The
ANCHOR
fall River, Mass., Thursday, Feb. 17, 1966 Vol. 10, No.7
«D
1966 The Anchor
PRICE IOc $4.00 per Year
I
Aim For Total Co"erage
The early subscription returns for the individual parishes this year are a little slower than usual coming in to The An chor circulation department a,s it becomes apparent that more parishes are seeking to achieve complete family coverage.
We know of a number of parishes that have surpassed their respective quotas but the pastors are making every effort to increase the number of weekly readers so as to attain the goal set by the Most R~verend Bishop. Four parishes have reached the goal. "The Anchor is the best adult education
pI'Ogram we have to offer in the diocese," said one of the successful pa~tors. "1 am certain it will not be long before all gain the mark we have attained," he opined.
It was considered ·an achievement by some when the individual parishs met their quotas in the early days of this d!ocesa,n· newspaper. That has not been so for many years. . . Parish after parish, among the 110 in the diocese, long ago passed' the quota mark. It is this ambitious group which now aims for total family coverage.
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Fast Days Now 2; ·Abstinence Age 14 WASHINGTON (NC)-P.ope pour VI has . issued new reg ulations on fast and abstinence by making them apply only ~ on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday. But thetraditiorial ,low requiring' abstinence' from meat remains in effect for all Fridays of the year. . " The Pope however freed children under' 14, from the ob. figationto abstain. Heretofore the' abstinenGe law has been i:n., 0ffect -from the age of seven on. .The age bracke~ for the law
of fasting
remains the some-beginning at 21 and ending with
the beginning of· the 60th year.
The revisions, which become effective on Ash Wednesd~y, Feb. 23, were set down. by the Pope .in 'an apostolic constitution' entitled Poenitemini~ ·whkh..was .pubrjsh~d in Rome today. It .provides that those 14· years of age and over· must abstain from· meat oli, Ash Wednesday and all Fridays of the year. .Those 21 to 59 mu$t fast on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.
Bishop Appoints Fr. McDermott Somerset Pastor Fr. Galvin Successor in Swansea
Fr.
[lil@4;;~a
Named Home
Chap~ain
Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River,
today announced the transfer of a pastor, the appoint
ment of a new administrator and the selection of a new
chaplain for the diocese's largest home for the aged.
They are: Rev. James F. Rev. Anthony Rocha, Fall
McDermott, pastor of Our River, as chaplain at the Cath
Lady of Fatima, Swansea, olic Memorial Home, Fall River,.
as pastor of St. Patrick's and part' time chaplain at the Earl Hussey Hospital, Fall Riv Church, Somerset. Very Rev. William A. Galvin, er, where he will serve on Sun M.A., J.C.D., chaplain at the days, Holydays and First Fri Catholic Memorial Home, Fall days. The appointments have been River, as administrator of OUt· Lady of Fatima Church, Swan necessitated by the death of Turn to Page Twenty
.sea.
Praises Zeal and Humility
Of Fr. Edward L. OIBrien
Rev. Edward L. O'Brien, late pastor of St. Mary's
Church, Mansfield, was eulogized by Rev. Walter J. Buckley, pastor of St. Kilian's Church, New Bedford, as a priest dedicated to loyalty, gratitude, appreciation, unselfishness and humilitv. He will ever be
known as the priest of zeal.
Father Buckley stated,
"Wherever Father O'Brien served, his interest in everyone was reciprocated and he was beloved by all - Catholic and non-Catholic alike co co ¢ Service was his distinction, whether as a curate or as chaplain at St. Mary's Home. New Bedford, the Bristol County Hquse of Correc tion or as director of the Cath olic Welfare of New Bedford and Cathedral Camp, East Freetowil. Varied were his positions but constant was his devotion." "Special attention for the sick and the elderly, assistance for
,, the poor and needy, personal in terest in the worries and prob lems of everyone - these and .. _-1 many more occupied his waking FATHER O'BRIEN TUfll to Page Ten
FATHER GALVIN
FATHER McDERMOTT
FATHER ROCHA'
Announce Jubilee Program for Lent 'I.'he·Most Reverend Bishop will adopt the Papal cus, tom of 'making the stations (visiting the chief churches of his diocese) during Lent. The events will be the Diocese's observance of the Jubilee commemorating the completion of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council. . To provide' everyone in the Diocese with the opportunity' to gain the Extraordinary Jubi- . lee Indulgences ,the Bishop shall: go to the' people since many: would find it inconvenient· to _ travel to the Cathedral in Fall, River According to Pope Paul's plan, 'it is the Cathedral of the = Diocese which is the center of jubilee celebration. On five successive Sundays, beginning with the First Sunday' of Lent, Feb. 27, there will be a· Pontifical Mass offerred at o'clock in the afternoon at esignated churches and a priest OK
the Diocese will deliver a ser mon on the significance of the Council. The schedule of the "Stations" is as follows: The First Sunday of Lent, Feb. 27, St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford: Bishop Connolly will celebrate the Mass and Rev. John R. FoIster, St. Anthony, New Bedford will preach. The Second Sunday of Lent, March 6, St. Mary's Church, Taunton: Bishop Gerrard will offer Mass with Rev. Joseph P. Delaney" Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, preaching. The Third Sunday of Lent, March 13, St. John's Church, Attleboro: Mass will be offered by Bishop Connolly and the ser mon delivered by Rev. Donal
Bowell, St. MaJ:l~''r'C\'tm1!li Norton. ~ T~ ourth Sunday 'of Lent, i\!liirch 20, St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis: Bishop Ger
!'2fdl. will celebrate Mass and
3:
Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, st.
Margaret's Church, Buzzards'
Bay, will deliver the sermon. . The diocesan jubilee celebra
tions will come to a climax as
Bishop Connolly will celebrate
a Pontifical Mass at the Cathe dral, Passion Sunday afternoon with Monsignor Humberto S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chancellor and Pastor of St. Michael's Church, Fall River, as preacher. Throughout these five Sundays and in every parish Oli' chapel where Sunday Muss io / offered with the faithful at tending, a specie:: .8:lrieS ~f ser .", mons will be Given "on he nature of the Chu~'n -:J18 light of the ~&Tf." As tlITJ~couragement in this eriod of Jubilee, the Holy Fa ther has granted a Plenary In dulgence to all those who re ceive the Sacraments of Penance and Holy Eucharist and pray for his intentions: Turn to Page Eleven
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Plan ~ew Jersey Program to Ai,d
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 17, 1966
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Poor $~Mdents:
Diocese of Fall River
JERSEY, ·CITY (NC) cf..o Father Victor Yanitelli,.s.J., president of St. ·Peter's ,Col OFF~C~AL lege here, has been named, chairman of a policy group which will, map a statewide pro-' gram of educational assistance ASSIGNMENTS to youngsters from underprivim . Rev. James F. McDermott, pastor of Our Lady 'of Fatima leged families. Church, Swansea, to St. Patrick's Church, Somerset, as pastor. Father Yanitelli, appointed 1>1 GOv. Richard J: Hughes, wiill Very Rev. William A. Galvin, M.A., J.C.D., chaplain' at . work with· educators and 'com- . Catholic Memorial Home, Fan, Riv:er" to, Our Lady of"Fatima ' munity officials from the state" Church; 'Swansea, as administra:tor~ , . ' . including·the director of the Of fice for Economic ·Opportunity. Rev: Anthony Rocha to .CathoUd Memorial' Home, Fall The Jesuit college' head 'will River, as chaplain, and also to serve on a part-time' basis . 'direct the advisory council for on-Sundays, Holydays 'and .First· Fridays, aschaplaln at the "Upward 'Bound," aprojeet de Earl E.Hussey Hospital, Fall ~River. signed to make college educatiolli Assignments effective' Thursday, March' 3, 1966. available' for students whose tal ents might go unnoticed becaU&8 of economic conditions. v "Upward Bound" will plaoo 11th and 12th grade students 0:Il college campuses during Summ mer months to bring out inter.. Bishop Fall River '.. ests and aptitudes for higher eelI
_ ASH WEDNESDAY PREPARAT][ON: ~ur.ning pa ms ucation. It will also provide. to'" fore,ashes to be., used"next WednElsda,y: for.,beglI,;ln}Dg of, Lent .toripg to 'enable' themtu ,gain·
.are Rev. John J. Brenn.ap.,. SS.CG., ;pastor. of)?t•. Jos:~ph~~ .. aqputtance~tocblle-ge.: .~ '; .',
Church F~irhaven'assisted by acolyte 'Michael Keary.' , 'Tlie groupis~to"provide''3'
'! .' , . ' . ' .. , : . ' . ' ," ,"i" , .•, ...... wotkable"outline'by March 1 so' ':1' . , ', .. " ,,""', '",. .., ,,' ". ,':'. ',:,', ," it can be"'submitted for' federal' , ~MDrmCQJM@@®~OITi1il@ "~l1!Hru@1@}f'" :rND' •1S'l. fl. o ~(Q). ~" '~.J1 0, ~(;:J/~O° Ifi\\ 00 '. '" " .. fin~~cingand' go into' effect'tliis IN'l'ROIT:' Be my rock ..of refuge;.Q God, a'stronghOld' " . l!::V~1JOUU~~ lr~'UU~U' \QII.lU"'· , SWhmer."'.:' ","'. 'I " , , , ., .. to give me safety; You are my ,strength "and my fortress'; ;, l' .' , .' :. , for YOUJ:"name's sake you willJead:fl.nd guide· me~ In you, [[)Ul?<e~ 1f@1l' (Q)~ 'V@©(!lJ«'O<O>lI1S' .S4::@[f(Sl)S . 'Ciri/(ocs', .. : l.", ':. Ne~rr.ol·o9y Lord".1 take refuge; let me never.be put to shame. "In' of Muraer, SemhllGIf'Dl!$ , ·;FEB~.#.. . your justice rescu~ me, and deliver me. ,Glory: be to. the Rev. J,?seph 1't. Hame, 1~560 Father, etc. Be my rock of refuge, 0, G<>d, a stronghold ,to CHICAGO (NC) _ A diocesan man to mature during his 'teen , .. Founder, .St.. Theresa, New Bed _give me' s'afety; you are 'my strenith and my,'. ~orlr~ss; director of voc'ations says minor years...,. . ford, . Critics of the minor' seminary, -for your name's sake you will lead and guide me. seminaries "are not priest fac Rev.. Philip Gillick, 18'74, tories." Father Higgin:. adds, cl~m that Founder, St. Mary, No. Attle GRADUAL: You are the God who alone works wonFather Joseph P. Higgins of "up to' 85 per cent ot· those en ders; amon,g, the peoples you have made known your power. the Madison, Wise., diocese ad tering some seminaries do not boro. With your strong arm you delivered your people, the sons vocates /that critics of minor become priests," therefore minor MAR. 1 Rev. James F. Masterson, 1901, of Israel' and Joseph ••• Sing joyfully to God all you' seminaries study the institutions seminaries should be closed. Lack Understanding Founder, St. Patrick, Somerset• lands " serve the Lord with gladness. Come before him more carefully befo~ "burying them under an avalanche of "This conclusion is based on a Rt. Rev. Peter 1.. D. Robert, with joyful song; know that the Lord is God. He made us, dire, apocalyptic statements." premise that a minor Seminary P.R., Pastor, Notre Dame de his we are; his people, the flock he tends. Expressing his views in the is some sort of priest-factory, Lourdes, 'Fall River. OFFERTORY: Blessed are you, 0 Lord; teach me Serran, magazine of Serra Inter- that an attrition .of 85 per cent MA~:~ . . " .. national which is devoted to en is a loss =ate which implies an .~ev. -Tlmle/l" 1.., B!:ady, ~941,. Your statutes. With my lips I,d.eclare all the ordinances of. couraging vocations to' the unprOfitable bE! .«:on- Pastor, St.. :Kiltan, New Bedford. ., priesthood, Fat~er Higgins as- . tinues. "This operation,"" ;y:our mouth.... type. of profit-loss. Rev. Antonio" Berube, 1938" COMMUNION: 'They ate, 'and were wholly surfeited;" serta that crittcism of m,inor sem thinking certainly in.d~cates a ',' Pastor, St. Joseph, Attleboro. the Lord had brought ,them what' they craved; they were' inaries falls under three general lack of understanding 'of the Rev. Tarcisius Dreesen, SS.CC. categories: ' 1952, MonasterY, of Sacred Heart. c not defrauded of.that which they craved. " ( 1 ) Tbe large percentage of function of a minor seminary:'" 'A minor seminary: is a place' Fairhaven. "Ie~se, Clip Clnda.-ing to, Church. on· Sunday ,.', "drop-outs" indicate that. minor where young men are trained to: Rev. Alphonse Gauthier, 198J, . seminaries are not worthwhile, be Christian young men, .he .says. ~r, Sacred Heart, New Bed- the minor seminary is usu (2) Rec1!ives GreJnt Mass OrClo ., . ally poorly staffed and equipped, They may come to know God in ford. MAR. I Salve Regina College, 'New , FRIDAY - Mass of Previous and (3) the minor seminary is such a way that they will. conport, has announced receipt of a Rt. Rev. Timothy P. Sweeney. Sunday. IV Class. Violet. Mass not a normal place 'for a young sider the priesthood, "but they' $50,000 grant from the estate of .may well decide to serve God as . LL.D., 1960, Pastor, Holy Name. PrOper; No Glory or Creed; Robert Goelet, longtime college a Christian ftither, husband,' and New Bedford. 2nd Prayer St. Simeon; Com influence in the world." . benefactor and donor of Ochre mon Preface. Jesuit May Rejoin Court, the major campus build "This can hardly be called a OR ing. The grant ·will perpetuate a Clergy War Group loss," he adds. . . St. Simeon, Bishop and Mar 11I scholarship Mr. Goelet had do .,1 tyr. Glory; no Creed; Common WESTFIELD (NC)""":A Jesuit nated yearly in honor of his late Preface. ordered in December to quit ··wife. ·St. Anthony Alumni SATURDAY - Mass of - the the Committee of Clergy Con Alumni of St. Anthony High Blessed Virgin for Saturday. cerned About Vietnam has been Reg. Master Plumber 293 School, New Bedford, will hold IV Class. White. Mass Proper; 'given permission to rejoin the GEORGE M. MONTLE 1/ Cape CDA breakfast follow a Communion Glory; no Creed; Preface of group.. . Over 35 Years . . Provincetown unit of the ing ,9 o'clock Mass, Sunday Blessed Virgin. This has been revealed by Fa of Satisfied Service Catholic Daughters of America ther Victor R. Yanitelli, S.J., morning, Feb. 27, at Thad's res 806 NO. MAIN STREET announces a public smorga~bord.: SUNDAY-Quinquagesima 'Sun-' president .of St. Peter's College, taurant, 1313 Ashley Boulevard. day. n Class. Violet.' Mass from 5:30 to 7 Thursday evening, Fall'River OS 5·74CJ In charge of arrangementS 18 Proper; No Glory; Creed; Jersey Ci~, and immediate su :March 17 at K of C Hall. . perior of. the priest' involved, Gerard Alves. ' Preface of Trinity. MONDAY -:.. Mass of preViOus ,Father 1)lllliel J. Kilfoyle, S.J. FatherYanitelli said permis- ' Sunday. IV ClasS. Violet. Mass I,R' TY . HO·UI'S .' Proper; No Glory or Creed; .' sion for ;Fatlier . Kilfoyle to re- . St~· Fruricis'
FO join the gr,Qup intent on promot Micltae"C•.' Austi. Common Preface. ' Residence··
ing discussion_ 'of moral issues ...• TUESDAY-Chair_ of St.' Peter, Inc. DEVOTI0 FOR YOUNG WOMEN
, r'lII' Apostle. II Class. White. Mass in. the Vietnam' fighting was given "on" my own authori~." 196 ·Vhipple· St., Fall River
Feb. 20-st. Anthon)'!s ConProper;. Glory; 2nd Prayer FUNERAL SERVICE Father' Kilfoyle, a former . v,ent, Fall 'River: (under one Conclusion) St. Conduded by Franciscan
Palll, Apostle; Creed; Preface· teacher at St. :reter's, is in Mi\lsionaries of Mary
NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Catholic Memorial Home, of Apostles. The beginning of' residence at the hlstitution while ROOMS - MEALS studyingfo-r a doctorate in the Fall River. the Lenten Fast· at Midnight. 549 COUNTY STREET • OVERNIGHT HospiTALITY
ology at New York's Union The Feb. 27-St. Anthony, East WEDNESDAY~AshWednes.day. Inquire OS 3-289?
FaIniouth: I Class. Violet.. Mass proper; ological SeMinary.
