forget, many believers underground.' to Sofia, Bulgaria. ' . London started the mini look) As a result, there are far more The trip marks the 60th 80- and the big news from the Brit­ people practicing their religion niversary of the famous Paris- ,ish is that' hemlines are coming in' the Sovie' Union than the" of­ Peking auto ,race; which' was " down. Hardy Ames, who designs ficial figures .,how,' Prawda won by ,an Italian, ,Prince Sd" for "Queen ',Elizabeth and the Ukrainy concluded., . pione Borihese. .... .' ,coUrt· set," bas already shown his. ,

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LYNN (NC) - A Lutherd clergy leader in this area rec­ ommended combining social sel'­ vices (jf Catholic and Protestant churches and also ul"ged redue­ ing the number of Protestanfl churches by as much as 65 per cent. The Rev. Eugene A. Brodeen­ pastor of the First ~utheran church here and dean of the Eastern Massachusetts District of the Lutheran Church JD: America, made the recommen­ dations in a report. Catholic reaction to the PF&­ posal has not yet been voiced but Lynn Protestant clergymen hope to meet soon with Catholie clergy to discuss the merger proposal, it was stated. Churches should devote mo~ time to the spiritual needs oI! their members, rather thaD: competing against themselves, said the Rev. Mr. Brodeen. This can only be done by having fewer but stronger churches, be contended. He noted in Lynn theJ1! D Methodist churches and eight Baptist churches. Some of the churches have fewer than 100 members, some no more than 300 and unless a parish has at least 300 members it cannot ex­ ist, he contended. There are iii all 50 Protestant churches here and he would reduce the num­ ber to Hi or 20.

Spling collection with the' new midi or mid-calf hemline. Truly reminiscent of the thirties, these first designs'left me'a bit cold but then so did the mini skirts .when they first came out so I'm not an accurate, barometer. What I would like to see is more and more women making up their own minds and not fol­ lowing "(like a bunch of robots) the beatiful people or the jet' set or the go-go gang or which­ ever group is in vogue at the time. These people I have the money, inclination and time to follow all that is new and "in". However, the average Amer':' ican woman, may have the in­ clination but certainly not the time or the money that these darlings of the press can spend. on their yearly wardrobes. What many of these women spend on a single item we don't spend on a yearly family clothing aliow­ allCe. Therefore it is up to us as individuals to buy and wear what looks good on us and not what looks good on Baby Jane 01' Jackie. Whether skirts go down or stay up; remember you're an individual, not 2 ·sheep.

Priests Seek laymen On Personnel Board PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The coordinating committee of the Forum of Philadelphia Priests announced it will solicit di­ ocesan-wide support for a per­ sonne~ board to, be elected by the priests of the archdiocese and to include,laymen appointed by the priest-members. A Forum' spokesman' said the organization, would contact - all priests of the' archdiocese and, would ask them to send their .endorsement, of 'a personnel, board to the Council of Pries... ,

Nun Resigns Presidency Of Baltimore College BALTIMORE (NC) - Sister Cleophas Coste~lo has reo;. signed as president of Mount 51. Agnes.,..College for women ~ 15 years in the office. She said she decided to rest_ so she could devote more time to preparing an institute in lin­ guistics for junior high school teachers, which she will dired at the college next Summer. Sister Cleophas was named out­ standing, Woman of the Year" ill 1966 by the Baltimore Profes­ sional and, Business Women'­ Association. The 500-studEmt colI e g-e founded in 1867 is conducted by the Sisters of Mercy.

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THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 25, 1968

COhJn1HI~~$ts

Switch, D~$cu~s Ea'cch ' Other's Sp~cma~tDe$

Seeks to Repea~ Aid Restdct~ons

By Joseph mid· MariHyn ROOeIl'RcE! Once a year Marilyn and I &witch columns as a change at pace and as an OPI>t>rtunity for each of us to impart !lOme of 1fu.e special knowledge we have been able to pick up lin our sprees in each other's areas. Frankly, I find myself ~ and less in the kitchen top of the egg mass and then as the ohildren grow older fold one edge of the omelet over and Marilyn can manage th'e other in omelet form. more of the time-consuming 6. Top with sour cream and

WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep. William Fitts Ryan of New York has introduced legislation to re­ peal restrictions on welfare aid imposed by the new Social Security bill which became law less than two weeks ~efore. Ryan's proposal, introduced on the day the 90th Congress convened its second session, would eliminate the freeze on 'Aid to Dependent Children, the compulsory work training pro­ gram, and income limitations on federal contributions to state medicaid programs. All were part of the Social Security bill passed at the end of the first session and signed by President Johnson on Jan. 2. Ryan conceded that current welfare costs are high, but said "it is no solution to take out our failure on impoverished fami­ lies, dependent children and people who cannot afford ade­ quate medical care." President Johnson has named a commission to study the pos­ sibility of revamping the na­ tion's system of welfare laws.

tasks that go into preparing 0 chives or parsley to taste. This meal. . whole process takes three or At one time I was the nut four minutes over moderately 60pper, onion and potato peel­ high heat and the omelets should er and cheese grater for' thiC be eaten immediately. bmily but Marilyn has taken .!lIm eRne Gwcllen otNer these tasks, whether to get "Joe, what do you think about me· out of the kitchen or merely this fig tree that we could grow because she has more time, I in a tub and bring indoors for oon't know. At any rate, my the Winter?" I asked. forays· into the kitchen are The way he just mumbled his mainly for snacks, instant coffee or the preparation of breakfast answer I knew I didn't have much chance of adding this par­ !or the children. _~_.:-~~ , -,, ,--.-J ticular specimen to our growing In the latter area I am un­ collection fYZ frWt trees but equalled as a cold cereal shaker­ AID FOR VIETNAM: Vietnamese refugee.q at Binh outer, a toast spreader and a quite undaunted I returned to Loi, near Saigon, share in distribution .of rice, cloth, soap, my daydreaming over the gar­ bun warmer. My bagels arid den catalogues that had just ar­ salad oil and clothing contributed by Lakeville, Conn., cream cheese and English muf­ fins sometimes leave something rived. I often think our mailman residerits who sent $1,300 to Father Robert Crawford, C.M., must wish we had a hobby with to be desired or to be more ex­ of Philadelphia, pastor of Queen of Peace church in Saigon. !let, something to be scraped less literature to it illS hiC trudges NC Photo. . . up our icy front stairs bowed eff, since I often forget to check ete broiler, but every cook has under . the deluge of gardening his shortcomings. However, I am material that arrives almost Three Dioceses Form particularly proud of my eggs. every day during January. But I'm also sure he 'Wouldn't be­ Statewide Conference Scrambled and basted fried are specialties (although my ego grudge them to us if he real­ LOUISVILLE (NC) - Ken­ Representatives. of Six faiths· Seel< was sOD;lewhat deflated when ized the hours and hours of tucky's three. Catholic dioceses Meryl returned from a visit to Wintry' entertainment they con­ have formed a consultative Mutu'al Resped for Religions body, the Kentucky Catholic &r friend Wendy's· house and tain within .their colorful covers. There is no better way to satis­ WASHINGTON (NC)-Mem­ town University, lYIrs. Hollister Conference, to permit joint IlQid thllt Mr. Kalif made better fy your shopping urges during ~gs than I), action on the part of the Churcb bers of six major world faiths­ is presidento£ the temple. stringent January and February Christianity, Judaism, Hindu­ "I'm a very sentimental woman in the state. Omelet MaEIing when the Christmas bills seem ism, BuddhIsm and Confucian­ and sentimental is not the chic The Louisville archdiocese I have' added a new specialty to' be vying with the car insur­ has joined wi.th the Covington within the past month, the ances to see who gets paid first. ism-gathered here to do some thing to be in 1968," Ml'l!. Hollis­ soul searching on the degree of ter confessed to a largely male and Owensboro dioceses· to ·form ­ omelet. About a month ago I You can sit comfortably in your. respect their particular faiths gathering ,of. about '50 perSons. the new· 'group, which is mod­ went to the Pot Shop in Boston accord each other. nice warm home while the win­ eled after' the. United States to pick up a little surprise for Space Gymnasties They were brought together Catholic Conference. Marilyn and was taught how to try winds howl outside and pick -She added .that a woman make an omelet by a charming . and choose what yoU' would by a Greenwich, Conn., house­ like to see growing in your gar­ wife, Mrs. Dickerman Hollister, she can't get very excited about little college girl who was dem­ such contemporary "male'" pre­ enstrating the art with the hope den this Summer. In fact, just who said she believes interreli­ looking at the lovely flower il­ viCJo~ous, b€.llIC~t€O. gious. understan~ing can be a occupations as what she' called of Selling a few. omelet pans. "gymnastics in space." lustrations . seems to bring the potent force for peac~ in a I watched her prepare several, XCtIV€, thOuCjht~ul. promise of . that oh so distant troubled world. '''You get to the moon and making careful mental note of S~er bit closer. build three Howard Johnsons lllSClpllll€ O Mrs. Hollister's conviction led bow it was done, and having Spending 'll'ime her to found an organization, and people are still killing one bated one of hers I immediately five words that tell the story of the This year we do' nlred some the Temple of Understanding, another," Mrs. Hollister said. put my new knowledge into contemporary franciscan Action Asmy One participant at the session, practice for myself. Everyone plant that would look well with which sponsored the conference Father John C, Haughey, S.J., of in cooperatio~ with the National . the early. tulips, perhaps these who visited the house during Georgetown University, said the let us lell you how yeo Christmas and New Year will doronicum caucasicums would Presbyterian Center and George- Eastern and Western religious can serve. Write tOJ' fREE· lllttest to the. excellence of my be just. the thing. They look in ' literature at no obligatioa. traditions' might move toward emelets and certainly the egg their picture like lovely yellow o PlIBSi 0 8ROTKI!II understanding if each appreci­ MmE!.. Chiang IEle~ted daisies and I do so love daisies, man is very pleased with my ~d the other's strengths and Father Aidan, O.F.M.CAP. or perhaps we should think Dew-found knOWledge. To Catholic Post weaknesses. He distinguished about a climbing· hydrangea for ( : ; - B•• ' _ ' . " ._~ The recipe for the omelet is TAIPEI- (NC)-Mme. Chiang between the Western tendency foot Significantly different from the shady side of the house, it to formulate precisely defined Kai-shek, wife 'of the president those. I used in the past except really needs some color. All of the ,Republic of China, was pl'Qpositions and the Eastern xan that water is substituted for these thoughts can float deli­ elected chairman of the board custom of relying heavily upon ciously through your mind milk,. it ill the method which is religious. intuition. of trustees 0(, Fujen. Catholic. different. 'l'he.ingredients follow: while the only thing you're UniversHy. . '. . spending is ,your time. For'·one 'serving: Members of the board, meet­ The one area where Joe and I ~ eggs ing to fill a })o::;;tion '.vacatedby do disagree a '.bit is the choosing the deatli of Thomas Cardinal 1 tablespoon of water of plants for 'the garden. 1 ooIt and pepper Tien, were assured that Mme. grated ~heese (Swiss or cheddar) tend toward the exotic and the Chiang would acc.ept the pqsi­ Savings Bank Life Insurance unusual while he prefers a rose ~ur cream tion if elected. $he was elected Reed Estate Loans to look like a rose. Also, I'll unanimously. ebopped chi~es or parsley She .had agreed last June to 1. Heat a tablespoon of butter often think of groWing a certain Christmas and Vacation Clubs . . so in a small skillet until R color flower because I would be named honorary chairman of like to use it in an indooor ar­ the board of trustees. sizzles but does not darken. Savings Accounts rangement bu't Joe likes the Archibshop Paul Yu Pin, rec­ 2. Break two eggs into a bowl. effect of the plants in their 5 Convenient Locations tor of Fujen University, is a IBtir with a fork but only enough natural setting and he can hard­ to break the eggs, Do not stir ly bear to cut them. So we agree long-time friend of. president excessively. The eggs should and disagree over the numerous lllnd Mme. Chiang, who are Methodists. DOt be thoroughly mixed. catalogues during these wintry Fujen, originally established So Add water. months, make up lengthy lists, in Peipin,;, was reactivated here pick and choose and pare down 4. Pour into frying pan. Now five years ago. It is jointly and finally, when the orders staffed by Chinese secular cler­ treat the egg as you would a can't be put off any longer, we gy, Divine Word Fathers and lIlCI'ambled egg but use a spatula Il'3ther than a fork. Continually finally make them out. the Jesuits. ON CAPE COD push the egg hither and yon With all the time we've had with the spatula (at this point to spend on them Md all the • will appear much like a thought we've given them you aerambled ·egg). Do not turn the would, I'm sure, imagine them Do egg over. In no time at all the to be long· and expensive but Rock. Slid~'or Slip? egg will begin to congeal and our school teachers' budgets al­ Don't llve In fear of false teeth

tile top of the egg mass will still ways come to the fore and we .loosening. wobbling or dropping Just

