Announce Parochial Assignments Appointment of the Dioc-
esan chancellor as a Fall River pastor, the designation l!f an administrator and new pastoral assignments for three New Bedford priests together with the selection of a new Attie-
boro administrator is anounced today by the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River. The Chancery Office announcement also includes the transfer of an assistant, from one Fall River parish to another. Rev. Msgr. Reginald M. Bar-
rette, a curate at St. Roch's Church in Fall River who serves in the dual capacity of chancellor, is the new pastor of Notre Dame de Lourdes Church in Fall River. Rev. Roger P. Poirier, who has been serving as administrator of
the Flint parish in the See City, has been named administrator of St. Joseph's Church in Attleboro, succeeding Rev. Ubalde J. Deneault who becomes pastor emeritus. Other assignments announced by Bishop <;:onnolly today:
Rev. Ernest N. Bessette, pastor of Our Lady of Fatima, New Bedford, to St. Hyacinthe's Church, New Bedford, as pastor. Rev. Roland B. Boule, pastor of St. Hyacinthe's, New Bedford, to St. Anne's Church, New Bedford, as pastor. Rev. Arthur C. Levesque, administrator of St. Anne's, New Bedford, to Our Lady of Fatima Church, New Bedford, as administrator. Rev. Maurice H. Jeffrey, assistant at St. Jean Baptiste, Fall River, to St. Roch's Church, Fall River, as assistant. All assignments are effective Tuesday, March 5. Turn to Page Two
Emphasizes Symbolism Of Rites . MSGR. BA~REnlE
FR. POIRIER
FR. LEVESQUE
FR. BOULE
.Fr· ,Delano
Fr•. Deneault Now Pastor Emeritus
The eHOR
Rev. Ubalde J. Deneault, pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Attleboro, for the past 15 years, will retire from the 3ctive ministry on March 3 to become pastor emeritus of the Attleboro parish. Father Deneault was bon\ on MaJ:'ch 8, 1899 in New Bedford, the son of the late Arsene Deneault and the late Mary Lebeau Deneault. The Attleboro pastor emeritus attended Bourget College and the University of Ottawa in Canada and received his theological training at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. Ordained on May 29, 1926 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River by the late Most Rev. Daniel F. Feehan, second' Ordinary of the Diocese, he served as an assistant in St. Roch's, Fall River; Sacred Heart, New Bedford, St.' Stephen's, Dodgeville; and St. Matthieu's, Fall River. In December 1950, Father Deneault was named pastor of St. Stephen's Parish, Attleboro and remained in that position until 1954 when he was named to his present assignment at St. Josp.ph's.
.FR. U. J. DENEAULT
The new rite of the Mass, effecive March 22, is truly a resFR. BESSEnE toration. That does not mean that we will be turning the clock back and doing things as they were done decades or centuries ago. Of itself, this does nct solve problems of better situations. It can create a big, dangerous "make-believe" and would therefore detract from true religion. The restoration asked by the Rev. Kenneth J. Delano, a Vatican Council, worked on by priest of the Fall River Diocese commissions since then and fiand one well-known in the field nally about to be implemented of astronomy on a national level, is a great giant step tOward the Now, spoke yesterday fn New York "meaningfulness", City before the two~day leader- word has been and is greatly ship Conference, "Miracles of abused today and some explanaAmerica," sponsored by The tion surely is necessary. Center of Ameriean Living. The The liturgy is composed of Center, whose chairman is Lady rites that will aid man and soMalcolm Douglas-Hamilton, pre- ciety to recognize God, man's sented the program to support relationships with God and space exploration, and Father man's relationship with man. Delano's- talk was on "Space These rites are to inspire, susand Religion." tain and foster a true religious, Other speak~rs included Astro- spiritual and ,prayerful attitude naut Col. Frank Borman, USAF, and life in man. famed rocket expert Dr. Krafft But: the rites are signs that Ehriche, Hon. Lucius D. Battle of remind man of great fundamentCOMSAT, space philosopher al tfUlths; put man in touch with Earl Hubbard and Capt. Chester the truly real but not onlyLee, USN, Mission Direc,tor-Apol- temporal values and relation10 Program. Master of ceremo- ships, with real life, with God. nies at the luncheon was Bob Turn to Page Eighteen Considine. Father Delano at"so participated in a Round Table moderated by Hugh Downs. A Center statement says: , "With the moon landing, earthbound moral and spiritual values by which we have lived since The Bishop presided at her the dawn of man's conscience Turn to Page Six - funeral and monsignori and
An,Anehor of the Soul, SU're and Firm-ST.
PAUL
Fall River, Mass., Thursday, Feb. '19, 1970 ....•1110. 8 © 1970 The Anchor PRiem 10¢ Vo.I 14 ., 1""' $4.00 per Year
Stress~s
Accomplishments In Catechetical Work
Accomplishments of, the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in the Fall River Diocese !lre detailed in its animal report for the year of 1969. Stressing the Confraternity's "principal and continuing work is providing, support and assistance to parish units of religious education," the re- that of Mark IV Presentations of Salette Center, Attleboro, port highlights objectives La thus realizing a more efficient achieved and outstanding distribution of materials. events of the year. CCD grew in 1969 with establishment of a center in Buzzards Bay to serve Cape Cod parishes with materials, and counsel. In operation six months, the center is heavily used. A major event in 1969 was the organization of a religious education meeting at which 12 denominations were . represented and at which cO,operative projects were discussed in the fields of leadership training, the apostolate to the exc'eptional child and the sharing of audio-visual materials. The January meeting, it is noted, influenced many ecumenical activities during' the remainder of the year. CCD personnel, states the report, prepared a catalog of audio-visual supplies in the field of catechetics and distributed it to all parishes. In September the CCD merged its film library with
Featured Panelist
Also offered to parishes was an evaluation of available CCD materials. The central office served dur-' ing the year as a major contributor to the development of ECHO, a retreat program for teenagers unique to the Fall River Diocese. CCD sub-committees, states the report, were active in many areas during 1969. Teaching Sisters and Brothers arranged a lecture by Rev. Alfred McBride of Catholic University attended by more than 200 persons, while the Exceptional Child Apostolate , conducted evenings of renewal for parents, teachers and friends of such children, sponsored a teachers' aide program among Diocesan teens, provided a doctrine course for teachers and in several other ways provided information and guidance for those involved in this work., Ecumenical effort involved Turn to Page Six
Marian Medalist Gave Her Life F'olr Childr'en priests crowded her wakebut maybe it says more
FR. K. J. DELANO
about Sister Mary Regis that among her pallbearers were the two men with whom she'd worked for decades in the kitchen of St. Vincent's Home, Fall River. One, Joseph Dudek, had worked with her for 44 years, since she arrived at St. Vincent's as a young nun in 1926. The other, Joseph Lima, had been with her 24 years. The men have regular working hours. Sister Regis never did. "She was in the kitchen from 5:30 in the morning until 7 or 8 at ,,~ight, seven days a week," said Father John Cronin, director of St. Vincent's. "She never took a day off." Well, maybe now and then she did. Her idea of a holiday was chaperoning a group of St. Vincent's youngsters to a Boston Turn to Page Four
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of FaU River-:Thum., Feb. 19, 970
Survey in Greater Boston Cites Concern for Schools
OFFICIA.L
BOSTON (NC) - A professional survey discloses the average Catholic in Greater Boston is "open to changes" in the Church, expects them and is prepared to work with them. The findings are contained in a 500-page repor:t by the New England Catholic Education Center at Boston differences and, therefore, options, especially in the inner-city, College. The survey was but they are potential centers of commissioned more' than a deepening and broadening the in-
Diocese of Falll APPOINTMENTS
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Rev. Ubalde J. Deneault, pastor of St. Joseph Churcp, Attleboro, as pastor emeritus of the same church.
year ago by Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston. The Louis Harris Associates, Rev. Msg!-. Reginald M. Barrette, assistant at St. Roqh opinion-research firm in New Church, Fall River, as pastor of Notre Dame Church, Fall York, designed the survey, which River. I was conducted by Drs. John B. I Donovan and George F. Madaus Rev. Ernest N. Bessette, pastor ,of Our Lady of Fatima of Boston College. Church, New Bedford, 3S pastor of St. Hyacinth Church, New REV. MAURICE R. JEFFREY More than 2,000 persons, inBedford. ' cluding 147 non-Catholic ,clergy, To St. Roch's, Fall River Rev. Roland B. Boule, admirlistrator of St. Hyacin¢ were interviewed. A 10-member Church, New Bedford, as pastor of St. Anne, Church, New board of education established Necrology B~fu~. last November by Cardinal Cush, FEB. 27 . I ing is studying the results, along Rev. Joseph N. Hamel, 1956, Rev. Arthur C. Levesque, admi,nistrator 'of St. Ann~ Founder, St. Theresa, New Bed- with a team of educators, sociChurch, New Bedford, as administrator of Our Lady of Faologists and religious leaders. ford: tima Church, New Bedford. : Rev.' Philip .GilIick, 1874, Church Mission Founder, St. Mary, North AttleRev. Roger P. Poirier, administrator of Notre Dame A cross-section of "publics"-' boro. Church, Fall H.iver, as administrator of St. Josleph Church. both' Catholic and non-Catholic Attleboro. !' -was interviewed, including a MARCH 1 Rev. James F. Masterson, special sampling of persons conRev. Maurice R. Jeffrey, assistant at St. Jean Baptiste 1906. Founder, St. Patrick, Som- sidered influential in the Church Church, Fall 'River, as assistant St. Roch Church, Fall River.I and the' community. erset. • 1_ . ,The survey,' in one chapter, Rev. Peter L.D. Robert" Rt. Ail appointments are effective Tuesday, Mat~h ~, 197~. , ' :, ,P.R.,.,I94B, (Pastor, Notte 'Dame, notes: Fall River. . "The Catholic people of the Archdiocese of Boston are a reliMARCH 2 Rev. James J., Brady, 1941, ' gious people and they are still Pastor, St. Kilian, New Bedford. sens1tive to the mission of the - Rev. Antonio Berube, 1936, Church in the world and to their Bishop of Fall River. i responsibilities as Church memPastor, St. Joseph, Attleboro. bers. Rev. Tarcisius Dreesen, SS.CC., "But they are a different 1952, Monastery of Sacred people than yesterday's generaHeart, Fairhaven.. Rev. Alphonse Gauthier, 1962, tion ,~ " ¢ they are deeply conPastor, Sacred Heart; New Bed- scious of their responsibilities to their children, the future bearers Continued from Page One 28, 1911, Rev, Ernest N. Bess!,!tte ford·. of the Christian message to the Monsignor Barrette was born is the son of the'late Noe,J~es MARCH' 3 modern world. ¢ * * They do not June 19, 1921 in Fall River, the sette' and the latEI Ida (Coderre) Rt. Rev. Timothy P. Sweeney, want the Church to provide son of the late Zenon D. Bar- Bessette. LL.D., 1960, Pastor, Holy Name, Catholic education at the exrette and the late Rose DeLima ' ' After pursuing his educa~ion New Bedford. pense of its other obligations to Corriveau Barrette. He attended at St. Ann's Academy, Swanton, Assumption Prep and College in Vt. and, St. Michael's College, ",....""111'.,111"""',,"""1""""111"""""""".""""'''''111'''0'''''''''''''''''''.''''''''''111 man and to society." Worcester and received his phil- Winooski Park, Vt., he prepared Blessed Sacrament Church in InteUectual Life osophical and theological train- for the Priesthood at St. Mary's Fall River untif 1966, when he The summary concludes that ing at St. Mary's, Baltimore. Seminary, Baltimore, Md. ! was appointed Administrator of Boston Catholics generally, no Ordained on June 15, 1946 in Ordained to the Priesthood I by St. Hyacinth Church, New, Bed- matter what may happen in the St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River Bishop James E. Cassidy on Jllne. ford. future, wish to retain some recby the late Most Rev. James E. II, 1938, he served as assist!int Father Levesque 0gnizable and distinct !!ectarian , Cassidy, the Diocesan Chancellor at Our Lady of the Isle, N;anBorn in Fall' River on Sept. form of education. spent nearly four years at St. tucket; St. Stephen, Attleboro; 27, 1919, Rev. Arthur C. LeTheir attitude described as Stephen Church, Attleboro, as St. Anne Church, New Bedford vesque is the son of the late being th~t "in a pluralistic soassistant. He was then trans- and Notre Dame Church, Fall Desire Levesque and the late ciety such schools not only can ferred to St. Roch Church, Fall River.' ': Elise (Albert) Levesque. contribute needed and valuable River, where he has served as He was appointed 'administraAfter preparing for the Priestassistant> until the present, as- tor and pastor of Our Lady; of hood at Assu!Jlption (.:ollege in • •• ,+ • • • • • • • • • • +. • • • • • signment as pastor to Notre the Holy Rosary Church in N:ew 'Worcester and St. Mary's SemD f' P Dame Church, Fall River. Bedford in April 1961 and 're- . inary in Baltimore, he was or.' ay 0, rayer Named a Domestic Prelate in' l~nal1·nge6d6.there until its dissolutIon dained a priest by Bishop James Feb.22-LaSalette S'h r i n e, March 1968, Father Barrette also E. Cassidy on Dec. 22, 1945. . Attleboro. served as Notary, Secretary and Since May 196fi,Father ~es Father Levesque has served St. Mary, Mansfield Vice Officialis of the Diocesan sette has been pastor of Qur as an assistant at St. Joseph SS. Peter and Paul, Fall Tribunal, Censor Librorumand Lady of Fatima Church, New Church; Attleboro; St. James . River. Chancellor. Bedford which he now leaves! to Church, Taunton;, St. Mathieu ' Catholic Memorial Home, Father Poirier be pbtor of St. Hyacinth Church Church, Fall River a'nd St. Anne Fall River.' • Rev. Roger P. Poirier, son of in the same city. I Church, New Bedford. ' Espirito Santo, Fall River. the late J. Napoleon Poirier arid Father Boule , On Aug. 12, 1969, Father LeMar. I-St. James, New'Bedthe late Irene (Audette) Poirier, Rev. Roland B, Boule," born vcsquewas appointed Adminisford. was born in New aedford June April 7, 1910 in' Fall River, is the trator of St. Anne 'Church, New St. Anthony, East Fal12, 1923. son of the late Honore Boule and Bedford, which he now leaves to mouth. After "attending Assumption the late Anna (Rivard) Boule.: . become Administrator of Our Our .Lady of Lourdes, Prep and College in Worcester, He studied at the College ide Lady of Fatima Church in the Marian 'Manor, Taunton. he pr~pared for the priesthood at Montreal in Canada and pre- same city. ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~I St. Mary Seminary, Baltimore. pared for the Priesthood at ~he Father Jeffrey He was ordained to' the Priest· Seminary of Philosophy in M9nRev. Maurice R. Jeffrey, 'SOl\, hood on May 31, 1947 by Bishop treal imd Foreign Missions iof of Oliver Jeffrey and Normande ,'O'ROURKE James E. Cassidy. Quebec Seminary" i (Prevost) Jeffrey, was born in Father Poirier has served as Ordained on June 24, ,1934 :at New Bedford on' Oct. 29, 1934. Funeral- Home an . assistant at St. Theresa St. James Cathedral in Montreal, , Arter studying at .Assu~ption 571 Second' Street Church, So. Attleboro; St. he' served as Ii missionary Iin College (Canada), he prepared Mathieu Church, Fall River; St. Manchuria for nine years. He'te- for the Priesthood at St. Mary's Fall River, Mass. Anthony of Padua Church, New turned to Canada' to serve las Seminary, Baltimore, and was, 679~6072 Bedford; St. Joseph Church, Treasurer at the Foreign MIs- , ordained to the Priestlwod', by MICHAEL J. McMAHON Attleboro. sions Seminary in Quebec.' I Bishop James' L.Connolly 'on Registered Embalmer After serving six years as asFollowing the Second World April 2, 1960. licensed Funeral Director sistant at Notre Dame Church" War, he returned "as a missiQnFather Jeffrey .\las served' as. Fall River, he was appointed ary to Asia serving in Japan un- assistant at St. Jean Baptiste. Administrator of the parish on til December 1949: He ,then te- Church, Fall River since ordinaTHE ANCHOR Aug. 12, 1969. 'He now becomes turned' to the <:ongregatiOli's tion. He lias also been appointed Administrator of St. Joseph headquarters until .June 1950. ~ Second Class" Postage Paid at: Fall River, a Notary to the Dioces~n TribuMass•. Published avery Thursday at 410 Church,·,Attleboro. , Returning to th'e Diocese ,of nal and Religion Instruct'Or at , Highland Avenue, Fall Rlvar, Mass. 02722 , Father Bessette Fall River,' he served as' assist- Dominican Academy in Fall by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription price by mall, postpaid . Born in New B~ford on June ant at Notre Dam(~ Church artd River. ' ",QO per year. I
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Announce Paroch'ial Assiglnmei1ts
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tellectual life of the Church." . "Their preservation, however, involves a resolution in some form of the problems of personnel and finance," the survey states. Public Assistance Government aid to Catholic schools,' while not universally accepted as "right and necessary" (80 per cent of Catholics in Greater Boston think it is), nonetheless is favored in some measure by 59 per cent of all residents of the area, the survey said. "Non-Catholics generally are positive in their evaluation of Catholic schools, but this approval does not transfer to according government aid to Catholic schools unless it is put in terms of a threat to the pocket· bQoks,.... the study said. ' "A slight plurality (45 per cent) reject the idea of government aid to parochial schools when it is posed as a solution in general terms."
Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Friday of the First Week of Lent. Violet. SATURDAY - Saturday of the First Week of Lent. Violet. SUNDAY -'- Second Sunday of Lent. Violet. Mass Proper; Creed; Preface of Sunday of Lent. MONDAY-Monday of the Second, Week of Lent. Violet. (St. Peter Damian may be commemorated today) \ TUESDAY-St. Matthias, Apostle. Feast. Red. Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Preface of Apostles. WEDNESDAY - Wednesday of the Second Week of Lent. Violet. THURSDAY - Thursday of the Second Week of Lent. Violet.
D. D.
Wilfred C. Sullivan Driscoll
FUNERAL HOME 469 LOCUST STREET FALL RIVER, MASS. 672-~381
JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN F ....era. ROllle 550 Locust Street Fall River. Mass. 672-2391
Rose E. ~uJllvan Jeffrey E. Sullivan
Michael C. Austin Inc.
Funeral Service EdwardF. Carney 549 County Street New Bedford 999-6222 Serving the' area since 1921
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thurs., Feb. 19, 1970
Notes Problems Attending Authority and Freedom
" ~~<~: C;)
LEBANON (NC)-Discovering ways to exercise authority and freedom in a responsible manner is not as difficult as it is physically exhausting, a~cording to Bishop Ernest L. Unterkoefler of Charleston, S. C. Speaking at III priests' workshop here in Pennsylvania, the Bishop of God, they miss the real definition of freedom," the Bishop emphasized that the chief said. hurdle arises when those He cited the Eucharist. as a who exercise authority and those who exercise freedom fail to realize both are gifts of God. "In the light of all the complexities these days," the Bishop asserted, "freedom and authority can be interpreted in many ways. It is a delicate subject. It is almost as convtroversial today as was the subject of freedom and grace in earlier years."· He emphasized that all share in authority and freedom as human beings. "All, Religious, priests and laity, with respect to their specific roles, exercise both freedom and authority. The laity exercise authority in the family, the Religious in their apostolates, and the clergy in their pastoral duties and in fulfilling their obilgations," he· observed. Source In Rl!velatIolU The Bishop, cHairman of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops' committee on the permanent diaconate, feels errors are possible in exercising both ~I'?edom and authority, because .m':' are part of the human deci~'::Q1i-~n!ll(ing process. "':lhis is an important concept. F.'e... ~om llUr! authority must be r:pproachC'd with dialogue in mind. An extreme approach could result in negative reactions," he noted. The "South Carolina brdinary advised that one way of prevent. Ing Such reactions is to "keep the channels of communications open." Bishop Unterkoefler believes that while the exercise of authority in the Church has many parallels in the body politic, both freedom and authority, are developed from Revelation. Miss Definition "Both freedom and authority, as they are known in the Church, are distinguished by Revelation from that which is based on a political constitution," he pointed out. Speaking specifically on freedom and its various concepts, Bishop Unterkoefler said: "In our day there are many interpretations placed on freedom. One of the more common is: 'I am free when I do what pleases me.' This can be a healthy attitude, despite the way it's expressed, if it means that: 'I am pieased when I serve God, when I serve the people responsibly, when I serve my neighbor.''' When those who exercise freedom "neglect God, or neighbor, or when they neglect faith, when they "neglect Revelation, neglect the Church, the People
sacrament of freedom, "because the moment of communion in Christ is a moment of joy and freedom." Bishop Unterkoefler made these comments on freedom and authority: "Man is free to reach out to' any' goal, but when he begins to exercise his freedom to make choices, he immediately begins to put limitations on himself, usuallY for the good of all other members of the community." '.'Free choices bring their limitations. The crisis within the priesthood may someday be resolved by going back to an analysis of the free choices people have made in earlier times. All were, by their nature, self-limiting." Community Voice "Free choice is limited by. the external world that confines and sets up obstacles. Free. choice is limited by the individual himself, since he is in the process of becoming, of growing. He is never the same today as he was yesterday, so consequently, in exercising his freedom he is indeed limited." "Unity can be damaged when there is no voice to speak for' the community." '
~G'@[?lf ~l(periment"
~ [j1) ~@ M~ation
MILWAUKEE (NC)-Five high school students who were tired of grades, exams, and academic competition were the impetus for a new experiment in education here-the Milwaukee Independent School (MIS). One of the students, Tim. Si·mone, said the five "were discussing the problem of change in the educational system last Summer." Since it takes a long time to bring about even "relati.vely minor changes such as the dress codes," he said, "we decided it would take to.o long for any really meaningful educational reforms. So we decided to start our own school and do it our way." Their strategy for setting up the school was seeking legal advice, gathering funds and resources materials, and asking university representatives for their reactions. They saw their efforts take tangible shape when MIS opened with 36 students, aged 15 to 20, most of whom had dropped out of local schools to join the MIS "student body." In a description of the new school, students said MIS "is based on the premise that 'education' should not be limited to 'schools' and the time spent in them, but rather that 'education' goes on 24 hours a day, in the community as well as. in the The oldest priest in the La 'school,' and that students can Salette Order died on Monday in and will educate themselves if Attleboro. Rev. Emile Leclerc, given the opportunity." M.S\, 88 years of age was born in St. Pamphile, P.Q., Canada. Guild Fashion Show Ordained in 1912 in Rome, St. Ignatius Women's Guild of Father Leclerc served in the Diocese of Fall River at the La Bishop Connolly High School, Salette Seminary and Shrine in Fall River will sponsor a Fashion Attleboro and the seminary at Show at 7:30 on Tuesday night, Feb. 24 at the Venus de Milo, East Brewster. A Mass of Requiem was of- Swansea. Mrs. Paul Dunn is chairman fered this morning at 10 in St. Joseph's Church, Attleboro. and Mrs. Frank DuValley will comment on the fashions. J3urial will be in Enfield, N.H.
Oldest Priest In Order Dies
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FR. J. A. McCARTHY
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FR. R. W. McCARTHY
FR. J. F. HOGAN
FR. D. A. GAMACHE
F our Priests in Diocese to Observe 25th Anniversary of Ordinations Four priests of the Diocese will observe the twenty-fifth anniversary of their ordination on February 24. Rev. Daniel A. Gamache, pastor of St. John the Baptist Church, Fall .River, Rev. John F. Hogan, pastor of St. Julie Billiart Church, No. Dartmouth, Rev. James A. McCarthy, pastor of ·St. John the Evangelist Church, Pocasseti·and Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy, pastor of Our Lady of Victory Church, Centerville, were ordained on that date in 1945 by the late Most Rev. James E. Cassidy in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. Fathers Gamache, Hogan and James McCarthy. will offer Masses in their respective parishes on Sunday, Feb. 22, at 4 P.M. Father Raymond McCarthy will offer Mas~ in his parish on March 1 at 4 P.M. All four extend 'an invitation to parishioners and friends to join with them at these Masses. Father Gamache Father Gamache, son of' the late Adolphe and Clairina (Lanneville) Gamache, was born May 4, 1918 in Fall River. Educated at Blessed Sacrament School, Fall River, and St. Alexandre College in Limbour, Quebec, he studied philosophy and theology in St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. On ordination he was assigned to St. Jacques Parish in Taunton where he served until being named pastor of St. John. the Baptist in Fall River last August. He servedr 17 years as chaplain he served 17 ytars as chaplain of Taunton State Hospital. Father Hogan Father Hogan, son of Mary A. (McMahon) Hogan and the late John Hogan, was 'born in Fall River on Aug. 29, 1918. Educated in the Davenport School in Fall River, Durfee High School and Coyle High School, he took his degree in philosophy from Providence College. He then studied at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. He also took courses at the Harvard School of Psychology and Boston College School of Social Work. On ordination he was assigned to St. Lawrence Church in New Bedford and served there until 1956. At that time he was made Director of St. Mary's Home in New Bedford and of the Catholic Welfare Bureau. He served as chaplain of the Bristol County House of Correction from 1956 to 1966, chaplain of the Catholic Nurses Guild, chaplain of the port of New Bedford, chaplain of the Newman Club at SMU and chaplain of the Juvenile Court in New Bedford. Father Hgan was pastor of St. John the Baptist Church in Central Village from ]966 to 1969.
Last Fall he was assigned to form the new St. Julie Billiart Parish in North Dartmouth. Father Hogan is director of the Catholic Welfare Bureau in New Bedford. He is director of theTelevision Mass and chaplain of the New Bedford Serra Club. He is director of the Thanksgiving Clothing Drive and of the Catholic Relief Services. He served in the Massachusetts National Guard as chaplain and holds a Major's commission (retired). Father James McCarthy Father James McCarthy, son of the late Timothy J. and Mabel (Smith) McCarthy, was born in Taunton on Oct. 21, 1918. Educated at St. Mary's School and Coyle High in Taunton, he attended Holy Cross College, St. Michael's College and the University of Ottawjl. He studied theology at" St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. Father McCarthy spent two years at St. James Church in New Bedford and then served at
Sees - Education . As Top Goal WASHINGTON (NC) - The Christian Democrats in Chile have made education their first priority, and their top man in that field offered some figures here in support. "After five years of constant growth," said Education Minister Maximo Pacheco Gomez, "almost one-third of the national budget is being devoted to schooling some 2.5 million children and youths, and that's onefourth of all Chileans." Figures for 1964 had been 1.7 million pupils in school. "Illiteracy rates came down from 17 per cent to nine per cent, and that is very good, considering the high average of Latin America," he added. Experts say the average percentage of national budgets allocated to education is a little over 23 per cent. They estimate there are nearly 50 million illiterates in Latin America, with a yearly average of some 15 million children who cannot get into school.
Our Lady of the Isle Parish, Nantucket, Holy Family Church, Taunton, Holy Name Church, Fall River, and St. William Church, Fall River. In March of 1967 he was made pastor of St. Dominic's Church in Swansea and served there until made pastor of St. John's Church in Pocasset last May. :Father McCarthy is diocesan director of the deaf, has served in several capacities on the diocesan tribunal and is presently a judge on that body. Father Raymond McCarthy Father Raymond McCarthy, SOIll of the late Raymond L. and Margaret (McGowan) McCarthy, was born in North Attleboro on March 6, 1919. Educated in North Attleboro schools he attended Providence College and studied philosophy and theology at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. Father- McCarthy served as assistant at Sacred Heart Church in Fall River until 1960. He then served in St. Patrick's Church in Somerset and St. Patrick's Church in Fall River. He became pastor of the newly-formed St. Mark's Parish' in Attleboro in 1967 and was appointed last August as pastor of Our Lady of Victory Church in Centerville. Father McCarthy is a member and a founder of the Family Life Bureau, Cana and Pre-Cana Conferences. He served as moderator of the Caritas Guild and moderator of the lay retreat movement, and served as a coordinator in the Catholic Chari· ties Appeal and Bishop's Charity Ball. He holds bachelor degrees in philsophy and theology.
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THEANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River:-Thurs., Feb. 19, 19~O
A Life-, of Charity for Children
Ohio Conferees to Corlsider N(titional Pastoral C~uncil
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WASHINGTON (NC)-The first nationwide conference en diocesan pastoral councils will pay close attention next month to the possibility of how soon-and in what form.L American Catholicism might get a national pastoral council. Each of the 162 dioceses in the country-those already Ham Rademacher of St. Johri's CollegevillE!, Minn., will operating some sort of College, be disclosed at the lconference. I diocesan-level pastoral body Archbishop Paul Liebold hf and those with none--has been asked to send someone to the . March 15-17 conference in Dayton at the Bergamo Center for Renewal. Over 200 are expected. "There are as many different things called 'Diocesan Pastoral Council' as there are dioceses that have created such bodies but a pattern is beginning to develop," according to Thomas J. Tewey, field representative for the National Council of Catholic Men, which is sponsoring the conference. Practical and theological matters affecting the creation of a national pastoral council - in which one day all 48' million Catholics across the nation would have a voice through representative laity, clergy and Re-' ligious-will also be looked into. Between 40 and 50 dioces~s and archdioceses have pastoral councils at present, according to Tewey. The number has been difficult to pin down because. "some are not true and proper councils as yet," he added. "Some dioceses have a steering committee which functions as a council and which is to bring a true council into being." Chancellors Enthusiastic Lay people, pastors, chancellors and bishops involved in existing or planned diocesan councils will attend the conference. The general theme is "Making Coresponsibility a Reality." The history, structure and programs of three diocesan councils will be exaritined in detail. One is the Youngstown diocesan council, formed four years ago and. one of the earliest of the representational structures which the 1962-1965 Vatican Council encouraged in the Church. The Men's Council has conducted a nationwide factual survey on pastoral councils. Tewey . said 11 0 replies were received, mostly from diocesan chancellors, and they showed "strong indications of enthusiasm for a national pastoral council." Dutch Experiment ~ The results of that survey, plus the outcome of an attitudinal survey run by Father Wi!-
Weak Faith Causes Inadequate Effort AACHEN (NCr-The aid given by rich countries to poor countries is inadequate because of the weakness of the Christian faith in rich countries, the secretary of the Vatican Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples said here. The Vatican official, Archbishop Sergio Pignedoli, told a meeting organized by the national Pontificial Missionary Society that "if the statistics are true, the rich countries are not giving even one per cent of their income· to poor countries." The reason for this, he claimed, is "the weakness of religious conscience. Weare weak as 'social workers' because our Christian faith is weak. The only true way of advancing the cause of development is that of vitalizing the faith of our Christian communities.;;
Cincinnati, who WillS instrumehtal in stirr:ing up lilly interest In the Evansville, Ind., dioces~n council when he was Bishop there before he was transferred in 196.9 to Cincinnati, will attdress the. conference. i Throughout the world, national pastoral councils ar,e still largely in the blueprint stage. Canada lis moving toward creation of on,e. Catholics in India have indicated they want to form a national' council. Bishop John Taylor pf Stockholm is· said to have I a council in mind for all of Scahdinavia. . The busiest and best known lis the one in the Netherlands. The Dutch experiment, started on Ia three-year provisional basis, ends in April when decisions will be made as to futu:re form. : !Ponder Men':s RoBe i "Diocesan councils are excellent structures which we' feel will become one of the most important elements in the Catholic Church," says Martin' Work, Men's Council executive director. I "We hope to find out what ways the NCCM, canser~e them." I . Concerning the possibility hf a National Pastoral Council in the United States without first having a widespread structure hf diocesan councils lit the lowh level, Work replied: : "There, should be 'a large number of DPC's before you dn think of having a really effective national pastoral council." i
SR. SUZANNE BRIECKEL, R.S.M.