St James, New Bedford. no Glory or Creed; Preface of
Our Lady of Lourdes, Lent. In Masses which imme Williams' Fune,a~ ,Taunton. diately follow the Blessing and
~A';"""H Distribution of' Ashes; the
,Home .Mar. ,:::,;-.~ne, Vin'e-' Prayer,s at the Foot of the Al Paint and Wallpaper EST. ' 1870 .. ONE 5'l1'01!" yard Haven. , tar' are omitted. The Blessing Dupont Paint WashIngton Square SHOPPiNG CENTER Holy Family, Taunton. and Distribution of Ashes; cor. Middle St. NEW. BEDFORD " - - . -...........- - -_ _....J .....Tfjm~~~- St. Matthias,
• Television e !Furniture • .' "!2 Acush Ave. THE ANCHOR Apq§tle. II . . Red. Mass , Reg. Funeral ·Director anI • Ap~,~C'nces. • Grocery second Class Postage Palo at Fall RIvero Proper;, Glory; 2n rayer 'Embalmer ' New. sed.ford Q"e.ta,t Mass, °.ublistlea every Thursday ot '41 . 104 Allen St., New Bedford Hlglllano ,Avenue Faft RIver.' Mass•. 02722 -' .Th\lrsday after Ash Wedri _.. PARKING PRIVATE . PARKING AREA llJ the CatholiC Press 01 tile DIocese of Fall day,; Creed; ,Preface of Apos-" ------VOl' "l1'ui~' 7.935"· TEl, WY ·~.8~8' 'Rear' of Store . River. Subscrlptlon price bYIIlIII. postpa lei
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Catholics Help Build Korea ~r~ort Church
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Feb. 17, 1966 ,
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Bishop, Reaffirms 'Duty of Lenten Sacrifice
In- "
J{IMPO, (NC)-K'impo ttC"d' 'h 'h t'H"IS eyes , t 0 these'p assmg " f 0,11'les 0, f ours; . I ylo 0 bserve t he soemnast I f an d help us stnct _national Airport, 'koo~n " ' 0 , as S u t haf was 18 the gateway to K~rea;"1UJW He .c(llis 0'''' ai' "men, 'eve~y'Where, to r~pent? for enjoin,cd on us liS a healing fore our body and soul." And lriIl have a Oatholie churcn: ,He has /txed a day, 'Whe", He 'WIll pronounce Just l'udg next Sunday: ~to God, each year You purify the Ch,lrch
~iOre the e~d of ~i,a y'~a~ 1tumton' Nie 'whole worM."" through the, Lenten observance. May the good 'Works of :~~~s ~ the aid of U.S. 'Cath-, ' St. tuke:' Acts of the Apostles, 17:}O Church obtain /0'-1IS the Crace ,'We tlsk forthroligh ' , :{It freezing' an!! biting 'wind Beloved in Christ,' , , " ,OUt' self-denial."" , ' , ' -These are sobering' words that St. 'Paul spoke to the ,. . What ma~ner ,of people are :we, 'w~ say ~ne thing, lrchbishop Paul M. Ro of seoul "-esscd'forthea new site and the eqrner . G reece, over nmeteen . h un d re d years ' h h . ) N 300-seat church peOP Ie 0 f A t'h ens, In and I'lYe f or t h e very opposite. '0 one IS so smart t at e !tone ID be built within sight .of the ago. They really are more suited to us than they were to may deceive God: :erminal buildings at th~ airport. those whom he addressed,-pleasure loving indeed, yet ,Penance is good for the soul. And talk about The church, to be dedicated to f II f'd I d 'b" Th G' k h •. . h out some proof 10 . morti f'lcation u 0 1 ea s an ,am ItIOns. St. Francis of Assisi be e ree s were muc more Splntua I penances WIt ~odern in style and suited to the anxious to learn of God than many of us are. They had of the senses, is empty, almost hypocritical. 13test murgical norms. It re the reputation of being disciplined. But most of us are So what are we going to :do? Are we to follow the ~!(lces a small frame wood hut, 'Th I' d' f B d • h ' . I pll'esl'ntlY illl use for Sunday not. ey lYe 10 ~11 aura~ 0 peace: ut we. 0 not: prImrose pat , or are W(~ to' Imitate our B essed Lord " ~'inss by, the Catholics in the . How cheap ,lIfe has become 10 our tIme, WIth two "who having joy set, before. Him, preferred the Cross.'~ \1ea. W9 rld, wars, and the ever presept threat of still another This very week Our Holy Father has spelled out anew When wm, completed '. ' 0 r d"'1 h . an d ' th'e nee,d f or penance d ::burch serve the the needsnew of peenng over our h onzon. man y, sucmemones unng t h e' Season 0 f Lent. A II ' the Catbolics of Hong Hang SO sobering uncertainty could, ,prompt, a bi~ of stock adults, age 21 to 59, must,fast on Ash Wepnesday a,nd: 1)00(:(. the village at the airport taking. Where am l? Where am I going? What manner Good Friday. On these days we may eat but one, full ~ate, Bnd of Catholic personnel " f ' . f,or meal " All those f rom 'age 1 4 must a b ' f rom meat on 11: the Korean Air Force 11th 0 man am I). B ut ' not too many peop Ie, h ave 'tIme statn A~h Wednesday and Fridays' throughout the' year., Th'is . r-ilillter W5na stationed at KimpO Such questions. Not with distracti",g TV, deceptive prop l~.r Dar;f', DB well. as tra~eUers 'a~anda in pOlitics or merchandising. No,. we .live in : n ' is :l change from the pra.ct;ce of former years, but, it is· !!BIl\!; the JrnternatlonalAlcport. ' h'109, IS" ., "be"" ,', . Sn:Jsbntial DODatioit, . " :d ream, worId, W h ereeveryt. tng ma d e" easy,-,-, ~. r,ule t h at we can:\II tea d'I I y 0 b serve. .,"': Fathe1l' (Capt.) Gerard:, M. even religious' practice. " " ,. ' ; Beyo~d this, however, Our Holy Father exhorts all kennan, .tT. S: ~r Fo~ chap- , If. YQU doubt this, ask yourselves how you' feel about ' of us to :~ulti~a~e a, spirit Qf penance ,and 'a readiness to taln at Kimpo Air Base, was ~h,e h' '1 H as your ' ,'." de been ' (tW 'h" at deny ol1'rselve's th,e pI f0 ' ,.,ime mover i~ g~ttil1g' the t e recent V' atlcan C ounCI. attltu ,...... ,," easures 'th'IS wor Id f or t h e 'sa k e 0 f Ihurch started. Father, B"en"ail, eoncessions 1 going to get out of this?" Has it been: the Kingdo~ of Heaven. 'The Fathers of the ,Second Vat• native of Boston and '~ow it "what can t do to become a better Christian, renewed in ican Co~nca have ,challenged: us to make this the age' ~:~:\O~~b~t~~~~~n~~~~;I:~~S:~ Christ?" " of the ma.(:ur e ,Christian" who follows' not only, the lettec,' ;ion to the local Catholic parish So many admirers of Pope John must know that but also the spirit of the law. And the spirit of the law-'_: Erom his mother and himself, in 'f'h'I d I h . . I t?e spirit of Christ-is one of voluntary penance, morti memory of his father, Francis P. eveR 1 e sml e a ot, e was a very senous man, a samt y flcation and se,lf-denial. " Brennan, to provide all the ma man. He was not soft. His heart went out to, everyone ;Cl'ials needed for constr\lction. that needed kindness and charity. But he never said or We need this spirit and practice of penance. In addition,offerings of Cath d h h h h . f Ch . C I ' We'll be, the better for it., Our society, our com .~jc servicemen assigned to aCt:e as t oug t e pat 0 nst, to a vary was an i{impo Aii' Base and' nearby easy, one. He had no wish to upend the Church. He simply munity, our family life, our religious practice will ikoul Ail." Base, gifts from those hoped to suit the Church to the need -not the demands _ be warmed by it. ,We will find that Easter Sunday, S ' d " d I' 'h P J h 'Id mea,ns, more to t,hose who act as though they wanted to ']armerly stationed at Kimpo and f h' flirts received by Father Bren 0 t ~ tImes. ome 10 IVI ua IstS say t, at . ope, ? n wou , :wn from friends in the U. S. not hke the results of what he started 10 an Impetuous rise wi~h Christ to better ,things. Again, let me remind yin enable the ch~rch. to be moment. Maybe, they do not like it. But the Council you that death is just around the corner in these days of eompleteci'l for dedIcatIOn on 'd'd h' . h h . I . ' . danger. Let us, live ·as having t,o give an account for the \)ct, 4, ftlaD~ of St. Francis. " I to t e -,?om.t t at t ere ,\as pqCtlC~ unafil~lty on CatholiCi) in the area who wilt e¥ery ConstItutIOn, Decree :In<l Dee.taratIOn, 16 malt., Faith that ~s in us. May we alt unite; clergy', religious, and ~ thfe church are givi~~.thei~. , But what has, alt this to d~. with Lent, now: close laymen. a.n~ women, ip. ~esolvi~gthat Easter Sunday will, - or rea. ' a t h a n d ? I should say: ".It has a IQt 'to, do with it." What God-wllhng, ':find us better in' mind and heart than we t" 'do we'look for in a season of penance,when we are asking
~re today.' This will giv'c~ mearting' to our daily Le~ten Ie cong' , ays . ,'the Lord each day in the Mass to' "use ~ur bodily fasting prayers in' the mas~. ::', ", ' Prie~t to 'curb' our 'vices, to elevate our minds?" This is from ' With war~ assurance of the p;ayers of all dedicated prayer w'e ask God to : to the service of God and neighbor, suppor'tl'llg one an the E uc h,a r"st'c ON (NC)-The comm14 I I . Next ' "Frl'day ietcong murdered aneld- l'tWatch, over the fast we have undertaken, al1d let this other in mutual charity, I beg ,to remain, VietnameSe priest, then bodily penal1ce be a tT/dy spiritual e,xercise, to mak,e us ated' and burned his Cordially in Christ, in the village of Thanh strong." Saturday's collect, a pray~r of the whole Catholic cated near the Cambodian assembly, will go as follows: "Hear onr prayers. 0 Lord, MOST REV. JAMES L. CONNQLLY ' about 50 miles west of
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Warns Against Experiments In Reff)rm of Seminaries
ed during the early-morn ttack was Father Joseph khac Dau, 69, whose par BOYNTON BEACH (NC)-Tlre Apostolic Delegate in sisted mainly of Catholic es from the north. Born the United States s'aid here reform of 'seminaries must re oi, Father Dau was pop main firmly in the hands of "those deputed by the Church ith Christians and non to do it. H Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi said suggestions and ians alike because of his ss to the sick and his criticisms' are welcome from' lowiiig dedication of St. Vincent edge of Oriental medicine. "every honest and sincere de Paul Seminary here. Vietcong apparently di Ope rat e d by Vincentian source," but seminary di-' their attack at the church Fathers, the institution 'is the rection should not face' in the battle began shortly , first ,major seminary in 'the midnight. Although he , terference ~rom persons "who do southeastern United States. Al n'ot possess direct knowledge of o part in the armed resis, , though located in the diocese of Father Dau was seized by s~minary life or whose experi Miami, headed by Bishop Cole ence with it has been incomplete tackers. ni~n' F. Carroll, it will be open of the Vietcong fired a and unfulfilled." to 'candidates from neighboring chine gun at him in the The prelate delivered 'a wide dioceses and from the Caribbean n of a cross from the head ranging address on seminaries, ' area. ards and from side to freedom of conscience and the Freedom 01 Conscience' role of priests at a banquet folWarning against the "hazards orts said the church sac of extravagant experiments" in and' several other parish seminary life, Archbishop Vag were also murdered. Dean of Women nozzi also said: the killings the commu Pursuit of, knowledge in the avaged the interior of the JERSEY CITY (NC)-Jose and set fire to it. fine Castan, assistant professor of seminary should not be overem phasized to the injury of inner the r Dau's body was modern languages, has been ap ht to Saigon for burial in pointed the first dean of women spiritual life; iests' plot at Chi Hoa par at 93-year-old St. Peter's Col Renewed interest in freedom o days later. Bishop Jo lege. Father Victor R. Yanitelli, of 'consCience is good, but it must ran Van Thien of My Tho S.J., president, said the appoint be remembered conscience can the absolution after the ment was made because the Jes be wrong and the guidance of e~ Mass. Attending the uit institution has decided to ,the Church is necessary to co..... . , _ was' Archbishop Angelo accept ~oeds for, the first, time rect it; , .. -, s, apostolic delegate to in next' September's' fceshRtan' , As for freedom ()f action :lor class. ' am and Cambodia. clergy, there are limits OQ botll
priests and their superio'rs, but duced by the Holy See, by the priests should willingly carry council and by the national out the directives of their bishop bishops' conference." and Religious superiors' even when these do not agree with their own opinions; As 'for aca demic freedom, the permanent ' timeliness of Catholic univer~li ties lies in' their creation of a'· purely Catholic cultural envi ronment. It cannot be tolerated that at "a, Catholic universi.ty CITIES, SERVICE
anything is taught which is' con- ' DISTRIBlI"'ORS
trary to definitive Catholic tents. Practical Norms , Gasoline 'Archbishop Vagnozzi' said that the Vatican' Council's decree' on Fuel and Range the training of priests will be supplemented by practical and detailed norins from a conciliar commission and from the U,S, OIL BURNERS conference of bishops. For pro"..,,,,t delivery ,-All the norms and directions , & Day & Night Service • • '" must be implemented with honesty and integrity," he said, "without adopting one aspect at 'G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS .the expense of the other or one particular view as against the Rural Bottled Gas Service general view of the Church, "The trainirig of priests is too 61 COHANNET ST. essential to the future of ,the TAUNTON
Church and cannot be left ex PoSed to the hazards of extrav-' Attleboro - No: Attleboro
ligant experiments which are' not Taunton
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fa." River-Thul'!., feb. 17, 1966
.Deplore$ Immodest Trend In Fashions for Women By Joseph T. McGloin, S. J. Undoubtedly, I will get the usual few letters on this eolmpn righteously proclaiming that no priest should men tion such things, and accusing me of injecting hitherto undreamed of thoughts into the minds of our otherwise deaf, dumb and blind young people. Maybe I'll even get side, since it apparently takes at least some stage-settings to another letter accusing me make most women attractive. of being a "sexy priest," an 'Pretty Stupid' epithet I still haven't lived down It is indeed discouraging to , since making the mistake of put speculate on the type of girl or woman who, basks in the "admi -, ting that letter ODour bulletin board. ration" she merits from the But letters' or no lett~rs, here bikini or. even from the topless we go. I doubt fiasco. Certainly she would have if I'm telling to be pretty stupid to imagine anybody that she is being adm'ired for her anything new, personality or because of some ALUMNI ,CHAPLAIN: especially those thing 'deeper than common old Father Thoma/! J. Penn, few who read desire and concupiscence, with a Jlewspa rare, genuine appreciater of art chaplain ,of the National :As per s. Beside!!, forms in the audience.
sociation of Oatholic Alumni this col u mn
It is hard to imagine the pride Clubs, advocates extension pretends to of the parents of a 14-year-old voice principles girl who, when interviewed on, of the clubs as a means of on occasion, and the beach and pictured in her providing, "a healthy Christ principles bikini, gushed girlishly, "oh. yes, ian atmosphere where men. in the abstract i get many nice compliments on and women of similar back are, not much help. It's no good my bikini." You can just bet going ~'tsk, tsk," as more and she does. But I don't think I'd ground and interests can more of milady appears, in care to meet her' father. I get .meet, and, hopefully, enjoy public. ,embarrassed when I have to successful courtships that It's important that we know shake hands with,a zombie.
lead to successful marriag why her unveiling is neither just
Body-Worship es." Father Penn is assistant the good clean American way We Americans make quite a pastor of St. Margaret's nor something to be taken thing of the lofty opinion we' church, Bel Air, Md. NC lightl~ . have of women. But in practice . Nor can we shrug off the fact '" we don't really like them at, all. Photo. ' . . that she is often surrounded by In fact, they don't seem to like reporters and photographers themselves very much' some eager to report her "courage" to lPauBists to Publish
either, especially when a waiting world, a report which timeS' they deny their human personal COl1U'llc:i~ Pamphlets
rates at least as prominent a ities on an apparently compulsive place in most papers as the fact GLEN ROCK (NC)~Paulist rush to attract attention by their that the bodies of three civil bodies alone. Press announced the -publication rights workers in Mississippi Some Americans have, in fact, of study-club editions of each were finally discovered.
devolved and 'descended into a of the, 16 constitutions, decrees Topless Bathing Suits
and· declarations of Vat i can cult of body-worship. We don't ""eouncil II. .. , The latest "fashion" atrocity, put women on a pedestal any which has by now been buried A commentary by a distin more, as our American fore for the most part in the hades fathers gallantly and wisely did. . guished theologian will preface reserved for bad jokes is the We put them on a reviewing the full text of each of the doc topless bathing suit and evening stand, and we pin a blue ribbon uments. The commentaries and dress. study-club questions have been And a most ap'propriate herald- • on them instead of handling prepared that discussion groups them a diploma or even a wed ing of this particular aberration' ding ring. may benefit as fully as possible was "the day American women , from the subject matter and the . It would be hard not to see, ,went back to the jungle." commentaries. when you view the situation ob It was obvious that the woman The entire series will be av~il jectivelY, the incredible imma who eagerly took up the cause of- the sui tless bathing strap was turity of many an American able by April 15. either one billed as "an exotic male in his attitude towards dancer" (some pitiable girl who women, and, of course, the con needed the publicity since she tradiction in a woman's attitude as she seeks this unique sort of was a failure anyhow), or some insulting attention. one in the ;Jay of the fashion ex Man's Helper perts or retailers of 'women's • " • Cleanse~s ••• clothes. Certainly women are supposed And by no coincidence, the to be attractive, and anyone can cameras and reporters were appreciate them when they are. 94 TREMONT SYREE1' ready beforehand. One such ex But they are also supposed to oIAUNTON, MASS. hibit just came up in the cause be man's companion in this tour of women's right to be utterly called life. They are supposed to Tel. VAndyke 2-062~ stupid with the amazing philoso be friends and helps to man, and phy that "They' dress this way not just the objects of his aesire for swimming in the far East~ through his senses. / why not here?" When God created a' wife for TAVARES Degrading Phenomenon Adam, He referred to her as a UPHOLSTERING SHOP
. An interesting argument, this, "helper," something which goes, Custom Made Upholstered Furniture
especially when you consider a essentially beyond, and even Reupholstering . l!uality Workmanship
contradicts the concept of her as few' other things sometimes in Large Selection Fine Fabrics
merely decoration for man's dulged in by far Easterner~ - Work Guaranteed . Free Estimates ,
amusement. like hara-kari, wholesale abor "REMOLDElING OUR SPECIAlTY"
tion, an occasional human torch, Above all, woman is not sup 992-2891
and so on. posed to be man's plaything, so .1602 Acushnet Ave." New Bedford
Of course, you don't have to 'much -as his playmate and his look to tl1e far East to find helper. And the woman who set women in various stages of pub..: tles for anything less cannot be lic undress. They are to be found noted for her humanity as much in any honky-tonk or strip joint. as for her naive stupidity. The The odd thing is that the Amer man who settles for less usually ican public tends to look down does so with a sneer, because he on this class of person, all the knows what she will never while smiling approvingly at know~she's being had. those who dress or undress sim- . AVAILABLE FOR
Harly at the beach. Banquets _ Testimonials
Honor Cardinal Now the topless bathing suit fashion Shows
BOMBAY (NC) ~ Valerian is a pretty crummy, degrading phenomenon. But .the bikini~ Cardinal Gracias of Bombay has Special Parties
been given the Padma Vibushan, especially on a supposedly civ India's second highest civilian ilized and often otherwise inno WYft\an 9-6984
cent young girl~is not far from award, at ceremonies marking it. The bikini may, in fact~ 'be the 16th anniversary of the In or MErcury 6-2744
. much more lim the seductive dian nation.
"The People of God Renewed" ]s the theme of a first-of-a-kind liturgy weekend scheduled for March 11 to 13 at Bennington Catholic High School, Benning,ton, Vt. The series of lectures and workshops is aimed at bringing a richer and fuller un-. derstanding of th~ message of Vatican II as expressed in the Constitution on the Liturgy and on the Church to the laity, along with practical helps for pro moting the spirit of these two' conciliar documents. Liturgy, Scripture Rev. John H. Miller, C.S.C. from the University of Notre Dame will conduct a series of lectul'es on Lit;;rgy. Rey. Aelred Lacomara, C.P. from the Pas sionist Monastery in Union City, N. J. will conduct the accom panying series on Sacred Scrip ture. In addition to the basic
LENT: A NEW DIET -"E HOLY FATHER'S MISSIDN AIIllI TD THE ORIENTAL CHURCH
A TIME
'TO THINK OF
<'loT! .~-:~
Lent begins Wednesday. It's time to quit llmok· ing, drinking, eating between meals. These weeks, besides, you'll find more people on their knees. When they take advantage of the dispen· sations the Holy Father grants, they'll make sacrifices elsewhere, as the Holy Father asks. They'll do without what they do not need, and 'make do' with what they have, so they can be generous to the 1>90r...• More than before, Lent this year Is up to you.. ~.
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courses, there will be worksho. . for special groups. Rev. Jam. Healy, S.J. of Shadowbrook No vitiate, Lenox, MaS&, will COD duct a workshop- -on "Interpre tive Reading of the Scripture fOll' Lay Readers." , Rev. Julian LaFlamme, diree tor of Chant at St;John Viannep Seminary, Barre, Vt. will con duct a workshop on "Directillli Choirs and Congregational Sin~ ing"; Sister St. Bernard, S.S.~ of Mount St. Joseph Conven-, Rutland, Vt. will conduct • workshop for parish organisiel and Rev. Howard Russell, vice chanCellor of the Diocese of .A). bany, N: Y., will give a leciu.. for the clergy on "Homilies." The program will open at • Friday night, March 11 with • Bible devotion and lecture ~ Father Miller, and will clOlle with a concelebrated Mass SUD day afternoon.
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Here are some new Ideas: NEW o In Niranam, south India. the ecumenical ,UHOLICS ·movement Is so successfully promoting reunion' NEED with the Orthodox Christians 8 church must be A built Immediately to care for the crowds at CHURCH Sunday Mass. Bishop Mar Athanaslos asks help only to purchase materials ($3,850) since our, Catholics. will do the work evenings free·of· charge.••• Name the church for your favorite saint, In your loved ones' memory, If you build It all by yourself. Smaller gifts ($500, $100, $75, $50, $25, $10, $5, $2, $1), too, are essen· tlal, of course. ThIs Lent help the penniless. GIVE o Only 27¢ a day ($8.50 a month, $1008 'SA. YOURSELF $600 for the six-year !lourse) pays thel nist A a priest's training in India. He will write erly PRIEST pray for you at Mass each morning, aj desec share In all the good he does. We'll sen churc name on receipt of your first gift. Tri, I MASSES o Masses for your Intention1 Our prle borde IN seas will offer promptly the Masses you Saigo Kil LENT Remember In partiCUlar your deceased the time to remember. ing FEED 0 Spare 33¢ a day7 (That's the price 0 Phan .A -of cigarettes.) For only 33¢ II day ( Ish c FAMILY week, $10 a month) you can feed a f ref\lg Palestine refugees. In thanks, we'll sen in H Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land ular ONE 0 To be sure your Intentions ara C~ris LAST carried out, It's wise to make a will. Ot kmd IDEA rigid State laws' may govern the dlstrlbl kno your savings.•.• Stringless bequest~ Th Catholic Near East Welfare Assoclatld recte legal title) will be used for the poor I whe Holy Father. after
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TMf ANCHOR-Ofocese of Fan River-Thurs., Feb. 17, 1966 : i'
lP'lE~PETUAL YOUTH: Left, Mrs. Adrien Gagnon, left, a member of Si:. Therese Chapel, and Mrs. Ernest R. Letendre, a St. Lawrence par ishioner, admire one of the "grandmother bracelets" members wear. Mrs. Gagnon has 16 grandchildren and Mrs. Letendre six. Center, Mrs. Byron Lake of St. Lawrence parish, (12 grandchildren) Mrs. Arthur Berube, the "{JIldest grandmother," a parishioner of Sacred Heart Church, and Mrs.. ~
Episcopo I Bishop Proposes Plan For Dialoque ST. LOUIS (NC)-Bishop George L. Cadigan of the Episcopal Diocese of Mis ~uri c~osed a week of com mon prayer among the denomi Gations here by proposing a plan flOT a "changing world" to begin dialogue with each other. The first Protestant to speak [rom the pulpit of the St. Louis Cathedral, Bishop Cadigan told Gn overflow crowd of 2,000 that cHective communication be {:ween the church and the world "l>imply does not exist." Course Directors "This is no job for ecclesIas tical hierarchy or industrial magnates," he stressed. "Th!s ,is rather the convening of new ower, of the frontiersmen and "ettlers who trouble our set ness, but tlot effectively ugh. For telling the church about world and the world about church, in God's new age, we nt persons whose business talent is to know the facts raise the questions about ere we are headed." he common prayer service at cathedral was the last in a iI's of eight services held in rches throughout the metroitan area during the Week Prayer for Christian Unity. Cooperative Blueprint ishop Cadigan said the ecu nical movement is not re al in itself "but only a part it, a sign of it, an entrance o it." We are not ecumenical in er to please each other," he erted. "We are ecumenical in er to be faithful and to please . Lord." . he Bishop observed "we w that we are not in search new churches. We hope for, pray for what we already e begun to see-that which are' 'called to be - the new lrch." ishop Cadigan said the ecu nical movement has opened possibilities for effective Irch-world dialogue. "We can gely describe the past sep tely but how can we blue nt and shape the coming at church in God's"'world un we do it together?"
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Martin H. Murray of St. Lawrence parish, (six grandchildren) left to right, prepare dressings for Rose Hawthorne Lathrop Home. Right, Mrs. Frederick E. Murray of Sacred Heart parish, Mrs. William Tremblay, also of Sacred Heart, and Mrs. Joseph A. Fernandez of St. Lawrence parish,- left to right, sort clothing for the missions. Mrs. Murray has five grand~ children and Mrs. Tremblay and Mrs. Fernandez have tWQ each.