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THE ANCtlOR-Diocese Jan. . . ofFall River-Thurs. . . 25, 1968 ~

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Continued from Page One many like it that turn out ~ be crank calls. But this w01nali'\ sounded as if she might btl pbysically injured and migb$ not ·act to help herself,' so n went.",'

Cardgnal Sheha.n g'n"ites Prie~ts Name Candidates for Wihtl1ingjt1'on

BALTIMORE (NC), - Law fice of bishop. They suggest a rence Cardinal Shehan of Balti- few names in the eventuality an more has invited each priest in opening comes, and forward the the Winmington, Del., diocese to names to Rome where the Pope Arriving at ~ apartme~ nominate candidates to succeed makes the final decision.' This Father McClintock found a malili Bishop Michael W.. Hyle of is the first time, the spokesman sprawled on the floor, apparent.. :Wilmington, who died Dec. 26. indicated, that the metropolitan ly unconscious and' Mrs. Brink-Wilmington is one of three has addressed a request for man bleeding' from a heaclJ, dioceses in the' Province of Bal- candidates to all the priests of wound. timore. The other two are Rich- U.e See. "I was still not sure at thQj mond, Va., and Wheeling, W:Va. However, the spokesman said, point that he had a gun," the Cardinal Shehan has certain re- the move is not without precepriest said, adding the mMli sponsibilities in connection with dent: He noted that the first man seemed harmless. Mrs. these Sees in virtue of his posi- bishop of Baltimore, Archbishop Brinkm.an admitted she kile~ tion as the senior prelate in the John Carroll, was chosen by his the man and phoned his sistei'­ prQvince. It falls to him to sub- fello'w priests, and their choice in-law. mit a nominee to the Pope was ratified by the Pope. He "The sister-in-law asked jf II should the office of bishop fall pointed out that in at least Ol\e would bring him to her home vacant in any' of the three. '. V. S. diocese priests were reand I decided to drive hiUl there," the priest declared. Ho . In a letter addressed to cently invited to submit the F'ather Paul J. Fallers, secretary names of candiates for the post ' and the woman got the man Oll!i ·to the council of priests o! the of auxiliary bishop. his feet and were starting fOli' Diocese of Wi'lmington, Cardinal In! Wilmington, .meainyhile, a the door when the man. pulled il Shehan said he had pla'nried . diocesar spokesman said the 200 small automatic pistol. . since Bishop Hyle's death to' in- .priests of the c;1iocese have been "He was pointing it right 16 'Vite Wilmington priests'to 'help notified' of their opportunity to me about 10 or 15 feet away,ff1 ehoose a.... successor. "wJ;ite .tq Cardinal Shehan: He., Father McClintock said. "I had! The Cardinal said he waited added that' Cardinal Shehan's no place to' run so I tried to geSJ until Archbishop Luigi' Raimon-' il1~itatioI:l.·.to . the priests does. it· away from him.. I got his gun­ tIi, Apostolic Delegate 1n the' I)ot qepy nUJ:ls ·an?·. laymen arm pointed at the ceiling aJlo11l United Sta<tE!s iilformed him t~eir right tocomll)unicate with the pistol.fired." . that theWilmingWri council, tr-f' t~e CllrdinaI.also. . . . . ,.., . ,,"'They continued strugglin'g, t~ priests had. been recons.t.ihited.. . ,. .. '.. .. weapon was pointed alte rn'a tel:!, . F4LLRllYE~I'fF1S ~'-':' ·E(:~.~ENICAL SERV~CE~' t h d' th t I A council: of ;pri~s~ autol)1at-· . Jcally dissolve's on, the death of·. . cOO S . p,' .. .4mon~,partJicipants' i~' the Ch.ristianl,Jnity ~rvic~)u~W ~r:~CBri~~:iia~r~~~d~lfs~~:;:: the· bishop; it serves;. but.... thif "f:ontinued from Page .Seven '. : hi the'Union Methodist Chun~h; Fall River' were : Re'v.· Tl;le':' 'fully to get help fromothe~' teD- . ·Wilmington.. council had p.etiS~A .F.al1. River' Odon; L. Za'wistow~ki,l?olil'\b: National' Catholic Church' of ants!n' the building but retUJ'nea · tioned.,th~ough Archbishop~ai.;.·, , .·Jt!s music, music at SHA 'Fan ' the' Blessed Virgin'; Rev. Peter. G ... Rizos;· St" De:metriOs' Blone' ,to·, the· apartment.. She . mondi for" its reestablishment. . River: where the newest group "... .' .•• , . .. picked .up·a china vase, or lam~ Give 'Reasons has' named ~itself .theConstella.: . (jreek-Orthodo~; mrs. Vernon L~ PhI1l~ps, presld~n.t ()~ t}:leand stnick>·the man oil. the head.. . . iri'the' 'leHik·to Father Fallers;'" ti~ns;· honoring i.\s' . moderatOr, ; ~reat~:l' .l?'all &iver C'oun~il of Church.esi.J~ev. Ga1e)t.· \V.il- . . '!He' iiidn'tbudge, the pri'e~' · (;~rtlii:ial~'.~hehal1; 'said in' part: 'Sl~e~; StellaJ4ane;The, 9ta~. ';: }u~rn~o~,.~hos,t ~ast()r .~!. .the M~t.hodis~ Parish ; Rev. Edwa.r~· said, 'land, she· hit .' him wit!) .~~~~a~.~QI.i·ple~se. ~rihg. to.the.... q.,:,~n.~e.t,~la~~.~r~ms,.l,>a~..'l.Jol; . ,~~MTfuhe'll, asSIstant a.~ .H~ly..N'ame, ;F.allFiver, and\proooher another' piece of ohina, Tbis .. atte·ntlo~n. .1 o!!. the' member'~ of the' .goltars. . . ;.. "'th ' . . ", '. ,. ·1iJ:De· he. m ... urmureti.·.· iOk!l.u .~'., .. , ' . ' and·8 ; ..' . cla1'1l1~t. '."'" «lIIl e·'·occ·aSlon ",.:' '. .... . . \ . ,.,..... ......., 'anG!'~ . ~ ~'!Jr.¢.p~~ct ..thi'o·Ugh t~e .c?u.nc:j.l, AI~~·livea.re·.~e'~IfA repr~-. ' .. ' . _ _ . p~~ Q!>~n' the .piStoi., i 'to~!c ~ " to aIVt1!~ ~E-ests workll1g 'lOthe . sen.tatives..~hc;>. ~ft.lclpat~d..m .... and hid ·it under a sofa. Will di()ce$e~':9:f""Wilmihgton t~e.fol- .t~.~~.~~~.~al .. S5>ut~_e~s~e,rl} ~l~tnt1t: ' ·.A :ealled 'pOlice but b(,fore ihey lOw111g';'!" ," . Con,~~rt ·held" :lastr'Y'eekend; 3!It. ft . . ' " !~ved' th~:man had slipp~.d·"~" · ....~ w<.>~~ ~ }?leased to'i'eceive La",z:er.ce ..~ig~, )n; ':f~~il'm;\].t~.:.".. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 'the door,/' . . , '. '.' ·.~o.m t;l!e':~.·.(MtB wOI'kihg, in the. ,!,~er"w~r.~....~~J;p'.:~~rcy-,.D.~a~ ..... ,·n.·. ·e.ct.i~. ~I:t. .··.Res..ident~.: ~_·s·p' o.iI.·:ci t.o ..· PoI~.¢e.fou~d .~~ -lying i'n ~ . :!ofoCes~:'thf!.'frtame or.. names' Of" .deVl1lers," Math,a and. ~oan' BG-, ar~away .betweenthe apartment' eandidates: ·cle~iried ..Worthy tel c~e,?-.ek.:af).d ~',l~. Ma.ri~·~~~ ... ,.. .MUSe· ~ndthe building next succeed Bishop Hyle as. ,bi~hOP rIa!!. - ..:',' :.:':. ".... "':.' ~ . ., door. The' priest gave the . pis~ of"Wilmiqgton: Inproposing._~ . ' ~ll.ny ,more: ~a~ ti.ve ~r~ ~ . " .' ". . . . . . ··to. a .policeman saying he . be­ ean'~idate,' a' priest should' give . P~ra.bl.~s,.. wt:io' e~ntll1Uetnelr . SAIG0N . (NC) - Vietnam.eSe· .t~e, ~ught~rs.of € h anty·· h;lVe' lieved' it' miglit ·be loaded' wi81 reasons for his 'choice. 'mlSSIon of spreadl.ng. the Good. .. refugees. living: nea'r Binh, ~i . theIr own convent. blank ,cartridgeS.' . . "Each letter :sho'uld . ' be from . News . Th' . IS. w e~ k th' . ey:.app.eare d ,'are . . gnlteful to the Salisbury. .. . His color' slides of life in' Viet." 'Th e ·.policeman. opened the .an individual priest, bearing bis . a~ a eyO meeti l1 g a~ Holy Ghost : Vietnam. Childrens' Committee :nain conviriced 'the c.ommitte·e " gun," Father McClintock saifllo . Church ,'an d told me: • signature ancl addressed to me . ". N or.th . T Iv.er t on an d i.n Lakeville, Conn:, for making h.'ow muchthel'r help wa·s. nee". Ii their Christmas seaso'n a bit ed to help. the war-ravaged ,. in an envelope marked personal next mon th .th ey 'll s h are lD 'They aren't blanks.''' and confidential. "Ct)ristian .Li.t!Jrgii;al Love-In" :brighter. country. . _ Police charged Walter C. T~ "The letters should be in my at ~t. Mathieu's parish,. Fall Mrs. G. Campbell Becket, who -pley, 45, of suburban Heni~ hands n'o later than Saturday, River. . : has been 'chairman of the SalisFather Crawford, who is County, with attempting ~ Jan. 20, 1968." . Mardi Gras will be observed bury Committee for a year and chaplain to' the Sisters, supermurder the priest and feloni.o Nuns. Laymen Also by the. ~rench ~onor .Society 'at a half, sent a check for $1,300 to vised the distribution of rice, ously assaulting Mrs. Bt'inkA spokesman' for 'the Balti- 8 specla . assem y, wI;h agenda Father Robert Crawford, C.M., cloth, soap, salad oil and clothman, who received treatment fOU' hd' 'd th b' h thus far a well-kept secret. ~ 'I d I . V· t ing to the refugees. 'a head cut. more arc lOce~e sal e. IS And the new drama club at U.L PhI a e ph/a to 'help Ie °P!1 of the Provmce of Balt~more SHA has n med itself th PI' _ namese poor. meet. every. two years. to dISCUSS . .? . . .~. os Father Crawford asked the ]' 'bl d'd t f th" f pect Players. Members are pre­ J1 e Igl e can I .a es or e 0 paring a Spring p~'es~ntation of Daughters of Charity to select· "The Boy Friend" and a recent the most deserving cases they Itt 6 at The Narrows in North Westport activity was a journey. to Prov':' could find. They chose families iden~e to see '''The 'Importance ina refugee settlement near of Being Earnest." Binh Loi, where the Sisters Where The

The ChurcJ'1 .Unit); Octave ;has have a small farm ~ which Entire Family

been especially noted by senior they grow food for their Saigon religio,n students, who have orphanage. Can Dine

covered the ..S.ChC;lOl with 'posters Economically

.The Sisters also support a . and have broadcast· 'the unity grade school for refugee chil­ prayers daily over' the public' dren and· maintain a medical , addi'ess system. Various reli­ FOR . giQns'and aspects of· ecumenism ~linic for the area's inhabitants.