Adult Education At St.. Patrick's
The Adult Education Division of St. Patrick's School of Religion, Fall River will sponsor a forum this Sunday evening on the topic, "Women irY Church and Society." The. discussion will be held at 8 in St. Patrick's School auditorium, Slade Street, Fall River.' . Participants on the panel will be Mrs. Margaret M. Heckler, Congresswoman of the Tenth District of Massachusetts, Sister Susanne Breckel, R.S.M., Ph.D., Director of Counseling Service, Salve Regina College, Newport and Dr. Mary Daly, S.T.D., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Theology at Boston College. Moderator of the panel will be Mrs. Nicholas T. Tyrrell, Coordinator of the' Adult Education Program ,at St. Patrick's. In announcing the event, Mrs. Tyrrell stressed that the en-' deavor of such programs at St. Patrick's is to raise isues' of concern to the contemporary Christian person, and to have available resource persons capable of guiding the discussion I Oppose Redulcing I because of their background or experience. State Legis-lcllture I Each of the panelists in .the BpSTON (NC)-A group of 18 program Sunday night will be Catholic, Protestant and Jewish asked to make' a brief statement leaders have stated that a pro- reflecting her thinking on the posal to reduce the Massachu- role of women from her special setts House of representativ~s background - hlW and politics, from 240 to 160 members is an psychology and theology..Fol"ill-conceived and ill-considered lowing the opening statements by the panelists, the floor will be idea." I The statement was addressed open to discussion.' ' Mrs. Heckler's educational to members of both House arid Senate where the first deterrrii- background is in law. She has nation on the reduction of the been admitted to the MassachuHouse members will be made in setts Bar and to practice before a joint Constitutional Convention the U. S. Supreme Court. Sister Susanne's educational scheduled for Feb. 25. : Signers of the opposition stat~ background includes study at ment include Father Paul P. Salve Regina College and Boston Rynne, executive director of the College. She has done postgradBoston Archdiocesan Commi~ uate work in sensitivity training sion .on Human Rights, and F~ and diagnostic techniques. Prother Robert F. Quinn, C.S.P., di- fessionally she has taught at the rector of the' Paulist Fathers' elementary, secondary arid college level. She has lectured Iilstitute for Human Understand• I widely on the North American mg. . I Other signers include the Rev. continent and is currently a psyJames Nash, 'director of social chological consultant to several rE:lations for the Massachusetts religious communities. Council of Churches; Rabbi Sa~ . Dr. Daly has studied at the ford Seltzer, director of the new College of St. Rose, Albany, the' England Council of th Ameridn Catholic University of America, Hebrew Congregations; and t~e the University of Fribourg, Rev. Warner Traynham, chair- Switzerland. She has taught in man of the Black Ecumencial this country at Cardinal Cushing . Commission, in addition to 1:3 College and Boston College, and taught in Fribourg as a graduate others. I I student. ! . She published a book on Days of l.ave iI women in the Church in 1968, No time of life is so beautifol and has authored numerous aras the early days of 'love, when ticles in books a~d periodicals. with every meeting, every glanc~, Currentfy she is an associate one fetches something new home professor of Theology at Boston to rejoice over. --Kierkegaard College.
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"There was a party afterwards, Continued from Page One Red Sox game at Fenway Park. and, she had such a good time," But next morning she'd be back said a friend. "She sang all the on the job, preparing dozens of old Irish songs." school lunchbags, in addition to And then she slipped away some 500 meals daily for Home from her kitchen and her friends. children and adult workers. .St. Vincent's girls at Mt. St. Over Four Decades Mary Academy were inconsolThe Sisters of Mercy never able. "It was as if they'd lost a gave Sister Regis another as- mother," said a faculty member. signment. She went to St. Vin- "Many other students sent them cent's and there she stayed, sympathy cards." growing old in the cramped, oldBut a six year old at St. Vinfashioned kitchen, where coal was used for cooking until 1950. cent's had the right of it. The She cooked for hundreds of pub- day Sister Regis died he cal1'!e lic suppers at St. Vincent's, ply- in from school and rushed to. ing guests with hearty meals and Sister Lourdette, Home superior. unlimited second helpings. "Hey," he said cheerfully, "1 She admitted that she didn't prayed to Sister Regis to help really look forward to St. Vin- me with my reading today, and cent's coming changeover to a you know what, she did!" new cottage-type facility. Her heart was with the old and inOur Companions convenient building. Last month, Sister Regis reIt is part of the business of ceived the Marian Medal for her life to be affable and pleasing years of service to childhood. It to those whom either nature, was as if the glittering ceremony chance or circumstance has made our companions. -More crowned her life.
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Bishop Medeiros Studying Calif. Grape Strike
California Priest, Nearing Century Mark, Writes Column for Weekly Newspaper
FRESNO (NC)-A former Fall River diocesan chancellor is one of a five-member ad hoc committee of United
SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-He snuggled comfortably in a well-worn easy chair, puffed his cigar, smiled and commented: "This is my heaven !" Father George Trunk, who'll be 100 come Sept. 1, was talking about his second floor bedroom-study in the gray frame Nativity parish rectory, close by San Francisco's famed Opera House. There are red States Bishops which is dissatis- geraniums in window boxes. fied with its findings after a tour told me to stop smoking and to of the four-year-old strikebound The walls are decorated with stop drinking coffee." He also murals - scenes of snow California grape growing area. likes a little honey and brandy Bishop Humberto S. Medeiros capped mountains, lakes during the day. of Brownsville is one of the hier- rimmed with pines, the way Father Trunk came to this archy committee which is plancountry in 1921, has never reFather Trunk remembered his ning to invite representatives of union pickers and growers to a Mid-March meeting. Representing the U. S. Catholic Conference, the ad hoc unit Is investigating working conditions which are at the root of the long labor dispute. . The Bishops' ad hoc committee is scheduled to report to the U. S. Bishops Conference in San Francisco on April 20 concerning the dispute which has been stalemated since negotiations broke down last Summer. Comprising the ad hoc committee in addition to Bishop Medeiros 6f the Texas See are: Archbishop Timothy Manning of Los Angeles, Bishop Hugh A. Donohue of Fresno, Bishop Wal· ter W. Curtis of Bridgeport and Auxiliary Bishop Joseph F. Donnelly of Hartford. The Bishops have been assisted by Rev. Msgr. George G. Higgins, USCC Urban Life division director of Washington, a weekly columnist in The Anchor. Discussing their role, Bishop Donnelly said: investigate Facts "The Delano farm labor dispute came before the Bishops at their November meeting in' Washington, D. C. The Bishops decided that before taking any official action on the dispuate, it would be appropriate to assign an ad hoc committee to investigate the facts on the scene; to meet with the parties concerned, separately and jointly, and to persuade both sides to resume the negotiations which were broken off last July. "The committee was authorized by the Bishops' Conference to take whatever action it deemed appropriate on the basis of the discussions with both sides and its own investigation of the situation. The fin!il report of the committee will be made by ~pril 1." Bishop DonnelIy said the committee is not completely satis·' fied with the Fresno meetings and plans to invite union and grower representatives to another meeting around the middle of March. The union, last September, called for a resumption of the uegotiations that were stalIed in July. It· also asked the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service to help get both sides together again. Because farm workers are not covered by the National Labor Relations Act, the federal mediators cannot act in the dispute unless both parties request their service.
Attends Episcopal Con~~D'atioln Rite ORLANDO (NC) - Catholic Bishop William D. Borders of Orlando marched in the procession and attended the consecration of Episcopal Bishop William Hopkins Folwell of Central Florida in the cathedral church of St. Luke here. Bishop Borders is the first Catholic bishop to attend the consecration of an Episcopal bishop in this area. Three CathQlic pastors also were present.
childhood surroundings in Carinthia, a province now divided be~ tween Austria and the Siovenian section of Yugoslavia. Father Trunk always had been handy, with a paint brush. For 22 years, he was pastor of St. \Joseph's church in Leadville, a town high in the Colorado RoclPes. While there he covered the church walIs and ceiling with paintings from the New. Testament. Does Push-ups "The inside of the church needed painting very badly and contractors wanted $6,000 so I decided to do it myself. It cost $78 for scaffolding plus money for the paint," he detailed. The Leadville church now is regarded as a national Siovenian monument because Father Trunk's paintings are considered a fine example of primitive art. Father Trunk doesn't paint anymore, but his days are busy and happy. He's up at 6 A.M. each morning, exercises for ,30 minutes. He does push-ups and bends strenuously, seldom misses a morning. Then he says Mass in a small chapel in Nativity church. After Mass, he breakfasts, and returns to his "heaven." He spends most of the morning at his desk typing a weekly political column for a Siovenian newspaper published in Cleveland. "Sometimes I feel tired' but I start writing and I feel better right away," he said. Delegate at Versailles Promptly at 11 A.M. and 4 P.M., he 'goes for a half-hour walk. After lunch, he's back in his "heaven" and reads until 2 P.M. when he takes an ofternoon nap. His favorite books deal with politics and science. Father Trunk, a priest for 75 years, attributes his longevity to self-discipline. "Sometimes I don't feel like exercising in the morning but I
Urge United Effort Against Racism CINCINNATI (NC)-Archbishop Paul F. Leibold called for a united effort by churches to root out both "personal racism" and ,"institutional racism" from American society. "There is no higher claim on the nation's conscience," the archbishop told an audience at the ColIege of Mt. St. Joseph in a program sponsored by the Delhi Hills Community Action Group. Joining him in the appeal for more vigorous efforts to overcome racial discrimination were the Rev. Charles H. Jack, director of the Council of Christian Communions, and Dr. Robert L. Katz, professor of human relations at Hebrew Union ColIege. Archbishop Leibold reviewed the many statements of "the unchangeable Catholic position in' this matter of racial justice," including those of Pope Pius XII, of the U.S. bishops, and of the Second Vatican Council.
turned to his homeland. He was a pastor in North Dakota until 1921 when he was sent to Leadville. In 1946 he came to San Francisco. He was active in politics be· fore he came to America, was a delegate from Carinthia to the Versailles treaty conference after World War I.
Denies Reports Of Resignatic;»n
FATHER TRUNK make myself get up and do it," he said firmly. "Twenty years ago the doctors
Material Available For Vocations bay WASHINGTON (NC)-A package of materials to be used in connection with observances of the World Day of Prayer for Vocations, April 12, is available from the headquarters of the National CYO Federation here. The package includes suggested homilies appropriate for the day, a sample program for a "youth day" or "vocation day," suggestions for contacti~g- the mass media for purposes of publicizing the events, prayer cards and a colorful poster. The program materials were prepared by the National Conference of Diocesan Vocation Directors and the National CYO Federation, Division of Youth Activities, U. S. Catholic Conference. The entire package, or any individual items desired, may be ordered from the National CYO Federation, 1312 Massachusetts Ave., N. W. Washington, D. C., 20005. The individual items range in price from two to 15 cents apiece, with reductions for bulk orders.
VATICAN CITY (NC) - Two left-wing Italian weeklies have reported that Papal Secretary of State Jean Cardinal Villot submitted his resignation in protest against Pope Paul VI's unyielding stand on priestly celibacy, but the Vatican officially and causticly denied it. The Holy See's press officer, Msgr. Fausto Vallainc, described the reports in L'Epresso and Panorama as "pretended revelations." Of the. many details chronicled in L'Epress and Panorama, Msg. Vallainc's denial focused on "differences which were supposed to have arisen between the Holy Father and Cardinal Villot and which were suppjosed to have led the secretary of state to pre· sent his resignation." Both Magazines said Cardinal Villot's . main concern was to keep lines of communication and understanding open between the Vatican and the Netherlands where the church has b~en pressing for optional celibacy. According to both accounts, Cardinal Villot submitted his resignation to Pope Paul on Feb. I at a tense encounter a few hours after Pope Paul, speaking from his window to Sunday crowds in St. Peter's square, said the Latin-rite Church's law of priestly celibacy will remain in force and cannot even be subjected to comment.
Opens Community Services Office STEUBENVILLE (NC) - The Steubenville diocese here in Ohio has opened an Office for Com· munity Social and Economic Services under the direction of Father Anthony Giannamore. Bishop John King Mussio said the office will serve to imple. ment the social program of the Church as outlined by Vatican Council II. The bishop named Father Francis F. Brown to direct the civil rights section of the office.
fHE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 19, 1970
University Trims Tech Programs ST. LOUIS (NC) - Faced by rising costs, St. Louis University has decided to discontinue several technological education programs and focus instead on the nature of man and his environ· ment, according to Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., university presi· dent. Beginning in September, the university will accept no new students in electrical, civil and industrial engineering and engineering mechanics, Father Reinert said. In addition, the university will seek to transfer in its entirety ownership and operation of the Parks College of Aeronautical Technol()gy, a four-year aerospace and engineering school, to some other public or private group. The phasing out of the engineering courses means the vir· tual elimination of the College of Engineering and Earth Sciences. The course programs being retained-in geology, meteorology and environmental sciences-will be incorporated into the College of Arts and Sciences. Fatheri Reinert explained that, in reviewing the needs and assets of St. Louis University, "it becomes brutally clear that our resources are, and always will be, limited. If we were to distribute them across the 11 schools of the university equally, the result would be mediocrity for all. Hence, we are forced to identify our priorities."
Cites Economic Ills Of Latil1l America TOLEDO (NC) - Latin America suffers from dependence on "the international capitalistic svstem," which means that "fre· qilently our nations do not own any goods, nor do they have a say in economic decisions affecting them.". This view was expressed by Jesuit Father Renato Poblete of Chile, at the annual Latin Amer· ica Day observance here. His message was linked to what Latin American bishops said at their 1968 meeting in Medellin, Colombia. The dominant groups in Latin America, Father Poblete said, have interests and values identi· fied .with world capitalism and these groups "help to maintain a status quo situation which benefits them and perpetuates the external dependence and impoverishment of our countries."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 19, 1970
.'9°0 0,0'00,000 COMING CHa~Ese
Belated Appreciation -
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UP!
One of the by-products of the present Catholic school crisis is the' attention being paid to what has so often and . too long taken for granted-the decades of dedication by . the religious teachers. I !
For years they have been there. Their heroic wor,k has been there. Their long hours of dedication have been there. Their sacrifices have been so many that they ha~e been made to seem commonplace. i for
And so these Sisters and Brothers have been takJn I ;
~anted.
Now, with rising costs in Catholic schools and the numbers of vocation somewhat less 'and sOIrle religioJs opting to leave the religious life and enter other calling~, the crisis has spotlighted just how very rich the Church ' has been in the dedication of so many peoplE:. It is unfortunate, of course, that a crisis has' to unveil this heroism. But, as is often the case, it takes a 'crisis to make others aware of heroism in those who have be~n dutifully and without publicity devoting themselves to causes. !