New Bedford Grandmothers' Club Proves Grandmothers Have Changed With Times "
'
By Patricia Francis
Once upon a time grandmothers were content to sit by their fires and wakh the world pass by. But times have changed and so have grandmothers. Today-if members of the Grandmothers Club of the Daughters of Isabella of New Bedford are any example grandmothers are a swinging set. They are vivacious and humorous. They're a gene ration on the go--even if ties of many organizations were "I have twins, too," a third their wallets a're bulging cancelled. But not the Grand chimes in. with pictures of grandehild mothers Club meeting. The ven "I did it the easiest way of erable members slid from home all," still another reports. "I ren by the score. Their hair is white, or at least it's gray. But the Isabella grand mothers brush age aside when it comes to getting things done. The club was organized in 1958 " .... '" some three dozen grandchildren ago" .... " for Isa bellas who wanted a chance to show off pictures of small ories and to talk with kindred spirits about the cute things grandchil dren do. Current chairman is Mrs. Alfred McGuire of Holy Name parish. But chatter and pictures while still important - have taken a back seat to what now is the "important" function of the club: Packing clothes for mis sions and making dressings and rolling bandanges for use at Rose Hawthorne Lathro{1 Home in Fall River. The busy-bee grandmothers congregate one afternoon a week at the Daughters of Isabella Home at 11 Robeson' Street to sort clothing donated for the mission field and for war refu gees. If it needs to be patched, they patch it. If it needs to be cleaned, they run card parties to earn the money to have it cleaned. While the "packers" are keep ing the mission fields supplied with clothing, the cancer-pa tient-helpers are keelling the Fall River home supplied with dressings and bandages. In between times, one or an other will pull out a picture of a grandchild to remark: "Isn't he a' doll?" The first picture is the hole in the dike, then they all get into the act. The first Wednesday of each month, at 7:30 P.M" the 25 mem bers head for the Robeson Street headquarters for a business ses sion-brief-that is followed by a social hour and refreshments. They delight in recalling that after one recent blizzard, activi-
to Robeson Street any way they could, while younger generations looked aghast. "Oldest" ,member of the club -she admits to being "over 21" -is Mrs. Arthur Berube of 64 State Street, a communicant of Sacred Heart Church. Mrs. Berube uses a cane to get around, but she makes it up the stairs to the second floor of the Daughters of Isabella home without pausing for breath. She beams as she reports she has "10 grandchildren and six great-;grandchildren ...... I got a new one yesterday," w h i c h m a k I' S her grand-champion member of the close-knit dub. Mrs.' Berube slips a little past the "21" mark as she also proud ly observes she celebrated her 50th anniversary in the Daugh ters of Isabella six years ago. When the grandmothers get together, many of them wear "grandmother bracelets" that tell the world the names and numbers of their grandchildren. ·But pictures and conversation are what really spell the pride they have in their children's ,children. "She's the kind you just want to hug," one remarks, looking fondly at a snapshot of her youngest grandchild. Another has an array of pic tures in a stretch case that would reach across the Acushnet River. "I . have six grandchidlren," one says. "But she did it the easy way," another reacts. "She had twins."
©~[pJ@$~ Ab@rlt~@[ffi PATNA (NC) -A national conference of India's leading ob stetricians and gynecologists here has unanimously con demned a proposal to legalize abortion in the country as a method of birth control.
married a man who had grand children." At Isabella bazaars, the grand mother clique mans booths, wearing grandmother aprons. Now they are thinking tenta tively of having a party for grandchildren this coming Sum mer. "We can have them all at my place," one grandmother volun teers. "And when everybody gets in we can lock the gate." "Oh, no!" 'another moans. "My grandchildren are all out of town." "Won't have to lock the gate on mine," Mrs. Berube adds smugly. "My youngest is 18." These grandmothers are ones for the books. They aren't young, but you'd never know it to watch them operate or to listen to them make plans. When they get together, life is comfortable and there's a spirit of amusement in the air. There is pride, too. The kind of pride for which grandmothers everywhere are notorious. "It's just a little more evident here-because there are so many grandmothers to be smug to gether. Visit 'them. You'd ~njoy it as much as they would.
Methodist Minister Cites CounCil Goai KEENE (NC) - A Methodist clergyman, who was an observer at the Second Vatican Council, says the ecumenical movement does not "seek the development of a super-church organization which demands conformity." "But, in response to the convic tion that God wills a church more visibly united than it is, it seeks with the richness of our diversity that we come closer together in love and insight and understanding so that our fears will disappear," said Dr. Robert W. Huston, Boston University school of theology graduate and general secretary of the general commission on ecumenical af fairs of the Methodist Church.
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THE ,At-.Irl-'O"-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 17, 1966
I
ceD To
Conduct Parish. Visitation (>
The Council and Lent
With a view to further establishment . and increas. i~g the effectivenes's of t~ Confraternity of Christian
Echoing the words of Pope John, Cardinal Bea of the 5ecretaria te for Promoting Christian Uriity has said of Vatican Council II: "The Council is' to rejuvenate the' Church so that her unity may be the mqre eyi«:lent." . . '. . Rejuvenation, then, is the first obiigatio~ of every .Catholic who would take to heart. and' . purp9ses of the· ·Vatican Council just concluded. And the unity that each Oathoiic 'seeks to obtain is unity' with Christ: a conform. ing in his Own life to the life and virtues of' the One Whose. 'Name he hearS as a Christian. '. ". . '. The work of redemption by Christ takes' place all' the time and 1;his Lent must' see more who carry the name of Christian live the fact in·their daily lives. The redeem ing Christ, the transforming Christ, the Christ working revolution in the hearts of men-this is the Christ Whom men must accept into their hearts and lives this Lent. .And He can enter 'only through the prayer and sacrifice and almsgiving that ,Christianity ,has accepted from the be ginning as vehicles for the action of God in and on man.
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.p~tri~~ II! the Diocese. of FaR River, a' parish visitation pro. gi~m l)eing implemented ~~r"ihe direction of ~v. Josepill L.•. Powers, Diocesan Director. Parish visitation will be made thr()\.igh·6ut the Diocese in order complete a thorough surve~ to determine needs, and to offer assistance in this field. The visits will be made by the Victory Noll Sisters assigned to the work of the Diocesan Office, Sister Joan Louise, O.L.V.M.. and Sister Miriam, O.L.V.M. Previous to the visit of the Sisters, survey forms will be mailed to each parish. Th:e re ports' based on these que$.tion naires, together with the results of the meeting with the pastor, and parish director, will be filed with this office, with the Dioc esan Director, and with the pastor and parish director. . Further directives concerning the time of the visit, and cqn:' taining the survey forms, will be' sent from the Diocesan CCD office.
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An Episcopal minister, Rev. William A. Norgren, di rector of the National Counc~l of Churches' Department of ,Faith and Order 'Studies, has warned that the ecu menical movement will be in danger unless Church leaders constantly make a clear distinction between Christian unity based on a common and essential faith and coopera tion -for ethical, moral and social objectives. 'The Protestant official sees failure to make this dis tinction leadit~g to indifferentism which, in his words, "assumes that it makes little difference what a man be lieves so long as he is sincere, a well-behaved citizen, and a good fellow." This, he says, is "often an implicit denial of revealed religion." It is good that this danger is recognized by leaders of all religiom; beliefs. Oc~asiomllly the enthusiasm for unity of all Christians leads' a well-meaning individual to imply that there must be a certain compromise of truth in the interest of unity. As Rev. Mr. Norgren says so well, theological differences need not breed aniJposity among the various Ch,ristian communities and a Christian spirit of love should be the pervading principle in associ ations and deliberations. But ecumenism cannot' be ob tained at the eompromise of what a group holds to be dogma, revealed religion,' God-given truth. . At the same time, religious maturity demands' that · careful distinctions be made between .what is dogma and what is discipline, what. is considere«:l revealed trutr. aJlQ.. .w-ha t is custom, what is the .essential and what is the de · tail" what, is ·the heart: of religion .. and' wh~t ''is' on the pe~iph~ri~ . The' essenthil .must be' held fast,' the.:. oth~r is open. . . il4.aption arid 'change, '~nd :iiPdat~ng' '.and ' . ..{ '. O~djustlnent. . . . ".
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OFFICIAL NEWSIPAPER OF ·THE DIOCESE OF FAll
RIV~R
Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River
410 Highland Aven~e
Fall River, Mass. 02722 . 675-7151
PUBlISHt:~
Most Rev: James l. Connolly, D.O., PhD., GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. I;lev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITO~ Hugh 'J. Golden
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Press Mormth St. Bonaventure once wrote that faith is. simply "a habit of mind by which we are drawn and captivated . into the following of Christ." And the modern French writer, Francois Mauriac, has said: "Once you get to know Christ, you cannot be cured of him.".. .. This is the work of the Church, to get men to know' f~hrist and to be drawn into following Him: 'It is the pur (Jose of 'all the works of the Church-educational; s.ocial : and charitable. February is Catholic Press Month. The Catholic Press in' all Its forms-books, magazines, newspapers, pamphlets -holds the Harne objective: to show men Christ. and His. reaction to contemporary events, His inspiration for pres ent action, His spirit of revolution and renewal. In facing and making' judgements on day-by-day happenings, men must· have a frame of reference," a set of values. The Catholic Press aims at letting Christ. be this point of reference, this standard of values.
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Church ·Membersh.ip Ahead Of Populati~n Increase NEW YORK (NC) - Me m be r s h'i p in America's churches and synagogues co.ntinues to run ahead of the annual population increase, according to the latest figures of the National Council of Churches. The Council's 1966 Yearbook of .Am e ric a n major Protestant, Anglican and Churches, published here, Eastern Orthodox communions says that membership in all. constituent to the National' religious bod i e s increased· .Council of Churches totals 41,- .
Prelate, Dr. King Discuss Rights
CHICAGO (NC) - The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. spent an hour and 15 minutes discuss ing his Chicago-civil rights cam paign with Archbishop John P. Cody of Chicago. The meeting took place in the . archbishop's residence. As he left, Dr. King was asked if he "slightly less than two per cen~" . 48.1,790-higher by 140,324 per- . and the prelate had reached an .during 1954, while the country's sons than last year's total of agreement. "It was not the kind of discus population grew less than 1.5 per· 41,341,466. cent. A Yearbook table shows that sion that would lead to 'an agree Protestants were 27 per cent of ment," the Negro leader said. On the other hand, a table· the U. S. population in 1926, He had said earlier that he prepared by the American In- .. 33..8 per cent in. 1950; 35.4 per wanted to enlist backing of the . stitute of PublicOpinon and in- . eluded in the Yearbook shows . cent in 1960; and 35.9 per c~nt city's clel:gYlflen in his drive, di that church attendance has. been . in 1964. The Romap. Catholic' rected initially at the slums. population rose from 16 per cent. Asked if· the archbishop had steadily if slowly declining since ,in' 1926 to 23.3 per. cent in 1960 told him whether priests and 1958. and 23.9 per cent in 1~64. '. nuns would be permitted to take These annual figures, based on An increase of $16 million in part in demonstrations, Dr. King a national sample of adults for the annual. value of new reli replied, "I" got the impression one Sunday, remained at 47. per gipus building construction ~ that it is a matter for individual 'cent from 1959 t6 1961, dropping from $995,000,000 in 1963 to conscience." to 46 per cent in 1962 and 1963, $1,011,000,000 in. 1964 - is' re
then to 45 per cent in 1964. The .corded in a table from the U. S.
all-time high was 49 per cent}n Department of Commerce. !l'he Says Sue.cess
1958. figure for 1963 indicated a'sharp Un 18~nng Ili1VO Of all bodies reporting tllis drop of $40 mil,lion ·from the year 221 were Protestant, with previous year. MILWAUKEE (N minican provincial to a total membership of 68,299,478 The ann u a I tabulation of session at the Wiscon as against. 66,854,200 a year pre- church statistics is based on re Action convention he yious-a gain of 1,445,278 or two -ports by official statisticians of success. of the Chur per cent. 250 religious bodies of all· faiths on teachers, nuns, The total Roman Catholic for the 50 states and the District parents in a number figure given is 45,640,619, com- " of Golumbia. . . Become involved; b pared with 44,874,371 in 1963. The editors of the Yearbook assume' leadership, This reflects a gain of 1.7' per emphasize that membership'stabe aware they repres cent as compared with Catholic : tistics "are merely quantitative Father Gilbert J. G. increases of 2,4 per cent in 1963 and' cannot possibly measure Chicago,' Midwest pre;" and 2.3 per cent "ii, 1962. . either' the quality or 'the depth the ;Dominicans, coun! Current me~bership in the 30 . of the nation's' religious life',": . ·"Maybe some of us~ . .. .. to ,get involved/' he t . ~ien.ce, mostly. nuns. .': . (I'n' ort~:···, :;.0 : ..• piimty of.,peopie· ouf l . . . . , '. '. ". . n~d us:' IJ~t they worj o·
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. - World:. ¢ounCiI,·¢athol·ic:;·Ch·urc:h·.··Ffi:vor: .; .., :·::~.e~~o~;:ethtl~ ;.~ ~ , . ' . Aid Program iii- India, ·Af-rica·.· "..',' '. involved." , . GENEVA (NC)-":The policy F~b:9 was'· seen here' asa eleai" Indianapolis' c: making body of the World, indication that the program is V B Council of Churches has en- favored in Rome as well. otes an on~
dorsed wholeheartedly a recommendation for a joint program by the WCC and the Roman Catholic Church for emergency and development aid to combat famine in India and Afrka. The program, planned as the largest joint effort by Christian churches in the relief field, was approved by the WCC Central Committee, While approval still had to come from the appropriate authorities of the Catholic Church, the statement made by Pope Paul VI on the subject on
. The Pope at his regular week- . . INDIANAPOLIS ( ly general audience had de- City Council of I clared that the "extreme gravity" passed a controversial of the food shortage in India im- designed to ban the sl poses a duty on "all of us" to scene literature. 'give aid. He ,urged that everyone Some ~Oo persons at contribute-"allgood Christians." heated council sessio Approval by the Central Com- terest was stimulated mittee came less than two weeks for Decent Literatu after representatives of the WCC and civic grol,lps. and the International ConferIndianapolis May ence of Catholic Charities met Barton indicated he her e to' map out common measure' and will approaches to aid programs law unless the city's through-ou the world. sel advised him othe
Urges Librarians Employ Cau,tion ~e~arding Boo'ks
F aU Ri",er' Suter Leaves Sunday to Fulfill' Lifelong Desire to Serve in Missions'
CINCINNATI (Ne).- A bishop Qutlined here the cau tion a Catholic librarian must employ regarding"
Youngsters stop her on the street to ask her about the religious life. She came to this reporter's house for an interview, stayed for a friendly cup of coffee and wound up with her lap full of assorted-size children. She's that kind of Sister-a wonderful ad,for Pope .John's open-window brand of Catholicism. She is Sister 'Claire Mari~of the Missionary Sisters of the
~uestion.able
beoks." cannot be so blue nose !]S to rob readers of real values by censoring out materials that, in·the light of conditions in. .our' times, really create' nl> prob lems:' Auxiliary Bishop· Edward A. McCarthy of Cincinnati, as ~ed. . . . "On the other hand, you ·must· not be so naive, so failing in :Four trust, as to be unaware that Bome of the literature being pub nshed and sanctioned in this'so phisticated world of ours. does create serious· moral problems !or reade~ especially young sters," the bishop told the annual Catholic Press Day observance of the Catholic: Library Associa tion's local unit. mghest Order "'You must not forget that morality is of the highest order. Nor must you bW the nonsense that a particularly controversial book is so fndispensible for the' IiteJrary edUcation of the high a:hooter, who sometime~ hardly knows how to· read, that his ed ucation is being- neglected' if he is not exposed' to its pornog raphy," he said. Bishop McCarthy advocated fIlat Cathollc libraries "reflect the new spirit of the Church." Be said the response of the Catholic librmrian to the Second Vatican Council's' can "to inten oify the life of lC)ve" is tG use J!)ll'ofessionaJ; skill and talents to serve others "by opening wider treasu.res," and by stimulating "Jntell~tum. fennent" among those the librarian serves. ~ou
.Immaculate Conception, the daughter of Mrs. Josephine Just o£ Notre Dame' parish, Fall Riv er. Look quickly if ,you want to see her---<m Sunday she's off to fulfill what's been her heart's desire since she was a bouncy fourth grader in St. Jean Bap tiste School,. Fall River. She's going to the missions--specifi cally to a tiny fly-speck on the map of Bolivia, the village C)f Guanay, population 500, at a charitably inflated estimate.
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She can hardly wait to get there, but it's going to be an od yssey. First lap of the journey will be easy, she explains: a 13 hour flight fJ:om New York City to La Paz. Then she'n start crawling: by cargo plane, 'truck and. finall'y by motor boat•. If lucky she'll reach Gu3Il3Y in about two days. The cargo plane part of ti!e trip, she explains blithely, is hazardous. The old planes, un able to fly high enough to pass above lBolivia's mountains, fly' through theni. The problem is that the peaks are usually mist
~~r~~~:r~~~:t:~~,xto~~em;~:n~f. r
said Sister, there's just room 'for
th:a plane to turn a comer between two mountains, and the pilots do it by timing. Sometimes they miss," she added thoughtfully.
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ECUMENlICAL COUNCIL: Sister Claire Marie, S.M.
I.C. discusses pictures of her mission in Bolivia with Ner
phrita and Morris Black. They are children of Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Black, pastor and choir director of Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Chtl.rch in Fall River.
1V!issiolllary DJiocese Sister Claire Marie ascribes her lifelong interest in the mis- children she'll have in the S ~I'it\.ftId I ~ IV a II sions to the "mission atmosphere school, but expects to open it o~ the Fall River Diocese. I next month. Three Sisters, plus tell the Sisters in my community lay teachers, will teach six MARQUETTE (NC) _ Bishop that in FaIt River missionaries grades. 'l'homns L. Noa has involved lao. are treated like kings," she said. CICOP Conference ity deeper in affabs of this And she remembers how visiting Sister Claire Marie was an Michigan diocese with his plam missionaries would talk to the enthusiastic participant in the tor [l diocesaIll synod.. children at St. Jean Baptiste third annual Catholic InterThe dioc:ese alread!y has clergy School and would often occupy American Cooperation Program, and laity members' 9n aU its the parish pulpit. Last Sunday, held last month in Chicago, and achool boards. too, old classmates held a re- also attended by Rev. James W. Bishop. Noa named three melt union in her honor at St. Jean Clark, Fall River's Director of and a woman to serve on the Baptiste. PAVLA and Extension Volunplanning and coordinating eom. She is bringing a rich back- teers. mittee for the coming synod. Be ground to .her new job,. that of She said that many of the also said one or two, laymen superior and: principal of a yet- mission projects discussed at from each parish will take part to-be-started school in Guanay. the meeting were already in in deanery meetings before the Her 20 years of religious life effect or would be put into op synod. have included assignments as eration at Guanay, where the ·Four priests, including Msgr. principal of schools in Texas and Sisters work with Franciscan Joseph J. Dunleavy of Ironwood, lllinois, she speaks Spanish and Fathers from the New York chairman, were named to the French, and. she has also done Archdiocese. The priests are in planning group. Laity membern catechetical work, which she daily radio contact with La Paz, include Mrs. Walter McClintock, will continue in Guanay. she said, and this service is go Republic, president of the Dio:: In contrast to the present flow ing to be amplified to provide esan Council of Catholic Women; of priests, Sisters and laypeople radio schools for outlying vil Robert Polzin of this city, head from North to South America, lages. "We have a Sister study of the Cursillo Secretariat; Con Sister Claire Marie's commu- ing ham radio now," said Sister Sullivan, L'Anse, and Charles nity, founded in Brazil, began in Claire Marie, "and she'll oper Gabel, editor of the Northern 1922 to s~nd Sisters to the ate the schools." Michigan Edition, Our Sunday United States. "It was a practical Also in the offing fo'r Guanay Visitor, dio~esan newspaper. matter," explained_Sister. "We is a farming cooperative where . .. needed funds to carryon the _.' 'by villagers will· pro:yide ,fresh Sell' Sniritug! Id~~~§ work' in. 'L~tin America,. and vegetables for the surx:ounding Ii'" sending Sisters to the States was area instead of bringing them in T~ Scien,fdfic Wc;')~~. a way of obtaining them." The. at high cost from La Paz. VATICAN CITY (NC)-Cath - ·Sister.s - tau~ght . and. catechised Sister Claire Marie ~i.1l be olic students were urged by and. In 19,18 a Umte~. States. visiting nearby villages as well' inf . "tua1 founded prOVInce of the commumty was 8S teachin"" school • On these l?ope P a ul VI ~b U . use SPlI'l to Ideals into "a world drunI. with . . . . . scientific successi2S." Although the .Misslonary 8IS Speaking recently at an audi ~ers ha~e a ~orelgn background, ence to the European Committee It wa~ t until ~ast year th~t the and European chaplains of the Amencan proVInce se~t SI.sters Jeunesse Etudiante Catholique out of the country, saId Sister, . (Young Catholic Students), the hence ~he. delay in s~t~sfying her Pope said: own. miSSIonary ambitIons. "Because you \Yill be far from The Guanay mission began a inferior to your fellows in sec year ago this month and the ular knowledge and objective Sisters already there have been achievements, you will be able concentrating on medical work to make it understood that the and catechising. "There is a pub South .. Sea Streets
GOd of faith carries no threat lic school," said Sister, "but the at all to man's intelligence but people have asked for 11 Catho Ter. HY 81
Hyannis that He gives it its full cIimen. lic school." The new principal liIions, in love." d.oesn't yet know how many
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trips, which may be two or three day safaries through jun gle territory, the Sisters wear dungarees and combat boots in addition to their blue-grey work habits. A priest, a nurse and a catechist make the trips, and villages can count on visits every two months or so. "The people are all nominal Catholics," said Sister, ''but some are just that, nominal." Spanish and the Aymara dialect are spoken. Sister bas been warned that on the mi.ssions she'll be called "Madre Clara." "We're all called 'Madre,' and the' people just won't b C) the r with double names," she said. InfectJiol!s JEntbusnasm Sister's enthusiasm for her new assignment is infectious. And she thinks there may be many girls like those who've stopped her on the street to ask her about the religious life. "Please tell them," she said, "to write to the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Conception at Box 536, West Paterson, New Jersey." .
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DETROIT (NC)-The 21st ~n- , nual meeting of the National Catholic Apostolate of the Sea has been scheduled for April here in Michigan.
THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 17, 1966
Bishop Manning Cites Challenge
Facing S«:hools LOS ANGELES (NC Catholic schools face the challenge of closing the gap between : information and ethics, Auxiliary Bishop Timo thy Manning of Los Angeles has told a meeting of 300 elementary school principals here. He warned of two modem heresies. One, he said, is ex pressed by those who say "no organization can tell me what to do because I have freedom of conscience." The other is expressed by those who claim that moral laws are impossible to observe and therefore the Church has no right to ask that they be obeyed, he added. Sueh modem heretics have not read the Scriptures, the Bishop said. ''The law of God is possible and it should be demanded," he continued. The highest facet of Catholic education is to inform the con science, to bring it into con formity with the truth of Christ in order to proouce Christian character. "We must strengthen his con science so that the child will know and follow the will of Christ," Bishop Manning said. The natural law and divine revelation are the sources for this formation, which must be pastoral, scriptural, liturgical. he declared. "We must become saturated with the Scriptures ourselves, so he said. "The Word has to affect our own souls first; then we can communicate it,"
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Colun1,ist 'ListsPatro'nSain,tS Of Branches of SerVices By MM)' Tinley Daly , A group of mothem with sons in service seek informa tion about patron saints of the various branches. Research :reveals the following (feast days follow immediately after 'name of saint): For aviatom: OUi' Lady of Loreto, Feast Day, Dec. 10: St. Teresa of Lisieux, Oct. 3, "The Little (1416-1507), founder of the Minims, a religious order of men Flower of Jesus," a Carme. who observe 'a perpetual Lent. lite nun who died in 1897 at For soldiers: St. Hadrian, Sept.
,.
the age of 24, canonized, May 1'l, 8, an officer in the Roman army 1925. Many graces have been at< who persecuted Christians but tributed to her was so moved by their constancy interces that he embraced the Faith and sion. Among her 'in the third century suffered writings martyrdom; St. George, patron we not,e, "I saint of England', who slew III would like to threatening dragon and later find a ..ift to suffered for the Faith under Di raise me to ocletian: He is commemorated Jesus, for .I am on April 23. St. Sebastian, Jan. 100 little to go 20, pictured with arrows and a up the steep erown. High officer in the army steps of perfec of Diocietian, when it was tion." Also for learned Sebastian was a Chris
lIlviators. St. Josephof Cupertino, tian he was condemned in 288, Sept. 18,' whose symbol 1m an first shot with arrows, finall3tt airplane'. " by ,order of the emperor, beatellil A Franciscan friar bt naly to death. (1603-63), he was known for his For Soldiers humility, sweetness, and love of Also for soldiers: St. IgnatiWl mortification and penance. Con- of Loyola, July 31, Spanish sol freres attest to his levitation, at dier and priest (149J,·1516>., flying, sometimes seven or eight founder of the Society of Jesus; feet off the ground, while saying St. Martin of Tours, Nov. 11, SOB :Mass or: reciting the Divine of 'pagan parents, French bishop Office. , and "soldier saint" who died in For MarinerS: st. Michael the : 397. ''Twas said he cut his eoat m Archangel, Sept. 29, depicted half with his sword, giving half with banner, dragon, scales, to a shivering beggar. In a sword. From the Apocalypse of vision, Christ is said to have ap St. John, XII, 7-9: "And there peared, dressed in a: half-eoat was a battle in heaven; Michael and saying, "Martin, yet a cate~ and his angels battled with the 'chumen, has covered me with dragon and the dragon fought this ,garment." , and hi; angels. And they did not Included, too, in the patronage prevail, neither was their place of soldiers is St. Joan of Are, found any more in heaven. And feast day May '2, French "Maid that great dragon was cast down, of Orleans" who lived 1412-13 the ancient serpent, he who Ul and whose career is too well ealled the devil and Satan, who known to be repeated here. She leads astray the whole world, was canonized 'in 1920. and he was cast down to the For artillerymen: St. Barbara, earth and with him 1Wl angels DeC. 4, martyred about 306 and :were cast down." pictured usually with tower" 81. Nieholaa palm, chalice and cannon. Also, St. Nicholas of Tolentino. Though little can be authenti Sept. 10, Italian friar of the cated about St. Barbara, devo Order of St. Augustine, who' tion to her persists, springing died in 1306. During life, he ap~ up spontaneously among troops. Prayers may be found in • peared to storm-tossed marincl'fl who invoked his aid off the missal under date of the parti~ eoast of Lycia and were brought uIar feast or the name of the
safely to port. Sailors in the saint. Space limitations preclude Aegean and Ionian seas' had further elaboration.. their "Star of St. Nicholas" IllI1d wished one another a good voy age in the phrase, "May ~ ,Blackfriars Presenting Nicholas hold the tiller." 'Consider the lilies' For paratroopers: St. Michael NEW 'YORK (NC) ..... "l'be the Archangel (see above). For sailors: st. Cuthbert, Blackfriars' Guild, New York'. March 20; St. Brendan, sixth oldest "off-Broadway" theater eentury Irish Abbot of Clonfert; group, with its latest offering, St. Eulalia, Feb. 12; St. Peter "Consider the Lilies," a new Gonzales, April 15; St. Erasmus, play about St. Catherine of iune 2, bishop in t~e south. of Siena by Father Edward Mol Jtaly ,who suffered martyrdom loy, has staged its 62nd pre.. Under the Emperor' Diocletioil duction in 25 years.
'The Blackfriars' '8to(!k-iBoo Id>out the year '300. has beenreligous playa, AIso fOr sailors: St. Christ~', trade' but there have been some eome-, pher ' (the' Chtist,.bea~r); ,JUly dies, tWo ori~rw llIBusicals, 25, pictured with ,the Child Je!lWl ' ,',' en"his shoulderS, a third centull7 ' ~r~~ jrii~ satii~..." "I'm very hl!PPY to ~ave stuck martyr;, and " St., "Nicholas of to the b8slc principles 'we started MYra, ~. e,' 'four~ centull']1' Wit~" Father Thoinaa F. care,., archbishop in Asia Minor, lo~ked , '~he' guild's direCtor, il8id~: .pori: also as the patron of chil 0.P.~ flOur policy has been new scriptll tirenand regarded as the proto type 'of Santa ClaWl (derivoo With' 'a Spirlhiai' ove~ne. if ~ , Could not dc:i original plays, l[ , !rom St.' Nicholas). ", :, For, seamen: St.: ,Francis «II! \Voudri'i be in the business. ~e Paula, April 2,' ' JtaliaaJnou are in the theater for the good it can do, for people's lives." Father Carey 'and the 18te , Fathe~ ,Urban Nagie, O.:P., bea
b I Whis1l' Mother Cabrlrii Circie, Daughc gan the BlacKfriars' venture"1im
teiS 'of Isabellli, will hold a pub.:. Washington in 1931. :Die whist at 8 Saturday night, Flint Project Feb. 19 in the parish school of FLINT (NC)-The Interfaith St. Margaret's Church, Buzzards Bay. General chairman Mrs. eouncil of Flint project will Frank Fraher announces that promote understanding of the procee,ds will finance charitabRe four major faiths in this com munity on the Sundays in March. activitie~ of the circle.
NEW BEDFORD BALL: Enjoying New Bedford Cath-, elie Woman's Club Annual Ball are, left to right" Mr. and
Mrs'. Henrique Rogers and Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Zipoli. Mrs. Rogers and Mrs. Zipoli were eo-chairrnen.
Missionary Mill Hill Community Priest Praises Peace Corps Work in Borneo Jungle Parish FAIRBORN (NC)-A visiting missioner whose Jungle parish in Borneo is larger than his native Holland praises highly the work of the U. S. Peace Corps. , Father Leopold Van Rooyen of the Mill Hill community say. two Peace Corps members help teach some 400 children 'in one of seven schools the missioner established. Father Van Rooyen said one llorneo ehief regarded AIrier icans only as wealthy people but the arrival of the Peace Corps 'workers changed his mind. The' priest sliid the chief now has 8ft affection for America because "her boys work for us and eat like we do." "We 'in the jungle are most grateful to America," Father
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NEWPORT (NC)-8ister Mary'
Emily, ,president, announced that Salve Regina College, conducted by the Sisters of Mercy here, has
received a $50,000 grant for
scholarships from Robert Goe let, .86, shortly before his death on Feb. 6. Goelet, an Episcopalian, and his wife donated Ochre Court, the eollege's first and major building, to the Providence Di- ocese iA 1947. '
) DEB~~:~ OIL
eAMDE:rT (NC) - Archblshall eelestine J. Damiano of Camde-, has instructed Camden priestll working in Brazil to prepare , . the selection and traininl GI married deacons. The Archbishop Is back homil after having visited four P8Zloo ishes he establlshed in the D100l eese of Jatai, Brazil, in Decem ber 1961. The parishes a . staffed by 10 priests from the Camden Diocese and five Fr-aDo> ciscan nuns from Joliet, IlL The hierarchies of Brazil 'ani! Chile were the first in tn. world to petition the J{oly see for the use of ordained mar~ deacons. ' "There is such a scarcity GIl priests in Brazil that thousandl of people are unable to partidoo pate at Mass on Sunday," Arc. . bishop ,Damiano noted. "On* parish has 24 Masses on Sun day and even then most peop~ oddly enough young, men and boys, have to stand outside." For this reason, he said, .. am al",ays open to more priest
volunteers, for BraziI." Arch bishop Damiano had, great prai. for his, missionaries. ''They ha_ mad~ a'favorable ,impressiOlii upon veteran missionaries whG! have been there 20 yean ' . more," he observed.
'ANNAPOLIS (NC) - Legtg. Van Booyen said. "Through JIltion to permit a woman whtt elaims to have been raped to 0b Catholic Relief Services - Na tain an abortion has been intro tional Catholic Welfare Confe, ence we receive regular ship-, duced in the Maryland Generlil ments of the best medicines one Assembly. The proposal provides fl woman could obtain an abMi eould wish for." tion if she filed a formal ra,N charge against someone.
Salve Regina College "Gets $50,000 Grant
S~. LOUIS (NC)-The Cath oDe Hospital Association is eon ductingits ninth eorrespondence' eourse, for hospital administra- ~ tOI'8 and supel'vil!OrB. 'It 1a "Su pervisory Management, for Hoe pi'als and. R~la~. Health FaeD-' lUes.";
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having pored ov~rthe garden catalog'S for al . most a month now, I have finally put together my orders, and sent them out and now am eagerly awaiting their-ar rival. It wasn't an easy job. There is so much that I need (like every other gardener, I'm sure) that it was difIt just does not seem so im icult to make final selecportant that we develop a blue f rose or a white marigold. I tions. One thing struck me should like to see plants devel in almost all the catalogs loped with longer life spans,' looked at and that was the num more frost resistance and more bel.' of what. I would consider . disease immunity rather than strange flowers featured in. with strange shapes and even brightiy ,colored pictures. Green , stranger colors. zinnias, fOf example. What in the w:orld would anyone w!Ult, ' ,. However, great things are
with a green zinnia? What coul(i probably in store for us in the
be more revolting than an .' coming years: blue daffodils,
insect-eating plant? And yet in 'white strawberries, black roses
'almost" every c~ta1og.these and' ~Qd the most necessary of all similar' plants are not only for lrilprovements, purple tomatoes. lIale but they are given greater 'well, I am sure that all this will space than some of the marvelous come to pass but I am more than hybrids which have been pro positive that none of it will ever duced in the last 15 years or so. find its way to my garden. I What is the reason for so much will content myself with yellow interest in the different and daffodils, orange' marigolds, red novel? I am afraid I do not have zinnias and yellow forsyt~a~ the ansWer, al~hough I ce~tainly ; : am curiOUS. Sometimes I' think '1 am: :disappointed' in the hy it is a salesgirrimick to appealbrldists in one regard, though. I to new gardeners or' to those" ~ carlnot see why they did' not c:ie people who 'have lost interest in "'\1elop a 'green zinnia with red gardening. And :yet I suppose it ~leaves. Now, this would,' seem to is largely' 'due' to' the search o~, '~' i the epitome of accomplish the part of the hybi"idist for :h~:ent. But on second thought, 1 something completely different am sure that there: are several which will attract attentiOn and botanists working on the projecf make money. '. J;ight no~! . "/'/'
Churches Plan··.~,"to', 'p rOmo'te Grass lRoots Ecumenism
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WORCESTER (NC) - As CJ step in implementing the Vati can Council's declarations on the Jews, the Diocese of Worcester' is sponsoring attendance by 15 Catholics, Protestants and Jews at a course in Jewish-Christian relations in Boston. The course, conducted by leading authorities, will be held weekly for 15 weeks at Boston's Temple Israel Meeting House. The Worcester Diocesan Ecu menical Co;mmission, with ap proval of Bisliop Bernard J. Flanagan, is sponsoring partici . pation by five Cathoijcs, five , Protestants and five Jews. The . discussions are und~r. auspices . of the' Union of American He brew Congregations, V. nit e d ,Synagogues of America and Packard Manse, a Protestant eCa umenical center in suburban Boston. FattIer John, F. Burke, chair';' man of the Worcester diocesan commission, .said "he, hoped the local grouP. wO,uld' forin. the' nll cleus "in this area for future dis 'cuSsions Qn Cluistian - Jewish " relatio~." :. "
,.: Asks Convents' House REHEARSAL AT STONEHILL,: .The Lafayette S~ of Stonehill College will present "KnoCk" by Jules RomllWs on, Sunday evening, February 20, at 7 :45 in Holy cross Hall. ,Lead~r~ in, this. Fr~nch language play, are Dr•. ,KIlocl(as played by B~J;'mlrd 'Petit of Fall River and Mae. childs of Falmouth who plays the role of the mysterious, ebullient Lady in Black.
Parents of Nuns
'Clety
LONDON' (NC) - A British nun has suggested that convents be modified to provide living quarters 'for the 'EHderIyparentlil of ,nunS who have no one else to care for them. Sister Mary Gregory, superior of a community of La Retraite
, !
Seekonk Coup~e Assume He.adship :~:~~:e i~fs~~~~:~a~~~r: ~~~t Of Dc@cesGIm- CFM Federation .::~hn~n~l:t;:;:n~e:~::~~~~
BALTIMORE (NC)-Top officials of the Oatholic church and the National Council of Churches ended a one day meeting here with the announcement that they would said a· pilot project to house Mr. and M rs. WI'lliam Crowley an d Mrs. J 0 h nPolli s are among pax:ents at convents is already work together to promote "grass roots" ecumenism among of st. Mary's Parish, Seekonk the promoters of this endeavor being planned by her community have assumed the presidency of and Rev. Father Tibault, M:S. in France. aU American Christi-ans. T h e . , . . ld be th" ti l' . h f' t '. purposes wou ' ,.e s mu a , Sister Gregory said this is one meetmg was t, e Irs ever"tion,'of ecumenisiD on the parish the Christian Family Movement will be on hand to discuss these
in the. Diocese of Fall River. .films. "
hi h 'win . held on an official level be- 'and 'community ievei, '.. , They rep'lace D.',1.','., and,.., Mrs., Jo.. , .Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wessman. WilY m w' c nuns· aregro g in awareness: of the. ,, . tween members' 0:1; the U.S" Bi;;hop, Carbe'rry unde,rscored seph Kerrins, in tha,t, post. ,In, ,are. planning a'leadership course aro~nd' them.' No ::longer,world she Catholic Bishops'" Cqmmission ". the :ecumenical' , nature, of the other personnel assignments, Mr. "for late ,February. Mr. and Mrs.. ' .said, do nUDS spend their eve- . for Ecumenical. ,Affairs and lead-' Baltimore conference by observ and Mrs. FranCis Stelter of St. Robert Fife will join the Wess" " Dings sitting in ,a circle ,with ers of the Nee, a councll of ing·that:it 'was held on the final , John's, Parish, . Attleboro. have. 'm,ans in giving this course to in- .mending. Now. they attend American Protestant and. Or", .. day of the Church~,Unity Octave become' members of the Public terestedcouples throughout the' courses Qutside the. convent, go thodox churches.~. , ,. and tJlat"it opened .with a joint Relations COmmit~ee, heac:led by , Diocese.:' to lectures and movies, watch Although no further meetings' prayer service in the assembly Mr. and, Mrs. Eugene" McLaugh-. The Federation will sponsor a ',' television and dl) parochial work. were sche,duled in the near fu- hall, of ,St. Paul's E pis e 0 pal ' lin. ' .' ,',', . booth at" the Diocesan Vocational
ture, it was announced that both.' Church. ' Exhibit' to' be held at BIshop' , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Mrs. Vincent O'Donnell re groups plan; to establish joint. !twas aisonoted that the day ,ported that the Art Club uniting Cassidy High School, Taunton, committees, perhaps by the end marked the seventh anniversary, children of CFM couples meets in March. Details of this will be' of February, to consider "all of'.. the'. calling of the Second regularly twice a month. Among handled by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph matters which affect the Chris- Vatican Council by Pope John their projects they are striving, Monaghan and Mr. and Mrs. tian community,,, and especially XXIII, an event that took place to put into practice many of the GeOrge Wilson of Taunton. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rogers Christian unity. at the basilica of St. Paul's Out- ideas suggested by the 1965-66 <. program of the Christian Family have been chosen to make plans Step lForward side-the-Walls in Rome. NEW' 8fElL1l!fO!J!l~ Bishop John. J. Carberry of Movement as it deals with the for a Spring workshop which Columbus, Ohio, the chairman use of leisure time. Field trips will explore the theme for the of the Catholic bishops' commisHub Cardinal Urges have been made and a puppet 1966-67 CFM Program: "Family INDUSTRiAL sion, declared at a pr-ess conferIe I show is presently being planned. Life and Economics." Details ence at the end of, the day that, 'Uni~y OT !Love . . The LaSalette Cinema ,Club 'concerning t~is program,~ill be HEATING OilS
' the talks represented a "treKEENE (NC)-Chlistians.' of will meet at varied, intervals a~ released later: the La~alette Retreat, HO\lse to mendous step forward for; tpe.. different religious beliefssb"pUld TIMKEN
"' .. relations of American Christi-' iearn to understand one another better' Interpr~t a~d und.e,rstand , films, tlius increasing theappre: OIL BURNERS
ans." and "work ~ogether'for univer .;. BEFORE 'YOU' "The day has given us; rel'1e~';' '.sal'· pe'li~e,"" Richard Cardinal ciation for this art forni.Atty. BUY-TRY ed hope and renewed confidence' 'Cushing of Boston has told an ,"Sales &; that we can ~~Dl~,,}~:,~ :l,>,~~~r.,.; itl,~~aU~ m~ting~h~;re iJlNew Famine to Chdlle'nge'" ~;', ,'.\!. ; , " : . understanding ot each 'other and' Hampshire.
. " .G' ' ' that we can work toget~er" ~or :, !,'NWy.gr.eat arilbiti()li" an com- Amerlc(i n,,' ,erier9,sity ; Christian ;unity," he said. I~g here and going elsewhere,"
NEW ORLEANS,(NC)-FllIri NEW BEDFORD The Rev. Nonnfl~..:J.. Baugher, he said,: '''is: to get the 'ordinary ine abroadwiUbe a majGr, ,chal OLDSMOBILE general secretary of the Church people, like ourselves, who are lenge to the generosity of 1\rner",., Oldsm()bile-Peug()f-Renault.. WY 3·1751' of the Brethren and vice-presi- the fouhdation of the country icans in th.e near· future, the·,ex.. 67 ,Middle Street F~i.rhaven . dent of the NCC, presided at .~he as well as.. of Christianity, to ecutive secretary of"the National meeting with. Bishop C~rb~~.... -~aik ·~:piJ.e ,anotlier~unde~\,their Conference of Catholic Charities While emphaSIzing ~hat ~e di!i-,' respective religious ;leaderS." declared here. eussions were not aImed at joint' . :, :. This growing, world crisis is action for the 'future, he'reve~l-~' ~he_Cardinal stressea the.,ef going to'hit sooner than we ex ed that they~ 'were, co~ciern~d' . fQ~, of" \tbe . S~?!1d "~at~tan . pect, Msgr, Lawrence Corcpran .. primarily with prayer 'and with Council'were not, aImed at-phy said in an interview. arid ·"we· , ecumenism on a local level. mcally unifying all churches. He should.begin making provisions." Parish Level ,.~ '!1~P~~;' "~e;:-t;nust be ?onest. He cited critical famine condi . ":.; '. at· He said some of the time was There are too many opposIte be- tions ionations like India, as sit·· devoted to questions of unity Uefs among us, too many unsur- uations where Americans. will touching "the social and pbblie ' mountable, ~bstacles in the way ~ :. be asked to, h.elp'.. He ,. praise~. affairs of the world." :of unificatIon. When I talk "Catholic Relief Services -.Na Spokesman declined to elabo-' unity, ,I talk the unity of love;"., 'tional Cath?lic Welfare C()nferrate on the ,joint committees that He, ,criticized scholars "who . ence for its "effective work, but will be fonned to carry on the live in. ..Ivory towers and are added, "We are going to be ' NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 115 WILLIAM ST. joint action. But It was made not interested in reaching little called on to do more" on a much dear that one of tbeir chief ~ple." broader scale.
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THE ANCHOR-D.iocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 17,1966
P(O)!}l)® Aw®rrs Morma111 Devotion
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VATICAN CITY (NC) -The ,veneration of Our Lady "is es sentially linked with that of Christ, deriving from and lead ing to it," Pope Paul VI told his weekly general audience on the feast of Christ's presentation in the temple and the purifica tion of Ma'ry. peparting from tradition, the Pope combined the audience ,with the annual Candlemas cer emony during which clerical and lay representatives of Rome 'present candles to the Pope as an act of homage. It was the first time the ceremony was heid in, St, Peter's basilica. Usually it takes place in the Vatican Pal ace before a limited audience. Devotion to' Mary, the' Pop'e 'said after' the ceremony, "guar antees us convinced, firmness" 'and "vital attachment." to faith in Christ and His Church which would be .impoverished and compromised without devoted and reasonable honor rendered to Mary. Revive Devotion , "It is therefore necessary," he said, "that we revive our devo:" tion to Our Lady, seeking the truths .which give it life in bib lical origins and'the age-old ana genuine meditation of the Church. Is not today's ,feast bib ,lical, for instance" ~erivrng its messianic,theological and spir-
itual depth from the stupendous pages of the Bible? "And together with these truths we must purify and em bellish the forms of our Marian piety, never allowing it to be detached from its doctrinal sources, but finding in them the norms and stimulus for pouring itself forth in genuine expres sions. The promptings of the heart and the genius of art also confirm the truth from which this veneration springs and tells us that it is sublimely embodied in Mary as in no other creature. Devotion to Mary has been vitalized 'by the ecumenical council, the Pope said, particu larly through the Constitution on the Church, which contains a chapter devoted to her. "Can any faithful Catholic dare to doubt its reason for be ing?" he asked. Can anyone ever think that it severs us from, or opposes itself to the unique supreme worship we give to Christ and through Christ, to the Holy Spirit,: to God our Father? Can it ever be said that this, devotion is superfluous, when it reflects the divine de sign regarding the' mother of Christ, and when the great basic truths of, the' entire economy, of human salvation fif,ld their lu min?us expression- in Mary?