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hav'i! been sU~jects' of' study Lt. William Knowlton served -the entire month. '. in Vietnam with the U. S. Army And SHAfreshm:en ~ill ell­ .in . 1966 before . rehlrning to ·tertain area' eighth 'graders from civilian life in Lakeville. He 2 to 4 Sunday afternoon, Jan. toId:'the local people' about the 28. "Bring sneakers and shorts" work being done at ·Queen of the guests have been instructed, feace church in Saigon, where ~o it's. unlikely the program will . be a slt-and:"watch affair. The arrangements committee in­ cludes Marion Dunn, Harriet Wolfe', Joyce Leary and Susan Reed. . . ;' € o yle High ·.Coyle High in Taunton is . NAMED: Bishop -Elect pro.ud of Emile. Davidzuk and Jo.h.n E. McCafferty,. pastor Jeffrey' Pepka, both. 'recipients of financial grants and early ac­ · of Holy .Rosary parish,Roch-.·ceptarices fro m' Northeastern ester, N.Y., has be~n named University. Einile has. received by Pope Paul \;1 to' l?e._auxiJ-; .•:lH~OQ)~ .t~~~~. of a, sch9)ar$hip .. ' iary to Bishop Fulton J.' .an~ lp~n, W:hde Jeffrey bas reo: '. Sheen of .' NC celyed;;1 .re!1ewable grant of

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lHE ANCHORlhurs., Jan. 25, 1968

Priest Asserts Poverty Great . Scando' of A~erican Society MILWAUKEE (NC)-An .ex~ pert on .urban problems 'said here the· great scandal of Arney.. ican society. is the fact that "we tolerate in our midst millions of people living in poverty, segregation and without hope." Father Geno Baroni said the poverty problem' represents an increasing "culture gap" between the affluent, growing middle class and the poor. This gap reflects the cultural, edu~ cationaI, economic and spiritual segregation in American society, he stated. Father Baroni, executive di~ l' e c tor of the Washington Archdiocesan Office of Urban Affairs, addressed more than 100 priests' at a conference on 'Poverty at St. Francis Seminary here. The conference was sponsored by the priestly formation committee of the Milwaukee 'archdiocesan Priests' Senate in cooperation with the Council on Urban Life. , Spiritual Missing "Here we have a nation which ill the richest and most powerful in the. world," Father Baroni Isaid. "We have the money, tech~ nology and brainpower. to put . woman an d c h'ld every man, I 'on JUs feet. But, if we get all thellC material goods, then isn't something spiritual missing?'" De asked. ., , , , I . ':The real 'poverty. of America. ,exIsts not .s~ ·much.m ,the P6,0r., n,.is a, spu'ltual pov~rty WhICh ,Jt!'XISts in .our new ml~dle das!! ,.:who make up ?Ul' parishes and ,;churches, In.thls class we must . fin~ a new. conse~sus for those .wh9 lack WIll,' hea~t-and,souHo meet the challe~ges.". FatheJ.' Baron.l claImed tha* people have. fal1ed 't~ ~espon.d to pover.ty because ·th.elr. ~eh8~?U~ tram1ng was too md~vldu. a:lstIc. They were tal:'gh.t .mateFlalIy to su.cceed and: spmtu~lly to ,~av~ .thelr own soul, he. saId. ThIS has d~veloped mto,3 . Jesu.s~and-I attitude that hasn t c.arned ove~ to. th: social, na~ tIOnal and m~el natIon~,1 o;der, - Father Barolll stated. ThIS has

Day of Sharing BONN (NC)-West Germany's 'first "Day of Fraternal Sharing," collection taken up for the World Hunger Campaign, the PI'otestant Bread for the World dl"ive and Misereor, the Catholic dverseas aid agency, raised $45,000 for aid to developing nations. The campaign will be repeated on the first Fl'iday of every month.

a

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produced a negative, reactioBl­ Estab~~§rrn~s ary climate, Resent ll"OOIl' AdVDS@li"}f "Whether you go to a middle ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) class parish, Protestant church -Bishop Walter P. Kellenburg 01' synagogue, you will find of Rockville Centre has an­ Americans are most generous as nounced plans to set up lay ad~ individuals. They will give you visory boards for the diocesan a check, or you can go into the Confraternity of Christian Doc­ suburbs and collect all the sec­ trine-the program of religious ond hand underwear you want. training for Catholic children "But just go into a middle attending public schools.. class group and talk about Each board will· be made up­

changing our pagan welfare of lay representatives, one from

laws that penalize the poor, and

each parish situated within the what happens? While we are

boundaries of the deanery, and

charitable as individual Chris­ a priest director appointed by

tians, put us all together and we

the bishop.

become increasingly resentful

and hostile toward the poor,"

"Reeognizing that religious ed­

the priest stated.

ucation faced many problemD

"We resent the poor because

all over the diocese, and desir­

they are 'immoral, illegitimate

o.us of providing a rightfull

or dirty," Father Baroni con­

g'uidance and encouragement oR

tinued. "Those people who are

the efforts already being made,

not poor need' to remember the

the bishop decided that greateR'

poor not 'just because there are

coordination of parish efforts so many poor people, not just had to be sought," said FatheIl' because, in fact, most people are TAUNTON UNITY SERVICE: Princ'ipals in the Pray- Frederick F. S;:haefer, diocesalJ 604 poor, and not merely because er Service for Christian Unity. conducted in St. Mary's· direetor of CCD. the poor are' usually forgotten. Church Taunton were: Francis Guay of the Interfaith Lay~ Need Moral Revolution men's .Council; Rev. Howard L. Love, Ph. D., Memorial ''Those who are not poor need Methodist Church; Rev. John F. CaUahan,.First Congrega~ .~ reme.rober the poor for thel'r ' Leo'. T S II' ov . u Ivan, pas t or 0 f very own sakes,' not for the sake' tl'onal Church, Raynham ,'. Rev.' of the poor. They need .ol'e~ '. St. Ann~s, Raynham, and preacher at the serViCes; Robert member the poor because, curi- 'Ricketson, Interfaith Laymen's Counci1;~~y. Gerald T.

ously eno'ugh, the poor repre~ent' ShoveltOn of Mary's, 'who .reci.t~, the. Li~ny.

them" too'." . .' Father BaroJli ~1ted special p' : courses, seminars and .·oontinu­ . iPtl..· .education pro~ra~s' for ' adults which are 'helping to t" ., R': :..' 'tOO' f . bridge the gap. He suggested:. " ep y to rles. s· eques. C)r' 'OICe ':'That diocesan school systems" .7' ,rn . ,Selection O.t.dinar.y" and parishes fina' ways to "build' ,

bridges" between the" poor arid 'G:REEN BA~'(NC) -The' They ~lso agl~~ed ,with the as-

the '8ffluent in' urban, rural and Priests' Association . of' Qre~n' soClati6Ii that priestS of· a diosuburban area:' :'" Bay has "rec~'ived sympathetic' ces~(' should be consulted Oft

Th~t researclnfihd ~iw aP ~., . replies from two 'bishops in reHie' ·qualifications. of proposed

pro'aches . to' the problems:' , sponse to its request for a concaridi~ates and noted that al-.

Getting Negro v 0 cat ion s . sUltative' role in the .selection of th'bi,igli . suchconsulation is not­ .... . through married deacons.. ' . a new ordinary' for'the' diOcese. . formallY required.it can be in~ "We need a moral revolution, . . The response to the associa~ . formally' conducted. :"'1 ...: a ~~~litlon. of conscienCe; in our' .tion's letter to leading members .... 'The :'Green Hay association,' wttitudes and actions to the of the U. S. hierarchy came from which represents 250· of the poor," Father Baroni noted: Archbishop John F. Dearderi of Some 300 priests in th6,diocese, '''Th'~ mission ~f the Gll~rchto ' Detroit and Archbishop William asked'for voice in the selec~. the poor is simply the .mission of .·E. Cousins of' Milwaukee:. .t.ion of' an· Ordinary. following S ..fJseriptioll Ti.ne the Church which, like .its· Lord, Both' indicated that even ,the death: in early December of .._ _ -....D ·has come that men might have . though current procedures for 'Bisnop St,anislaus V. Bona.. life and have it· more abund- selec'tion of bishops would riot .antly." 'permit 'a completely affirmatIve response to the priests' request, new procedures which have Ask COlJJrt to Back been proposed to the Holy See by the United States bishops .\~ Open ~ousong Right would give priests of the diocese WASHINGTON (NC) - The a greater' voice in selection of Europea/l Sit ri./lcs--i lit' Ilof)' La/ld-fr()1JI $719. National Council of Churches candidates for bishop. European Shl incs ... 3 weeks, .. from $749. You'U ,s.ce' has asked the ·U. S. Supreme Court to stop housing develop~ and worshi'i~ in l\lilan'srnagllificent II Duomo.,;visit the ers from refusing to sell homes App~()ve Abortion H olv Shroud ill Turin .. , tou I' the \'atican and othl'r Ronian to Negroes. shri~les.,.take part in the T(H('hli~:ht Prnn'ssion at I.A·)\;rd~'~ Oklahoma In a friend of the court brief ... ,er' sacred sites in Sp;iin and I'mtuJ.,:aI, attend j\lass at filed in support of a suit brought OKLAHOMA CITY (NC)-A Fatima ... OI".visit Paris, Ireland (Killarney,Blarney Ca,t!t", by a St. Louis couple, the coun­ bill to widen the grounds for Cork, Dublin) alld historic I,ondon, Plus mu~'h m1)J'('. cit said builders who discrimi~ therapeutic abortion has been Holy Land-2 wccks-f rom $774. Fi rst you land ill nate do so "in order to profit approved by the Oklahoma state RorTI(', to rcflect on the ,hrilll" of tbe Ftc'rnal Cit\'. Then from racism." Senate Judiciary Committee. The NCC suit was filed the off to t hose lands of the li ast \\'hich ollce Il['held the' Fal'c of A similar measure was passed day before the National Cath­ Christ and the S:\ints of :1/(: ,\;,,\\. Testan1('lll. To Beirut, by the House during the 1967 .olic Conference for Interracial Ihblos ,;nd the Shrille of (luI' L:',dl' of Ilarissa lla'albeck session of the Legislature. Justice and 24 American bishops' a,;d the Arabian 1\ighls Palace oi Bl'iteddine Jnu,alem The bill would permit abor­ filed a similar bl"ief in the case. and the Basilica of the 11.)11 Sepulchrl' an~l the "in Dolor6,a The" suit is also supported by tions to protect the physical or ... Gardcn of Cerhselllane, Sarnari,l:Sea of( ;alilkc, Betide' mental health. of the mother; if the National Committe Against hem,·N azareth, Tiheria" :tnd 'l'l'\ f\"iv. Anll mll1'l'. Discrimination in Housing, the there was a risk that the child would be 'born defective, or if Sec it all-in the COlllp:ln~' of an eX!1l'rt tour guide. National Association for the Ad­

vanceUlent of Colored People, the woman was mentally de­ .--------------------------------------------­ the American Jewish Congress a fective, incompetent, or preg­ : Alitalia Tour Depl., Alilalia Airlines nant from I'ape or incest, or if ANC-126 . and the Anti-Defamation League : 666 Fiflh Avenue, New "<Irk, NeVI' York 10019 the mother was unmarried and I of B'nai B'rith. under the age of 15. I Please send me free folders descrihing your pilgrimage to

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Omaha See Organizes IEduca1l'iol1l Board

AUXILIARY: Bishop­ Elect Dennis W. Hickey, vic­ ar general of ROChester, N. Y., has been named by Pope Paul to be auxiliary to Bish­ op Fulton J. Sheen of RoCh­ ester. '

OMAHA (NC) - The Omaha Archdiocese has established a

board of education to supervise

"all matters pertaining to edu­ cation," Archbishop Gerald T. . Bergan has announced. The board's constitution requires the

election of .most· members. Five

.have been appointed for an jn­ terim pel'iod. The board will hold its first official election in three' years' 'and, after that, all voting members will-be elected.

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'12 ,(

mE ANCHOR-Diocese elf Fa,II River-Thurs. Jan. 25, 1968

(lJJ [f~ ®$ ~ @OlfilrJlf\)@lfu [L@U'<clJ D§, ~ l?@)f@t?

P@~3B@U'PD~fr ~@li'!}))®~~ '~@Ui)®[f®®@frO@Ui) A:s~:s' [Q)@~®[J'i)1f[f@~ Og®<cll AM{)'[}u@!?O{)'11' '

PITTSBURGH (NC) -'The ,Pittsburgh diocese's commission on ecumenism has recommended that an' "Our Father," or, Lord's PALM BEACH (NC) - Pas­ complished through a prudent . Prayer, <:::::eptable to all U.S. monist Fathers met here and call­ increase in democratic proce­ Christian faiths, be adopted. ed for an increase in democratic dures, and greater reliance on the , The commission's recommen­ procedures and, a decentraliza­ principle of subsidiarity-,-en­ aation has bcen..Iorwarded to the tion of authority within their couraging subordinates to make U.S. bishops' committee for ec­ IDOngregation. as many decisions as possible. umenical and religious affairs in The meeting of the English­ Father Rooney said partici­ Washington; D.C. jlpeaking assistancy of the con­ pants resolved to make stronger' gregation was held at Our Lady and -clearer presentation of the '

cr>f Florida monastery in prepara­ ideals O'f their congregation in a

tion for the general chapter to special document. The document

\be held in Rome next Septem­ will employ theological, scrip­

ber. tural and liturgical principles in

The Passionists number 4,000 describing the life of the Pas­ \priests, students and Brothers in , sionist, and also encourage adap­

20 provinces 'in 52 countries. The tation to the needs of modem

oongregation is divided into four times.

lbasic language groups called as­ Father, Rooney said the meet­

aistancies. A representative of ,ing here called for improved

caach, of the other ,assistancies at­ formation of younger members,

~nded' 'the. meeting. Father Paul and greater attention to increasM. Madden, C.P., consultor-gen­ , ing the role of Brothers in the oral of the congregation, pre­ congregation.

c;li.ded. '

Sense of Agreement Congregation's IdeaRs Other suggestions induded ,in­ ~ Father Gerard Rooney, C.P.. ,tensification of communal wor­ \j)rovincial from Union City, N..l.. ship in light of the Passionists' ooid strong sentiment' was ex­ vow to keep alive the implica­ ,Iltressed to decentralize the struc­ tions of the mystery of the 4ures of religious government, Cross in the lives of Christians. mod, to place greater accent on "It waS strongly felt that cur-' wital community life. re;nt trends to deemphaSize the' He indicated this will be lie- Cross of Christ must be cor­

rected, although with the re­

Il'lization that the' Cro~ is' i~

complete without, the vast im­

plications of Christ's Resurrec­ " ,

tion," Father Rooney stated.