It is a tribute to their dedication that Sisters a~d Brothers have been for so long going along and doing tHe F'r. Delano Ol'll Astli"onomy Panel· work of God without making any ripples. They have be~n so that men must ask: What acContinued Page One building goodness and discipline and knowledge into the have suddenlyfrom acquired new di- counts for all this? Who is its, fabric of generation upon generation of young people. I 'mensions and perspectives. Fail- creator? What do I, as a part ure to recognize "this might one of this creation, owe to the This, people have always known. Now ther~ is a deep-' day' cost. man his very survival, creator? er awareness and a belated appreciation. " I For his future, as always, lies in . Space exploration demands the I
Rising. ,Morality
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. A Harvard professor has said recently that he b¢lieves. that morality is on the rise, that there is a radic~l increase in the number of people reaching principled morallity. ~ ; .. I t
He attributes much of this to the necessity peopl,'e have found of making judgements on such. vital issues as the Vietnam war,civil rights, awareness of the po~sibility of nuclear destruction and environmental dangets.· I
The realization is growing that to make judgements. on these issues involves an appeal to some sort of standdt b'" I ar , 0 some aSlc pnnclp es. At the present time, the professor indicates, some people still feel that morality is relative. In lthe face M such a belief, however, their judgements would have on~y a transitory validity and it is. difficult to se,e how orie can call this morality at all-merely the mood of the mbment. I
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But it is a .good sign that there is an appeal ~o morality, to principles, to standards.' Now when tlie awareness comes that there must be unchanging moralit~.y and firm principles and standards that are roioted not in man but in God, then morality will really have come i6to its own. . ! I
But, according to the good professor, somE~ first step.s have been taken. !
the new frontier-which is now the universe. There he will seek to learn more of the magnificence of God's creation and the greater meaning of man." 'This conference' launched a' movement 'that - will bring together leaders in key fields of hUJ:llan. concer~.. These meetings will provide a focal point for philosophical understanding and responsible public opinion' "in favor of the U. S.space program. Topics presented at the conference included "Space and the American People," "Man on the Moon," "Space.and International ,Relations," "Space and World Communications," "Space and Industrial Progress," "Space and the Future," "Space and the Na~~~i~n~f~~~I.::' "Space and the Boredom Father Delano's paper was a succinct but comprehensive treatment on the moral and religious viewpoint of space exploration. Emphasizing that there must be support for the present war on poverty and disease he also called for a war on what Teilhard de Chardin called "the' great enemy of the modern world-boredom." <;:iting the fact that both ghetto-dwellers and the youth of affhient homes seek the expansion of consciousness and the gaining of new perspec-
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@ dJ. The ANCH .. .""OR"., I i
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OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF IFA.LI. RIVER II .
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Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the DiocesE!·of Fall Riv~r , 410 Highland Avenue I Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., ~hCl. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER j Rev. Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. MAN~GING
Rev. John P. Driscoll EDITOR
H hJ G Id ug . 0 en, lL.Q. . ~Leary Pren-Fall River
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age offers such opportunities which challenge the human race as a n~w frontier and which will have. a profound impact on religion. All too often has .the world seen and sought to use God as a good-servant god existing to serve· the needs of human beings on earth and when He does not fit that role being declared irrelevant and non-existent. The explorationof space causes man to think of God in larger terms than he would make Him and also forces man to deal with his fellow human beings in larger and less small-minded terms. Man Asks Space exploration will keep before men the magnitude of the universe and the beauty and harmony of its orderly movement
ceD
Work
Continued from Page One participation in various interfaith workshops and meetings, and in the adult education sector courses were conducted for more than 900 people throughout the Diocese on diverse subjects. CCD curricula were prepared, courses for teenage helpers designed, and a research project . was organized to determine attitude changes among adults involved in CCD courses. Sustaining §erVices Sustaining services of the CCD noted by the report include cooperation with the Diocesan school department, a speaker service, a work~hop program, retreats and evenings of recollection, cooperation in planning of regional CCD Congresses, a research program, and attendance at CCD seminars in the New England area "to deepen awareness of CCD developments." Published by the Diocesan CCD is a newsletter, "The Pulse," and various catalogues and aids.
Asserts Weekly Has Free Hand VATICAN CITY (NC) - A leading writer in the Vatican City weekly magazine has stated that authorities of the Holy See "in no way interfere" with what is published in it. Federico Alessandrini, associate editor of L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican City daily newspaper and a regular contributor to the weekly magazine, made his statement in the magazine itself, L'Osservatore Della Domenica (Sunday Observer). He was comme~ting on an article in a French _newspaper raising the question of L'Osservatore Della Domenica's authority. "The higher authorities-however stupefying this may seemin no way interfere either in L'Osservatore Della Domenica or in the weekly foreign-language editions of L'Osservatore Romano, or in the news broadcasts of Radio Vatican."
development of the intellect and this is needed, Father Delano maintained, in this present age when so mucl1 emphasis is on the exercise of man's good will in answering the needs of fellow men that there is danger of a one-sided development through failure to cultivate intellectual growth as well, Such a trend in the anti-scientific and antiintellectual growth as well, Such a trend appears in the anti-scientific and anti-intellectual attitudes of many high school and college students in unwarranted criticism of the nation's space program. Destiny Jeopardizing the space program, whose budget amounts to less than one-half of one per cent of the gross national product, would kill the pioneering spirit of the American people and would be a disservice to the whole human race. "Man's destiny awaits him out ST. PATRICK, there among the stars and FALL RIVER The board of education plans planets. To say 'Let's not have a space program" is to say 'Let's 'a potluck supper Saturday night, March 7 in the school hall, with not have much of a future.''' Theodore Cloutier and Philip The exploration of space, said Medeiros co-chairmen. Proceeds Father Delano, is the answer to will benefit the school. the unlimited growth of the Also to aid the school will be human race as it looks to other a fashion show set for 7:30 Sunworlds which can be made per- day night, March 22 in the hall. fectly habitable in the future. In charge of arrangements are Father Delano also made ref- Mrs. Eugene Connors, Mrs. Rayerence to the possibility of other mond DeNardo, Mrs. Raymond intelligences living in other Pineault, Mrs.. Frank Hrycin, worlds and concluded: "We do Mrs. James Schedler and Mrs. not know whether or not people Thomas Vanasse. living a century or more from now will be communicating with OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL alien inte~ligences, but we would HELP, NEW BEDFORD Our Lady of Perpetual Help like our descendants to be able to look back with gratitude to Society will meet at 6:30 on . us of the 20th Century for hav- Sunday evening, Feb. 22 in the ing had the foresight and the church hall. Following the busiwill to prepare a future for man- ness meeting, an auction sale kind in space, while at the same will be conducted and attendance time attending to the great so- is limited to members only. cial and environmental problems HOLY NAME, presently facing us." NJEW BEDFORD The regular monthly meeting of the Women's Guild will be Raclliate Smile held at 8 on Monday night, Feb. Sinile to yourself until you 23 in the parish hall. Following the business meethave warmed your heart with the sunshine of your cheery ing, Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson will countenance. Then. go out-and discuss ceramics and give a radiate your smile. -Hagspiel demonstration.
The' Parish Parade
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Sisters to Form New Community Open to Laity
THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 19, 1970
Form Movement To Aid Biafra
LOS ANGELES (NC)
NOTRE DAME (NC)-A university of Notre Dame freshman is spearheading a movement among more than 1400 colleges and universities to join in forming Students for Biafran Relief. Thomas Hamilton, national director of the program, returned from a weeklong tour through media, organizational, and gov'ernmental offices in New York and Washington with a strin~ of endorsements for the fledgling group. He gained support from U.S. Sens. George Murphy~and Alan Cranston of California, Vance Hartke and Birch Bayh of Indiana, George McGovern of South Dakota, and Edmund Muskie of Maine. Faculty and administrator at the university here are supporting the effort, including Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., president, who is a coordinating advisor. Funds raised by the organization will go to any reputable relief agency operating in the former Biafran territory, Hamilton said.
The Sisters of the Immacu-
late Heart nounced
o~
that
Mary anthey
were
forming a lay community open to both married and single persons "committed to the service of man in the spirit of the Gospels." Nucleus of the new community will be those Immaculate Heart Sisters who have asked to be dispensed from their canonical vows and from the prescriptions of the Vatican's Congregation of Religious. Anita Gaspary. president of the former order of Sisters. said "in order that we might fUlly develop the experiment in contemporary community life which We attempted to set in motion two years ago. Our repeated efforts to expand ,the structure of canonical Religious life did not meet with the approval of the Sacred Congregation." She was referring to the documents of renewal. issued by the Immaculate Heart Sisters in October. 1967. and presented to James Francis Cardinal McIntyre. then Archbishop of Los Angeles. after overwhelming approval from the community of 560 nuns. These documents outlined "experimentation in life style which is to begin' immediately and continue, with possible variations. through the period of experimentation set by Rome for all Religious orders of the Catholic Church." , Grateful foJ!' Service Archbishop Timothy Manning of Los Angeles issued the following statement: "On behalf of the archdiocese of Los Angeles we wish to express to Sister Anita and her companions our gratitude for the many years of service rendered as members of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. "A free decision has been reached by each member to solicit a dispensation from the canonical vows and to join together under another commitment to apostolic activity. It is the action of the chapter and thereby becomes a non-canonical lay grouping. "We are confident that the service to God and to people will be continued by them as they pursue this new form of life. Our prayers will follow them on the pathway they have chosen."
p'relate te; Address rrrtGS$ Conveniuon NEW YORK .(NC) - Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin. general secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and of the United States Catholic Conference. will be the chief speaker at the 60th annual Catholic Press Association convention in Chicago from May 20 to 23. James A. Doyle. CPA executive director, said the bishop will speak May 22. He said Bishop Bernardin is at the center of Church operation in this country and highly qualified to discuss the theme: "Five Years after the Council-Where Does the American Church Stand Today?"
Laughter Power Laughter. while it lasts, slackens and unbraces the mind, weakens the facuities, and causes a kind of remissness alfld dissolutioD- in all the powers of the soul. -Addison
7
CHANGING ROLE OF PRIEST IN CHANGING SOCIETY: Participants at University of Notre Dam~ conference concerned with ths"local Church of Tomorrow" are: Thomas O'Dea, professor of religious sociology at the University of California; James O'Gara, editor of Common.weal; Fa~h<er ButchaElII, C.S.C., chairman of the Notre Dame Theology Department; Dr. Jon Regl~r, assocIate general secretary of the National Council of Churches in New York and Bishop Reml De Roo of Victoria, British Columbia. NC Photo.
Slate Convention
Issue New Rites .for Profession of Vows
ST. LOUIS (NC)-The Catholic Hospital Association's 1970 annual convention will be held June 9-12 at the Cincinnati Convention Center. More than 5,000 health services personnel f,路olll. Catholic hospitals, nursing homes, and affiliated organizations throughout the United States are expected to a'ttend.
Formula Left to Discretion of Community VATICAN CITY (NC)-New garb is delayed until the profesrites' for Religious profession- sion of temporary vows, and is the taking of vows such as obe- one of the acts suggested, as dience, poverty and continence symbolizing that coinmittment to that constitute the essence of the' Religious state. Reception Religious life-have been issued o at the novitiate may be accompanied by a simple, private cerby the Holy See. The purpose of the new regu- emony, but in any event may no lations is to give the act of Re- longer be accompanied by an ligious profession that "greater elaborate public ceremony. PubUic Signing unity, sobriety and dignity" demanded of it by the Second VatCeremonies surrounding the ican Council. profession of temporary vows Until the publication of this may be held during Mass, alnew ordo-a joint effort of the though such solemnity may be Con/n'egation for Religious and reserved for perpetual vows. the Consilium for the Implementation of the Constitution on the' Liturgy-each Religious order or ~~es ~icsplhemJ community has its own, cereg~ M~~~xine tr~~m monial for the profession of JERSEY CITY (NC) - Funds vowS": The formula of each vow is for the student literary magazine left to the discretion of the Reli- at St. Peter's College here have gious community concerned, al- been suspended by the college though the new路 ordo suggests president as a result of a co~tro颅 some elements. What has been versy over the publicatjon of rendered fairiy uniform is the two 'poems, one of which has ceremony surrounding the pro- been termed "blasphemous." The controversial poems were fession of vows. Under the new regulations, printed in the Winter issue of the reception of the Religious Pavan, distributed free to students on campus in December and again on Jan. 12. Scranto~ fro Hl~ve One, titled "Fool's Diary~' and written by George Thorry, a junJesuit FresBdernfr ior now studying in Ireland unSCRANTON (NC) - The next der college auspices, contained president of the University of a section referring to "Mary the Scranton will be a Jesuit. Nazarene" as one who "seems Dr. Eugene A. McGinnis, rather lewd." It was this poem chairman of a search committee which was called blasphemous seeking a successor to Father by Father Victor R. Yanitelli, Aloysius C. Galvin. S.J., said the S.J., when he said funds foc,the university trustees in selecting Spring issue would be wiithhe!d. the search committee decided on The second poem was written a Jesuit to head the university. by William McNeal, a senior and The trustees directive ruled associate editor of Pavan. It out speculation that the univer- contains anatomical vulgarisms. sity might consider a layman as president. A Jesuit priest has headed the institution since the Jesuits took over its operation more than 30 years ago. SHEET METAL Father Galvin announced he J. TESER, Prop. will resign as president June 30 "in the best interests of the uniRESIDENTIAL versity and my own priestly iNDUSTRIAL character and religious vocaCOMMERCiAL tion." Father Galvin indicated he 2~:lJ Cradar St., New Ekadf@l'd will consult his superiors regard993a3222 ing a new appointment. .. e#14t.'.~ "~.#).,,.~ (
Norris Ho Tripp
Light is thrown upon the link between the Eucharist and the offering of one's person in the Relgious state. Among the symbolic acts suggested for the act of perpetual profession is the reading of the vows previously handwritten by the Relgious himself or herself, and the public signing of the vows at the altar.
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I THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 19, 1~i7'0 .
!
Ask C10urt 'Rule On School Aid.