COMMISSION MEETS: First meeting of the post-concilar central commission to co. ordinate the work of carrying out the provisions of Vatican Council II was h~ld with Pope Paul VI attending. In foreground at left is Archbishop John J. Krol of Philadelphia, one of the undersecretaries of the council. NC. Photo. .
Suggests Protestant I Aggior,namentol
Priest'Asks Study 'of Reformation Protests
EVANSVILLE (NC)-A priest staff, of Archbishop Paul C. challenged Protestants to con Schulte ,of Indianapolis, said the duct an "aggiornamento" in Catholic Church, ·.as ,a result of much the same way Catholics the council had made. a change of 'attitude' from a defensive, did in the Second Vatican Coun cil. ' monolithic' organization that· is trulY'revolutionary. ' ·Father Raymond' "T. Bosler, New Theology editor of the Criterion~ Indian'-, apolis archdiocesan ,newspaper, "For the past several hundred , " speaking befpre some' 400 Cath years, the Church closed its eyes olics and Protestants at a unity to ail the good in the modern service here in St. John's United world," the editor said. "Because 'Catholic Welfare Bureau and Church of Christ, said that the new societies of capitalism, C~thedr,al Camp, East Freetown. through the council the' Catho socialism· and even communism He' is survived bY,a brother, ' lics have made a beginning on' seemed to be progressing with Francis X. O'Brien, of Cambria the road to unity. out Christ, the Church took"the Heights, N. Y:, and fiye sisters. 'position that nothing good' couid Now it is up-,to the Protestants Ma;. Gertrude Hacking, 'Mrs. result froin any of' these move to take a hard look at them 'Madeline. Sullivan,' Miss' Agnes ,ments. . .o'Brien and Miss Louise O'Brien, selves and determine if the pro "When .Pope John told the 'as tests of the Reformation still are .all of Fall River, and Mrs. Julia ,sembled bishops 'not to condemn valid, he added. O'Toole, Somerset. . anything or 'anybody, fresh air Father Bosler, who served' as ,The body of the .late pastor blew through the Church and in a peritus (expert) at the four was 'transferred from the Mans sessions' of the council on the .stead of having the attitude of field' rectory to the church Sun waiting for the modern world to ,day afternoon at which time 'the come back to Christ, the Church office of the dead was chanted. now is going out into the world Diocese in Florida
with a new theology that is Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, meaningful to the man of today," D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of' Aids Poverty .Warr
Father Bosler said. JACKSONVILLE (NC)·- A the Diocese, presided and chant In issuing his challenge to up ,former orphanage and convent is ed the third lesson. The first and second' lessons now serving as headquarters for 'date their, church, 'the editor called attention to how much the were chanted by Rev. John 'J. the local war on poverty. Catholics . have learned from ,Casey, No. Easton and Rev. The Diocese of St. Augustine Protestant theology while they Maurice S'ouza, Taunton. has given the Greater Jackson conducted their _"aggiornamen Officers at the Solemn Pon ville Economic Opportunity (G to" at the council. tifical Mass offered in St. Mary's JEO) rent-free use of the three Church, Mansfield on Monday story building. morning were, Bishop Gerrard, The building served as an Mass Privilege celebrant; Rt. Rev. Hugh A. orphanage until 1952 when the BONN (NC)-In priest-short, Gallagher, assistant priest;' Re'v. Sisters of St. Joseph,. changed it tourist centers and other areas James, E. Gleason and Rev. to a corivent. They moved to a in Germany where Catholics are 'George E. Sullivan, deacon and new convent late last year. widely dispersed, Sunday Mass subdeacon, respectively. obligations may be fulfilled on ,Rev. James F. :f(enn'ey, thuri fer; Rev. John F: Hogan and Pilgrims Fatima Saturdays. Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney, ac FATIMA '(NC) ~ Ab~ut 1.5 olytes; Rev. James F. Lyons, millon persons from almost ev book bearer; Rev. Edward A. 'ery country of the world visited Rausch, candle bearer. Rev. Roger Gagne, mitre bear-' this Marian shrine ,during 1965, acc,ording to figures released' by er; Rev, Arthur de Mello, grem the shrine secretariat. During iale bearer. the past year inore than 15,000 Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medei' Masses were' offered at the ros, I;>iocesan Chancellor, and Rev. James F. Kelley, masters shrine's main church, and an of ceremonies. .-other 2,500 Masses were cele Interment w'as in St. Patrick's' ,brated at the chapel of the ap Cemetery, Fall River. paritions.
.'Eu'logi%~s: Fr... O'Brien's Humility' . Continued from Page One
days and prayerf'ul' nights. ,The
'fact that he: was 'plagued by ill
'health during many. of 'tpese
'years was, not allo~ed to' inte~'"
.fere; To' you who liv~ here,~nd have watched him,' and helped him and' worked ,with him~no words of mine can be adequ~te.:' The eulogist continued, "The, fruit'o{hill'labor during th,ese 23 plus years w'il s climaxed by the building of this beautiful church and rectory. In every direction . we see the proof of ,his planning and exquisite taste. This church is his visible monument. The in visible memorials are 'in the minds and hearts of the people of Mansfield -'- with everyone ,with whom he came in contact. He lived the ministry' of kind ness. "Humility is the virtue which is the foundation stone of all other vi rtues and it surely was the main-spring of his every thought and act. He never thought of himself. He was the 'most forgiving and forgetting priest I 'have ever known." Father O'Brien, pastor of St. Mary's Church, Mansfield for 23' years and a native of Fall River, died Thursday morning. Born here, the son of the late Thomas E. and Bridget O'Lough lin O'Brien, on March 24, 1894. A graduate of Durfee High' School, Fall -River, he attended Niagara University and St. Ber nard's Seminary, Rochester. Ordained on May 26, 1921 in St. Mary's Cathedral, F'all River, by the last Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, he was assigned to St. John's Parish, Attleboro. He was later assigned to St. James Parish, New Bedford, and from 1932 to 1942 served as chaplain at St. Mary's Home, New Bedford, the Bristol County House of Correction, di rector of the' New Bedford
Attack Efforts BONN (NC) - COmmunist roled Albania's Radio Tirana has attacked Pope Paul VI because of his peace efforts in the Viet nam conflict. It said he has sup ported the American peace of fensive, which is nothing but a "bi~ swindle."
"We have placed the emphasis of ChJ;'ist's presence in the Eu charist," he said, "and you have placed his presence primadly iii. the 'Word' of Scripture. We now recognize the importance of Christ in Scripture and now it is , ,time for Protestants to make ,;' note of ,His sllcramental pres ence." . Without thi~ change in the at
titude of Protestants; there call
. be ~o unity," Father, Bosler
warned. He called this sharing of the common bread the" greatest source of unity and pleaded for , all- to join in prayer, that this Christian unity, which seemed an impo!,si~ility only a short time· ago, can be "a possibility in our lifetime." "
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Convergence Taking Place Of Catholics and Jews
tHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil Ri~er":"Thurs., Feb. tl7. t-966
so AlII N
SAN FRANCISCO (NC)~A University of Ca]ifornia sociologist said Catholics have been moving in a liberal . direction and Jews in a conservative direction during the past three years. "The convergence has been taking place almost as rapidly from the "It is not so much that Jews Jewish side as from the have moved in a conservative Catholic," Nathan Glazer direction-it is rather that Jews said. Dr. Glazer, a Jew, gave have stayed relatively in the
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a luncheon address at a two-day Catholic-Jewish dialogue held here at the Jesuit Fathers' Uni versity of San Francisco. Factors He cited three factors to help explain the basic change in Catholic attitudes: the increasing impact of respected Catholic scholars on even their non-Cath olic contemporaries, Pope. John's aggiornamento, and the. work of thousands of loyal Catholics dedicated to the reform of the Church. A sociologist generally does not take account of individuals, Dr. Glazer said, but he cannot ignore the "remarkable accident, 01,' miracle, of an individual such as Pope John occupying the chair of Peter, and using the still undiminished 'authoritarian power of the position to con scioUsly push the" Church in a modern, even a' democratic di 'rection."
same spot while around them other ,groups were changing," Dr. Glazer said. Nevertheless, numerous factors have tended to modify traditional Jewish atti tudes. One such factor, according to Dr. Glazer, has been the recent history of political revolution. Since 1920s, "the golden age of Catholic-Jewish relations," Jews have generaHy tended toward the left of the political spectrum, Dr. Glazer said. Many were So Cialists, but there was close harmony with the Irish, Italian and German Catholics who were Democrats. They were all mem bers of the working class and they often supported the same candidates. "But the carriers of revolution today are Cuba and China," Dr. Glazer said. "And Jews are as little inclined as other Amer icans to find anything attractive in those regimes."
Announc~' Lent Jubilee Program
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USO 25th BIRTHDAY: USC, of which the National Catholic Community Service iGJ a member agency, celebrates its 25th birthday this month. USC. now has 128 centers ~n this country and 40 overseas, four of them in Vietnam with others to open Soon. Her~ Mrs. Patricia Krause! center, an NC.C.S. staff member from California in USO'I;! Saigolll club, conducts a grab-bag for· U.S. servicemen. NC Bhoto. "
Future
of .Soviet
J'ewry Called Grave
Need Continued International Pressure NEW YORK (NC)-Twenty four major U.S. Jewish organi · zations reported that despite ·some minor gains, the future of '·SoYiet Jews remains grave. · They said international pres .sure must continue to be brought in the Jews' behalf upon the authorities of the USSR. 'In· a year~end report, the .American Jewish Conference on ,Soviet J~wry said that "Soviet Jewry is' being 'doomed to a 'lingering death." The conference is a coopera tive association of .Jewish civic, religious and zionist bodies founded in April, 196.4, to' com bat Soviet anti-Semitism. Rabbi Israel Miller, president of the Rabbinical Council of America (Orthodox Judaism) and the conference's steering committee chairman, charged that a number of new incidents have ,occurred in the past two months which are evidence of continuing pre s sur e against Jews.
'Continued from Page One . 'Taking' part in the Bishop's , "1. As often as they are, either afternoon Mass on Passion Sun present on at least' three oc day at the Cathedral or at any ~asions at explanations of' the other pontifical Mass celebrated Decrees of the Second Ecumeni 'there by the Most Reverend cal Council, or at sermons Bishop before May 29 affords the same opportunity. preached on the occasion of a mission, or devoutly attend the Every single Catholic in the Sacrifice of the Mass celebrated Diocese may receive a plenary with some solemnity by the indulgence for the Jubilee since Bishop in a Cathedral Church. he will attend at least three This last indulgence may also be explanations on the Decrees of gained by those who are present the Council (they will be at the Bishop's Mass in the preached in all churches and Churches . specially 'designated chapels ,for five' weeks) if he for the Jubilee. but intend· to receive the' In "2. Once only, if within the dulgence, receive the Sacraments time prescribed they visit the and pray for the Pope. Those able to attend a mis Cathedral Church, or ,one of the sion before May 29 may also designated <;::hurches, and there gain a plenary indulgence if ·renew their profession of Faith, either by reciting the Apostles' they fulfill the same conditions. Creed, or .using another suitable formula." Anglican Governor Convenient, for' All " The further an'angements Gets Papal Award made by the Most Reverend BOMBAY (NC)-The Angli Bishop bring the opp()rtunity of can governor of Maharashtra faining the special Indulgence ,state, P.V. Cherian, was invest Plaque to Airline home to each Catholic in the Di ed here in India with the knight ocese. NEW YORK (NC) - Francis hood of the Order of St. Gergory Cardinai Spellman of New York A visit to any of the above the Great by Valerian Cardinal has presented a plaque to Trans Churches, together with the re Gracias of Bombay. newal of the ptofession of Faith Also at the ceremony was the · World Airlines here on behalf of Pope Paul VI. The plaque, de and the reception of the Sacra governor's wife, Mrs. Tara Che ments of Penance and Holy Eu rian, who received the papal picting St. Christopher, patron saint of travelers, was to thank charist and prayers for the Pope, Bene Merenti medal., the airline for the Pope's return can be done between now and GOY. Cherian, headed the of flight from New York to Rome May 29. One Plena'ry Indulgence ficial reception of the Maharash may be gained dUI'ing one such tra government for Pope Paul on Oct. 4. visit. VI when he visited Bombay in Participation in any of the , 1964." Pontifical Masses mentioned a bove together with reception of the Sacraments and prayers for the Pope brings the opportunity of gaining a plenary indulgence SHIEET METAL each and every time. J. TESER, Prop. , INDUSTRIAL Successful Drive RESIDENTIAL NOTRE DAME (NC)-Three COMMERCIAL months ahead of schedule, the 253 Cedar C:t., New Bedford COLOR University of Notre Dame has OY DE Lvll WY 3-3222 topped a three-year $20 million
'He speCifically denounced a statement by Aaron Vergelis, editor .of "SovetishHeimland," ·the only Yiddish journal in the 'USSR, that there would be more ·social progress if synagogues were closed., : Cites Harassment: :. R~bbi Miller .said, that "such a statement by the editor of a 'st;lte-sponsored journal-':as are 'all 'publications in' the USSR....:.... .cannot be viewed as purely per: 'sonal observation, but must be ta,ke'n as' stili further evidence of the continuing pressure that is being maintained as a matter of policy by, the Soviet regime' against Jewish religious insti tutions." Rabbi Miller cited these ad-
'ditional examples of recefl6 government harassment: Jews 'under 30 in' Tashkeoii 'have been forbidden by tiWJ city's Department of ReIigiOti to enter the synagogue. .' Bukharian Jews in Dushanb{) (formerly Stalingrad), the cap:' 'ital of Tadjikistan, were refuselll 'permission to open up a new SYfloo ·agogue. The community ham '10,000 Jews and one synagague. A number of tourists have reQ ported that during sabbath se.,.;, vices and, the recent high holJl'<' 'day observances in Mosco~ Leningrad, Kiev and Odessa, as many as 20 to 25 auxiliary polic'l stationed themselves in the synagogues to keep worshippcUl and tourists apart.
Poland Pilgrimage
If FALSE TEETH get on nerves
VIENNA (NC)-Plans are be ing made for a special train to take a large Austrian pilgrimage led by Franziscus Cardinal Koe nig of Vienna to the Polish na tional shrine of Czestochowa on May 2 for celebrations of Po 'land's 1,000th anniversary as a Christian nation.
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use special powdeff
When false teeth get on your ner"l mllny'dentlsts give special FASTEE'1' pOWder. It helps hold teeth In place helps keep them from sllpphlg or droP'? ping down when you talk-makes yO~ feel more secure. FASTEETH cushion tender gums so you can bite harlle and eat faster With greater comfor~ FASTEETH helps you laugh and spen mare clearly. confldently. FASTEET checks "plate odor" (denture breath~ At drug counters everywhere.
Norrms H. Tripp
nationwide campaign for im provements. Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., president, has announced that $21,292,271 has been i'aised for the "Chal lenge II Program."
New Bedford Blind New Bedford Catholic Guild Ie the Blind will meet at 8 to night at K of C Hall, New Bed ford.
RETREATS AT LA SALETTE
ATTLEBORO, MASS.
20th
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EVES.-Mon. thru Thurs. at 8:00 Fri., Sat. Eves at 8:30 Sun. Eve. at 7:30 MATINEES DAILY FEB. 19 THRU FEB. 27 Phone F. R. 1,677·9357
Tickets on Sale in New Bedford
Merri Card Shop, 834 Purchase Street
SINGLE WOMEN: (Ages 18-25)
March 4, 5, 6
ENGAGED COUPLES:
March 11, 12, 13
S~GLE
March 18, 19, 20
MEN: (Ages 18-25)
For information and Reservations write to: REV. GILES GENEST, M.S., La Salette Retreat House
Attleboro, Mass. 02703, Tel. (617) 222-8530
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 17~ 196~ I' ·.~1li ,';-,; .<., '. ,.-_~.l;·:: ~ _;'~;~~:-f!~~~~' ~'·~_~~""~.~::~::l.~: :,~'~_~~':~:~':~}f~'
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By Mos~ Rl!lv~ 'FuilR,tOJl1l .J~' ,SlheellU;' "D.n. ~'" ,':, .'. A woman who ~as reduced to living in the siums in Latm' America, and who spent most' of ber days and nights gathering scrap paper from the streets in order to buy a few ,crusts of bread for, her children, wrote a diary: "This morning there was a Mass. The priest told us not to drink. He said that the man who drinks does not know what be is doing, that we must drink lemonade attd water. Many people went to Mass. He said in his s~rmon that it was a pleasure for him to be with us. But if that Father lived with us he would soon change his mind because we are predes tined to die of hunger."
By lRt. lRev. Msgr• .1TohllU S. lKelllnedy , In reading Louis Auchincloss' new.novel, The Embezz ler (Houghton Mifflin. $4.95); I was reminded of a play which I had seen many years ago and had quite forgotten in the long interval. Its name and its author I cannot recall. I remember only that an eJ~ . L o ' ama. Guy has settled there in ..' cellent actor, Lester nerg- 1941 after serving a prison term. an, had a leading role, and He composes his memoir shortly that the play was cast in before his death (in about 1960), unusual form. It dealt with two in order that his descendants men ~d a woman, their in- .may know the truth about him. vOlvenient with '' . Splendid FeRRow One another and .• In reviewing his life,' Guy 't.ne rder 'makes much of the glory of the
"which resulted. ' Primes. He does not fail to see
E·a c he. 0 f t 11 e t b e foibles of individual mem "three ~ctS was bE!rs of the clan, but tbeir collec ·.the v€ t sion of tive challenge is his ~rmest be one of 'the thtee' ·lief. Although he is aware o{ his principals. And own quirks and especially of his no two of the deviations from the artistocratic, U4=counts agreed. code, he still thinks of bimself The play was as a spiendid fellow.' m0 re clever Has he not made Rex Geer's than cOIllPelling. spectacular success possible? Mr. ~uchincloss''latest' ~ork," ':Geer owes everything to, him: of farqireater depth,'and "intri" 'betng able to finish at' Harvard, eacy ,.is divided in1Qc tlue.e sec-. securing a position in a topflight tions. In each, one of, ~h~ three ,banking firm, being introduced princi~~.s'-,two'·. ~e~ .. :'a~~,:,· 'a:" , to·'Ne~. Y'~rk so~iety. B~tG.eer,
There are certain things that one. calli, never, know untD
one has passed through the experien~e. One of them Is star
vation. The point ,that this woman makes
Is that the: priest would never have
said that; it was a pleasure to bta with
them if he had to live with them. We
of: the. affluent -North American civil- ,,~r
izlition~priests, and faithfol' alike
cannot 'understand:: .what ' two-thirds i of
the world suffer; We' cross a line 'bot
we come 'back. We go" down into the
dirty cellar but we walk upstairs again.
We put on our overalls for a visit to
Harlem, and we come back and pot on
our jackets and ties. But Our Lord
crossed the line of sin and never went
back to heaven· ontU He had blotted ~,.
out sin. ' . ,.' . :- .- .
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MOTHER MARIA del ROSARIO
~
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.