"The most, significant thing

ft. JOSEPH, noted in the meetiQg was the re-"

FALL RIVER markable sense of agreement of

men from all over the nation and

Parishioners have made iDl­ the worl!! to, the nature of the

aal arrl:t'ngements for a "parish­ 01a" to' be held Saturday night, , problems' ;·....c onfronting the' re­

April 20;' Officers' are Florence ligious institute and the basic di­

rections' which should be 'fol­

Fitzgerald and 'Fred Sherry, co­ lowed in an intense program

<l:hairmen; Di>rotliy' Jeff, secre­ of renewal and adaptation," Fa­

Clary; arid Joseph 'Souza, treas­ IUer. Priies' '\ViiI "'be 'picked up ther Rooney said.

lilt the ' homes" of'parishio'ners "It was unanimously feLt that

from n'Oon' to '4 Sunday 'after..: the' interchange of information

I1llOOn, ,Feb. '4. Clement' Dowling 'and proposed programs offered

is in cHarge of this aspect' of the by members of all the' provinces

ll»"Oj ect. involved was of inestimable val.;,

ue."

F'ath~r\ 'Franci~ Glenn, secre­ heaven," whi.le the Protestanb tary of the local commission, said pray, "wh~ich art iri:heaven"; 1tmc "Ii common Lord's Prayer will Catholic, "forgive us our tre9­ help ecumenism." He said a : passes as we forgive those w~ trespass ,against us," and 'the ' version ,acceptable to both Cath­ olics and Protestants' now is Protestant addition, "For thine in use in Germany and a similar is the kingdom, the power and prayer is being considered in the glory, for ever and evec. ,France. ' ' Amen.," at the end of the pr~ er, Wlhich also is used by some Principal diff~ren<:es in the Eastern rite Catholics.

pr!lYer in this, country are: 'the Catholic ,version, "who art in

The' Palfish Parade

,as

BOLYNAME. FALL RIVER

Cadette Girl Scout'Troop 1043 will hold a cake sale following

lJ11 Masses except the 6 o'clock lSunday morning, Jan. 28. Pro­ \!leeds -will help finance a Spring trip to Boston.

Maow.i ' Beaeh 'Street

Named'for Priest

MIAMI BEACH (NC) - At

the urging of religious leaders

and civic groups, the Miami ....

Beach City Council has named, liT. JOHN BAPTIST, one of the city's streets in honor flENTRAL VILLAGE of the late Msgr. William Barry.

Initial plans fur a parish va­ The council decided West 37Un

'Il'iety show sponsored by the Street, which runs through St:

Ladies Guild will' be made at a . Patrick parish properly, now

meeting tonight at 7:30 in the will be known as Barry Street

parish hall. All those interested in memory of Florida's dean of

in participating in the show are the Catholic clergy and found­

:asked to attend. ing pastor of St. Patrick's who

died last November at age 81. '~UR LADY OF ANGELS, ''It is a tribute not only to FALL RIVER I Msgr. Barry but' a tribute to our Plans for Holy Rosary Sodal­ community," said Rabbi Irving !lty inClude a' cake sale Sunday, Lehrman of Temple, Emanu-El. .Jan. 28, and a Communion "I believe it is an honor to' us lbreakfast follOWing 8 o'clock to name that street in memory Mass Sunday morning, Feb. 4. of the, great, great religious

RMMACULATE CONCEnION. leade'r."

NEW BEDFORD

A semi-formal Valentine ST. JOSEPH,

dance will be given from 8 to NO. DIGHTON midnight Saturday - night", Feb.'­ , ,Mrs., Edward, .Roy" president.

1{) ,by members of the Rosary announced that residents of

Sodality in the school hall. 'Marian Mano!, Taunton, Will be

Music will be ,by the Skyliners guests of the, Guild at the Feb.

Orchestra. 1st meeting 'scheduled to ,be

held 'in Mariah Manor. The en-

ST. STANISLAUS, tertainmEmt will be supplied :by

FALL RIVEP' the parish choir and Mrs: An­ The-Men's' Cluo'willsponsor tone' Kat'on' Will head the re­ a Winter Frolic Spectacular at freshment 'committee. " '

7:30 Saturday night, Jan; 27 'in All members were invited' to

.ftJ.e parish hall. Proceeds will attend the area meeting of the

benefit the school hUilding fund._ DCCW, ,on. Feb.. 6. ,at St. Paul's Walter Gosciminski will direct Church, Taunton. Sr. Mary Hor­

&he program and the leading -tense, S.U.S.C.; of the Cassidy role will be taken' by Ernest High' .faculty 'will be' guest

Krupa., The public is invited speaker. ' and tickets will be .available at Women of, the No. Dighton the door. A~ s~<ci,al ho~r ,will __ Metbo~J.ist, Church have invi~d -'follow ,the e.ntertainment with Guild 'members to a Valentine refre~~ments , and, ,dancing lNl, 'I:'jl,~y' t,o,:~ .Qe.l,d on_"~.,,~li; ¥' _e agenda. . :the 'Methodist Church :

/

THE SOCIETY FQR THE PROPAGATlON OF THE FAITH

SEND YOUR GIFf TO

"The Right Reverend Edward T ..o'MeQl'tl

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. NilionaJ Director

The RighI Reverend Raymond T. Consl4l"!f

OR Dioceion DireCtOr

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New, York, NeW. York 10001 FQJJ . River,:Ma.sstl&hiuens OZ7Z0. ~

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Order Yaet Cong Take Advantage Of Cease-Fires

New Bedford Nurses Enjoy Meetings

At Our Lady's Haven, Fairhaven

SAIGON (NO) - 4CCom­ m'and cadre must make the most advantageous use of of the truce period to urgent­

A group (}If New Bedford area nurses congregated 8it Our Lady's Haven Saturday. But the sick didn't suffer as a result. Occasion was the second annual day of recolleoion of the Oatholic Nurses Guild of Greater New Bedford-held at the Fairhaven home for elderly resid~nts that now serves as a monthly meeting place for the Guild. What hap­ pened to area patients while the nurses were "recollect-' . "? M' M C H II mg. ISS 'ary . a oran, president (}If the Guild, laugh­

ly transport supplies, prepare the battlef\ield and train the troops in !:be shortest possible time with' available facilities. This will ensure the successful implementation of our combat plans." These are the instructions is­ sued to Viet Cong units con­ cerning the cease-fire periods at Christmas, New Year and the lunar new year known as "Tet" in Vietnam. The information came from n

document captured in the Fourth Corps Tactical Zone by a Viet­ namese Marine unit. The doc­ ument is dated Dec. 16, 1967, and was issued in English trans­ lation by the United States Mis­ sion in Vietnam (Jan. 8). , Issued by the Military Affairs Committee of F3, the communi­ que is addressed to the three types of Viet Cong troops, main' furce, local force and guerrillas at provincial level and "various brancl;les and agencies." The communique details the time periods for the cease-fire. Two have already passed. The lunar new year period, according to the direc·tive, begins at 0001 hours Jan. 27, 1968, and ends at 0001 hours on Feb. 3 1968. "Tet"

Explodes Myth· I

ed as she explained. the e'bent only drew "off duty" nurses. "Our members," she said, '''are not necessarily employed. Some are doctors' wives, some have small children and don't work. Others were not on dutY-110 there was no great drain on any institution." The £irst such day of recol­ lection was held at the Haven. last year.' It replaced 'retreats formerly conducted at Cathedral Camp that "didn't draw as many peo­ as we might have hoped,", Miss Halloran said. Sisters Belong Last year, more than 30 of the Guild's 80-odd members attend­ ed t he Day of Recollection. "They liked it so much, we de­ cided to repeat it," Miss Hallo­ ran recalled. .~ Last year, she served as chair­ man of the Recollection Day. This year, Miss Anna Donovan was chairman. ' In addition to lay nurses, nursing nuns from Our Lady's Haven and Sacred Heart Home also are members of the Guild.

"Having it at Our Lady's

H a 'IS very nIce, . " M'ISS H a­I ven loran said, "because we feel so welcome there. 'Last year, we 'invited residents of the home to ­ atten,d Mass and Benediction. "They helped make it a suc­ cess because they were so glad to be on hand." Moderator of the Guild, Rev. Albert F. 'Shovelton of St. Mary's Home, serves as "retreat • master" for the Days of Recol­ lection. "He's such a good speaker, we always get ;1 great deal out of the day. . "The nuns' choir' from the home sings fur Benediction and ' you can't ask for better music," Miss Halloran says. She feels meeting there also is "a good way to acquaint nurses with the institution."

13

THE ANCHORThurs., Jan. 25, 1968

.A.bout Clergy SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Arch­ bishop Robert E, Lucey of SaD Antonio told a meeting of Cath­ olic, Protestant and Orthodox leaders here that it is a "tired old myth that clergymen belong m the sanctuary and in the syna­ gogue and not in the slums, the hovels of the poor, the hall of a 'labor union, nor in the fields where human beings, made to the image and likeness of God, labor under the burning sun for starvation wages." "That aged and tottering myth," Archbishop Lucey de­ clared, "has been exploded al'ld condemned by ministers and priests 'many times in recent years. "But," he added, "certain nice people in our Church today are shocked that Christ in the per­ son of a clergyman should as­ associate with the' little people the exploited, the poverty­ stricken, diseased and the illiter­ ate." The archbishop spoke at OU]? Lady of the Pillar Retreat House here at a banquet honoring Or­ thodox and Protestimts willo spoke at weekend retreats con­ ducted at Catholic retreat houses in the archdiocese in the past year.