-
Every.one. . Bewa·ils ponutio~I
JEFFERSON CITY (NC)-Despite a green light flashed by the state's top legal officer, the Missouri Board of Education decided to stall until a "court of compe. tent jurisdiction" rules on legalBy Joseph and MarilYll1 Roderick I ity of aid to nonpublic school . students through federally fund• It has become very fashionable' to write. and talk about ed programs.. air pollution, water pollut~on and the waste of our ~atufal The board met here a week resources: so fashionable mdeed, that one wonders If a~y after state Atty. Gen. John C. one is listening. With all the talk about what we are domg Danforth issued a decision which to our environment, it would" . I said the state may take part in special federally funded proseem that people would be- fellow Iman but of course ~he . . I . f latter didn't count· at .all pegrams, including those conducted come mcreasmg y aware 0 cause weren't we one of·· those by public school personnel, with· the problems we face or are marvelous people who only ate out conflict with state laws. going to have to face up to very -meat at one meal durinl; L~nt Groups of parents of nonpubshortly but very little seems to (and of course neV4~r on Fridays). lie school students, not all of be happening. Yes, looking back, it was a very whom attend Catholic schools For the past two Sundays I easy'road to Heaven that ~ay have indicated they will institute have been taking Jason and an~ concern for our fellow ~an court action to force the state Melissa for a walk in the woods; didn't even have, to enter our education department to conwoods which have diminished minds. .. : . : form to the ruling by the attorto one-tenth of their' previous . Not So l~asy l ney general. size in the last 10 years. Last Being a modern day Christian week I showed them where a ish'tthat easy.' We found this The bOlird also received a letnatural spring had been when I . out. this, past Summer when fe ter from Bishop Michael F. Mcwas· a, boy and although the took a "Fresh Air" 9hild for tjNo Auliffe of Jefferson City, which spring was still to be found, it weeks. Treating others as b,ro1thtermed the ruling by the attorwas blocked with felled trees ers and bemoaning the woes ~f ney general a' "welcome clarifi· and had the stagnant smell of the ghetto children make woncation of Missouri law which polluted water. derful cocktail pa.rty conversamay benefit many educationally A half hour's work was suffi- tion; but when we have to tJke deprived children. dent to. unblock the water so one. of these "brothers" into our nie bishop urged the board to that it flowed. But whereas own home and find out that Ihe HARDHAT FOR CARDINAL: Richard Cardinal Cushing of Bos- inform public and nonpublic years ago ,it had f1owe? into doesri't blend in SIS we!las (We . ton has worn· many hats to identify himself with people in all school authorities of the intera lake it now flows' mto a feel he should, then It' really· walks of life. The latest is a gift from the Building Congress, pretive change in procedure inroadbed where it will be lost for takes a Christian nttitude to ad. a Massachusetts trade association. Robert L. Marr, retiring presi- volved in the decision. so the fed· just to the situati6n. .j \ dent of the congress, presented the steel helmet along with the erally funded programs "may be drinking purposes.' Virtually Destroyed . , With these tho,lghts. in m!nd;;association's annual award at a Boston meeting. NC Photo. fully implemented to the benefit The' whole' area has been vir- I m sure Pope John reahzed that of the children it was intended tually destroyed. A new school he was makinl; Lent a lot h3;rder to serve." has been built on considerable for us (not easier) wher,t he lIfted acreage, houses are springing up so many of the IreqUired r~les overnight, sewage has been in- and asked us ,to ~Ilake up sopte Cites Need to Teach stalled, what looks like a fire of our ~wn, e~pec~a'ly thos~ t~at 'University on 'Eler:nen~ary Level' Features . ~Socia! Doctrine road has 'been cut through the deal With respec.tmg th~ ,dlgn;lty woods and· the fallen trees lie of all men. No, Just as It s allot BOGOTA (NC)-"My priests Specialized Divisions, Programs where' they fell, making' the easier. to rea4.~~~qt. a. war tHan hav~ '.8 right to . tea,ch ~he woods almost impassable. expenen~e one, It S ,also ~ gr~at STELLA NIAGARA (NC~ne children bf this age. 'This, will be Ctiurch's .s~~,ial dO<:~I;!J'1e)O the.; There are still traces of paths deal easIer to pretend we re be- of the first so-called Education followed by ungraded work up poor;' even if it does have powhere we' tracked squirrels and ing Christian than to really be $0. .Parks in the state of New York until the fourth grade.. litical implications, be¢ause they rabbits with our imaginary bows' . Even a Le.nt with eased1up . -its planners call it a 'univerAnother school within the .must defend human rights," said .' and arrows and where pheasants rules on f.ast1D? seems to 9all sity on the elementary level'- Park will be a Montessori school Coadjutor Archbishop Anibal would frighten us as they f1ut- for. more fIsh ~Ishes .tha~ us~al. will be opened ~his Fall at 62children two and a half to Munoz Duque, apostolic admintered into the air but these This salmon pie recipe IS easy year-old Stella Niagara School for six years of age, while a school istrator of Bogota. are slowly being abs~rbed by the and tasty' and will give a little here. He also denied news stories of languages will be inaugurated growth. of brambles and shrubs. variety to your fish menus.. with the teaching of French from claiming that a new group of Sister M. Corinne, provincial In a word the 20 acres or so of Salmon or Tuna ]pie "rebel priests;' had been organ· the third grade on. woods w~ had available to- us (with salmon selling for $1 superior of the Stella Niagara ized in the archdiocese. The nuns, said the new-type school Still another unit of the Park stories said the new group had as children will be non-existent something a can, perhaps )10u. signals a recognition of the great will be the. famed Stella Niagara 10 years from now. woud prefer to use tuna) importance of a sound elemen- Cadet School 'which for many split off from the Golconda It may seem selfish of me to· 2 beaten. eggs . movement, a group of priests tary education. . years has enrolled children of formed in 1968 to seek social and expect that things should stay as· Y2 cup mIlk She said ·the plans for the prominent persons: 'they were. Certainly a school Js 1 Tablespoon butt~r, melted economic reforms. school were formulated by the a worthwhile project which will l,4 cup chopped o!l1on The present high school proThe archbishop denied that faculty of Stella' Niagara work- gram at Stella Niagara will be benefit far more children than 2 Tablespoons mmced parsley "priests in charge of our paring closely with a group of eduan 'untended patch of woods and % teaspoon basil . I' discontinued. ishes in the poor sections of cators from the· University of homes have to be built some- l,4 teaspoon salt the city have started a protest· where, but it does seem a shame lone pound can (2 cups) salm-·· Buffalo, Canisius College; Rosary and-attack group against the acto sacrifice everything to "progon or 2 7-ou.nce cans of Hill, Niagara University, State Publish' New Catholic tivities of the Church or' the University College at Buffalo, ress." tuna. State." Periodical' in Poland' and other institutions. In the meantime, at least, I dough" for one top crust. The duties of their priestly ~) Combine eggs, milk, b~tt~r, will continue to get my children BOt'lN (NC)-A new Catholic Instead of just the traditional out into the woods in the hope OOlon, parsley and seasoOlngs. one through eight grades, the periodical, Chrzescijanin w Swie· ministry leads them to denounce that some day they too wilr look Break the salmon :in chunks, reo Park will be made up of highly' cie (Christian in the World),has injustices, he said. back and remember when. moving the bones and skin. A~d specialized divisions and pro- begun publication in Poland. In 'the .Kitchen to the egg mixtur~ and p.our iqto grams. The periodical is published by Lent is here and quite often a well·greased 8 mch pIe pla~e. the Center for Documentation. At the beginning, for example, p with the· relaxing of rules one 2). Pre 3;re. past~ and r~ll and Social Studies, founded in could possibly forget it; espe- 1/8 mch thiCk, cut: cI~c1e C?f .~)le there will be a kindergarten with 1966 in Warsaw by a group of cially during the busy time of d~ugh. and cover pie f~lhng, a new approach in teaching for Catholic intellectuals. Prescriptions called for the week. For this reason I have crlmpmg edges. Brush WIth I a An editorial in the new puband delivered heard many people reminisce b~aten egg a~d tablespoon- of bI LOFT' about the Lenten days when ml1k for a OIce brown crust. Urge Churches Mo i ize lication stated that it will deal with "the relations between the CHOCOLATES their stomachs growled because B~ke in a 425.· oven about 125 For _World Development Church and society in the spirit 600 Cottage St. 994-i7'439 of their stringent diets and they mmutes or untIl done. I MONTREUX (NC)-A mobili- of the Second Vatican Council New Bedford truly felt they were offering up zation of all the human, techno- and the papal encyclicals." sacrifices for God. . New Zealand . Studies logical and monetary resources In many ways those "good old St t A·d t 5 h I I the churches can muster to meet days" were very easy (even . a e I 0 C 00 s I the needs of developing ·nations though all we did was complain DUNEDIN (NC) - The' New . was called for at a five-day Conhow hungry we were). We could Zealand government has set up sultation on Ecumenical .Assistfeel quite smug and Christian a committee to hear testimoby ance for Development Projects, because we didn't touch candy on the question of state aid Ito sponsored by the World Council for all of seven weeks and only independent schools. of Churches here in Switzerland. at the devil could lure us to a The government has not an-' movie. nounced which cabinet ministers . A new concept of development It's a wonder halos didn't float will be on the committee, }jut stressing social justice and the above our heads imd' a pair of they will include Minister lof need to transform unjust social . feathery wings sprout from be- Education Talboys and Minister and economic structures was actween our shoulder blades. We of Finance Muldo,on. Another cepted at the consultation here could walk piously up to the possibility' is 'Minister of J~s- by 100 churcb executives and ] 15 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. al~ar' daily and then turn right· tice Daniel Riddiford, who Has . economists as well as represent. ;: around . and ~I1Y _ . .ou,. long ,h"",p;oned the ,a;d· ... ati... nHn",.ationa; agend...
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THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 19, 1970
Wonders If Long Lengt,hs Will Repeat '40's Conquest
Urges Support For School Aid
By Marilyn Roderick Between Mr. Nixon's war on inflation and concern over where skirt lengths are going to land, the consumer is buying with a cautiousness that hasn't been seen in years. Things evidently have gotten to such a pass that in this past Sunday's New York "Backward step for mankind." Times both Bonwit's and "I don't like them. I'm used to Lord and Taylor's took out the mini-skirts and like them. new style is a retreat to full page ads reassuring their This the thirties."
patrons that any skirt length at all would do for Spring and Summer of 1970. Even the pattern books are offering the look for "Right Now"six months from now is anyone's guess. The merchandisers are trying to get the message across that we can all do our own "thing" and be mini, maxi or midi-just pick your "m" and wear it.. In all probability this will be quite true-at least through t:le Summer. But the Fall may well be a different story altogether. Women are Wary Most females, especially those o f us who have experienced one "new look," are a bit wary of how this new length is going to look on us. Just a glance through high school and colle~e yearbooks are enough to give one the shakes. Get a load of those sharplooking thick (it's a wonder we were able to get those penny loafers on) anklets, those long skirts just grazing the cuff, and you'll see the reason why we shudder just a bit when Paris· advises that the hemline is failing. Of course fashion never looks as out-of-date as it does in old snapshots but from all indications those snapshots are going to be mighy up-tO-date. Unfavorable Poll I thought it might be fun to poll some of the male members of the school department as to what they thought of the longer skirt lengths. With a promise from me that their names would not appear in print their comments flew thick, fast and quite opinionated. "A disaster! An offense to all mankind, horrible." "It makes me feel I aged 20 years overnight. It's reminiscent of the 40's. Every woman dressed like that, whether 25 or 45, looked like an old woman." "They ought to make the guys who design them wear them," this from my favorite redhead, and I don't mean Lucy.
Arthur Goldberg Joins Pope John Institute CHICAGO (NC)-Arthur Goldberg. former U.S. Supreme Court Justice and U. S. Ambassador to the United Nations. has been named to the board of trustees of the John XXIII International Institute. an ecumenical agency working to combat racism and poverty. and achieve world peace. Goldberg. now a New York lawyer, is president of the American Jewish Committee. The John XXIII International Institute was founded last year by the Chicago-based National Catholic Conference for Interracial Justice but is sponsored by various faiths to promote Pope John's call for social justice in his "Peace on Earth" encyclical. Edward Lamb, a Toledo, Ohio, industrialist, financier and attornef, is institute chairman.
BUFFALO (NC) Bishop .James A. McNulty of Buffalo has suggested a massive letterwriting campaign to area legislators urging support of a bill that would grant financial aid to parents of nonpublic school children on the basis of family income. "A massive campaign of this type will indicate the sentiments of our people and convince legislators that the bill commands the interest of a large portion of their constituents," Bishop McNulty said. Msgr. Leo E. Hammerl, diocesan S'uperintendent of schools, and Raymond J. Forton, director ot secondary education, met with lay teacher groups and parents from home-school associations working for aid to Catholic schools. They emphasized the need for immediate action at the grass roots level to demonstrate support for the bill. The bill is expected to come up for a vote in the New York legislature within the next six weeks.
"I hate them, it takes away from the appearance of a woman. u "Terrible, no erudite statement. I don't like it. In some cases it's because basically I like to see what's there. Good or bad." Not wanting to accept only one side of the story, I asked a few females the same question and their reaction was equally strong. "Forget it." "Ugly." "Strictly taboo." "I prefer the mini." "I love the mini, greatest thing that ever happened to women." From just a glance at public opinion it looks as if Yves, Mark and the rest of the boys are going to have a bit of difficulty convincing women (and men) that the midi is the look of the future. However at this mament I wish I had access to some of the newspapers of the fortiesI could hazard a guess that feeling at that time was running in the same vein, and this just before the "new look" became the only look.
Educationally Deprived Program for All Pupils JEFFERSON CITY (NC)-Missouri's top legal officer has ruled educationally deprived students' in private school of the\ state' may take part in special, federally funded programs, including those cond!Jcted by public schools personnel. State Atty. Gen. John C. Dan-,. forth composed the decision at the request of state Rep. James F. Conway. The decision said federal statutes and regulations were designed to make certain programs available to private school ,students-such programs as remedial reading, speech therapy, health services, guidance and counseling. Public school personnel, paid with federal funds, "may provide such special services to elegible children" in public and nonpublic schools, the opinion said.
Committee to Suggest Cardinal's Successor BOSTON (NC)-A 13-member committee of bishops, priests and lay people has been established here to r.'_ake recommendations for the selection of a successor to Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston since 1944, whose retirement is expected in August. Cardinal Cushing approved a resolution of the Priests Senate proposing the formation of the committee, the first of its kind in the Boston archdiocese. The committee includes three auxiliary bishops, three officers of the priests senate, four nonsenator priests, two laymen and one lay woman. The committee plans to conduct a pell of priests in the archdiocese to develop suggestions for the selection of Cardinal Cushing's successor. The group's recommendations will be forwarded t:> the Vaticaon.
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List Women's Names In State Secretariat
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TEsts FACiliTIES: Educational televisi'on network is being installed in the San Francisco Archdiocese, with 50 schools to be included in the program. Here a test of the facilities at St. Patrick's Seminary, Menlo Park, shows cameraman Dan Sorbi focusing on Marist Brother John Samaha, in charge of secondary school and adult services. NC Photo.
Privilege' Jesuit Cites Important Role of Catholic Press in Reporting Changes. CINCINNATI (NC)-Change is inevitable in the Church and the Catholic press has the "very important role" of reporting the news of the changing Church both courageously and responsibly. , Father Edward J. Carter, S.J., assistant professor of theology at Xavier university, spoke to the Catholic Library Associlition at its annual Catholic Press Day luncheon here. Father Carter said that as the Church changes to become "better adapted to modern times," pain and suffering have to be expected. "But amidst this pain aM suffering, Christ wants us to maintain our peace of soul," he added. Meanwhile, the "great privilege 'and great responsibility of the Catholic press is to present in a responsible and balanced manner' what's going on." Follow Lead of Spirit This must be done with courage, he said, so that the peo. ple areinforI~ed and so that difficulties are "not swept under the rug." At the same time, there must be explanations of the changes and a reflection of the fact that "Christian life in any age is a combination of the traditional and the changing," of what is new and what is old. Even the conservative-liberal polarization serves ,to enrich the 'I
Church, Father Carter suggested, "as long as the followers of both sides follow the authentic lead of the Spirit." Thus, he said, the conservative "puts spec;ial emphasis upon the timeless and unchanging ele· ments of the Church" while the liberal "points out that there must always be renewal and adaptation in the Church." Moreover, the fact that in some instances change is abused ought not to be cause for discouragement, since "every good gift of God has been abused," Father Carter said.
VATICAN CITY (NC) - For thEl first time in, the history of the Secretariat of State, the names of women employed have been published in the Holy See's annual yearbook. The 1970 edition of the Annuario Pontificio has the names of five women, including two nuns and three laywomen, as employes of the Secretariat of State. Two other nuns are listed as employes of another office connected with the state secretariat, the Council for Public Affairs. A Vatican spokesman confirmed that women have been employed in various Vatican offices for a long time and that at present there are 66 women employes on the payroll of Vatican offices. 'The names of four nuns named to staff positions' on the Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes have been carried in the Annuario for several years.
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Senate to Join N. E.Conference
THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 19,. 1970
Missouri Bi!hops Critic'ize State Board . Decision .