The only way 'we can ever get' close to these ~~thersof ours, these people living' barassed, haunted by ,h~ger ~n th~ir. hoyels... ,,'. ' .is ,to make' a' sacrifice 'sUfficiently' great to'make us· feel' a;Uttle, . of their pain. How· many priests' wbo relief this cpltiffin'; that it was not only a pleasure 'to liear' about' these srltm( but of the ':crucial 'eventS in the ~n'; "witb a maleovolent, o1:lsessiv(!" Reverend', Mother Maria a pain?' How :many faithful":whO 'read a~()ljt.this'diarY:~w say', ' terwoven lives of the'ti-io~:The' determination to ruin Guy. Guy . d,elRosario;~uperi<>r generat' not- only "how terrible" but "this hUrts Die?"" HO\1i ~y will: DO . ght ;haveav6id~d' exposure:, of the Religious of Jesus and, 'aitythirig?' How .many ,will Write:tO ,me)\t The Society for, th~ accounts' do :~ot ,c.oincide; ·~spe-. dally where motive is ascribed.' and impoverishment had Geer' .. ,., ": ' Pr6pagation of the Faith, 366Fifth'Av:enue:N;ew Y()rk,~..)!'. 100011 Mr. I Ailchincloss,· generally' been willing to make !tim IlD " M~lY,,J~a,s been.n.~meg.pres ~~ considered' one of' our; best' nov...· " :eaSily arrangeable loan at 'a crit- ident of the International Com GOD LOVE YOU to M.F; for $10 "Ericlo~ed 'Is children's .. "" :'1 elists brings much mbte .artistry ical moment, But the loan' was mission of Major Religious Su offeriI'ilf for their starving 'brotherS' and sisters in. mj;?siQn lal!:ds.~ to hi~ use of this d'evice thari did " not made, and collapse had en- periorsin. Rome, The 'new com It was the pictureS in msSION magaziJie that kept them fr~m the playwright of yesterday. sued. miss~~n was f~~ed by a. p~st eomplaining about having to eat food that they didn't like, and This is- a novel of considerable Rex Geer's account comes conCiliar comnussion on'religious .prompted this offering.". • • to M.B. for $2 "Every month· I tel! literary distinction and of un next. He ,bad, heard of Guy's life. 'myself that I am going to send money and then don't because common subtelty. But there, ill death with relief. There could At the General Chapter of the we always need it ourselves. But today I decided that, with God's something wearing and weary be no more dirty tricks from Religious of Jesus and Mary help we can always help those less fortunate than we are." • • • ing in going' over the same that quarter. His old age with held last May in Rome, Rever 00 Mr. and Mrs. J.J.B. for the $100 that they sent to the poor , ground three consecutive times. his wife, Angelica, would suffer end Mother Maria del Rosario of the world instead of buying Christmas gifts for tbemselves Hence, whereas this reviewer no' further disturbance. Yes, An- was elected Superior General of and their six children. believed for some time tha~. The gelica is now his wife. Guy had the worldwide Congregation for Embezzler was possibly the, au-insisted on a, divorce after his the third time. .
thor's );~e~, book, entql,isJasm . prison term, Rex's invalid wife She is th~~ 11 th !:!uperior' Gen-' '.: Bisbop. Sbeen's. newest; book; WALK WITH GOD, is, a ·provo..;
waned ;~ ,the secqnd, the~ the:' Lucy had eventually died, and: ' erill of" Congregation, wPicbcative commentary ,on.living in today!$' world and speaks to modern
third rehearsal proceeci~.: . ~ex and Angelica had wed: ., . founded in 1818 in L)rons; . ~an, woman~d child....,to the status,. seeker,' the sceptic, ,to' beat Coiit.r-astinr: Backgr9un~ ," : B,ut then GUy's -manuscript at- ., 'Ftance.:' " " ' n l k s and "hermits, :to ,teenagers,· the :poor;·the .rich, to those wbo . j'; The t~ree principals jJre, Guy rived, with the direction that it Before"herelectlon' 'she waS .: are' lonely Qr,sad,to: stlJdent and teacher alike. ·In it is ·wisdom: Prime, ,ll;stockbro~er; ReJ!! G~e~l ,be given to. his grandchildren. . P~ovin~ialoftheSpa~ishPrOv~, to bring;.us peace.and .understanding, guidance to ·bring us closei' a ban~~.r. who has: be.en Guy,s,.: .The request would be honored" inee and resided in, BarCelona. to 'the path,of goodness. ,WALK ·WITH GOD will be' a most'import- . friend. Jrqtn c;oHe~e .days;, ~md. but 'both Rex and Angelica' PteVious to her 'eIectioilin 191,3,', ant, contribution to your daily life; and an inspiration to' those Angehca, Guy s wif~ and, bJ::ief~ wo.uld append their own read- 'she h&d. visited the United states, ,~. whom" you give' 'it, Catholics ·.and non-Catbolics alike; 'It 18·
ly, Re~'~ JDistress." .. : ,ings of ~heevents.(}uy reciteci. inI951~'and;.aSSuperiorGen;' available for $:75 by writing to the Order Department, The Society
Thel~ ba~l,tgrounds ~re stro~g Both Wrong .... eral, in' 19,54, in 1957, and, iii. . the' Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New' York,
ly cont~astmg.l'heP~e fanu~;V \ Rex supplies details whicb'; 1964. '" 'J . , , . _ 'N.Y. 10001. . has b~en long establisbed, 1Il. Guy has omitted, details casting. . -, '.,' --_.~ . , ,. American' Provinces New Yqrk and represents old an alto'gether different. light on . Cut oot this column. pUn your sacrtfice to ,it and maD it New York society. Founded by key developments. Guy, he At that time; she visited the 00 Most Rev. Fulton J:' Sheen, National Director of The Society an auctioneer, its launcher on thinks destroyed himself 'be-Eastern American Province with for the Propagation oil the Faith, 366 Fifth Av'enue, New York. the social scene was an Episco . cause 'he could not be all the .its Provincialate in Hyattsviile, N. Y. 10001 or to your diocesall1 director. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond! pal bishop who had seven sons, things (often mutually' exclu- Md., and the Western American T. Considinta, 368 Norti'i Main Street, FaIn River, Massachusetts. most c: whom married heiresses sive) which he had aspired to Province with its Provincialate in the )lineteenth century. In the be. From the outset, Guy had ii:l El Paso, Tex, During her first Etlwardian era, when the stories used Rex for his own glorifica- two terms as SUPerior' General, of the principals begin, the tion' Rex was but a tool for his she visited establishments of the Primes are not leaders' of. the self~aggrandizing schemes. And Congregation in Spain, Ireland, new, ¥g money society, but re, when his·imp.osible castles came :England; Mexfco,' GermilDy, gard . ,~hemselves . as authentic tunibling, do~, his .cielight was W.-ance,13elgium,' Italy, Lebanon, ,DADSON Oil BURNERS pracbqally peerless aristocrats. to pull .Rex,down too .if that ,.Switzerland, NeW 'Zeaiarid," alSo Rex,! Geer is from ,Vermont; "were af all P~ssible:Foriunately, in Canada; In d i a ,Pakistan, 24~,~our Oil BUrnl9r' Sery,ice His fa~er.was"a. PQor"<:lergyman' ". it ~ad ,not been.. possible.' ... .-So~th' America': and1'Africa.· .' w·th "I g famiI 'd " q~~~falat~;9f:ib~ , ",. '. ,Copg~e '... , ·:FarrioullRec.iding HARD.COAL 1 B! aT e , . y. W'thth 1" ~_IU., .iAngelica, . when ., her .. ,tum TI,1e of a ~ali allowapc~ from hi$ conies",says'thatuoth'GuY':anci, gat~on is in Rome, where'Rewer~, " ,) NEW.ENGLAND COKE' '.' :athe~j and b~ taking ~o::; R~ Re~ ~e wrong, b~t Guy"more en<~i Mot~r Maria4(:lI,Ro~ario,,;; 'i c:· ' .. ' S jus;l manf\gm,g "til ge roug ;;80 ,1h Sl?- Rex. The ,bitter fails to resi.des ;Wnen.. sh.e ',is.,. t . iting;: Harva~d 'Wl1e~.· he mee~', 'Gu~ . i see: that, .throughout.- Guy had . j:, .-i : Primer, a classmate..:,'.fh,ereaft.er worshipped him.' Buf Guy-was the, education instit~tions, mis- , their ~ve~ are interhyh1ed ~l;l capable of. self-deceptio~ on .a ,.sionary .. c~nd' ters, .residenc~., for ..,:' the rn!Od, nses for Re.~. . , , ' ,';.. vas,t seale, an.d. ,base .. ,d,".hi,'s.. w,hole, women, an retreat houses con-, ... , ~r. duqted by ,t~·Religiousof;JesWl An~lica ,was .. ~, Hyde. The .life on a which shim~erjn~ ;visi~~, of and, Mal'Y. througbQut the :wodel. :' ,':_640~ Tel....;.WY ,6-8271' New Bedford .. ' Hyde~!had money; but· were con':'" . hfn¥lelf was ~ltogether - Pleasant ... Street ...
Jesus.. Mary Nun :~~:~~:~:~l~sd o;~~~r 0;:i:6~~t·: h~-~;~~t~t ~:isd ~~~,ha:~ai, ':HeClds. Ney,,, Uni~
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tempt~ous of New York SocietY:' untrue.. . Mrs, Hyde a Catholic spent most' . Where,: in all tbis, is objective' of her !ime, tr~velliIlg.in ~urop~ '. fact?, Who can tell? Each of US to vie,! palrltings;' 'sculpture, 31';';'~ ~ :has been' astounded by' the dtf': chitectpre and to hobnob wI~h" 'ference between bur own con Henry :"James and .a.!!ren~~n,!Irl~;::;·struction of an experience from lesser uative cerepr~ties:~or:~ti.t~e~thoseof others'whO' bave shai'ed " folk, atl aesthefi(:':and:is.omeWhiit -:.It. The ·elenieritw-hicb we effete, ~It 'Yas', w.Ilile sh~.was in~ c:;8fder deci,sive, another. ignores. Europ~:. with' per... mpther : that;' The mO,tive which we ascribe, Angelica met, feU in l,bye: With'" another beatEidIy, and' perhaps and ma'rried, Guy.' Pr,i~e; .: . with subjective honesty, denies. Bat ~who is ;the" embezzler? .Mr. 'A~c.hincloss has, ind'~ed Guy PJ:ime. No doubt of that. caught something of the tortuous We l~rn it straight off. Guy's ~plications and contradictions account comes first, and it is in our irreconcilable versions of writteIt in o~ own day, in Pan .the same serielil of bappeninp..
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.'$~ Stad:e,," H~liday ,Trilps, OtherS, to W'ork on Book Reports. Science Projects Next Week
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Columbian Prelate Denies Dispensation"
Vacation starts tomorrow and plans for its gay spend ing are foremost in student minds. Ski trips are on the
LOS ANGELES (NC) - & Bogota priest haa disputed • elaim made here by a birtti eontrol advocate that· priests itI!l Colombia are giving "dispensa tions" to some mothers witl!i three or more children to tak.. birth control pills. Msgr. Jose Joaquin Salced~ here for a symposium on nu-a trition and population, said U knows there has been no autho rization given by the ColombiaJ:i hierarchy that would permit priests to give dispensations f~ use of birth control pills. "Besides, the Pope has tbt whole question under study and these reports are made by people who would l;ike priests to sSl'. such things," Msgr. Salcedo as serted. . Gen. William H. Draper, viet chairman of Planned Paren'" hood-World' Population, matkl the "dispensation" claim in alii address at the University of California, Los ,Angeles branch. '
agenda for some, while such m'atters as book reports and ooience fair projects will have to be worked into odd hours here and there. Anyway, to The Kingsmen will be fea start things off, students at tured at a dance to be sponsored Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall by the Prevost student council River, will view "Raisin in tonight at the Dwelly Street the Sun" tomorrow afternoon. Mount scientists will really· be among those working during the free week, since the school's science fair fa slated for Sunday and Monday, March 8 and"Z, only one week after school begins again. At Coyle High in Taunton the bonor roll for the second marking period has been issued. Brother Thomas Gallagher, prindpal, announces that highest honors have gone to Michael Felong and William Holgerson, juniors; Emile Davidzuk, Leon Silveira and Wayne Sjolund, sophomores; and Kenneth Corrao, Marc Emond, Gilbert Nadeau, James Phelan and Christo-pher Reid, freshmen. School Rings
Armory. Also to play are the Overwhelming Odds. 'Students at St. Joseph's Prep held a party honoring sopho mores and also presented tokens to superiors and teachers. Also aeen was an educational ,fUm, "Our Mister Sun." At Coyle the second issue of "The Warrior" is being distrib uted and retreats have been scheduled for Geniors and jun iors, who have a choice of at tending exercises at La Salette S h r in e , Valatie, N. 'Y. 'or' Gloucester, Mass. Upcoming at Jesus-Mar,- Is Book Week, to be held the week of Feb. 28. A book night • scheduled for Tuesday, March 1, With the program to be highlighted by presentation of "Twelfth Night" by the junior has become an SHA tradition _ And juniors at St. Joseph class' and "Oliver!" by the soph the past few years. Mr. White _ Prep, Fall River, have received omores. In addition, prizes will a native of the Burns country bl their school rings. The onyx be awarded to winners of poster, LEADERS AT DOMINICAN~ Student leaders at D0 Scotland and his daughter " stone and gold band, says school poetry and essay contestn now minican Academy, Fall River, are, front from left, Catherine an .SHA graduate. president Simonne Dufour, liym- under way. Yet another acceptance: Jo bolize courage, durability and Other acceptances at the FalX Sullivan, Athletic Association president; Helene R. Bileao, anne Robidoux of Holy, Famil3' perseverance. The prep students River girls' school include PaulQ glee club president.; and rear, Elaine Talbot, head eheer at Westfield State College. And were among attendants at Feea ette Nadeau, St. Anne's and leader; .Louise Eaton, orchestra president. at SHA Fall River Margaret han High's gala presentation of Union Hospital S c h 0 0 1 s of Pruitt has been named a finalist Camelot. Nursing; and Janet Roy, Bryant ill the National Merit Program. Today and tomorrow are the College; while at Dominican .As a result, she 'is eligible tOft big days at Sacred Hearts Acad- Academy Louise Eaton has been scholarship aid from the pro emy, Fall River, ElS the annual accepted at SMTI. gram. gym meet is set to roll. Girls Latin Week has been cel& And algebra students at Holy have devoted hours of their brated at Dominican Academy Family are brushing up their weekends for the past month or in high style, Including a Roman x's and y's in preparation few so to practice sessions and the banquet honori'ng senior Latin CHICAGO (NC) - A 45-year lay men, one lay woman and competition in an intermediate results should be obvious to au students. G u est s portrayed during the next two days. Roman gods or goddesses, anell old father of six has been named four representatives of teachers' algebra exam next month. groups. The school system is the At Jesus-Mary Academy, Fan sophomores and juniors alsc the first layman to head the 15 Play rehearsals for The Musht member school board of the largest privately, supported one Man, to be jointly produced by' River, a magazine subscription presented skits 1n Latin. in the world and the third larg campaign Is under way and in At Holy Family High in New Chicago archdiocese which ad Coyle and Cassidy High Schools, est of public and private systems are being held every Sunday another field of endeavor, the Bedford Barry Harrington, CC)oo vises on policies affecting 366, 000 students. in the nation. JMA jayvees defeated Domin- captain of the basketball team, afternoon at Cassidy, and also in He is Albert Belanger of sub~ Belanger is a former Marine progress at the Taunton girls' lean Academy jayvees in basket- and associate yearbook editor, ball, while the DA varsity gained has been notified that he's the urban Oak Park, one of three officer with degrees from Chi school is an eight week CCl» a victory over the JMA ditto. recipient of a $1,300 annual lay members on the board since cago Teachers' College,. DePaul <course, which is including in Chosen to National Honor So- scholarship fro m ,Providene;e 1963. He ·is purchasing director University and the University of struction for elementary and for the Inland Steel Container Chicago. deti membership at Dominican College. secondary level teachers and • Company. Academy have been nine seniors. Also at, HF, JuniperoClub special training' course. Belanger'S appointment was They're Louise Eaton, Barbara president James Stager and ment Class· B. The tourney _ And Cassidy senior religloa French, Jeanne Fronczek, Catha vice-president Jam e 8 Kelly announced by Archbishop John is slated for Monday, Feb. 21. <classes marked the feast of OUl' P. Cody of Chicago. The prelate' erine Griffin, Paulette Masson, made a radio broadcast explain~ The HF team has also qualified Lady of Lourdes with a spiritual Pauline Miranda, Patricia Niedo ing the purpose of the vocation said Belanger's appointment "is for Tech Tourney, and James service broadcast over the puboo indicative of my desire for the bala, Madeleine Souza and Su- group. laity to have a more important Carr, co-captain, was named lie address system for the entiNl Ulnne Vallee. . Gowns Choselll role in parochial school affairs." "player of the week" by the student body. Oratorical Contest Fashion flash from Mt. st. New Bedford Standard-Times. ' A Rarity Mathematicians at SHA Fan Winners of an oratorical eon- Mary's! Girls have chosen their Lay men and women holding CAPE COD'S test at Bishop Feehan High in gowns for graduation. They're posts on diocesan school boards River are working on projects Attleboro are Elyse Parmentier, styled with scoop necklines, emQ are now found in many Catholie to be entered in a regional fair LARGEST BANK Kateri Detellis, Claudette Oui- pire waists and A-line skirts. school systems but appointment at Scituate High School and, PAYS met and Bernard McKay. Also Girls are scheduled to go for fitQ of a lay person to head the board hopefully, in the state math fair at Salem State College Saturday, at Feehan, 11 juniors have been , tings by Saturday, Feb. 19. is a rarity. received in the "Societe Honora Also at Mount, the College The board, an advisory body Ap~12. Also at SHA, students heard a &ire de Francais," receiving Corner is featuring information reporting to the archbishop, ill! cards and pins in recognition of about Stonehlll College, with made up of eight pastors, two lecture on Robert Burns b.Y Jamel ''Tee" White. 'lhis lecture attaining an. average of 90 01' URI to headline this special bol Interest Compounded and
better in French. letin board next month. And the Deborah Boardmaa has beeu
payable quarterly on our College acceptances include National Honor Society will hold named Homemaker of Tomor-, Investment Savings Account Paul Proulx of Prevost High in a '~ollege Bowl" quiz· show, row and will continue 10 state Fall River, accePted by Niagara; with jUniors' and-seniors partid leyel comp~tition. .. , , ang Richard Ch~lai'id" il1s~, .ai pating~ If ,thl~ ~pilot :'projectis • PrevoSt Memol'7 BoOk pie Prevost, acc~p~, by ~er:ri~ae.k.-· ,success,_ a similar"q~ig will- be tores have been 1aken and final Savin~s Ed. 1897 Also at the fail· Ri~er schoo~, 'presented, for.. the participation preparattions . for the book an announcenientiaas been made of the en~ire· Btudent':body:' • 10m 'AIMOUTH being completed b1" :Brother ,Build~,i:SuppJies that a jayvee baSketball- team ' --." And .. '~e', Mother" McAuleY . Robert, moderator. .. . • DENNIS POIT 2343 Purchase Street will not. be organized next: year... M~~ers' Guiirl at Mount will Meanwhile' at Holy l'amilJr.,: New, "8edfo~ r ' . . An~ ,at ~Je~-¥a!y ~ea~~ , ~ld ..a,ri~pen, meetin~ tonight. " basketball players will compete • YARMOUTI SIIOPPI. PUlA ~an,e Gaud~a~,is ~aJdng. Pl~8 " ~atuling a calen~ar ,pa~. ." . for the 'si:x:th year ,in a row ita' WY '6-5661 • DSTlRYlW . , to 'enter, ,Truesdale Hospital· ''; A.t ' DOminican· Academy. girlll , ibeNewEngIand Catholic TOW' School of NUl'I.\ing ·come.Septem':' , . will PartiCipate. ill '& Cursillo re;' ber; while at Mt., ~ Mary's, _. treat ~ ·La ,. Salette : Shrine in N;mcy, Say~ard,,' Alina' Fl~n,·', J,lay ;.~d;: ~o:re: 'i~~!iltely, Barbara Dubiel and N.aney·:Lord ~dents are prepa,ring for· :,the ' Treat· are;' pointed: 'towards'" SM"1'I; ,school :science fair, to 'be held Jeann~ Bernier towards Rhode . ,Monday and Tuesday, March ., Island College; 'and ~~~ii.' and' 8. ,'Dominican Athletic As Lebre towards Central Connee- sociation members will hold a ticut. ' : Joi~t p,ooi, ~!i, Muse party Sat-· Leslie Bishop, Suzanne Guay, .urday, .March 12. Members will Patricia Roach and Mary Ann meet at the YMCA pool, then WHilE THIEY LAST
Demetrius participated in a will continue theiro party at the ONE TO A CUSTOMER
Bible Vigil held at Sacred home of a faculty member. Hearts, Fall River. Guests were And at SHA Fall River St. Sacred Hearts grammar schoo! Agnes' team won a stamp drive students, who afterwardlil· to\H'ed by collecting a fantastic total of UNION WHARF, FA'RHAVEN the high school. 350 DOOO stamps. Also at SHA
First -in Nation
Appoint Inland Steel P'urchasing Director Head of Chicago Catholic School Board
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese·of Fan River-Thurs., Feb. f7, 1966
Asks Serious Consideration:' . Of Commissi-on's Rep.ort :
By Msgr. George G. Higlrins-·· (Director. Social Action· Dept.~ N.C.W:~ . In August, 1964, the Q>ng:re~s 01- ,tpe "'united approved, under Public. Law. 88444, the ·.¢sta~llit~~nt':'·6f:: a National Commission.~on· :Technologyj:AJl>toniat~on, and~ Economic Progress. This, corrirt1fs~i'OIi,' comriQse<f;, of 14 ou.t!:: standing industrialists,hibor f • • . • • • • • • • : , ":.~:::':•••,':' :'; ,;~. ~:"'. leaders university. profes ,a)S, on the commissio~'were 'able , ". to get the: COJIServatlves to hold sors, and civil leaders, was still for them. appointed by l!>resident John The report.· itself provides an'
..) .' ". '. .'States'..