Nuns in New Jersey Gotham Lottery

is the biggest holiday in Viet­ Win nam. The directive states: "During ALBANY (NC)-With a ticket the truce period, all cadre and bought by a studeot's father, a soldiers of the three types of convent of nuns in Paterson, troops and various branches NEW BEDFORD NURSES RETREAT: Miss Alice ·N. J., has been catapulted into, "must always take precautions Miller, Mrs. Angus Gillis, and Miss Mary Halloran, pres­ the top money bracket of New against enemy spies and Viet­ ident, about to receive Holy Communion at the annual York State's education lottery. namese 'government s p e cia 1 A spokesman for the Sisters of retreat for the Catholic Nurses Guild of Greater New Bed­ Charity at St. Joseph's convent forces, and remain in a state of ford ,conducted at Our Lady's Haven, Fairhaven. combat readiness. Armed units said the' nuns are delighted that must always be alert." they have won at least $5,000 The possibility of combat dur­ , The Guild began holding its for the meetings is proving a and maybe as much as $100,000 ing the truce period is not ruled monthly meetings at the home drawing card in itself. Many in the drawing. In December 1967, Rochester's out, because, it says: "In move- ­ nurses who didn't wish to drive last year. Regular meetings are ment or bivouac, if the enemy held at 8 the third Mond;1y to Cathedral Camp are finding Bishop Fulton J. Sheen was provokes ,us by conducting air­ it convenient to get to Our listed as a winner in the lottery, night of each month. although his prize, also won OIl strikes or sweep operations, we' Having a "centr21 location" Lady's Haven where they have should be determined to counter­ a chance to talk professionally a gift ticket, was much smalletr than the Sisters' take. attack and annihilate him." with their colleagues. The communique also calls on the "South Vietnam Liberation Army." that is, the Viet Cong, to step up progagandizing and proselyting activities during FORT DODGE (NC) -:- The the truce periods. WITHOUT TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBLEMS National Association of Laymen, Paperwork is not neglected, U rounded last Summer has sclled­ at the as the directive ends: "After uled its second annual conven­ this cease-fire order is dissemi­ ISlt tion from June 28 to 30 in Chinated to all village, district and Some 'GOO members of 'the DiQ' cago. province local' force units and SOMERSET, MASS. - The NAL executive board, all branches subordinate to the oceSM, Catholic Youth Organ-' ization are expected to partici­ which met here im. Iowa, de­ province, a report must be sub':' mitted to the Military Affairs pate in a trip to Washington in cided to estabffsh a national 01­ The most friendly; democratic BANK oHering Committee of F3 prior to Dec. April. Plans for the event were' £ice,. hiI-e a full-time executive forwarded at the unit'sJD()nthly 'secretary and undertake a na­ 22, 1007." , meeting held in Taunton.' tionwide fund raising campaign Violated Truces Club Accounts Auto Loans In other business, it was an­ fur continued operation -of the Both the Christmas and New Checking Accounts Business Loans nounced that the New England organization. Year truces were marred by Savings Accounts . Real Estate, Loans Dr. Jobn Bannan, member of frequent V~et Cong attacks on CYO convention will be held ~ Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman St. Bridge Vietnamese and U.s. military this year at Holiday Inn in Fall the faculty of Loyola University i~ Chicago and NAL vice presiunits. During the New Year River. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Mark Chace of the Cape Cod dent, was appointed general truce military headquarters in CYO area was named to fill the chairman of the convention~ 'Saigon reported no incidents involving fighting between Viet unexpired tenn of Richard theme of which will .be "The O~ellette, also of the Cape, as Option for the Church." Cong units and Free World DIOcesan tre~surer. Ouellett~'s . . .. Forces. resignation for personal reasons genms LaJ?~ls, NAL p~esldent, The New Year truce period was accepted. ' SaId. three cIties are bemg con­ was extended by 12 hours to end Coordinating committee for the, s~dered for the national office at 0600 on Jan. 2. During the New England convention will be' site. extension period a base camp headed by Michael Botelho, .". .. of the third brigade of the U.S. Taunton. Also serving will be 25th Infantry Division was at­ Ray Gariepy, Elaine Charves, tacked with a mortar barrage, Richard Brown 'and Paul Ste­ followed by a heavy ground at­ benne, all of Fall River; Ronnie' tack at 2330. 'Croux and Tim M.ulligan, At­ . A second ground attack was tleboro; Betty Naylor and COMPANY launched against the camp at Sharon Bestford, Cape Cod area; 0120 by an estimated regment­ and John Schondek, Taunton. al size force. The camp is lo­ Area AcUvities Complete Line

cated near the Cambodian bord­ In reports ox area activities it Building Materials

er in Tay Ninh province about was noted that basketbaD is .80 miles northwest of Saigon. underway in all districts. Cape Ov~r 300 enemy were killed in Cod groups plan a rewional 8: SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN the fighting, ki which 26 U.S. drama festival, swimming par­ soldiers died and 111 were ties, agir}s' volleyOOll league 993-2611 .and a Lenten forw... wounded in acUoa.

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(14

·I.THE ANCHOR-" \ ' Thurs., Jan. 25, 196~

Oppose Georgia''', Abortion' ·Plan

Vieff ~oun® ~o~~@d

"'36~t~O

(NC>-An

doe~ not 'protect aPtnst mal­ practice suits. and could .not stand up under a court test. . "The fetus has 'legal' rights in Georgia 'at the present time. The present bill has no provisions for review of decisions to perform abortions or no way to appe8I a ' decision," be said. Father Charles Carroll, Epis­ , Dr. John Hillebrand, Toledo copal priest who is chaplain at physician, commented, "U pro­ California's San Francisco'Med­ ponentS of the bill can prove .ical Center, said iii opposing,the t~e fetus is' not human, then I proposal: . would back both Of theS;e bll!B.­ ''The state should protect those who can't protect them-' • . selves," he ~d. Outlining the ;~.'I;"" .Installatlon Set. moral1mp~ratIves of the medi-,',, ,,<;:~EN(NC) .~ Bishop , cal profeSSIon's Oath ~f Hippoc- '. George: H. Guilfoyle ~ in­ ratesj he. 'asked: i ~Whete 'is t h e . ' ...'. ' ethic of Am' d" 'l" ., .. ;Stalled as fourth spmtual head , e~can me lcme. : of the six-county Camden iMo­ :. Lega.l Rights cese March 4 in St. Joseph's Defense Attorney John Archi-' ! church, here. Ar~hbis~op Luigi bold, Presbyterian 1 a y man, I,' :Raimondi, '·apostolic delegate: to . stressed that the Georgia bill 'tHe United States, will officiate. ATLANTA: l Episco­ pal priest fr:qm San Frans:isco a Presbyterian lawyer from Den­ verand a Catliolic physICian from Toledo, have told members of the Georgia Senate Judiciary Committee it would be 'a mis­ take to relax t~e State's' abortion laws. " ,

C;VO~tl~lrn$

SAIGON (NC)-A report is-' "wed 'by the Public Safety Divi~ 'aion of the United States Mis. sion in Vietnam showed that in i967 Viet Cong terrorism caused . ~e death of 3,820 Vietnamese dvilians. The figure was more than double the .number for 1966, when 1,618 were killed. Abductions by the ,Viet Cong ralso rose in the same period'.' T-hey kidnapped 5,368 civilians In 1967, as against 3,507 in 1966. The report is based on figures ,!'JUPPV,ed .by the Vietna~ese I 'governinent. The Public Safety; 'r' Division said that the govern­ ment has' now adopted a more accurate reporting system for ·communist terrorism against civilians. . ,",Ac,<;orQing to the report, Viet (: Cong 'as~assinations in Decem­ , 0' ., ..... 'ber,· 1967, totaled '468 of the ,'. general pOI1ulation and 116 gov­ ernrilen t'clfficials and employees. These include civilian policemen killed in terrorist a.ttacks· and eiviliaris killed as a result ,of A~LEBORO UNITY WEEK: Monday eveni:ng's llible ..

Viet Cong attacks on trans­ portation. It includes such Vigl1 in St. John's Church, Attleboro, was led by' Clifford

things as civilian transportation Bonna and Alan Corkum. vehicles: hitting VC-placed mines on: roadways.

Again, : December, '1967, saw

~'. the biggest· number of civilians .. Continued from Page One, basic necessities to millions of· .kidnapped by the Viet Cong, Ttu! HDLY FATHER'S MISSIDN AID 'I'D THE DRIENTAL CHURCM .. ;:' with 987 taken away. During and the charitable agencies of impoverished per~ons; Catholic'.' \ the 'Church, during the' past Relief Services sponsors socio-: the same month, 18 government The examplecon:tes from Emile Cardinal Leger. quarter century, more than 8lh economic and self-help projects', officials and employes were kid­ who resiS,n8d his see In Montreal and went tD million tons of suplies valued in designed to help -.the needy be. napped.' . excess of. $1% billion! Truly, come' self-sufficHint and to as-' '.', SUNDAY Africa last month to give his life for lepers. this agency has justified the sume more responsible roles. in IS Few of us can, follow·In his footsteps, but all of " romises, Backing wpport it has received from the the development of their own' . ,'WORLD us can spare something for medicines and For Hospit~.1 . Catholics of the United States. communities and countries, ' . ~"I am sure the faithful' laity . During .1967; a1lpost;$4 mll- , .LEPROSY .supplies. ChrIst so loved lepers He workedi CANBERRA. (NC)-The Au-· are proud of therecotd of . ~on' was channeled through DAY m~raclesto cure them. The World stili has 15­ stralian g~vernment has given': achievement' . Catholic Relief .Catholic Reliel' Services from million lepers. Here's what your gift wlll do: public assurance that the Cal- . serviceS. . has written and,"in various {oUndations an,d< funding vary hospital planned by the . view of the major part it plays agencies to support, such corn­ Little -Company of Ma'iy will be 0 in today's struggle against world munity development projects. C $5,ooo-buy s mobile dispensary (Uhospltalo constructed despite an increase poverty, sickness and disease, I Under the agency's food dis-' on-wheels") for visiting far-flung villages. in the estimated costs. . ~' co.nfident that they ·will.re,triblDtion ,programs,. over six'

CI $3,ooo--'b'ain ten n~ivs Sisters In nursing?

The minister of health, Dr. spond as generously, as ever to ~l1ion malnourished children, : ' A,J. Forbes, in a statement on this appeat" approximately four .million·

$l,SOO-provide an operating table (for mo hospital facilities here, said that . The, national_ g!>al of. the, l!-P- .. health and welfare. cases, 'more.

st~ring limbs, etc.).

additionalJ gov,ernm'ent financing""', peal h?!l.be~n se~ at ,$5 mill.ion, <?than one million persons par'ti- . will be made available' to meet t~e mIn1?lum: all?-0~t requlx:ed.. cipating.' in "Food for Work",',

[] $S7S-buy a leg whir/pool bath. the rise in: fqe' hospiptal's to maintain its ~orld:\Vide pro~ projects,' and neariy .seven' mil- ~

struction cost; '" grams, C~tholic~ReHef. S!'lrvi,ces lion individuals in'families re-,'

$20o-purchase a microscope. All reasonable steps will be said. These aid and develop- ceived, supplemental foods dur­

[] $1OQ-give the clinic a sterilizer.

iaken to fnsure that, the 200-bed ment programs. conducted by ing th past 12 months.·' hospital will be lOCated in the CR8. in 70 countries have. a

[] $9S-enable a leper to get around by whGQ> new dev~lopment area of Bel- ,v~lu~: ;of ,approximately, $1~5 I'5).Db f';'. 11U.@.[1-I1\Vlr,<;),., CC' •. ~;'_.n.r,<;), chair. , connen, Dr. Forbes said mIllion annually. lQ)ulW IF&.Ul/uu.8)uU-Uuu ,I . . Self JH[elp lI'roJects ' , '!i'@ [] $4O:-buy 1,000 vitamin tablets. Last' year, about $130 million Continuelll!: fromll'age: '~Jme worth 6f food, clothing, medf-' proposals which· were, in tunlo .' CUR~ [], $SQ-give a leper a hospital bed. -dne's and other ,.relief supplies~ - ~jecteii by tlie :.welfare recipiLEPER:5 approximately, half of which' ents. : ' " ' ... :,. c '1 ~~,s WHAT • []$l.5-siite him (or her) a hand-walker. was composed of U. S~ govern:A l!ocial services department_·

PRIESTS C $lQ-give the clinic a blood-pressure set.

mimf-donated foedstuffs _ was " spokesma~ said a' nu.ml,ler Of the .. · shipped overseas and distrib-' 'grc;»up spent the :night· ~n the ~.

., , AND C $8.50-buy 10,000 Dapsone tablets. ~ted by Catholic,Relief Services< .~ente~.. Severtil, . he. ,reported" , SlSl'ERS to the needy in areas of poverty, l~entIfled:-,t~emsely~ as, ,Chr.is-~ 'NEED. [J $8.00-:buy 12 thennometet's. and. c1istr~ss.,' tIans U¢ted in Spcial, Action., [] $5.00-100 vitamin tabfets. In addition to providing tbl! . Reclaimed they intenerM WiUl ' the --.functioning of the depart-' $S.O()-.e)pair ofgalfZe scissors. merit by "clogging intake booths ' commandeering ielephones Teachers' C ~.~ Ib. jar, SUlfadlzlne ointment. destroying records." t C $1.75-100 gauze pacls(3.'x3"'). on ract roposa s .' Set $50 Bail ' PHILADELPHIA, (NC)-Rep-: . Thedem t t .' '­ ,[I $l.OO-monthiy membership In our dolla..... resent.atives en the Association ons ra orsw~re 81'-. en Catholic Teachers' <,ACT)': rested ~ter' a welfare depart­ .month Damlen Leper Club.