JEFFERSON CITY (NC) -The Catholic bishops of Missouri have criticized as "wanton disregard of the
The Senate of Priests of the Diocese of Fall River met Friday afternoon with Rev. Msgr. . John' E. Boyd presiding. 22 sen- ' ators were pres.ent. Following a discussion on the proposed constitution of the New England Conference of Priests' Senates, the Fa.ll River group by a vote of 19 to 3 has allied itself with other New England Diocesan Senates, whose proposes are: The Creation of a mutual forum for mutual deliberation on pastoral problems, for the de-. velopment and collaboration in policies and program of common interest among several senates and for the exchange of idea.s and information. Also included will be the sponsorship of inter-diocesan projects and the recognition. of a common voice of all senates on issues affecting the priestly ministry in New England. A general discussion was held of programs il)volving the clergy. Such programs would include pastoral counselling seminars and programs that would project priests into greater effectiveness in the alleviating the crises developing in con:tmunities.· Problems - needing assistance were listed as drugs,. alcohol, suicide attempts etc. The temporalties committee submitted a questionnaire on salaries of priests and it was accepted by the Senate. Information on this matter will be forwarded to the clergy of the diocese for their comments. Named as delegates from the Diocesan Senate to the National Conference of the NFPC in San Diego next month w~re' Rev. Msgr. Boyd and Rev. Peter F. Mullen. Rev. George W. Coleman was selected as tQe. alternate. . '. " " .. The Senate will meet on Feb. 26 to vote on the resolutions to . be discussed and voted on at the San Diego meeting. It was announced that Rev. John McCall, -S.J. personnel director of the New England Province of Jesuits, will conduct two special study days for the priests of the diocese on April 28 and 29.
law" a decision by the state board of education forbidding federally-funded teachers to staff special classes in prnvate and paro~hial schools. The' bishops, speaking at the Missouri Catholic Conference, made their charge in a letter to J. Warren Head, president of the education board. ' The board's decjsion inflicts "an injustice on the youngest' and neediest simply because they do not attend the state schools," declared the letter,' which was drafted by Bishop Michael F. McAuliffe of Jefferson City, executive chairman of the Catholic conference. GOLD STAR MOYIrIERS:' Returning from Vietnam, where they had participated in dedication The state board had voted to of a memorial hospital to 'American:; who have died. there, four Gold Star Mothers were recontinue its present' policy of ceived by PresidEmt Nixon 'at the White House. From left they are: Mrs. Elaine Huntoon, Mrs. forbidding teachers paid with Gladys Berg, Mrs. Bertha Tofferi, and Mrs. Priscilla Gariepy. NC Photo. public funds to teach in any nonpublic classroom. Violates Law I . The decision disregarded an • opinion issued Jan. 29 by MisIn souri Atty. Gen. John C. Danforth. He held that state law SAIGON (NC)--Four Mas~a Worcester CountY,killed in Viet- a week before she departed for did not prohibit public school chusetts Gold Star Mothers who . nam and to the more than 200 Vietnam. teachers paid in full or in part The mothers were impressed with federal funds from provid- came here for the dedication; of others who have been decorated hospital' cClmmemorating for bravery, in the Vietnam war. with the older French-Canadian ing special services to nonpublic a . With the mother:s. was' Fra'ncis Redemptorist priests who have school children under the 1965 Americans killed in Vietnam are federal Elementary and Secon- without bitterness because "they R. 'Carroll of the Vernon Hill been in Vietnam for 38 years in know their sons died in a just Post of the American Legion the village where the hospital is dary E~ucation Act. and noble cause"~- a Catholic who started the hospital project located. Bishop -McAuliffe's letter chaplain said. '.' when a friend was killed' in Viet" I charged that for the five years Father Mara said: "I had the nam. The chaplain, Father (Ca~t.) .that ,the federal program. has . .wonderful privilege and oppor'Collections" for . the '. hospital operated in Missouri, the state frank Mara of'the Bosfon 'arJh- were begun in January, 1968, tunity of celebrating Mass in department of education has . diocese, now with the 11th Ar- and a year later Carroll was able ·'their little chapel. They attended failed to meaningfuHy include mored Cavalry Regiment, was to· come to Vietnam for the dedi- 'that l\;1ass » »' * and they were private school educators in the the escort for the four mothers, cation ceremony of the prefabri- very edified. We have not used planning and developments of who are from Worcester County, cated 60-bed hospital,which will Latin in the' Mass at home in the programs-a failure which vio- Mass. Father Ma.ra was for- serve Montagnard tribesmen. States for a number of years, so lates. the law and directives of merly a chaplain with t.he NaI had the oppor~unity to hearken tional Guard of Worcester. i 'Wonderful Privilege'. the program." hack to the old days as the The mothers are Mrs. Elaine The four mothers were the priests have trained the MonThe bishops said after-hOurs programs conducted for nonpub- Huntoon,Mrs. Gladys Berg, Mrs. guests of the Vietnamese gov- tagnard people to give the responses in flawless Latin." lic school students under the Bertha Tofferi and Mrs. Priscilla ernment. ~ One of' them, Mrs. Tofferi, of 1965 .act have shortchanged edu- Gariepy. Mrs. Nguyen Van Thieu, the . Mrs. Huntoon Iteaches CaD Fitchburg, Mass., buried her son cationally depriveg children. Vietnamese President's wife, reclasses and is otherwise active The bishops asked for a meet- in her home parish. ceived the four mothers and pre.! ing between the Catholic conBore of Sam~ness sented .them ,with native-type Texas Editor Joins The Gold Star Mothers were ference and the state education footwear. Unbroken happiness is a bore: board, with spokesmen for other the Worcester County delegatibn Ne News .Service . It should have ups and downs. On the last day of their visit nonpublic school systems in Mis- at the dedication ceremonies bn -Moliere WASHINGTON. (NC) .:- E.B. th.e hospital site at the village of in. Vietnam, Gen. Creighton souri also in attendance Dan Pao near Dalat, in the Duarte, managing editor of the Abrams, commander of U. S.. southern. part of the central Alamo Messenger, award-winning forces in Vietnam, arranged for weekly of the San Antonio Archhighlands of Vietnam. . Ask State C'ut Aid diocese, has joined NC News the mothers to see some of the The ANCHOR The hospitalfs planned as i a Service. fire bases. To Catholic Sch091s living memorial to 157 men fr~m Richard M. Guilderson, Jr., diTORONTO (NC) --When the • TYPE SET I rector of the service, said Duarte directors of the Ontario Public Seeks Changes .• PRINTED BY OFFSET would bring an ad'ded dimension School Trustees' Association is- Sponsor MOl1lehny , TUCSON (NC)-Aptlointment to NC News. s~ed a brief asking the Ontario ., MAILED of Mexican-American bishops in "He knows the problems of Spanish-speaking dioceses and provincial government to cut Reform Cont:erence I GENEVA (NC)-The intere~ts the smaller newspaper, and he is demands for housing and educagrants to separate (Cathqlic) - BY THE schools, it hardly caused a ripple of the developing <:ountries and also a tireless reporter," said tion needs were among proposals in press and educational circles. international 'monetary refo~m Guilderson. "We will draw on' issued at the first national conAt present, Ontario Catholic will be discussed here at a con- his vast experience in covering vention of Padres, a newly schools receive government ference sponsored by Society, the areas of social justice and formed organization of Hispanic FALL, R.IVER. grants up to the grade 10 level. Development and Peace, a joint minority group problems, for pr:iests. The first two years of high committee of the World Council which both he and the Alamo school- grades 9 and 10 - re- of Churches and the Catholic Messenger won wide professionceive financial support at the Church that promotes world jus- al acclaim." tice, development and peace. i elementary school scale. Dr. Charles Elliott, the BritiJh The Ontario Separate School Appea~ Rulin~ Rt. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport economist who i~ organizing the Trustees' Association last May PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A conference, said he hopes it will asked the provincial government "produce an up-to..date profes-' case involving an effort to reto extend its aid for the remain- sional analysis' of the interests store prayers and Bible reading Where The ing years of high school. The of the developing countries ~n to 'public s<;hools in PennsylvaEntire .. Family government has not yet officially international monetary' reform, nia has been appealed to the Can Dine replied to the Catholic trustees' and an assessment of the pros- U.S. Court of Appeals here. The brief. Economically pects of those' interests being appeal .involved a decision handThe public school trustees" realized." ed down by U.S. District· Court brief, prompted by the Catholic The committee aims to ke~p Judge Louis Rosenberg in Pitts. FOR request for a fully integrated church leadership informed of burgh, which ordered the prayRESERVATIONS elementary-secondary s c h 0 0 1 trends in economic development, er practice discontinued in pubsystem, asked the government with a view to stimulating the lic schools in the Albert Gallatin PHONE to drop all grants for the sep- churches to become preSSUI:e .area school disttict; a coal min675-7185 arate school system's grades 9 groups on behalf of a more just ing community in southwestern and 10. international society. I Pennsylvania.
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Ch'apllain Escorts Gold Star Mo.thers Attel,ded ,Hospo'tal Dedication
Vietnam
.LEARY PRESS
WH ITE'S Family
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Restaurant
Baptist Minister Expresses Views On Ecu~enism
THE ANCHO~Thurs" Feb. 19, 1970
Pl'opose Prelate For Nobel Prize
SAN ANTONIO (NC)
Open lines of communicatiOl:t among Christians at the grassroots level are more significant than establishment of large, structured ecumenical organizations, a Baptist leader said here. With this view in mind, it is doubtful there will ever be widespread Baptist participation in these ecumenical organizations, the Rev. Jimmy AlIen, newly-elected president of the Baptist General Convention of Texas, declared. In Catholic-Baptist relations, Mr. Allen sees "a considerable move toward a higher degree of exchange of information and ideas." He warned, however, "it would be an illusion to think bett~r communication necessarily 'means more agreement. Instead, the better the communication, the better the understanding and respect for disagreement." Mentioning . several areas of Catholic-Baptist agreement, Mr. Allen cited interfaith concern on problems such as ,pornography, drug abuse, race relations, and poverty. Common Ground In the field of social justice, Mr. Allen said all faiths "now have the realization of their responsibility for suffering people, a responsibility that has always been present" but on which the churches have failed to communicate due to "suspicion on both sides that the other side might be involved too much as a sectarian group. " Although he pointed to "wide gaps" in theological viewpoints, Mr. Allen said: "We do indeed hold a common grourid in respect for the religious authority that gives us an anchor in the shifting world." Many Catholics and Baptists, he said, "are a little suspicious of the radical shift of liberal theology and it is not so much specifics as it is our respect for the responsibility of men to respond to an unchanging God." Cautious Attitude Mr. Allen said he does not believe there ever will be widespread, Baptist participation in ecumenical organizations such as the Texas Conference of Churches because "we have an attitude which is cautious of large, structured groups that tend to become authoritative. We are extremely conscious of congregational autonomy." Elaborating, he said, "We believe that unity is a matter of spirit rather than structure." Mr. Allen said the ecumenical movement-"which came forth with a burst of energy from Pope John XXIII's excellent leadership"-is now in a "frozen stage." He sees "a shock reaction setting in late" and attributes some of this "to the realization that structure alone is not all there is to ecumenicity."
, Pleasure in Work The superstition that all our hours of work are a minus quantity in the happiness of life, and all the hours of idleness are. plus ones, is a most ludicrous and pernicious' doctrine, and its greatest support comes from our not taking sufficient trouble, nor making it a real effort, to make work as near pleasure as it can be. -Balfour
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COLLEGE PRESIDENT: The vice-chairman of the Board of Higher Education, Francis Keppel, displays the badge- of office presented to former Sister of Loretto, Mrs. Jacqueline Grennan Wexler, when she was invested as ninth president of Hunter College, which this year marks its 100th anniversary. NC Photo.
Share State's Concern for ,Urban Crisis Urges Continued Tax Exemptions 'for Churches HARRISBURG (NC) - Asking ,for continuation of tradi~iof\al tax exemptions for churches, the eicecutive director of the Pen'nsylvania Catholic Conference warned that "the entry of thE:! tax assessor into the sanctuary today could bring the state into the inner workings of churches tomorrow in ways impossible to foresee." Howard J. Fetterhoff, testifying before the Special House Committee to Study Tax Exempt Real'~Estate, pointed out that churches do not enjoy unlimited tax immunity. He said taxes are paid on property such as rectories, parking lots, and undeveloped landproperties not used for worship or for carrying out vital functions of education, sick care, and other charitable works. Fetterhoff also pointed out that religiously affiliated welfare agencies "account for about one quarter of all the ongoing sick care and social services afforded to people needing these in Pennsylvania." J;>iminishing Resources "In the interest of increasing demands on both our property and our personnel to continue these indispensable works," he
Editor Retires BELLEVILLE (NC) - Father Theodore Siekmann, editor of the Messenger, Belleville diocesan newspaper, has been relieved from the post because of illness by the six-man board of publications for the Illinois diocese. His successor has not yet been named.
Man Like Beast Sorrow was made for man, not for beasts; yet if men encourage melancholy too much, they become no better than beasts. ~ervantes
declared, "we assert unequivocally that the traditional policy of the .General Assembly to grant tax exemption is still as fair and as feasible as it was at any time in our na.tion's history, and even more so." Parishes, schools, and charitable agencies operated by the Church share the government's concern for the urban crisis shaking many communities today, Fetterhoff said, . "At the same time," he added, "they also experience the diminishing fiscal resources experienced by municipal authorities." While both Church and state
Establis~ Workshop
For Administrators WASHINGTON (NC)-The Division of Elementary and Secondary Education of the U. S. Catholic Conferenc~, in cooperation with the Catholic University of' America School of Education, will sponsor a workshop in governmental programs for non public school administrators, June 15-19, 1970.' . The workshop' will be directed by Dr. Edward R. D'Alessio, Coordinator, Governmental Pr-ograms, Division of Elementary and Secondary Education. . Dr. D'Alessio said nonpublic elementary and secondary school students and staff members are now eligible to participate in a wide variety of federal educational programs, ranging from school lunch programs to vocational education, in addition to the landmark Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. "But the quantity and quality of such services received by children attending nonpublic schools," he told NC News Service, "is directly related to the administrator's knowledge of federal educational programs."
share in the responsibility of caring for the people's welfare, Fetterhoff said, "the Church's responsibility to provide suitable places of worship for its people is something which it has to bear alone. Centuries of Tradition "This leads us to a consideration of tax exemption on property used for purely religious, as distinct from welfare or charitable, purposes," he said. Fetterhoff said two centuries of tradition could be cited as a precedent for granting tax exemption to land and buildings used for worship by all churches in the United States. Admitting, however that "no tradition goes unchallenged," Fetterhoff declared: "The question is not whether . our first 200 years justified this tradition, but whether it is still ,justified today. We assert that it is." He cited a close relationship between free exercise of religion and tax exemption. "There is no evidence," Fetterhoff said, "that freedom of worship has diminished in the minds of present day Americans as a value to be cherished."
STOCKHOLM (NC) - Archbishop Helder Camara of Olinda and Recife, Brazil, has been proposed again as a candidate for the 1970 Nobel, Peace Prize, this time by three members of the Swedish parliament. â&#x20AC;˘ The three men', Evert Svensson, Lar Henrikson and BertH Zachrisson, all Protestants and members of the Christian SocialDemocratic Alliance, made their proposal in a letter to the Nobel Committee of the Norwegian parliament. Earlier, Pax Christi, the international Catholic peace movement, proposed Archbishop Ca-" mara for the prize. In their letter, the Swedish legislators cited Archbishop Camara's work among the poor of Brazil and his political efforts to improve social and labor legislation and to bring about land reform. They also described the archbishop as a "leading promoter of non-violent methods of social change." In this capacity, they said, he is playing a key role in Latin AmE;rica. They pointed to Archbishop Camara's international reputation. He had influenced the Second Vatican Council's statements on social justice and developing the poor nations, they said, and by participation in conferences in various countries had contributed to the understanding by persons in industrialized countries of the situation in the underdeveloped nations.
Seek Ordination NEW DELl-II (NC)-The Indian hierarchy is directing a formal request to Rome for permission to ordain a group of five Anglican ministers who' came into the Catholic Church last year. The decision, hitherto 'unannounced, was taken at the general meeting of the hierarchy last month.