son in December" 19.64. In carry
answer to thiS query. It says' that, while the memben. of the date to study commission ep.gaged fu "spirited the effects of debate," none of them was· com automation' on mitted to doctrinaire solutions. the economy "We began," the report points' particularly . on out, "with a bias to· the free' mar 11 n e m p loy ket and the free. society, but we ment - and to have: also recognized that where recommend pro the market economy iS'incapable grams. to· put of providing c:ertam. services, the . n~w . tech,public. agencies must undertake Iiology to woJ;k such functions. kJ. ' sol v i n g "Equally, we, have agreed that , pro b 1 e ni s certain communal needs can "MY SON~': Mary utterS the words as. she.meets Christ weighed down with the Cross of human neet:I only be met by Federal! expendi in the .UnitedStates, the m~m ditur~_ even though. t!leopera ~ thiS. scene, from "The Red~in~'to, be' shown in. Fall River and New ~dford in March. bers of the commission pad', the ti.ve actlvities:needi not be in the· ·~Stanc~· st>!Iff.of conipe~ent hands of 'government agencielh'" economists. and ~Ociologists wh~ Socialist SyStem
In' tum " were· abIe' to upon . To my way of thinking. this is
~,Qnd~' ,. the vast· resources of other fed- Ii reasonable auth.eiltically
eral agencies md notably the' "American" phnosopl'l;Y: .of gov'- ~, " . -....J ~ 'B'ureau of. Labor StatisticS of the," ern~ent, 'but to· Arthur KroCk, The 'Serra Clubs of' .Farr· "The. Redeemer" the- latest· itself . only to, Hig sufferings, v. S. 'Dep.a:itment;,~fLabor.; . vete~an . Ne¥1 Y?~k Tiines'; .co~,. - , and New Bedford :00-" motion picture on. Christ. to! be' death 2nd' resurrection. On these Genen.l Agreemen& ummst and political. pundIt, It . . . '. ' . ' released" is a Catholic' ·one.. It e.vents converge the whole· ~e~eral weeks ago th~ press smacks of~ociaiism. . gether. WIth the CounCIls-. o~ was produced by Father. Pey meaning' o:l!" Cblristianity, which began to report that the comrpis "The American society.; more .CatholIc, Women from the, ton's Family Theater" located on is the redemption of Mankind sion was badly split on a num nearly than any great human two' Cities will sponsor a prem-; Hollywood's Sunset Boulevard. from its, sins, purchased with the ber of iD:tportant. issues' and complex of .the past," says. Mr. iere. of the, motion picture '''The! This. organization has for almost bIood of Christ. It is therefore 20 years been turning out. family III devout meditation in depth probably would not be able to Krock in a recent issue of the Red~emer" i~ each city. . :reach a consensus in ·time to . Times, "would fiJ.lfill·the. vision On Wednesday,.' March 2, at 8 entertainment for radio. and tel on this great central fact, and , meet its appointed deadline. 9f St. JohIJ. the Diyine pf 'a.new, o'clock,.the. first nighter will be evision. the events as they unfold on the Some of the labor'memberS of Jerusalem. coming, 00 ~. 0 out of shown at .the. Strand Theater,; "The Redeemer",. their first screen were painstakingly cre the commission were said to,be heaven,' if the recommendati,ons Fall, River.. On March 1.1 the, film for theatres, is a reverent. ated to correspond' most closely 80 dissatisfied 'with successive' of .the Presidential 'Conirriission~ premier~ screening will. be' and· moving portrayal, of the' too the account written 2,000 drafts of the commission's report' on Automation could. become the shown in the Arcade· Theater,; purpose' and core. of Our Lord's years' ago by John and Matthew, that they had decided to go it state of the.' Union witliout· BaiIey Square; New' Bedford~ coming to, earth- since it confines who were' eye witnesseS to, them. alone and to issue a separate' wrecking. it.. But the American . ' minority report, in their own· form of goveminent would have' D8JJle. , been ·supplanted by II: socialist" Fortunately, however, cooler system in which: publie. power ~ads prevailed" and on Jan. 29- 'is' tOtally fec:IeraliZe<L'r . . i' , '.' ,',; ;' the Commission transmitted to,' 1UlIIfah' flo· Membel'lJ " '. . ' . . ',':. {' I!',' ,: Ii. ' . . . .. I " • Pre~dent . .Johns1m . a single,:' Mr.' Krock, it seems to'me, is-: qua~n-unanlmous report. On. a., using the' English' 'language very ~w ,of its findings individual· carelessly and is being: very un., llIlemb~ of the oo:auniSsi.on ex-. fair to the'members' of the com ,pressed. their. diflsent 'or their. mission,. whorwent out 'of their reservations in oeparate. £001'- way in their':r:eport to the Pres lllOtes, but there. was general' ident; to say ~ they are:not ia agreement, on the report ~ a: favor of socialism. . Ranges Whole. '" ''The- 'r~poUsibility.of gov-: GOoel Report ernment," they stated'. as: one of ,. The fact that the members of their major conclusions, ''is. to . ~l ftte commission were able, in.--' foster an environment of'oppor 'f' i mim:II:... ~ the end to resolve their differ- tuiUtyiIi which satisfactory ad ences-some of which, apparent-, justment to change can occur. hr, were quite serious - is re-' But the' adjustments themselves' tr.arkable· enough. It is even; must occur primarily in'the pri-·. more remarkable, however, that vate employment relationship. . they managed, at the same time,' "The genius of the private' ~d to come up with such a good.. 'justment process is the· fl~ibil-' report. ., ity with which it acco)1lIIlodates' , As a. general r\lleJ cOIIJ.mission. to individual circumstaI!ces. Our' Clo~hes Ol1'yerrs reports whicIi represent a last-- report suggests areas' for consid-' 'minute" compromise between. erationby private and public' conflicting' pofnts of 'view' turn' employers, employees and 'un-' out to be little more than a ions." , Wa~err Heaterrs patch-work co~ection of banal.. The commission's recommen ~ddle.-o#:-t~e-foad. glilnerali~es, .• daUops, ·many of· wh~I;q., are .ad-, .' Thisreporl, on the contrary, mittedly very far-reaching, need, is outspokenly pl?ogressive by al-· not. be' accepted, but they ought most anybody's s~da~ds" As, to be taken very seriously~ .Aed 'Toin Foley, ';1' reporter for the if, 'in the end, they' are: rejected ..-,' You'ii'find 'ouf'Main office' ali ~s Angeles Times, 'tecen.t1y. ob-. by the, American people, speak-· 'up~ei' but you'll 015'0 discover our served in a news story. which ing through the Congress, we prices on m~rchandise upset too. was picked up ·by·the Washing..; had· better be p!:epared' to come' ton Post, the report recommends up with alternative solutIons to Dryers, rarig.es, water heaters . "a wide range of economic and the pI:oblems .they were designed. and room heaters have been social programs - including a to me,et. . , marked way down'. Come in and .Console Heaters take guaranteed income .for all fam- I These problems. will not solve' ad.vantag,e of our being up ilies - that eventually would themselves, and' they can't be set by.letting us set up a'modern ehange nearly every phase of wished away with- the outmoded Gas appliance in' y.our horne. American life." "anti-socialist rhetoric- of~-a by';· Answers Q'lIery ' . gone era.. Some of the COmmission's rec Main _Office Open Saturdays 8 a:.m.· S, p.rno onunendations are· so advanced Anll'tuGlI and would require such a vast OTTAWA (NC)-A, Canadia~, expenditure of federal funds that the Washington Evening government committee has urg Star canIlot understand "how on. ed ,that all persons 65 years of Comp4JIff earth, except: in a wild bargain age and older be provided with , iog seision," the so-called liber-- . anannua1 minimum illcom~
hlg out their Congressional man
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THE A~~CHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 17, 1966
1
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER, HYANNIS
Special guests at a hairstyle, wig and fashion show planned for 8:15 tonight in the lower church hall by the Women's Guild' wili be members o( the Matron's Club of the Federated Church Of Hyannis and the Amercan Council of Baptist, Women of the Baptist Church, also Hyannis. Chairmen for the program are Mrs. John Lycett and Mrs. John Moda. Mr. Machado, represent ing a West Yarmouth store, will show wigs and wiglettes with the aid of members of the audi ence, and will also create hair styles to complement original designs by Mrs. Robert E. O'Neil of Hyannisport, known in the fashion profession as Gisela. Gisela's specialty is the crea tion of formal gowns for Hyan nisport year-round and Summer res ide n t s. "Special arrange ments," say committee members, "have been made to accommo date the showing of some of her gowns which have been flown in for this occasion." Fashion commentator will be Mrs. E. Stuart Rounds. A social hour will follow the program.
The Furniture Wonderland
Open Doily 9 A.M. to 10
'of the East
, Jn~luding Saturdays
. r
Nearing fhe End of Mason's On(e-a-Yea I Price~Slashing· Sale of Qualify Furniture
....
ST. ANTHONY, MATTAPOISETT
The Altar Rosary Society plans its annual Mardi Gras sup per for Tuesday, Feb. 22. ST. ROCH, FALL RIVER
The Council of Catholic Women plans a rummage sale and whist party for April. A parish retreat will begin Sunday, March 6. SANTO CHIR.lIS'll'O,
lFAIT,IT,JRnVEllt A malassada supper and penny sale are announced for 6:30 Tuesday night, Feb. '22 in the parish hall, under sponsorship of the Council of Catholic Women. Tickets are available fl'om com mittee members and will also be sold at the door the night of the supper. Mrs. Sara Souza, sup per chairman, will be a'ided by MrS. Mary Cabeceiras, co-chairman. Donations of penny sale prizes from parishioners are requested by Mrs. Margaret Dyl, in charge of the sale. She is aided by Mrs. Del Furtado. The council will install new officers Sunclay afternoon, Feb. 20 at The Coachmen restaurant. Busses will leave the church for the event at 2:30. Mrs. Mary Me deiros, chairman, requests mem bers who plan to attend to con tact her. Also announced by the unit is 21 potluck supper 'for March, un der direction of Mrs. Bella Agui ar and Mrs. Ann Faria.
,.
ST. WILLIAM, FALL RIVER
Weekly whist parties spo,," BOred by the Women's Guild will J'esuine Tuesday, March 1. Women's Guild members will ieI've a public ham and bea~ 'IIUPper tonighi, an<1 have sched: uied their next business meetint " for Wednesday, March 9. ESPIRITO SANTO, , FALL RIVER .
Holy Rosary Society members will serve a malassada supper at 6:30 Saturday night, Feb. 19 in the church hall. A penny sale will follow, with proceeds bene fiting the parish fund. NOTRE DAME, JFAILL RIVER Christian F ami 1 y Movement members will sponsor a cake &ale after all Masses Sunday morning, Feb. 20.
More Parish Parade Pages 17 -18
P.~
Nothing re~rved, nothing· withheld-Ev:erything goes regordles~ of C;:ost~ loss o~" Sacrifice. We're Clearing. out'all' ~d~ and-: E,hds, Floor Samples, Discontin~ed .St)ile$ -andt:fundreds of o,ne' cindFew-of-a'-K~nd It,ms'to make' room for carload purchases expected soon from- the nation's leading furniture factories. Most items are One.of.a.Ki~ and subject to prior sale-Hurry for choice selections. FREE DELIVERY
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C"ONVENIENT BtJDGET TERMS
No Banks or IFinance Companies
ACRES OF
FREE PARKING
00 .Il'ey
"NEW ENGLAND'S LARGEST FURNITURE SHOWROOM"
PLY M 0 U T H
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THE'ANCHOR~Dioceseof Fall Riyer-Th'urs.; ~eb.
'17: 196'6
American'Volunteers to Play
Large Rol(g i~ la~Dn fMtM~~
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A&P Stores win Be Closed All c»ay, Tuesday, ,,:! !reb" 22rrnd 1111 Observance Washington's Birthday1, ~
, ,.F,rom "The Church in the New Latin America" 'Edited by John .l., Considine, M.M. The. call for theological answers for the great problems
()f the day in Latin America. drew forth strong approval ltnd commendation from Archbishop Miguel Da'rio Miranda'
I)f Mexico City: Dr. Calvani sQunded an important note when, he appealed to the ' theologians to provide the tens of millions of underprivi aity' of Latin America with leg~d: In. the colos~al task of r 'd l' f t logistIcs Involved In serving , Ul e- n~e~ or our grea these various elements Latin :ommandmg tasks: A generation America's new laity can rightly tgo when Pop~ PlUS XII. calle<i.. welcome apostolic cooperation ,he.laity ;to ~lay from European and North Amer ,helr;maJot ro~e ican laymen with a wide variety ,n the, C~thohc of talents. I\.cti,oI:1 ' 'move~ , , nent lie likeI?avld 0 S~ea, long a lay lead_ wise turned to er m the Umt~d States and pres 'h th 1 lans ' ently the NatIonal Secretary of ~ e eo ogt. the Papal Volunteers for Latin .or coopera IOn. A . ~ d' ':::><. th ~enca, offers us a frame of liO, Ig 1..-.,.0 e~ 'f h' 1 h d re erence w Ich h e 1 p sour ) ogy, e urg~ ; thinking in this regard ;tudy the prm' :iples involved Grimly' Reminiscent R .th~ public What is happening in Latin ,I,ffalr~ of our . America today is grimly remi :~me,s, Toda~ we can adml,re the niscent of the European indus ':mdmgs whIch much solid re- 'trial revolution, which created ;earcjl brought forth and, of a working class largely closed to l~urse, we recognize great areas the message of the Gospels, and ;bll untapped. also produced a large middle In Mexico besides our clergy class for, whom presence in lnd Sisters we use 8,000 lay mis- Church tended to be a mark of lionaries of the Mexican Church. respectability, and piety a pri rhey labor in numerous fields va,te concern with little rele including even that of preaching, vance to social issues. The upper though naturally not from the dass was only too willing to pulpit. . support the Church as an instruDr. Calvani mentioned the me~t of social control, with no work in the social economic deSIre to take an active part ~ivic, political fields: St, AuguS~ personally. M o,r e d~amatically, tine declared many centuries perhaps, the dIsruptIOn of tra ~go that the best kind of citizen, ?iti~nal values and s~cial organ the best kind of family man, the IzatIo~ ~e~ to. a SWI~g tow~rd best kind of servant comes as mateqahstIc Ideologies which fruit of Catholic doctrine, Our f!nally .found expression in laymen of today must up-date (~ommumsm, Nazism, and Fas ;hese roles. ' clsm. Guillermo Videla, of the ChilThe tJnite~ States is in many
~an social action program, added ways" a creatIon.of' the ~ame in ,tis voice: dustnal revolutIon which pre ' Ch'l th b· h cipitated mass migrations from C urren tl y In l e e IS ops tl E ' le uropean countnes. How 'lave g' e la d b t h d' ec ts I Idv n n; NUtWth °b.lrh ever, this country has had a dif , e an re f orm. 0 e IS ops f t h' t ' 1 ' t th 1 U did· (~ren IS OrIca expenence so )U e aymen. n er ay Irec- f· r a C th r " ' d d ,s a olclsm IS conce~ne . ;ion we have the Institute of • ' P t' h Those who came here, espeCially ...granan romo lon, w ere C th· f ' . . 'k'U d t h " , 1 th , a olics, ound In their religion , 1 e, ec mCIans p ay e ~u- a focal point around which to
tbentIc r~le of the layman wlth rally in an alien land
:1n agranan, program, a health .
program, an educational proThis heightened their religious
gram. The top lay leaders in awa.reness at ~ time when ap
turn seek fOr generous Christian pallIng expenences of' their
eooperation from all lay partici- bJ'Others, Who had lef~ ~he rural
l\NInts at every level.' area~ for European CItIes, were
. ' movmg them in an opposite diThlS ~atter of land reform is rection-away fropt religion. By lJut one. Instance among, a num- this time ethnic identity was oor of fmportant prOJects of _waning in the United States the Ch~istian motivation directed in great majority were ab~ to' Chlle by. laymen. Thus in. Chile move relatively freely up the lIVe provld~, a de~onstrabon of social scale, actively assisted and [)~. Calvam s thesIs of the new encouraged by Church authori lalty, ties. This again was a different New Laity, U. S. Brand experience from' that of their "And what of the new laity El!ro~ean relatives, irtcludi~g JUch as we know it among us those. ,who went to La tIn 'lere in the United States?" in- Amenca. luired one of the lay particiThey 'were long held down by ;>ants at the CleOp Conference. an' established class structure "What manner of role has it to which, for example, would effec play in Latin America?" The tively deny the children of mswer is constantly sought in workers ~he possibility of any lay circles throughout the coun- thing more than a grade school ;ry, at meetings such as special education, lessions held for the Papal VolWhile historical factors in Jntee.s on the occasion of the the Latin American area make :ICOP gathering. its experience quite unique, Thqse best acquairited with these contrasting results of in ::'atin America recognize our dustrialization in Europe and in :Jnited States program as multiNOll"th America point up both the ::Ol'm. It, goes without saying that dangers and the opportunities when Dr. Calvani describes the this presents to the Church, ,ay thinking in Venezuela and in Potentials are'enormous if the :'atin America as a whole, he is Church moves with the people ~eflecting the rapidly growing all the way. If not, disaster is mt still minority segment of the inevitable. Certainly the major Ipper middle and lower middle ity of Church ·leaders in Latin :lasses. The task of this sector countries seem determined to s enormous since it must hope help the people usher in a new ;0 influence powerful Catholic social order and adapt to its ~lement in the upper classes and novel challenges and opportuni nust seek as well to impl"egnate ties. '
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.OKED· HAMS
Portion
- An Economical Cut
Butt Portion
Shank Half
Face Half
Tender, Meaty Gilt
With Center Slice.
With C!:entor Sliest
Fresh, Tender, Meaty; U. S. D. A. Inspected, Buy The Parts You like Bestl
CHICKEN SALE!
Breast Quarters Leg Quarters Chicken Breasts Chicken Legs Chicken Livers
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LB 37 LB
31c
L~ 59
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LB 5S c ~B 79
U.S" !Nc». 1, $Ize A.
MAINE
POTATOES
20B~G89c
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Drumsticks Chicken Thighs Chicken Wings Backs and Necks Chicken Giblets
L859« LB 59<1
LB LB LB
3315' 2ge
Fresh
Turkeys
1849 c
5TO
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IONA CUT
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15%OZ CAN1 LB 1 OZ CAN
GREEN BEANS 6 FOR 89 C POR SWEET PEAS IONA 6 89 40Z BLUE PETER CANS 49 SILD SARDINES 3 90Z 4 PKGS 49°
PIE'CRUST MIX C SHEETS PKG 69 \ 4 ROLL PAPER TOWELS IRVING Q
JIFFY
150
A&P 91% CaHein Free
INSTANT COFFJ:E I!nloy Dellciou. , Flavor Wlthodt Losing A Wink of Sleep'
I3 OZ JAR
19c
CHERR:Y PIE
Jane Parker large
a-Inch 1 Ib a oz
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49C Prlcoo ouoranOood thru ~at., fob., 19 at AU AM lIupoi
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The
Parish Parade
8'1'• .lOAN OF ARC, ORLEANS '
'!'he Women's Guild has an nounced plans to hold a social gathering the third Friday of each month., A breakfast, di rected by Mrs. Leo Miller and Mrs. Charles Grindle, is planned 10 follow the 10 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, March 6. It will be served in the school' hall. Advance plans are being made :lor a Summer fair, slated for Wednesday, July 6.
BOLY ROSARY,
S8. PETER AND PAtJL,
S,,-CB,J;D ,HEARTS,
FALLIUVER
FALL RIVER
NORTH FAIRHAVEN
AdaJri Furgiuele a~d Miss Rose Furgiuele will direct a pop 'con cert to be held Saturday, March 19 in the parish hall under spon sorship of the Women's Guild. Chairmen of tickets are Mrs. Jennie Inlbriglio and Mrs. Frank Mazzoni. A cosmetic demonstra tion by Mrs. James Carey will highlight the unit's meeting Mon day night, March '1. Brownies and Girl Scouts' of the parish will attend a Communion break fast Sunday morning, March 6.
Ladies of St. Anne will spon sor a cake sale to benefit the parish fund Sunday morning, Feb. 20, following all Masses. Donations may' be left at the school cafeteria between 3 and 5 Saturday afternoon or before Masses on Sunday.
THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 17, 1966
The Woman's Club will hold its annual Communion breakfast Sunday morning, April 17. Mem bers will be hostesses to Cub Scouts from St. Vincent's Home at a Blue and Gold banquet Sun day, Feb. 20 at White's restau rant. CORPUS CHRISTI, A potluck supper will feature , SANDWICH Corpus Christi - St. Theresa's the Monday, March 7 meeting of Guild. will hold its Communion the group, with Mrs. William Sunday for all members Feb. 20. Marum Jr. and Mrs. Albert Feijo The next regular meeting will in charge of arrongements. be held Wednesday, March 9
The Best
ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER A membership tea, postponed! from a previous date because oj!
weather conditions, will be held by the Women's Guild from 3 to 5 Sunday afternoon, Feb. 20 at the Catholic Woman's Club on Rock Street. A public penny sale is slated by the guild for '1:30 Saturday night, March 19 at Polish National Home, Globe Street. Chairman is Mrs. Joseph Petres. Other future events include Q :»ecture Wednesday, March 2 by Sister Mary Anastasia and ill floral demonstration Wednesday, April 13. OUR LADY OF HEALTH, FALL RIVER
A malassada sale ahd dance planned for Saturday, Feb. 19 in the church hall by the Wom en's Guild will benefit the church fund. The sale will take place Saturday morning and the dance will be held from 8 to 12 Saturday night, featuring music by the Four Aces. Mrs. Betty Barreto heads a large arrange ments ,committee. ' ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER
Forthcoming events for the Women's Guild will include a eoffee and doughnut breakfast 10 follow all Masses Sunday morning, Feb. 20; a Communion breakfast Sunday, March 6; and 11 ham whist Saturday, March 26. A Mother's Day Communion will ' be featured in May and a guild ola in June. OUR LADY OF FATIMA, SWANSEA
Parishioners will hold their annual penny sale at 7:30 Mon day night, Feb. 21 at the church hall, Gardner Neck Road, Swan sea. A parishwide project, the sale will, say organizers, "main tain its tradition of cash awards and many attractive prizes." Friends from the surrounding area are invited, and refresh ments will be available. Co chairmen, represeriting p a'r ish societies, are Frank Cusick and Mrs. Alexander Rostler. Heading committees are Mrs. Nicholas DeMarco, sellers; Mrs. Raymond Parent, table arrange ments; Mrs. Eric Johnson, tele phone contacts; Mrs. Donald Le sage, special gifts; and Mra. John Scanlon, runners. 1lI0LY NAME, FALL RIVER
A buffet dance sponsored by the Holy Name Society will be held from 8 to 12 Saturday night, Feb. 19 at Stevenson's restau rant. The buffet will be served at 10. OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP, NE'VBEDFORD
New Rosary Society officers are Mrs. Alice Bobrowicki, pres ident; Mrs. Alexandra Golas, vice-president; Mrs. Cecelia Mandeville and Mrs. Helen Bo browicki, secretaries; Mrs. Kath erine Bielinski, treasurer. The new executives will be in charge of a card party slated for 4 Sun day afternoon, March 20.
More Parish Parade Pages 15 -18
YOU CAN BANK ON THE BEST
PERSONAL LOANS
AT THE NATIONAL BANK
Are you faced with a temporary money probiem 1 Talk it over with an experienced Personal Loan officer at Fall River National Bank. He can help you pay for medical expenses ••• make that' important purchase ••• and meet other needs for cash. The cost is low • •• terms are arranged to fit into your budget •.•• the service is fast and completely ,confidential. You'll make short work· of that money problem • • • and get the best i!1 Personal Loans ••• with l!l visit to fall River National.
l'
THE ~NCHOR-
;"Commence . Shl"d)t
Thurs., Feb. 17, 1966
The
arish Parade
LAWRENCE, V BEDFORD'
'v. Edward Miichell of Holy e Church; Fall River,. k and show slides of the Ec nical Counc~l'at 7:30 Thurs:' night. Feb. 24 for the lIes Club. The group wHlI.
of
American Catholic Press
West Coast Diocese Promotes Ecumenism.