have presented proposals forf' ment lawyer ,read a ~equest that

teacher contracts Wl'th th Ph'l • they le!1ve peacefully or face:'

i---~--------~~~e 1- 'arrest ' adelphia archdiocese. ,... " . , .. . ,'Dear ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $ , - . Monsignor Nolan: ACT, whose membership in-' In B~klyn Criminal Court, __ _ cludes 600 lay. teach' ' . 30~ Judge ~lch~el A. Sartanides set ers .lD the priests' bail at $50 each. -.;. _ Please cHAM1r.E high s~hools of. the arch~lOcese, Bail for the other demonstrators 'return coupon STREET· is a~kmg fo~ .Increases lD the, ~ went as high as $500, The two ...... -'-,,;-. _

with your starting salarIell of, lay teachers priests are. white and the four offering of from $4,800 to $7;500 anIiu..:;"1 others are Ne roe . CITY STATE_ _ · _ZIP CODIi.R_ _.. ally. It is also seeking reduction . g, s. of ,class sizes, equal opportunity MEDALIST: Frank J. for teacher. advancement im­ f­ Beu'e'rlein, Birmingham, Ala., ,proved fringe. benefits, aD:d of­ is the 1968 winner of the ficial archdiocesan recognition. that ACT is Uie laY1eachers' , Holy Name Society's Vercelli bargaining representative. Medal. He_ has headed the Neither Msgr. Edward,' T. Mobile-Birmingham diocese's ~ughes, ,s~peJ:intendent of ,61rch­ MSGR.· ~6HN' G. NotAN, Natio!"sl Secretary project to build chapels in dIocesan schools, nor ACT offi:' Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. cials would comment on' the areas of the diocese which 330 Madison Avenue·New York, N.Y. 10017 meeting, except to say the .pro­ Te~phon~212/YUkOft ~5840 have no Catholic church. NC ~als had been presented and', p~ ',', meetingS 'schedul8cL' .., '.'~ -"'-' , . ,. ,. ---, : -~,,~.,~' ,._._ " .~,~ .. , J . <

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Educators Favor Plan to Change Constitution WASHINGTON (NC) A conference of Catholic educators has approved. a proposed new constitution for the National Catholic Ed­ ucational Association which would establish new structures and broadened goals for the 64­ year-old organization. Participating in the three­ ,day conference were more than 30 delegates representing each of the present seven association departments. Founded in 19M, the association is the nation's oldest and largest Catholic ed­ ucational organization. It has some 16,000 institutional and in­ dividual members. The constitution approved by the conference now goes to the organization execu,tive board which will meet in Washington, Feb. 13. If approved by the board, the constitution will be submitted to the association's membership at its convention in San Francisco, April 15 to 18. Principle Points Major points in the new con­ stitution include: The association is restruc­ tured along functional lines. This is in contrast with the present department structure which corresponds to different levels of education. Two major divisions are es­ tablished-a division of higher' education and a division of fundamental education. A bureau of services is estab­ lished to coordinate research ef­ forts and service functions. Two executive committees will be established for the di­ vision of higher education and the division of fundamental ed­ ucation. The board of directors, chief policy making body, will, for the first time, be open to repre­ sentatives from the field of ed­ ucation at large. The new board will have 18 members, as against the present 29, three elected of­ ficers from the association, three elected members from the di:' vision of higher education, six from the division of fundamental education and six delegates at large. Four Objectives The constitution sets four major objectives for the Nation­ al Catholic Educational Associ­ ation: "To promote and encourage the principles and ideals of Christian education and forma­ tion." "To encourage and provide means whereby Catholic educa­ tors and their institutions can work cooperatively and effec­ tively for professional growth." "To promote and interpret the Catholic educational en­ deavor in its contribution to the total naUonal educational en­ terprise and to the general wel­ fare of the' nation." "To seek and foster cOGpera­ tion nationally and internation­ ally between Catholic education­ al endeavors and those of other educational institutions and agencies which promote the gen­ eral welfare of society."

Presidlent of So.,th Vietnam Clarifies State, Religion loyalty , SAIGON (NC) - President Nguyen Van T>hieu, a Catholic, said here that as President he should put the highest interests of the state above everything. . He was asked by a Vietnamese newspaperman how he would choose if divergence arose be­ tween your point of view and that of the Bishops' Council." According to the semi-official Vietnam Press News Service, the

President replied in the follow­ ing sense: "As President of the Republic charged with conducting the af­ fairs of the state the President believes that he would not con­ sider himself as an individual belonging to a political party or to any' particular religion and that he should put the highest interests of the state above everything." /

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The actual words of the Pre!l­ ident were reportedly: "When I am President of the Republic I should forget that I am a Cath­ olic." This was apparently an off-the-cuff reply to a news­ man questioning him This journalist's paper and an­ other allied to it printed the statement with the headline in quotation marks: "I no longer consider myself a faithful Cath-

(

olic." The President's press of­ ficer promptly issued a clarifica-­ tion ag above. President Nguyen Van Thien has attended Mass publicly. kneeling in the sanctuary and received Holy Communion pu}).. Holy in the Cathedral on a recent fc ,ti val occasion. He had a spe­ chl Mass offered which he at­ tended on the feast day of hHJ patron, 'St. Martin of Tours.

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WASHINGTON (NC) - The U. S. Supreme Court has re­ versed two more obscenity con­ victions, and bas once again strengthened the belief that it will sharply restrict efforts to control pornography. The convictions were reversed the day before the Court was to hear arguments in two eases concerning laws prohibiting the display or sale of smut to juveniles.

1S

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Jan. 25, 1968

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'11 6

Religious Unity

THE ANC!-!OR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Jon. 25, 1968 CJ

DiSE:M~~®~ ~®@~~®. @Bl) ~M~~~~ 'PEf@W@[f @If ~O~D~ M®®U'D[JTI,@~ By Msgr. George G. Higgins Religious News Service (RNS) reported' in a recent ,dispatch from Albany, N.Y. that Bishop Fulton, Sheen of Rochester spoke briefly to both houses of the New York SVate Legislature, using the same quip: "I'm ndt going to pray for you. There, are files of sample prayers for such some things that a man has occasions, I can sympathize' to do for himself. He has to with the Rabbi's position. Pub­ blow his own nose, make his lic prayer, at civic gatheriJ;1gs

Continued from Page One Our Lady of Fatima Church, Swansea. Heretofore, the religious lead­ ers have almost single-handedly participated in the unity octave sessions whereas an aroused laity joined to make this year's program the most successful ever conducted in this section of New England. Rev. Howard L. Love, Ph.D., pastor of the Memorial Method­ ist Church, Taunton spoke to more than 500 people of all faiths at services in St. Mary's Church, Taunton Ion Sunday night. In his sermon entitled "Dying to Live", Dr. Love explained that an inmportant way to reach ecumenism is through resurrec," tion" the most miraculous power in our personal lives". "Fears, desires, and hatreds keep us from living the lives we ought to live," Dr. Love added. "We must die before' we can live." "We must die to the things which divide us," Dr. Love con­ cluded, "and rise up to the cre­ ation and gift of God." In Fall River, a capacity con­ gregation in the Union Method­ ist Church heard Rev. Edward J. Mitchell, assistant at the Holy Name Parish, note that the key to understanding Christian unity was in the resurrection of Christ, for in that moment when the dead' Christ stood alive in the midst of His apos­ tles, a new type of religious community flashed into being. This association of men in God was so inseparable from the resurrection. that St. Paul can call it Christ's Body.

own love' and say his own should, I think, take into account Jl)rayers." The-Bishop's decision the religious sensibilities of all 00 ,forego 'the those present. llIsual ritualistic On the other hand, there are 11 n v 0 c a,t ion those. who, like the ed~tors' of ~hich clergyThe "Christian Century, honestly men have tra'thin.k' that this is incompatible ditionally been with "the prophetic thrust· of ~xpected to deprayer language at its best," lliver on such This, too, 'is a valid point and lrormaloccasions -on 'which, in my judgmer t , brings to mind Rabbi Gerber tends to dismiss o fascinating detoo lightly.

bate on Public In any event, It is perfectly ,

]Prayer which obvious from reading the pro

Ilnas been simand con ,arguments elicited by

lIIllering in the pages Gf The Rabbi' Gerber's provocative ar­

Christian Century for the better ticle in The Christian Century

that we are faced with two al­ PROBLEM FOR CONFERENCE: Life in a Favella; n»art of a year. , I Rabbi Israel ;T. Gerber of, most irreconcilable points of as seen here in a sqabter40wn ,on the hillside near Bogota, Temple Beth EI in Charlotte, view .and the all parties to the

Columbia, is one of the vario'us problems at the fifth an­ N. C., triggered the debate last debate are equally' sincere and nual Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Program meet­ May with a full-length article equally certain that they are OR ing in St. Louis. Prominent speakers from the western hem­ m The Christian Century in the sid.e of the angels. which he took the position that ,Practical Solutions isphere will discuss oooperation through understanding. when prayer is offered at a pubWhat, then, should be done NC Photo. llic, gathering, in a pluralistic about the matter? I really don't oociety such as our own, empha- know, but I am beginning to lJis should be placed on the fac-' thiilk that Bishop Sheen's deci­ Ilors which unite men in a comsion not to offer the usual ritu­ mnon workship experience, rath- alistic invocation when he vi~~' er than on those factors that ited the New York State Legis-', Archbishop Views Busing of Students Geparate them. . latul'e a few weeks ago may Lack Cooperation As Artoficial Gimmick By this he meant specifically have been the most practical ADELAIDE (NC)-A Cana­ llhat public prayers (as opposed solution to the problem. SEATTLE (NC)-Archbishop the city's human rights commis­ dian priest studying the lav ~ prayers recited privately or By that I mean-as several of Thomas A. Connolly of Seattle sion, the priest said. apostolate around the .world in astficily 'Christian service) Rabbi Gerber's Christian sup­ , "The archbishop has not re­ commented here that "coopera­ Ghotild 'be; addressed to, "God" porters in the correspondence has notified the Seattle city tion between laity and hierar­ and not to "Jesus." columns of The Century have council that he is urging open . vealed the' program he will fol­ Other View suggested, - that perhaps the housing legislation for the city low to reach' his goal," he added, chy is not being developed any­ in 1968. "but he' will do everything in where to any great extent." An editorial in the same issue time has come to eliminate pub­ Father D. Harvey McIntyre, his power to· get something

of The Century disagreed with lic prayer at civic gatherings. workable, and will zero in on

assistant chancellor, mad e Rabbi Gerber on~ this matter, I ' am, not advocating this as the pr()blem this year."

I!lrguing, in summary, that "all the best or only solution to the known Archbishop Connolly's prayer is language of a particu- problem raised by'Rabbi Gerber. stand at a city council meetinl~. Father McIntyre said that

Jlar community" and that for the I am merely throwing it out for Father McIntyre,who is a Archbishop Connolly looks upon

Christian, pray.er must revolve pur'pose of discussion. member of' the Seattle human the effectiveness of the state law

around Jesus. My own personl;ll feelings' on rights commission, said the as "minimaL"

Off-and-on during the inter- the matter tend to be very am:" archbishop "wants a fair. hous­

vening months The. gentury has bivalent. ing law-a directive to the peo­

~ WYman

published a number of thoughtOn the one hand, I can see a ple with teeth in it. He is con­

3-6592 Jl'ul letters, pro and con, in genuine symbolic value to pub­ cerned that nothing definite response to Rabbi Gerber's lic pI'ayer at civic gatherings. along' the lines of open housing CHARLES F. VARGAS INSURANCE AGENCY, INC ~hought-provoking article. On the other hand, I must hon- legislation' has been propOsed 254 'ROCKDALE AVENUE' In the Nov. 29 ,issue the Rabbi, estly ask myself if this symbolic sin'ce 1963." 96 WILLIAM STREET

An a round-up reply to tM con value is worth the risk of em., Indicating that he was actini~

NEW BEDFORD, MASS. NEW BED,FORD, MASS. lletters~and' to The Century's, barrassing or antagonizing a siz_ as a spokesman for the arch­

editorial-restates and tries to able minority of people who bishop, Father McIntyre said

998-5153 997-9167' clarify his original argument. may be deeply 9ffended by "Archbishop Connolly viewll PERSONAL SERVICE He says 'that his objective in prayers which to them are ,busing of students and Gther submitting this controvel'sial theologically unacceptable, such attempts to alleviate the subject to debate was not - as Travesty of Religion city's racial problem as artificiaR ~he editors of The CentuI'y I would like to have a little gimmicks." . aeemed to imply - to impel The priest's statements came

cz:hange "so one will be offended." more time to mull over the He readily ailmits-in dil'eet problem - prayerfully, if you' after councillmlm approved a

response to Archbishop Paul will-before I come'to a definite' race relations seminar. No date

was set, but a committee of

Hallinan's public criticism of his conclusion.

article-that- "each man ought to Meanwhile, . however, I ami seven was delegated to draft the

'

speak in his own faith, undi- certain of one thing, namely, agenda. luted" when he prays in private that the practice of multiplying , . Sometbing Workable 01' in his own cn.urch or syna'public prayers at civic gather­

213 CENTRAL AVE. Father McIntyre said "I win gogue, but not w:J:)n he is called ings in an effol't to get every­ support the seminar, ·lIl1though

upon to pray in the name of the body into the act is just about the time for talk is long past.