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THE ANCHOR--Dioce~e of Fall River-Thurs." !=eb. 19, 1970 '
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Does Development Aiel Give Clue to Safer World? ' By Barbara Ward . I There. is so little public support in the United Stfltes for the transfer of resources by the government to ass~st other nations' develo~ment that the 1969/1970 foreign aJid bill, at .less than $2 billions, is smaller than ever befo~e. When aid is reckoned as a I . percentage of national in- a~n:s. bill climbed ,to nea.rly ~80 . '. bdhons a year. Nor, agam until come, It red~ces Amenca .to recently, were people very worr~ seventh or eIghth on the lIst ied about the question' whether of donor countries. Since Amer- money they were paying out <>n icans' with per cent ,of the arms was: really buying them world's people . "security." They were not, in the consume about jargon, conscious of the "cost-, benefit. ra~io'~ evel1l t~ough t~ey ·40 per cent of the world's in~ , were paying, on tbe Side of stracome, thei~ role tegic weapons,' some $20 bil~i9ns as leaders in a' year only. to be ,equally 1O~ePACIFISTS iN NATION'S CAPITAL: Pickets demonstrc;Jte in front of the White House as part of ·the plan~t's desure ,at an even higher, level! of, a Le~ten-Passover 'fast, action project.' Organizers expect between 30 an~ 50 will fast daily in front velopment is inexpenditure., ' . . . ' .1" esc a p a b Ie .. But' suppose, aU,:>wing for ~he at the Executive Mansion until the last· day of the Jewish Passover, April ~7. Clergy and Lay~en If they give no chanciness of. ,all', human c9n- Concerned About Vietnam and the Fellowshi'p of Reconciliation are sponsoring the banner-carrYing lead;' . ' developcerns, that' building up the e~o- peace dgvo~ates. NC' 'Photo. . ment will be nomic opporttinitie's and hu",an slowed down, . hopes of other p,eople ~ere,la perhaps criticial· 'b.etter answer to the baSIC pr?bly. No otherpoweroroup of . lem .of security, wou~d.it I1-0t powers has the resources for the: make sense to pare down ~he job. . . , ' extravagallt ~rms, bill and .Hllt 8 Bi~logy So, either.. by actionor.by de- ~ome C?f the~esour,~essaved ll'ltO · fault the United States sets the mvestment In·, w!:>rld develop~ Although a vestryman in the ' lege, at a ceremony in the col. PHILADELPHIA (NC) - La , . pattern men t'. ,,' . .. I Anglican church, Dr. Holyrod, lege chapel. Salle College here'pulled out, all , . . If one kind of u:!iecurity"-the At a subsequent ceremony, The reasons f?r ~hl~, retreat. traditional one-has been' backed the stops i~ honoring its legend- who rivals fiction's beloved "Mr. the institution's science center Chips," was inducted as an honary' Roland· Holyrod, .teacher for are. co~plex. It IS, IncI~en~allY,. by such readiness ;tospend, itl is a stat:f,hng retrea!. Dur~ng. the not irrational' to.suggest that half a century. and founder of orary member' of the Christian was designated the Roland HolyMarsh,all Pl~n penod, w~th less another way of firiding security the coll~ge's ,biology department. Brothers who. conduct the col- rod Science Center. The 74-yearold educator· was later feted at than ". half ItS. present 1Ocome, might deserve.: the, same kind'lof a reception and dinner' in the Amenca ~ontnbuted t,,:o:perce!1t backing. ' . .":" . 5" college union building. of that Income to forel~ ald. , But this brings' lis' back to the .-11 Archbishop Joseph T. Ryan of Today the:per percentage earlier Co·,nsult~t.oon·· . Anchorage, Alaska, presi~E.!d at than 0.03 cent.. TheIS sJess tark . question. . DO'transfers!of'l . ~. · h' bo t because capital and skills at concesslondec I'me , ary rates-grants . ", 1 .. I .. U. S. and in Latin America must the affiliation ceremony and come . IIy,asAOlenca . a ns areu not con . MIAMI .(NC) - Col1eglahty Auxiliary Bishop Gerald V. Mc. ". . "or ow-1Oterest . I • b aSlca vinced that "foreigners"·· should loans-:-from, qne country, to an- among bishops must. be rooted concentrate on improvmg means Devitt of Philadelphia offered be helped" and tend to believe other. really. do an~, ~ood. . in consultation with the faithful, of cooperation, the bishop said. Mass. , : The a?swer to th!s ha~ bt;en .·a' leading U~ S. Church official Bishop Humberto Medeiros of that, in' any, case, it does no Dr. Holyrod,a native Of ~~!I~ , given. fairly conclUSively m ~~e . said here. " , .Brownsville, Texas, expres,sed chester, England, who. still clings good to try. .. Old View .Report of the Pearson. Com",ls-' Addressing the. fifth' Inter-. regr{!t over the deGrease .in pas-' to the British custom of wearing '. sion published last OctoI;>er' American ,Bishops' Meeting, toral attention given to students academic robe while conducting If. voters thought ·~hat the which points out .1that; over the. Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin, gen- in recent years. classes" estimates he has taught correct way to deal 'With, other last dozen years, the, devel~p~ng _ eral secretary of' the' National Less than a decade . ago, he more than 5,000 graduates of the peoples was to help and support nations have in fa:ct on the av- Conference. of Catholic Bishops . said, there were over 'two dozen college-near a half of the inthem, foreign aid ~ould, in the- erage, been growing by nearly '(NCCB), also urged dynamic co- organizations,in the' U. S. inter- stitution's 13,000 alumni. ory, be as extensive .as the re- five per cent a year-':the Atlh- operation of Catholics at the in- ested. in t,he foreign. student When he first started teaching sources n()w. devot~~ to .anot,~er tic average was only' three .pe'r teinational level to help' thE! . apostolate but they lacked <;oor- . at La Salle in 1920 there were way of l~okmg. at outslders;- cent in the 19th century"":and' Church keep up with the times. dination and now lack continu- fewer students in the entire colas ene~les,.thIeves and dec~lv- many of the mos~ rapid "gr9w~ He told the' group of prelates ity, even though ther.e has been lege than in some of his classes ers. "This. vle'Y of the outSide ers," Kore,a, Formosa? TurkfY' from Canada, Latin Ameraica, an increase in the number of today. . . world which IS as .ol? as the also received high rates of as- Spain and the U. S.. that ex~ foreign students in this country.. He retired in 1960 as biology human. race --' ~O mllhon ye~rs s i s t a n c e . . . ' I change 'of information is a key. Bisttop l\iedeiros said there are department chairman after two old perhaps - IS so deeply 10- . . .'. ".." to' the needs of both collegiality nearly 25,000 young Latin Amer- heart attacks, but· continued as grained that millenia of murder. ThiS IS not, P~I ~aps, conc~~- and international cooperation. ican ,students on American captous warfare have riot yet con- s~,:e proof. But It ~s not ne~h- . . The meeting was jointly spon- puses, in addition to about 800 a teacher. He spends his vacavinced us that other methods of glble and h~s been .prepared',1Qy sored, by the Latin' American scholars. . These . figures, he tions on journeys down the Amdealing. with other people might· expe~s of Impecf:lble mtegnty. , . Bishops' .Council (CELAM) and added, dramatize the need for a azon in South America, on trips to Africa or other distant locales. be.worth~rying.. . , Drag~~'S,reeth . . ','l ,the U. S. bishops' conference. strong pa~toral response on the Dr~ Holyrod is the type who'll As it is, few voters until quite But, . the ~ntIcs then say,' e ' . > The group undertook a study part ·of U. S.Church leaders; 'He' dispute a familiar adage such as. recently seemed to care as ,the do not beheve. that . econo~~c . "of the' pastoral needs of some warned,however, that at, the "You can lead a horse to 'water , . . growth does make nations. m9re . 25,000, Latin American stu.dents same time concern for these stu- but you can't make him drink." o peaceable. T~e tyvo. worst w~rs in· the United' States. and 'the' dents must originate within the He contends: "You can make Obi ate to D.reet In human history, 10 1914 ,~ndqualificat\ons required for ',U. S. ,Church in, their respective' coun- him drink if you salt him first," '. Sec'ular Instituil'e 1939, took.place;be~ween ~he ,m!ss\onary",personnel, religious tries., . He carries that same reasonwealthy a~d l?dustJrl~hzed,st~tf~' and lay; to make a positive conChapll;lin's Work.. ing in· dealing with studentsWILMINGTON: (NC) -:'.Father .. Perhaps aid IS !lowmg dragop,s tribution to the Church in Latin The bishop's' remarks were "A student's interests must be Francis J.,' Griffin, O.S.F,:S., has ., teeth. In the. future, ,other cqil- Americli. . followed by a brief discussion of salted. It takes, time, patience, a' The' prelates were al~ocon- the many Latin American gradu- love of the subject and of the been' appointed national director tinent~ ~ill. simply fi~ht w~t.h of the De Sales Secular institute: the, sophls~~c~t~d !u~, of E~- cerned with updating education- ates who, choose to remain,in student, too." He disdains moda group' of single women· dedi- rope s two clvl1 war~. , I. .' 'al-, methOds to serve' ~e . poor the U. S.; thus draining their' ern teaching methods and his cated to the religious ,life who do. 'To set the re<:ord' straight, .hetter in tl1e struggle. for more own countries ·of. the 'brain' Classes constantly are on the not live in a community,or wear however, one must reply that Iin human conditi()ns in the areas' power needed for development. increase. His familiar warning to religiQqs garb.. ..,', . 1914 the ,war bega,n in the Bal- they 'represent: Bishop Medeiros voiced his students is: ' Bishop' Bernardin. introd~ced preference for existing pastoral At 'his headquarters here at kans, preCisely .out: .of, a dispvte "Don't mistake the side show Salesianium faculty. residence, over who. should \ control these' the. fourth major item of the organizations-the 'parish, the' (extra. curricular activities) for the Oblate '.of St.' Francis' de poor and backward territories. m'eeting's'agenda: "Inter-Corn- campus', chaplains, the special- the main event (studies)." Sides explained the Institute's The 1939 war broke out becaUse munication ' Between the Church ized youth movement~to' take .funct.ions, . customs, and some of ' the great Depre!lsidn of1929 per~ . ' in .the . 'United States., and in care' of' Latin American student. Warns High Schools ~ts, history. ': , .. ' . mitted an' irrational ',:saviour"l to 'L.atin America.'.' needs rather th~n creating' new "Secular institutes, undertake exploit Germany's. extreme ecoHesaid--there·were. tw.o under-' ones. 'He stresssed however, that To Balance Budgets tile duties of charity whiCh reli- . nomic misery~ '. lying needs ,in this relationship:' Latin American personnel, cler, ST. PAUL (NC) ...:.. All high giot,ls, Qrdersare, un,able to carry Today" the nagging . small . A necessity for collegiality to ical and lay, should' be involved schools in the St. Paul and Minout. Their 'members usually do wars whatever>their proximate be ,rooted in consultation with in this. pastoral effort.'" ' . neapolis archdiocese will be renot live. in co~mon, but come. caus~s, are all talldng plac,e Iin the faithful, thus lending greater According to Bishop Medeiros, quired to present balance,d budgtogether for the sacraments al,ld' the still under-developed lueas. force to common efforts. . a cha~plain caiuiot limit his work ets before they will. be authorspiritual conferences,'~ he said.' ,So has, every serious struggle. A necessity for closer bonds. to liturgical services or mere ized to operate in the 1970-71 ,,"The De Sales· Institute'is' 'since 1945. We cannot say, with As world unity, increases sociai and cultural functions. school term. .~ade up of wom~h who must dogmatic certainty,' ,that th~se thr~ugh ' communications and The new' generation of Latin The warning came from Coadtake at least one YOW (usually facts prove ,that development tra'vel, he declared, .there must Americans, he said, is searching jutor Archbishop Leo C. Byrne perpetual chastity) but more h!,!lps security,:But theypointiin be a corresponding development for answers on such basic issues' before a meeting of high school often take'. 'all three" (poverty, 'that direction.. Is this not a .c~ue in the relations betwE!en churches as justice, development, libers.- principals. He said tuitio~ inchastity:and obedience), he con· worth following. towards ~a. safer in the world. Within this con- tion and ways to ,improve con- come and fund-raising efforts must provide the necessary help. Unq~. . :;t.,' w~r!d? .. _ .. '. ;.', ;>-, .':' text, the Catholic Church in the temporary, society~ .
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WASHINGTON (NC)-The nation's Catholic bishops have cabled Pope Paul VI their total support in upholding priestly celibacy. John Cardinal Dearden of Detroit, president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, informed the pope that the
American bishops are hold. h 109 to t e unwavenng position" on the issue they II
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adopted before. His telegram said the bishops of the United States "wholeheartedly join Your Holiness again in supporting the ideals and discipline of consecrated celibacy which have served the priesthood and the Church so well." Pope Paul has been personally leading a vigorous defensive campaign against critics of the celibate rule in recent weeks as pressure for a change from ~andatory to optional celibacy in the Latin-rite priesthood has strengthened. The Pope told a pre-Lenten audience of Rome diocesan priests in the Sistine Chapel that celio bacy enables a priest to devote himself to "the sole love of . Jesus" and the service of the people. He said it makes the priesthood more attractive as a vocation. It was the fourth time in nine days that he had spoken publicly about celibacy. The same day, the Vatican Congregation for the Clergy released details of a circular letter it said was sent last Nov. 4 to all the bishops of the world. The bishops were encouraged to gather th~ir priests together annually to renew their ordination commitments, especially those concerning celibacy and obedience. New MassThe clergy congregation suggested Holy Thursday is a good time for this, and the Congregation for Divine Worship prepared a new "Mass of the Chrism" for that day. It contains a suggested formulation in which a bishop would recite before his assembled priests a series of renewal promises, and the priests would together respond "yes." Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin, general secretary of the Bishops' Conference in Washington, when asked by NC News if Cardinal Dearden's cable to the pope
Laity M@v@~ S~Qwly Toward ~G~~ell' Role DUNEDIN (NC}-The laity of New Zealand are moving slowly but steadily towards playing a greater role in the affairs of the Church. But the process is not without its difficulties and progress is at best uneven. Nor are all the laity by any means assured that they want to be moved on. What has been done so far has shown that a good proportion of them are quite content with the way that things are and would not be averse to continuing in the old, well-worn paths of the past. Not the least of the reasons for this is that, though "Vatican II" is an "in" phrase among many of them, the number who have actually studied what the Church said at the council is small, and as yet there is no effective program aimed at widening their understanding. Like most Catholics, New Zealand members of the Church have long been accustomed to "leaving it to the bishop." The result is that unless the bishop in each diocese moves, there is little movement among the faithful.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 19, 1970
Bishops Reaffirm Support Of Consecrated Celibacy
lenten Program of Sacrifice ilJ1 Vermont Based on Average of Meal Grants;
stet.ttm,ed from the clergy. congreg~tlOn s annual renewal Idea, replIed: "This is not a response to the congregation's recommendations, because they have not been discussed by the bishops. The message sent by Cardinal Dearden is rather a reaffirmation of what the bishops stated on the subject of priestly celibacy at their me~ting of last November and before that in 1967." . Continued Endorsement The semi-annual meeting here CONFERENCE DtRECTOR: Kenin November 1969 had issued a neth T. Wilson, 35, a personnel sta~ement of ~trong support for celIbacy, warnmg that to expect .specialist and former recruita c~a~g? in the rule was "not ment chief of the Job Corps in the Midwest, has been named r~alI~tlc. At th~ November 1967 meetmg the bIshops had also deputy director of the National voiced their continued endorse- Catholic Confereoce for Interment of the celibacy rule.. racial Justice, Chicago. NC The text of the cable to Pope Photo. Paul was: , "Most Holy Father. In November 1967 and November 1969, the Bishops of the United States reaffirmed the position of the Church regarding the law of celCHICAGO (NC}-The Chicago ibacy. Within the context of this unwavering position the Bishops Committee on Urban· Opportu?f. this count.ry whol~he~rtedly nity has approved - the appointJom .Your H~lmess agam. In. s1;1P- ment of Father Carl Lezak to the ,portmg the Ideal a!1d dlsclpl~e Montrose Advisory Council. Father Lezak's appointment of consecrated celIbac~ whIch have· served the prIesthood became an issue when the Monand Church so well. In their trose board, through its chairman, Robert Lerner, took up the nam~ I express to Your Holiness s~ntJments of our loralty, affec- 'matter of why the priest's aptJon .and esteem. (slgne?) John pointment had not been cleared Cardl~al Dea.rden, Arc~blshop of by the committee in the 17 DetrOIt, PreSIdent,. Na!10nal Con- months since he had been elected -to the post. ference of CatholIc BIshops." Lerner told Father Lezak that , Mrs. Murrell Syler, the commitAsk G~il~r~;d Permit tee's director, explained the condelay by allegedly callF@r Mb:edl Marriage!S firmation ing the priest a "subversive" and OSLO (NC}-The Scandinavian a "pinko" among other things. Catholic bishops have asked the Alderman William Singer Holy see to abolish the religious later introduced a resolution in impediment to mixed marriages City Council calling for an inand give general permission for vestigation of the case. Catholics to marry Protestants. Neither Mrs. Syler nor Robert The bi.shops' conference met Jackson, public relations agent, at Mariaholm Youth Center, were available for comment. with mixed marriages the main Father Lezak said: "No official theme. A team of experts on canon law, led by Bishop Hans response has l?een made to me or Martensen, S.J., of Copenhagen to the Montrose Urban Progress Center (on his approved appointtook part in the sessions. Because Scandinavians are ment). The statement (read to Protestants the bishops said they him about the appointment) igwere dissatisfied with the canon nor:ed the issue, _which is the . law provision which makes per- question of clearance." mission for a Catholic to marry a Protestant an exception rather Archdiocese Forms a rule. The mixed marriage study will Pastoral CounciD be continued by a committee of DUBUQUE (NC) - Archbishexperts headed by Bishop Pau" op James· J. Byrne of Dubuque Vershuren of Helsinki, Finland. has announced the creation of an Archdiocesan Pastoral Council to act as an advisory and Catholic Political . consultative body to him. p'arty in Ceylon It will be a representative COLOMBO (NC) - A Catho- group of clergy, Religious, and lic political party to be known laity, he said, as Christian Socialist party has In. making the announcement, been formed. here to field can- • the archbishop also released a didates in the forthcoming gen-- set of guidelines for the creation eral elections in this country. of - an Interim Pastoral Council Organizers said the party was to serve until the permanent formed in the "interests of Chris- council is organized. tians in parliamentary electorThe 29-member interim counates" and it will run for seats cil is charged with drafting a mainly along the north and schema, constitution, and bysouthwestern coasts. . laws for the permanent counThe Ceylonese bishops last cil. year refused to grant approval when ~ new party under the Fruits of Labor name of United Catholic Front was approved by some Catholic Happiness loves to see men leaders. at work. She will be found not An official spokesman for the in palaces but lurking in cornbishops called the proposal un- fields and factories and hovering wise and said the inclusion of over littered desks; she crowns the word "Catholic" in its name the unconscious head of the la-Grayson boring man. would be most misleading.