NEW YORK (NC)--"':Prelim- Father·John Reedy, C.S.C., edi- Reedy's committee. A final reinary reports on two investiga-· tor of Ave'Maria magazine. It pod on the study is not expected SPOKANE (NC) Bishop tions into basic questions of im- /' will be part of the program at until next year. Bernard J. Topel of Spokane has portance to the Catholic press in the CPA's 56th annual national Meantime, the CPA's editor- announced formation of a dioc Amer.ica have .been approved ·by .convention· .,May .10-13 in' San· .publisher.: 'relations ~ committee esan commission' on' ecumenism the looard of direct9rs of the Francisco. Fr. Reedy will report ·wm meet later th!s. ~onth. to to stimulate "Christ-like love for' Catholic Press Association of. the' '. ie.suits· Of" the preliminary. study begiri detailed discussion and ex· '. out separated 'brethren," and .. UnitEldStates·and·Canada..· . ·"of. ·.the.·association's aims' and change of ideas on the'relatio~- :educate eatholics as to their·N· ... ene, a reexamination ·ofthe . operations in a one":hour. session' ships nowexist-ing ~ ;ind.w~ic~ . sponsibiUti~ ·in. t~.~ork ,~ ..: CPA's purposes and·~rvices.to MaY 11. Members will discuss: ~.ight e~ist -;-: betw:ee..n. !>i~hops .. promotingecY.~eni~•. ~!:'. ~ : itS .member: publishers; is being this'subJectat'a'session'the next' . and other rel~gious si1~riors as.' way, 'he sa!d,' w,as this 19~ '--, 'conducted by a special commit-. ; day and"makerecommendations pu1;llishers an~ .theedifJoft . Of promote "religious ·!ndiffere . tee' 1n~ertlie cl!airmans!,it.> ·of for further s~udy .. to :F;tther . their: publications.· :' ; .... .Js~.", . .. ....:.....:.;,.,;",,;, ....._ ..... ;.......;,..... ....;, ....;, - - ......
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er Street GEORGE, TPORT e Womerfs' Guild and Holy e Society will co-sponsor ,: seventh. annual variety " Saturday and Sunday, ch 5 and 6 at Dartmouth I School. Ticket chairman is ren.L. E. Johnson, and Mrs. iam B. Eddy is directing the luction. General co-chairmen Mrs. R:;llph P. Souza and Napoleon Bussiere. .A spe performance will be offered Sisters of the' parish. .and. 01 children at. 2 Sunday rnoon Feb. 27· the parish 01 audito·rium:. .
in
JOstp:U: . . Good Will Sunday and Open re to 'be ,sponsored by the ,h unit of the Confraternity ::hristial'l Doctrine Sunday, ch 20, is being supported by other parish . societies, ac ling to' announcement made tev. Christopher Christensen, :C. The parish's new school be included on the tours to held on that date and ap ,tments of greeters and ,kers have been made. trishioners will welcome vis ; at both the church and '01 and tour guides will be tlg men .and women of the ,h. Speakers .to the many residents expected to attend ,~vent wil~ cover sucll- topics aptism;;.tpe founding of the rch, the.·Mass,.sacred vessels.: vestmellts; the . stations.. of Cross, confessionals, and the. ~ of the- ·CeD." . . .' ltil~VEN
ITATION GUILD. EASTHAM' .lild members will sponsor a . lion the' first Friday ~f each th at v.iu'ious homes. The will be ,held Friday, March. the residence of Mrs. Leroy bitt, Nickerson Road', East I, and will have an Irish ne. Succeeding flocials will held Friday, April 1 at the Ie of the guild president, . Arth4f Cestaro, Surrey le, .East;pam; and' Friday, , 6 at the home of Mrs. John nors, Camp Ground Road, th Eastham.. ~atured 'at the April social be a drawing for a ham din Chances will be available Ie March meeting and from tbers, and.' returns will be . e to Mrs.; .. Robert C. Clark, y Chase :Road, Eastham. '.
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IACULAo;rE CONCEPTION, .LRIVER . he Women's Guild will spon- . an afternoon of recollection day' 'afternoon;' March 6 in . parish church. Three confer ~s will be followed. by .a 5 )ck Mass l:nd supper served . he church hall. JEAN BAPTISTE, ,L RIVER Ie Council of Catholic Women
sponsor a public ham and tet whist' at 7:30 Saturday It, Feb.' 19 in the churCh . Chairman and co-chairman Mrs. Louise Goyette and Mrs. ien Laroche.
lore . Paris~ Parade Pages 15 -1-1
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 17, ,
,
l~66
.
19
Holy .F'amilY!ligh. CC!mpile/) Best Area Baskl!tball Record
Nobrega' Quintet' ~n AU..WilrlD'llirng Ho,op Season.
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By Fred Bartek All area'schoolboy basket ball leagues conclude action tommorow night. With the exception of a few teams that will play non-league games next week, the only remaining 1966 hoop action will come 'In
}, .¥t't~:t our. n a , .' :w<i.t." ments. For the \{suc:'c:essful . ,..:,"<,'-:" ". .:::; teams its off to i'. ~"[('!lf' "Boston Garden
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Durfee High of Fall River has easily qualified with a 16-% overall record. The· Hilltoppers have two remaining games. ThEl7 travel to Bishop Stang High in NEW BEDFORD COURTMEN CAPTURE NARRAGANSETI' LEAGUE TITLE North Dartmouth tomorrow and play their long-time rival New Bedford High on Washington'. will be the first time .Coach, journey to Fairhaven in the Bolsters Attack ly last week eliminated it frO'lf, Birthday. , .John' O'Brien'e Stang Spartans wind-up for both. An interesting ~ason's finale Tech contention. Two other Oliver Ames Again' pits Dighton, last year's Nairy Narry League combines have ar. The last game that Durfee lost have qualified for the Tech In the Class Cranks of the champs, against all-winning outside chance of qualifying, was at the hands of New Bed 'tourney. Coach Jim Lanagan'of ford before Christmas. The Coyle has guided his hoOpsters Tech tournament, Oliver Ames Holy Family. The New Bedford Old Rochester and Westport can "Toppell'B,.. hoping to reverse to Tech berths for the past four of North. Easton will be repre- club is back at full strength with still make it in a down to thE' Diat earlier set-back, will be years .It will be a busy few senting the' northern section of the return of Steve Lawless, wire fight. Both will have tJc out to keep their 13-game win weeks. for both as ~ey, have the county. The Tigers, who 'the big gun a year ago who re-: win their remaining games. Old ning streak intact. Durfee .clinCh . also been ~lected to 'participate have rarely failed to qualify in turned to action last ~eek for Rochester'travels to Prevost ill Fall River' 'and Westport hosts ed the BCL title last week by in the New 'EDgland Catholic the past 10 years, have clinched the. 1966 campai~. WIth Law winning over Attleboro and title p~ay. It will also be Stang's .. the .Hockomock League, title; - .",less,' HF fills its only 'Weak spot Apponequet·. first venture to Lawrence. Coyle" . , , (if they have one) -the reBishop Feehan Higbll. Diman is' at Case and Ware has been invited three conse«:UCoach Jack. Nobrega ~ unbeat- bounding departmE:nt. ham at Abington' in other gaDUll ,New Bedford played an ex tive y ars; en Holy Fanulyfive WIll travel So' t' 1 to' 'H I" ~ami'" tomorrow night. cellent game against North . e '. ~~--to Dighton t<mlol-rQw night. .The.· " .' merse S oss 0 Y iii Quincy leader of the Greater In a' head":on match of these' .New: BeqfQrd Pai-'ochiaIS, sPort..: Boston League, as it watched two local Catholic powers;"laSt ing aD. impressive 18-0' .season'. a four point half-time l~ad tum week,. Stang emerged the victor. That 'loss dropped Coyle tWo mark, were denied the Narry into a nine-point deficit. The ames back of Stang and b1" League ,championship by one Crimson conclude league action g game last ~ason but they ran tomorrow night, hosting Chel third place in the BCL. However,. away with the league title this Stang dropped a seven point' time, winning by four full games.' sea. decision to Attleboro while Coyle' Two Spartans' Firsts dropped Voke to make-up for' The Nobrega men who easily Coyle High of Taunton and one game. Stang will host Dur- qualified for the Tech, have re :Bishop Stang of Dartmouth will fee tomorrow 'while Coyle tra- ceived another invitation to the also make the Boston trip. Tbl8 vels to Attleboro for the sea- Catholic title play in Lawrence. eon's finale. This is the fifth straight year Holy Family has been invited to Gotham CYO· Honor. Top Flight Medas the New England Catholic tourBishop Feehan of Attleboro . ney. Sherman and Como will be at home to Taunton to
NEW YORY (NC) - Allie morrow for the finale for both. " C~ {II Sherman, coach of the New York Neither has ~t "the world afire" Giants professional fo 0 t b a II . this Winter. Taunton has one of team and singer Perry Como the area's outstanding. players have been presented with honors in Bob Medas who is averaging ~., by the Catholic Youth Organiza Fall River, Mass. 23 points a game. The first time tion of the New ·York Archdio- ,the~ clubs met the .Taunton " ON OUR"STA,GE ~~. . Tigers won by 'five' points. The Sherman was selected for the Shamrocks would like to even .WEO.:MARCH' 16,7:45 P.M. john V. Mara Memorial Sports the series and finish the sea
{~. man of the Year award given for oon on winning note.
·outstanding achievement in In an independent game to
• . ~THOLIC PR.~R.AM ~., professional sports while main morrow night Dartmouth will
taining high standards of per
sonal conduct worthy of emula
/8 CTO Day of Recollection
tion by the youth of America." C~ AIRLINES . • The award is named for the late
For Mmnis,ters . owner of the Giants who was a . . Ca.i;hoII.~ Tra.V'0J. <O>i?Jt'lce 'iii' ,WARREN '(NC) - A member longtime member of the C Y 0of the Youngstown diocese's ec board. . ' C~ WASHtNGTON CHICAGO ROME LONDON '1111 Como was presented with the umenical commission became .a ,.OIlUltTftAl'S _------~--Club of Champions gold medal the first Catholic priest in north-. lfRP CATHOLIC TRAVEL OFFICE' FRM 'i" DIFfUU 8Y A, eastern Ohio to give a day of for 1965, the eYO's highest hon C~ Dupont Circle Building, Washington, D. C. 20036 • .......... CIIUII lurs UIIGUI . reCollection for Protestant min or. He is the 32nd annual re Please send me your free IIhilltrated booklet dSllcrlblng In ~... isters. . , cipient of the award for "out Orch. & Loge 4.50 _ detail the "world-covering" pilgrimages. . ~ standing setviceand inspiration Father John Gallagher, pastor ~~ l8JV B~lc. 3,50, 2.40 of Holy Family parisb-, Poland, to youth." : Name .." Over 2,000 persons attended Ohio,' at 'the invitation of the Special Arrangements ,.. Address ~.,. the $50-a-plate dinner which, Rev. Arthur M. Sherman;' Epis for School Groups "c.~. ~/Zor'ie/State '.' . '." ' . raises funds for the CYO work copal pastor and president of the :_::'PbbRe·,.,: :R, among 270,000 young people in Warren Ministerial Association, lave the retreat. this area.
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Continued from Page One Rev. Francis A. McCarthy, pas tor of St. Patrick's parish in Somer.set. Appointments are effective March 3. Father McDermott Father McDermott was born June 22, 1907, in Taunton, the son of Bernard L. and the late Margaret A. Lynch McDermott. A graduate of Taunton High School, he attended Baston Col lege and received his philosoph ical training at St.' Bernard's Seminary, Rochester. Ordained on May 21, 1932, in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by the late Most Rev. ,James E. Cassidy, he was first assigned as assistant. 'at St. Joseph's Church, Fall River. Following four years at the Fall Rliver par ish, Father McDermott was tmnsferred to Holy Name Par ish, New Bedford, and remained there until 1952 when he became assistant at the Imaculate Con ception Parish, Fall River. On June 12, 1956, he was ap pointed administrator of st. Peter's Parish, Digh'tori; until'his assignment as the 'first' pas~or of 'the new Church of Our Lady of JFatima, Swansea. . For 12 years Father McDer mott 'was, d{rector of the Priests' .. Choir and, from 1959'. t9' ~962, served as director of the Guild' for. the' Blind, in the 'Fall River area... . / Father Galvin' . :rather. GalVin was born March 16; 1912, in Fall River, 'the, son of ,.the late Michael P.' and the late Elizabeth Z. Riley Galvin. A graduate of Durfee High School, Fall River, he attended St. Charles College, Catonsville, Md., St. Mary's Seminary, Balti more, and the Theological Col lege, Catholic University, Washington. , He was ordained on June 3, 1939, in'St. Mary's Cathedral; by Bishop Cassidy.· On June 14, 1939, Fathel: Gal vin was awarded a Master of Arts Degree - School of Social Science, Catholic University.' . Serving' as an assistant at St.
Vincent's Home, Fall River, dur In September of'1941, 'he was
ing the Summer of 1939, he re assigned to St Wi'lliam's Church,
turned to Catholic University in Fall River, and the following
October to pursue Graduate. year was transferred to St. Pat
Studies in Canon Law. He .re rick's Parish, Fall River.
mained at the university for two On June 12, 1940, Father Gal
years and served as an assistant· vin 'was awarded a Bachelor's
,at St. Mary's Church, Nantucket 'Degree in Canon Law and June
during the Summers of 1940 and 11, 1941, he received his Licen
1941. '
tiate in c;anon Law.
In October 1945, the'new ad
ministrator of Our Lady of Fat
ima Parish, returned to Catholic
De~~rve 'Univ~rsity to .complete his
studies in Canon Law and on
Furrn~$ Dec. 19, 1946 was awarded his
in Canon Law.
ALBANY (NC)-Use. of Doctorate On June 28, 1946, he returned public f u,n d s to provide to St. Patrick's, Fall River, and health and welfare services rEmii:lined as assistant uniil April, for nonpublic school chIldren 1957, when he was l;Ippointed is "legally justified and morally chaplain at the ,Catholic Memo
required," a johit legislative rial Home, Fall River.
He has served in the'Diocesan
budget co'mmittee was told here. Spokesmen for the New York Matrimonial Tribunal as secre State Federation of Citizens for tary and notary, vice-officialis, and since June 18, 1964, as offi Educational Freedom - repre NEIGHBORHQOD MASS: Msgr. Charles Jackson, cialis. senting 50 chapt~rs, of CEF Father Galvin on his appoint:. pastor ,of St. John the Baptist church, Napa, Calif., offers urged approval 'of funds to pro ment Officialis' of the Diocesan M;lSS each Wednesday evening in homes of outlying parish vide psychiatric, psycliological, social work, 'guidance, 'testing Tribunal received the title' of areas.. Purpose of the plan; Msgr. Jackson s'ays" "is to de- "Very Reverend.~' and remedial-instructional ser , " He served' also as one'. of 'the velop a sense of commun.ity. by-participation' in the Mass.. vices for nO,npublic ~chool pupils. NG .Photo'. , censors of books for' the Dio Testifying before the' commit .': " ',. .cese,. chairman of, the "Friends
tee on behalf CEF'~ere Reu"': of the Catholic University," and
.ben· Grq~ljl o~ Sia'ten .lsI~p<! ll~d :' ~ examiner 'of: the Clergy 'and J. Kenneth O'Loane of Roches- for Administrative "Removal: ~. 'tel;::: " , .:' . WASHINGTON (NC) ,-...:.. T,he . widely.contacted with -literature Father ROcha , 'rhey s~id health arid welfare major official" U. S. Cath01ic, on the plan and that advertise';' , The chapiain at th'e € a tholle services. to, ,nonpubl,ic', sC~091 . ~ealth \lgencies ha"e. denied any, _. ments 'for) it -were carried ill' ciiildt:E!I1, "do, not beriefit the . Memorial Home, ··Fall River, .was connection: 'with a "Catholic'- . some Cat'holic newspapers. 'botn Aug. 11, 1924 in New Bed": schools * * " but they do benefit ford; the son of 'Mrs. Anna Mar Hospita1'Plan" being. offered :by' Amo·ng· inducements for the childr~nand cl1ildren ~onlY." , 'tin Rocha and the late Antonio -I] ',comJ.l1~rciaf. i~suran~~ com.,. , commercial' plan,. according to pany. ~-, .' :the, company's literature; is a: They said nonpublic',Ilchool Rocha. pupils should receiye, the same. Father Rocha attended St. " . A ,- statement issued here 'by . pledge that in the event of the benefits now provided to stu Jerome's College, Canada, St. Msgr. Harrold A. Murray, direc- death ofa policyholder, $500 dents· in public schools, and Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, and . tor of the Bureau of- Health and will be paid to the policyholder's added: "Children denied, these ~he Patriarchal, Seminary ,of 'Hospitals, National Cat -Ii 0 l'i c parish unless otherwise directed. services face the possib~lity of Lisbon.. Welfare .Conference, said:: . In, addition, 'the l;oinpany growing up suffering the phys .. 'Catholic Hospital 'Plan' of- states in its brochure that bene On Feb. 12, 1959, he was or ical and social pains that handi dained in Lisbon,' by the Cardi fered and advertised bY' the fits to POli~Yholders Will. be re caps produce.' , nal Patriarch of Lisbon, Emman- M u t u a 1 Protective Insurance duced !?yfIve per cent If they Gross cited an amendment' to ' uel G. Cardinal Cerejeira. ' Company, . Omaha, .Neb., is not enter a non-C~tholic hospitl!l._ IIi addition' to his assignment' sponsored, by ihe 'Catholic 'H9S the state constitution approved' by a statewide vote' in 1938 and . at the' Catholic Memorial Home, pita1 Association or the 'Bureau Raises Rank providing for equal treatment 'of Father Rocha will also serve' as of Health 'and Hospitals, VATICAN CITY (NC) - The all students as the legal. basis part time chaplain at the Earl N.C.W.C."· " Holy See has raised the rank of for providing health and welfare Hussey' Hospital, Fall River, ,Inquiries addressed to him, its diplomatic mission to the services to non-public school where he 'will 'assist on Sundays; Msgr. Mut:ray said, indicate that Syrian Arab Republic to the pupils. . . . Holydays, and First Fridays. ' Catholic paris~ pr~sts" were rank of a ·pronunciature.
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Theologian Discusses MQdern Danci'ng 'Expression of Pleasure ••• No~ A~t.omatic.a!ly S.inful' "Nevertheless, a perverse in VATICAN CITY (NC) Whether the frug, the twist:, the tention and environment or con Charleston or the waltz, dancing , ditions of lust, such_ as indecent has always bcen a twisty prob clothing, immodest gestures and' vulgl!r jokes, in addition to t~e lem for moralists. Confronted with a reader's influence of !Ilcoholic' drinks ....... question on the morality 01:' the' , a n,d, questionable supervision, 1 ate s t discotheque novelties, can trouble the serene joy of Msgr. Ferdinando Lambuschini, dancing. This is particularly true a rofessor of moral theology at 'of many modern dances." Msgr. Lambruschini said mod Rome's Lateran University, gave
a guarded answer in the Feb. 13 ern dances are "undoubtedly oc isslue of Vatican City's weekly' casions of sin, but not immediate magazine, L'Osservatore della occasions * * * And one is not bound to avoid all remote occa Domcnica. sions of sin. Otherwise he would He said, dancing is "a sporting and artistic exercise consisting have to get out of this world." Parents Responsible of movements and gestures ac The main responsibility in companied by musical rhythms guarding against actual sin oc in which enjoyment is found casioned by dancing, he went on, particularly by the young, which "lies with parents, not only as cannot automatically be de scribed as.sinful'" '" ,., It can be regards attendance of their chil an expression of serene pleasure dren at public dances, but also and/compatible with the typi(~a1 regarding private dances * ,., c. which'" '" * at' times, under ex ly Christian virtue of temper ceptional circumstances, can be ance'and modesty. even 'worse than public dances, it '" * The main difficulty from a moral point of view is that of Retreats in' Korea KWANGJU (NC) -The pR"O-, control." With. due regard for 'the "le ..incial of the Chicago provirlce of the Passionist Fathers said' gitimate aspirations of youth t-o here that hig· community will ,,indepE!lidence in the organiza ,soon begin the first retreat Weekly Folds house operated by' missionarAes' in Korea. Father John P, White, LONDON (NC)-'-A new ven C.P., slllid a planned retreat ture in Catholic journalism in house near Kwangju will offer London failed when the London retreats for lay persons and' edition of the Catholic Pictorial clergy. folded up after only eight weeks.
tion of their amusements, in cluding dances at, home," he : called for vigilance on the part , of parents, "both elastk and far sighte9-; with full trust in ,youth but, with effective intervention ~ith ,frankness 'and, firmness whenever necessary to prevent the happy atmosphere, of play from becoming troubled."
Rather than in formulas and prescriptions, the fundamerital solution lies in youths them selves, he said, "in the formation of consciences regarding the per ennial choice between good and evil, which, we must all make at every moment in our lives."
Ambassador Tlhanks Spanish Pa'stor PAL0MARES (NC) - U. S. Ambassador Angier Biddle Duke personnally thanked the pastor of this Mediterranean village for his assistance to American airmen injured and killed when 'two Air Force planes collided in the air in mid-January, The ambassador greeted Fa ther Juan Navarrete and other townspeople' and thanked them for their "heroic collaboration" in the ,rescue that saved seven lives'.. Citizens here have taken the' . accident in their stride. Ameri-' ~ can authorities have promised 'to pay for, crops, damaged as' a result of the' crash.
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