992-6216 community at 'a public gathel'- the worst of all possible solu­

Archbishop Connolly express­ ing attended by people of dif- tions to the problem raised by, _ed his demand for an open ferent faiths. Rabbi Gerber~ , housing law this year though NEW BEDFORD Our task, he says, is to find In recent years - to cite the Father McIntyre's presence OG "prayer language" for such oc- most notorious example - we easions which is "religiously have had found separate prayers pluralistic." (Protestant, Catholic, Jewish . Irreconcilable Views and Orthodox) at Presidential As one who has delivered inaugurations. This, it seems to hundreds of invocations at all me, makes a travesty of religion, , sorts of public gatherings and and 1,1 for one, would strongly ~. ~~tweeCl\l IraUll lito"," 'clIIRd New Bedford

has collected several bulging advocate, therefore, that there be only o.ne prayer at the next' ioJ~ ~ SOllDitihlem ~ew lEmi~~OJlnd'5 Fine~ FaciiitiSs

Inauguration. M~<e{i' Dliil (p1i'@1Jil~® The poor clergyman selected' INl@W. AV~D~~lb~~ ~@rr:

GRASSE (NC) -About 200 . to give this all-purpose prayer, priests, :J3rothers, Sisters and lay would have to wrestle in his ~NQllBlEcr5g IfA~HfiOINJ ~HOW!$, people from various European own conscience with the prob­ f02 DIETAil$ ,~1J.1l. MAINAGE~ eountries, all volunteers for lem raised by Rabbi Gerber­ Latin America, met near here but better, I think, to have one 636-2744 G!' 999-6984 for the second Fllropean Week man wrestle withtbe problem than four. for Latin Amel'H.:a.

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Asks Proposa Is For Reform Of Liturgy

Latin Language Enters Age of Automation At Sacred HearUtJ AcademY9 FaNO Raver

ATLANTA (NC)-Atlan­ ta's Archbis·hop Paul J. Hal­ linan, chairman of the U.S. Bishops' Committee on the

Used to be you ~tarted Latin with "amo, amas, amat" and went inexorably on ~ "omnia Gallia divisa est in paprtes tres" and "arma virumque cano." No more. !-,atm has entered the age of automation, and the youngsters who can tell you all about It are 50 freshmen at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River. Under the guidance of Sister Francis Sebastian, S.U.S.C., a veter­ an Latin teacher who's been thoroughly converted to the new approach, the girls

Liturgy, has called on the 7,000­ member Liturgical Conference to come up with concrete pro­ posals for liturgical reform in the United States. The archbishop's appeal, made in a statement to NC News Service, came in response to 8 Liturgical Conference letter cir­ cularized among the nation's bishops and criticizing them for their lack of leadership in lit­ urgical renewal. Mailed to the bishops at the beginning of January and made public on Jan. 8, the Liturgical Conference statement empha­ sized "serious - distress at the continuing absence of signifi­ cantly open, creative, and vigor­ ous leadership in matters litur­ gical on the part of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops." 1IJIlcreased lDiisregarll1l Especially criticizing the dis­ cussions of the liturgy carried­ on at the bishops' meeting in Washington, D. C., last Novem­ ber, the statement then warned of the possibility of liturgical disobedience. With obvious ref-. erence to "underground Masses" and "agapes" being celebrated around the nation, the state­ ment's authors predicted: "There will continue to be an increase in the disregard in which the liturgical authority of the bishops is being met throughout the nation by sin­ cere and dedicated people, both clergy and lay." Archbishop Hallinan's reply, while confirming the Liturgical Conference's complaint, criti­ cized the conference for con­ centrating blame 0111 the bishops. "By speaking of the absence of leadership and creativity in the liturgy, the Liturgical Con­ ference has put its finger on a genuine problem. But it has merely aggravated the problem by criticizing the bishops alone. Share Responsibility "The fact is," the archbishop pointed out, "that no one of us­ bishops, priests, laity, the Litur­ gical Conference- itself has done as much as we could and should have done in matters liturgical. The responsibility is a shared one. "Last October," Archbishop Hallinan continued, "the Litur­ gical Conference called for 'a sense -of collaboration and a willingness to consult in an open dialogue of bishops and priests and the whole body of Jay men and women; and a gene/rous spirit which will show appre­ ciation for any effort at li turgi­ cal renewal. . .' "In that spirit I invite the Liturgical Conference to pre­ pare and propose to the bishops concrete programs of liturgical reform While continuing to seek its avowed goals in the fields of liturgical catechumenate and participation."

National Seminar

On Church in India

NEW DELHI (NC)-Plans to hold a national seminar on "The Church in India Today in the Light of' the Decrees of the Vatican Council" were an­ nounced here by the steering committee of the Indian Bish­ ops' Conference. Father Patrick D'Souza, com­ mittee secretary, said the si:I:­ day seminar will attempt to re­ define the Church's mission in India, especially in view of the need for its cultural and social Integration into the countrY'D .life.

tackle the language of Ceasar' and Cicero with tape recordings, filmstrips and programmed workbooks. Among the first sentences they hear on tape (in a smooth male voice ,of movie-star' calibre) are "Vestes virum reddit" and Man­ us manum lavat" "Clothes make the man" and "One hand washes the other," surely uni­ versally applicable comments on the social scene. The workshop instructs stu­ dents when to listen, when to repeat after the taped voice and when to study on their own. They proceed at their own speed and, it's not uncommon for a girl to cover from 50 to 100 pro­ gram steps during a 40-minute Latin period. '11'0 1IJnderstand !Latin Purpose of the program is to teach students "to read Latin with understanding," said Sis­ ter Francis Sebastian. Instead of word-for-word renderings of the language, they're encouraged to give "idea translations," more

accurately .rendering the Latin

sense. . Distributed by Encyclopedia -Britannica, the program .is based on a linguistics approaeh de­

veloped by Dr. Waldo E. Sweet.

Sister Francis Sebastian first be­ came famiiiar with his methods at Boston College, therefore was eager to try his course. As a pilot teacher, she will relay comments and suggestions on the program to Encyclopedia Britan­ nica, which will take them int() consideration in making revi­ sions. An acid test for the course came soon after school began this year, when Sister Fr:mcis Sebastian was involved in an automobile accident and was out of the classroom for three weeks. Her substitute wasn't familiar with the program, but the girls assured her that they knew what to do. "They ran the class almost by themselves," said Sister, "and when I returned they had lost no time."

She says her girls pull down consistently higher grades than traditionally taught students.­ "They -aren't competing against each other, only against them­ selves," she noted "and there's less tendency to chat because they:d only cheat themselves." The girls will finish the year,

she said, with a Latin vocabulary of some 700 words, as opposed to between three and five hundred

under traditional teaching meth­ ods. More Students The program also seems to

have revived interest in Latin

at SHA, said Sister' Francis Se­

bastian. Her 50 students form an overwhelming majority o.f tlbe freshman class of 68.

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THE ANCHOr:­ Thurs., Jan. 2~, 1968

17

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LANSING (NC)-Bishop Al-­ 'exander Zales: i of Lansing haJJ come to the c1:,,~nse of a priest who mailed his draft card t€> Secretary of State Dean Rusk, along with a letter expressing "strong dissatisfaction with pres­ ent Vietnam policy." Father John P. Huhn, 29, oR Battle Creek, who described. himself in the letter as a "con­ firmed' conscientious objector,'" mailed the card _to Rusk Dec. 12. He made it pubilc in mid­ January. Bishop Zaleski said the prie~ "as any other citizen of a free republic, is within his rights Un expressing, his dissent.

~;

_._.

"Although m_ilY will disagree with his opinion, and I, for one, cannot endorse his tactics Un manifesting disapproval of the conduct of those guiding the na­ tion, no one can quarrel with his rights to make known hID conscientious objection," said th~ bishop. ­

..

"It is understood, of course" that he has expressed himself 3D an individual citizen," the prel­ ate added.

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LATIN IN AUTOMATION AT SUA: Learning Latin a new way are Kathleen Mitchell, Jane Powers and Kath­ arine Stanton under the direction of Sr. Francis &~bastian, SUSC. And learning is a practically painless procedure, under the new method, agreed .a pretty trio, Kathleen Mitchell, Katha-

Sets Interreligious Affairs CommissDon NEWARK (NC) -The New­ ark archdiocese is expanding its work in interfaith matters, and has reorganized the commission for ecumenical affairs on a

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rine Stanton and Jane Powers. They all plan to take the second year of the programmed course as sophomores. After that, said Sister, students are ready for the traditional stuliY of Virgil. Sacred Hearts, she noted, is- ~ pilot school for the new method, the only school in the Diocese now using it. With contagious enthusiasm, it's a pretty sure bet it won't be the last.

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Any Sacrifice "In a- i III will y01ll build churches, pre a c h missions, found schools. All your efforts will be destroyed unless you wield the- defensive and offensive weapon of a press that is Catholic, loyal anti sincere. I will make any sacrifice, even to pawning my pectoral cross, ring and cassock, to support a Catholic newspaper.'" Pope St. Pius X 'V

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'18

"THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Jan. 15, 1968

;Ilankrupt~w, Tlulfeatens

Diocesan Schoo~s, rP~®~@tl'@ Tells Governor :KANSAS· CITY (NC)-Cath-, because they the unable to re­

alize their, self-detennination."

~. Joseph diocese are threat-. Each transfer' to, public

ened with bankruptcy, the dioc-' schools at the grade school level,

esan school board president has Msgr. Froeschl said, "drains off

dlarged in a letter to the state's $600 and more each year in tax

governor because, he said, revenues of the state that could

"'Catholics pay twice for- educa­ otherwise' be used to increase

ilion." . aid to the poor, and the cities

: Msgr. Martin Froeschl, in his and all the rest that runs up the

letter to Gov. Warren Hearnes, taxes on the working man and

eaued for passage .of legislation -those on fixed incomes and their Of benefit to students in Catho-' families. That might be used to . ~ and 'pJ:ivate schools duriI.!g 'increase even public school ex­ Ute January special session of penditures per pupil." , the state legislature. Msgr. Froeschl urged the go;v­ 'In his letter, Msgr. Froeschl ernor to "introduce some mea­

~ldthe. governor: "We of the sures to help the private enter:'

diocesan school board feel'that: prise school. families in your

regrettably in the past' we have special session call," and to set

failed to use our official voice to up a legislative study commit­ . sPeak out in aid of our patrons tee to "analyze the effect clo­

who are paying twice for edu-, sure of the Catholic school sys­

cation. tem would have in this state

,With education costss9 high on the 'tax-public services crisis'

and rising rapidly, we now feel we· are facing in Missouri.

tilat we owe it to our patrons to help represent their interests to the public and elected offi­ daIs. Chaos to .Budgets ;J "Further requiring that we MILWAUKEE (NC) The

OOW speak out," Msgr. Froeschl ' Marquette University Institute

Giontinued, "is our moral obli­ on Poverty and the ·Law will be

gation t9- inform the community expanded to serve as a regional

and the state that our Catholic law reform center for six Mid­

~hools are facing bankruptcy. west states.

"Closure of large parts of our The announcement by Robert school system would bring chaos F. Boden, dean of Marquette

,to the biJdgets of state and local law school has been gran ted

governments, and would be a $96,337 by the Office of Econom­

tragedy for the indigent, the ic 'Opportunity (OEO) tQ finglnce

disadvantaged children, senior' the institute's second year. Mar:.

<eitizens and others who even quette will provide 'an additional

mow are so inadequately served $5,935.

by tax resources." \ ' Under the program, the insti­

Msgr. Froeschl told the gov­ ernor the board also "does not tute will provide assistance in

wish to operate' an educational research and briefing and will

system for only the ',prosperous draft legislative bills for OEO

and affluent 'who can pay the offices in Minnesota, -Nebraska;

4ilOsts,. which will continue to Iowa, the Dakotas and' Wiscon­

increase in o'rder to provide sin.

During its first year the in'" GIJOmpetitive an d leadership stitute produced a 400 page text· ,ON PAllUSH VISIT: Mixed reaction on the part of two firlrt-graders' is visible as quality in education." , 011. legal .counseli~g !or t~~ indio:,:" "Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore bagan a series 00: informal 48-hour ViSlits M; Enrollment Drops . gent, It also was responsible for . . ' . • ' . The school board president·· pOverty 'iaw 'seminars 'and tele-I the largest parIsh In the arehd'locese, st. Anthony 00: ;Padua. On these occasIons, the Car­ l18id enrol~ment .trends in Cath­ casts·on Poverty-law subjects. ' dinal concelebrates a Mass .with the priests of the parish, and meets informally with par­ <ltlic schools have been dropping, , . . , ' .. , ishioners to hear their comments, pro and con, on a variety of matters. NC Photo. for some time, "with many fam-' Wes being forced for financial .Clergy Favor reaSOns to )nigrate in sorrow from the'schools of their choice. ()p.en· Housing. Policy: , "Thqugh· we feel . public , HAMILTON (NC)-Priests in schools to be very fine, these a tbree;:'country. area of the Cin­ families must have more than cinnati archidocese' have issued merely our compassion, which a "statement of ·concern," ad­ Msgr. TlJ,omas J. Reese, direc­ WILMINGTON '(NC) -.: The Bay, Wis.~a priests' group has is present in us in full measure vocating an open oCCupancy pol­ Association of WilmirIgton sought such consultation through tor of Catholic Social services, icy and opposing religious and Inc. who has acted as its spokes­ Priests has asked 'that the clergy the form of an election. racial bias in real estate trans­ man, made public the letter con­ The Association of Wilming­ and laity of the diocese be con-: actions'of any kind'. . ton Priests was formed late last cerning a successor to Bishop suited in the selection of. a suc­ The statement was signed by. cessor to the late Bishop Michael year by 10 P!iests of the diocese. Hyle. Continued from Page 0-!1e keen because we have had a 38'priests of Jhe Hamilton'dean­ Wi Hyle. The group-a voluntary 01'­ window on the world' with ery. The statement resulted from montnly meetings of· deanery , ganizatio~ of priests of the dio­ The Anchor. .: "But many things should be priests, ~naugurated more than ' cese--also asked that the selec­ a 'year ago;. . tion . of a successor be ~ made expected of the people too. At "Inner city l"iots intensify the soon. least the, bishop and the, clergy .suburbanites' fear of the ghetto .The requests were contained do,. and, in a true sense, the in messages sent to Pope Paul faithful look one to another for dwellers and make a racially in­ evidences' of valid Catholic tegrated programs much harder VI, to the Apostolic Delegate' to to secure," the priests said. "Yet the U. S., Archbishop Luigi.Rai­ 7 Perry· action. Such a point of judge­ the more we build' walls, around mondi, and to the bishops of the ment is the matter of subscribing Aven.ue the hiner city, the more we Pen Baltimore province. «0' The Anchor. We must read to 1IP explosive forces that will . In the letter, the group citeell be informed. Our religious needs erupt in violence." Bishop Hyle's leadership iii. a Taunton Mass. ean never be satisfied by listen­ Warm variety of activities. ing to a Sunday sermon. Some­ 822-2282 ''Under his inspiring leader­ thing in our home should keep Richmond Employees . ship much progress has been liS alive and alert to meet our made in our diocese in matters needs today for an informed 'On Pension Plan of divine worship, Christian for­ faith. Something like the Bible, " -'RICHMOND (NC)-The Rich­ but also something like The mond Diocese has installed 'a mation and education, ecumeni­ cal effort and social action ­ 'Anchor. comprehensive retirement ben­ "So the 'answer is simple: Sub­ efit program, along with group' especially on behalf of sCl"ibe again, subscribe anew, life and medical insurance Negro brothers," the letter but subscribe. Your bishop 'wili . plans, for the nearly 1,000 lay stated. "We are greatly concerned surely feel better about having. employes in its offices, schools, that the ,initiative started by an informed and articulate laity, institutions and parishes. Bishop Hyle continue with 'as when he knows that the greater The entire cost of the retire­ part of the parishes in the Dio­ . ment program will be 'met by ·Uttle interruption as possible." eese of Fall ~iver are 100 per the dioc!'!se with no eXPense to The group did not suggest cent readers of The Anchor. So employes. Employer and em­ how the clergy and laity might let uS,'loyally help ourselves ­ ployee will share the cost of the be consulted in the selection of 653 .Washington Street, Filirhaven our family' and the Diocese group. life, and major .medical a successor. 994:.5058 through sup p 0 r t for:,. The, .insurance programs " whic~ go In 'another diocese where Anchor.", . iDW effect next September~ there is also a vacancy-Green ~ic schools in the Kansas City­

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Ri¥eP-lhurs. JaA. 2'l.-l968

!!,p-Snortin' Capeway Hoop· Race:

Favored Dennis-Yarmouth' Knotted With Fairhaven

-----.-----------------,;rt:O-=---==~"'"""='r.""l"........,.~

By PETER BARTEK Nor~on

High Coach

Dennis-Yarmouth, pre-season consens~ favorite in the Oapeway Basketball Conference, will have to wait until 1ihe second ha:lfof the campaign to prove its superiority to all conference opponents. The Green Dolphins have com­ pleted the first half of ~h~ season with a perfect 7-0· played, the eo-leaders will not league slate but their per­ 'meet until 'tomorrow night second half action gets fonnance has been dupli­ when under way. The ,standings show" cated by the Blue Devils from , that Dennis.-Yarmouth anell Fair­ Fairhaven. When the 1967-68 haven hold a commanding lead league docket over the other six member was drawn up, schools. But, something must it was proposed give tomorrow. " t hat Dennis­ The critical clash between the Yarmouth and loop's pace setters has aJll con­ Fairhaven meet ference followers reminiscing. It in the first and was only a year ago 'that both klst rounds of schools were locked in a race second half play. similar to the one they're pres­ Either by a ently staging. The result of that stroke of luck contest was ironical. Fairhaven or pure genius, Peter defeated the Green Dolphins th e schedule twice in league play to win the Bartek makers finalized conference title, then lost to a plan that will undoubtedly the Cape regionals in tourna­ keep the conference champion­ ment action, and, thus were de­ ship in doubt until the final nied the privilege of represent­ contest of the reason on Feb. 16. ing the conference at "the Boston Although half of the 14 Garden. This time tlhings could league contests have been be reversed.

Thriller Is Repeat of Last Winier Coach Merrill Wilson's DoI-

phins are led by high scoring

the personal seoring cllue! be­ tween Wilson and Smith. The Fairhaven sharpshooter ranks third in the conference scoring race behind Wilson and Dartmouth's Steve Gaspar.

PRESIDENTIAL INTEREST: Tribute of appreciation for his interest in the youth of, the nation was presented to President Lyndon B. Johnson by representatives of the National Catholic Youth Organization Federation, while holding their annual board of directors meeting in the nation's capital. Seen with the President, left to right, are: Miss Philomena Kerwin, executive secretary/National Catholic Youth Organization Federa­ tion; Gerard Mosey, Buffalo, N.Y., presiden t, young adults section, NCYOF; Msgr. Thom­ as J. Leonard, director, Youth Department, usec; and Michael McGown, Beaumont, Tex... president, teenage section, NCYOF. NC Photo. -

Says .Money Sure Cure for School Ills Need Substantial Financial Relief

Dann Wilson" who is hitting the twine for close to a SD-point CINCINNATI (NC)-An edu­ nverage in league competition. cator contended bere there's Young Wilson, son of the coach, 'nothing wrong with the Catholic llet n conference single game school system that money can't Elsewhere in the conference ' , seoring record last week when cure. be talUed 51 points against tomorrow night third rated Msgp. William J. Franer, 88­ on lowly SlS . t ant arc hd'lOcesan supenn­ . Dartmouth. He's getting plenty Dartmouth takes Bourne on the Indians' home tendent 0 f schools, warned ' of assistance in the scoring de­ that court, Falmouth plays at Old .. I bst . 1 fi partment from John Karras and Rochester and Wareham will be ,un ess ,some.. su. antIa nan­ .lack Harrison. This able trio to­ cial relief arrives in the near at Barnstable. gether with Steve Johnson, future" it is hard to see how the, Doug, Whynott and Bob J\ng~ll . 't~ach "'Ai Pal~eri's Dart­ sChools "can maintain even the , give the Dolphins one of' most mouth qtllittet should have 'uiue" '5t1ltus quo." " , pOtent scorin'g machine's seen 1'n. tronblemaintaining its current' 'Speaking to' the Our Lady of , 1h,e:'area in quite a while.' ',: league :standing against. winless 'Victory parish council; in sub- ' However, the Blue Devils" ;Bo~~!l. ,~he Indians, capable ,q(' urban Delhi, he desc;it>ed, the do not scare easily. Coach ~ating anyone in the circuit on present policy of the school sys­ Wayne Wilson's lads, who re- a good night, are still in. conten­ tem as one of "opportunism," or member only too well what tion for post-season tournament "doing the best with what we happened last Winter will do action and are bent on defeating get." " their best to see that they "go one of the leaders before the Chipping Away all the way this season." campaign' draws to an end. . The result of sucb a policy, Lester Smith and Gil Vieira, Steve Gaspar, John Gonsalves, he said, is "diminution by attri­ veterans on the Blue Dev.il Keyin Hayes and! company' tion-a chipping awayproeess, squad, who constitute one of the ...should stay in the running this: grad'e by ghde from the bottom best one-two punches in the week as they tangle with Bourne up' and school by school from league, are equal to' mustering, ,Friday, then travel to Bam­ 'the inner city out." " enough strength from their sUP-lrtable, Tuesday next. Both the ., '" , pOrting cast to upset the Dol,. Canalmen· and the Red Raiders, "Any help our schools have phins. who are having tough seasons, recei~ed from federnl or .state An . interesting side light to are fighting to stay out of the ,government sources has been ' tile dramatic contest should be cellar. peripheral - that is, auxiliary aids, such as transportation, vis­ ual and audial aids, health and testing services, and so on. Not Coach Bill' Maxwell lost his Old' Rochester, who will host ' ~~e .red cent has been directed

to the heart of the matter-'-the bread and butter' part of the curriculum, the teachers' sala­ ries," he said.

He called attention to th,e re­ cent commitment on the part of the archdiocesan school sys­ tem "to pay a living wage to teachers." , Fall Shori . "In principle, the Church has 'always been c'ommitteed "to the principle of' a living via'tj,e," he si,lid, "but in practice the' !,lchools fell far short 'of·tliii;"goat.~ .' " This year's salary boosts for teachers, he indicated, have, in-, volved the schools in deficit fi-. nancing, 'which he called "a new departure in. this area of Cath­ olic school administration," , . " He referred to the archdioc­ esan wide program' 'eptitl,ed' . "For the Future of Catholic Scliools, the Time of Decision is Now,'" designed to bring' parish income up to the new levels re­ quired by rising' school' costs, but declared that "it is.. a bit

premature to evaluate the suc­

cess or failure of this program

as of this date."

Another factor in. the fil1an­ cial pressure on the schools. Msgr. Franer said, is the in­ creasing proportion of lay teachers. For the first time illll the history of tbe archdiocese there are more lay teachers tham Religious in its elementary schools.

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starting five of a year ago, nev­ Falmouth tomorrow, is experi.l ertheless Wareham is having a encing a somewhat disappoint­ 'Steps respectable year. The Vikings ing season but, in a way, it was 'ENV~lOP~S , ,DETROIT (NC)-Trustees of are in fourth place and a first predicted by' Coach Ray Car­ Marygrove College here in PRINTED AND MAILED division finish by Maxwell's valho. Prior to the season's ~chiga~ have' accepted the 365 NORTH FRONT STREET club would be a commendable opener, Coach Carvalho was op­ NEW BEDFOIllD resignation of Sister Mary Emil, Write or PhcU'le'672·1322 timistic about,the current cain- ' accomplishment. IBM., president for the past The next two contests' will be paign but he said then that any­ 992·5534 llix years. Sister Jane Mary, no ~reathers for the Viking as thing can happen in this league, I.H:M. will serve as acting 234 Second Street - Fall River they strive to stay in the upper "there aren't any breathers in· president. Sister Emil, a widely &2&iWi44 half of the league. The club will the Capeway conference. published poet, will now: begin Coach Carvalho may have a new assignment as an educa­ be on the road to take on Barn­ stable tomorrow and Falmouth been right in 'more ways than . tional consultant. one. Although Fairhaven and next Tuesday. Coach Noel Kinski's Lawrence Dennis-Yarmouth are engaged ~n

High Clippers lack - the real in a battle that will go right ~"""""""'.A""'··+A·······.· good big man. This deficiency down to the wire, don't, count has proved disastrous for the' out the other league members, to Your Gulf Hill Route Man;$

'ex-Providence College ace. The pull a few upsets to keep things, interesting. Always at Your Service 1

Clippers, who are battling for a Excavating

Dartmouth, Falmouth and .000 season, are currently being FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 998-5691 led by Rick Sample and Mike Wareham could be the spoilers. Contractors

Rainnie but the club has to or maybe Coach Carvalho's Old 9 CRQSS, ST., FAIRHAVEN make up for lack of height with Rochester club will prove to 1?e the determining factor in this hustle and desire. Unfortunate­ WYman2~862 '. bo, sometimes these ingredients the second Winter of Capew<liy. so., DARTMOUTH. MASS, are not enough, Conference basketball action. ,. ,'" """"..."'.....,........"......"".........".."........"'....... ~

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',-20 .

T-HE· ANCHOR-Diocese 'o(Fall River-Thur;. Jan. 25, 1968

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