Approves Priest In Advisory Post
BURLINGTON (NC) - They call it the "Eating a la Welfare" program. Some 300 families throughout Vermont are participating in the program throughout Lent, getting a chance to sacrifice and also to experience how those on welfare rolls live. It's a seven-day-a-week program which limits each person to 28 cents per meal, the average welfare meal budget. The program, which orig-
ina.ted with the National Welfare Rights Organization, is supported by the Vermont Ecumenical Council, the Champlain Valley Office of Economic Opportunity, the Burlington Ecumenical Action Ministry and several other organizations. Rev. Howard O. Stearns Jr., executive minister, Vermont Ecumenical Council, said the response from Catholic and Prot· estant groups throughout the state has been encouraging.
LENT
AND
LEPERS THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSiON IUD TO THE ORDENTAL CHURCH
CHRIST
so LOVED LEPERS HE WORKED MIRACLES TO CURE THEM
If Lent so fClr has not been meaningful, if you haven't done enough, y.ou still have time to make it worthwhile. How can you best keep Lent? The answer is we' must make sacrifices on our own. In easing the Lenten regulations of fast and abstinence, the Holy Father recommended instead that we deny ourselves voluntarily and share our abundance with the poor and suffering. This week is World Leprosy Week, an observance calling attention to the needs of the world's more than 10 million people with leprosy. Here's what your Lenten gift for Lepers will do:
D $5,OOO-Builds a pre-fab clinic in a far·flung village. D $3,OOO-train ten native Sisters in nursing.
D $I,500-provide an operating table. D $575-buy a whirlpool bath. D $200-purchasEl a microscope.
D $100-give the clinic a sterilizer. VO D $95-provide a leper with a wheelchair. CURIE D $40-buy 1,000 vitamin tablets. LIEPERS HERE'S WHAT D $30-give a leper a hospital bed. OUR PRIESTS D $15-give him (or her) a hClnd-walker.
AND D $10-give the clinic a.blood-pressure set. SISTERS NEED D $8.50-buy 10,000 Dapsone tablets. D $8.00-buy 12 thermometers. D $5.00-100 vitamin tablets.
D $3.00-a pair of guaze scissors. D $2.25-a 1 lb. jar, Sulfadizine ointment. D $1.75-100 gauze pads (3" x 3").
D $l.OO-monthly membership in our dollar-amonth DAMIEN LEPER CLUB.
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Q) Dear ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $ Monsignor Nolan: FOR _
Please return coupon with your offering
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NAME STREET CITY
THE CATHOLIC NEAR
_ _ STATE _ _ ZIP CODE_ _ EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
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THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 19, 1970
German Prelates favor Celiba~y
Rome Appfirove§ U~
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Tro ~~~Gt1'8on WASHINGTON (NC)John Car<linal Dearden of Detroit, president of the National Conference of Cath-
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olic Bishops, has announced the Holy See has confirmed the English translation of the new Order of the Mass and other revised liturgical services, scheduled to be introduced in the United States on Palm Sunday, March 22. , ' The decision also affects the services ,of Baptism and marriage. Cardinal Dearden noted the Holy See action will enable publishers to sp'eed up the distribution of official texts for insertion in altar books. When the National Conference of Catholic Bishops approved the translations at its 'semi-annual meeting here last November, Ma'rch 22 was set as the first date for use but the NCCB left individual Bishops free to choose a later date. All dioceses must employ the revisions by Advent 1971. ' Marriage Service Other changes, requested by the American bishops, Were also made public. They include optional 'Use of white vestments at Masses and other services for the dead; violet or black vestments may also continue to be used. For the marriage service either the revised text or the traditional fonnula may be recited by the bride and groom to' express consent. The new form reads: "I take you to be my wife (husband). I promise to be true , to you in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health. I will love you and honor you all the days of my life." The more familiar version is: "I take you for my lawful wife (husband), to have to hold, from this day for"."ard, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, until death do us part." Also in the marriage rite, a final blessing, not found in the Latin orginial, has been approved for the United States, ' Defer Decision In addition to the major English translations of the Mass, Baptism and marriage, a new version of the litany of the saints will be used. All translations are the work of the In. ternational Committee on EnglisJ1 in the liturgy. Three requests of the American bishops, made at the November meeting, have been deferred to a later date. , They are a request for the reception of Communion a second time on a. day in special circumstances; for priests to celebrate Mass a second time in order to join in a concelebrated Mass and for a wider 'extension of Communion under both kinds at the discretion of the local bishop. The Vatican is studying the three requests 'for possible inclu~ sion in a document affecting the entire Church, the Cardinal said,
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Causes
CLEVELAND (NC) - A oneday seminar concentrated 'on cau'ses rather than solutions of pollution in Lake Erie has been scheduled by John CarrollUniversity here March 2~.
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SEAMEN'S C:HAPEl: rJrence Cardinal Cooke, Archbishop of New York, blesses the chapel of the Italian Se'amen's Club. With the Cardinal are, at left, Msgr. Patrick F. Raftery, New York Port Chaplain, .~nd t~e V~ry Rev. Renato Bolzoni, CS., extreme right, Superior General of the Scalabrini Fathers, and th~ Very Rev. Caesa'r Donazan, D.S., New York's Provisional Superior. I
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Gu:atemalans :Increase Efforts I ' $e, Hope in Strong Lay Apostolate
GUATEMALA CITY' (NC) Against a backgrund of poli~ical tension, and waVles of violence, the bishops of Guatemala have asked the country's clergy 'and laity to step up their efforts! for "progress" for, all Guatemalans, especially those in rural communities. ! At tha..,same time, the bishops recalled their prE~vious warning against priests and laymen using leadership posts in the Church "to promote a given political trend" and to "harm the apostolic ~ission of the Church,'i They deplored a movement of so-called rebel priests Who, "prompted by a false national'ism and using the Church's drivel for renewal," have issued a "violent challenge" to legitimate authorities. ,i , In a pastoral letter issued at the end of three-day meeting in Antigua, the bish.ops said trey were speaking Bit a time of "grave moments for the Church," With national elections due March I, the Il;overnment: of President Julio Cesar Mendez Montenegro suspended constitutional guarantees after a number of police, guerrillas and civiliims BR
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'V'@ H@v@ Courage . VATICAN CITY (NC)-At the outset of a Lent-ICing "Campa·ign of Brotherhood," launched! in Brazil, Pope Paul VI called upon Brazilians to hav.'e courage I to shun passivity in the face of evils oppressing our brother~: He spoke' in Portuguese in a radio message to :Brazil 'about a month after receiving a dossier from. prominent Europeans doeupolice tortures andl summary exi ecutions in that country. The Pope said" "Our state i as men obliges us to be participants in the solidarity and resportsi-. bility of the universal family,';
were killed and robberies' and of the great hopes for Guateand bombings ran up losses into mala," it said, lies "in the emergence of a strong lay apostolate" the millions of dollars. The bishops reminded Guate- offering the Church and, the malan Catholics of the Church's fatherland a growing number of r~lationship to the country's po- , men and women who are humanlitical affairs, set forth in, their ly and spiritually mature and i969 statement. The statement able to take up the responsibilisaid that the "Church, as such, ties for temporal development never enters any activity of a and for the growth of the factional nature"~and in this Church," it said. country "has no commitment They said that the group of whatsoever to any of the politi- ,rebel priests has succeeded only cal parties," in bringing scandal to Catholics, In their lastest pastoral, the confusion to the public and a bishops said that the. Church's threat to the unity of the Church. 'presence in the field of social Their pastoral claimed that progress "demands that those "only sustained dialogue can Christians committed to action channel the just and urgent debe particularly faithful to ~he mands of our priests" who want Gospel, learned in doctrine, and the Church to have "a greater willing witnesses of Christ," impact" on,"the realities of our "The tensions and anguishes fatherland," of the present time," the letter added, have resulted in "sorrows and fears but also in ~ope," One
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COLOGNE (NC)-The bishops of the state of North' RhineWestphalia have asked that mandatory priestly celibacy be maintained. In a statement released here, the bishcps of the Cologne, Aachen, Essen, Paderborn and Muenste.' dioceses recalled the decisions of the Second Vatican Council confirming the law of mandatOl'Y celibacy and declared their support of Pope Paul VI's recent statement defending priestly celibacy in the Latinrite ChUl:c". The bishops said that as neighbors of the Church in the Netherlands, they have been asked by many persons for a statement of position on the current discussions of the celibacy question. The Datch bishops have supported the Dutch National Pastoral Council in urging optional celibacy for priests and that priests who have married be permitted to return to their ministry. In addition to the joint statement, Josef Cardinal Hoeffner of Cologne has released 10 theses defending obligatory celibacy. The cardinal also defended celibacy in reply to a memorandum of the Munich Action Circle of Pries~ arnd,Laymen. In that statement, the cardinal stressed that priestly celibacy is "biblically founded," He admitted that the provisions of canon law on celibacy are certainly not of divine right, but said that it must be observed that celibacy is an important, if not the principal, idea of the New Testament and of high value to the priestly ministry.
Thec~ogicqd S~ho@ls
Name CO@B'dinator DUBUQUE (NC) - Dr. Raymond A. Martin has been named coordinaCng secretary of the Schools of Theology here. Dubuque Theological Seminary, Wartburg Theological Seminary, and Aqui:las Institute have operated soma joint theology programs for the past decade. The administrative council, to 'which Dr. Martin will report, consists of the chief administrative head:; and other representatives of t"Je Presbyterian, Lutheran and Cntholic schools. ~~
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QUILON (NC) - A "Catholic, 365 L\lO~1'H. L"Ii!ION'f SY~IE';T 94 t'~EMONT S'li'ct~ET Laymen's Association here has' NM l!.\[!ifOfORD TAUNTON, MASS. ,protested alleged "autocratic and un-Christian ways" of Bishop ~~2·~$~4 iet 822"@E>2~ Jerome Fernandes of Quilon. In a memorandum to the ..Indian Bishops' Conference, the 5!lIl11l1l11l11l1l1l11ll11l11l11l11l1l11l1illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliJIlIlIlIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIlIlIlI111111111111111111£ lay association also claimed that the decree's of the Second Vatican Council would be "meaningless" in the diocese as long as its members are excluded from havINCo ing any say in Church matters. The memorandum was the latest action in a war of nerves between Bishop Fernandes and the I8-month-old organization. Branding the group as a forum for separating the laity from the clergy and bishops, Bishop Fernandes had issued a pastoral letter in November, 1968, "expressly forbidding" the association and divesting its members from all privileges in the Church. l5l1\llIIlIlJIlllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~1II111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111I11111111111~
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Catholic. Schools Face Crises In Maryland ANNAPOLIS (NC)-Two cardinals and a bishop met here with Gov. Marvin Mandel and told him the closing of Catholic schools was "virtually a certainty" without prompt state aid. Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore, Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of Washington, and Bishop Thomas J. Mardaga of Wilmington presented Mandel with a report intended to illustrate the' "severe financial crises" facing Catholic schools in Maryland. The five-page report by the bishops of the Maryland Catholic Conference said Catholic schools in the state would operate at a $10.3 million deficit next year without help from state funds. The governor said after the closed meeting that he told the churchmen he does not plan to take a position on state aid to nonpublic schools until after a commission studying the question reports to him next year. That will be after the 1970 elections. Contributed Services Cardinal Shehan said Mandel was not asked to give outright support to Catholic school aid but simply to give "careful consideration" to the schools' financial problems. Legislation to give state funds to nonpublic education is pending in the state legislature.. The report given Mandel by the churchmen covered th~ cost of educating 83,767 students in diocesan and parochial schools In the state. It put the figure at $23.8 million-with only about $7.95 million coming from tuitions· ·and $5.7 million from the contributed services of Religious teachers. The value of contributed services is the difference between what such teachers receive in Catholic schools and what they would be paid in public schools. SurvlvaU Hs Ussnre The report noted that the annual cost figure did not include costs for capital ,improvements, school furnishings and borrowed money. The prelates said the issue confronting Catholic schools is "not merely one of curtailment but 0 0 0 one of survival itself." "We have no desire to abandon our schools and to ask the already overburdened public school system to absorb these students. But reality makes such an eventuality virtually a certainty unless these schools are given a prompt opportunity to continue their valuable program of public service," they said. While noting that one bill pending in the legislature proposes state aid to nonpublic schools out of general funds, they said they did "not presume to suggest what form assistance should take."
Preparatory. Seminary Rector Explains Training of Colored Seminarians BAY ST. LOUIS (NC}-Increases in black vocations to the priesthood and Brotherhood will come when black seminarians are assured "that the Church, through the bishops, is seeking to open up leadership positions" for Negro clergy. This is the prediction of Father Leonard J. Olivier, rector of St. Augustine's preparatory seminary here in Mississippi, which since such as counseling to aid per1920 has specialized, though sons in hospital, family and difnot exclusively, in training ficult housing situations. blacks for the priesthood While it is true that individ-
and Brotherhood of the Society of the Divine Word. Father Olivier, who was reared in the same (Sacred Heart) Lake Charles, La., parish as Auxiliary Bishop Harold Perry of New Orleans, cited in a recent interview these trends among Negroes having religious vocations in the Catholic Church in the United States: Ordinations of blacks to the priesthood have increased from o~e in the \920s to 13 in the 1930s, to 23 in the 1940s, and to 52 in the 1950s. Total figures for the 1960s are not yet available. There are currently an estimated 185 black diocesan and Religious . priests in the U. S. Catholic Church, which has an estimated 800,000 Negro members. An estimated 303 black Brothers and more than 1,000 black nuns serve in various religious orders. Seek Leaders "Negro people want more decision-making power in housing and employment," Father Olivier observed, "and they are looking for people to lead them.
ual Catholic Church leaders have failed Negroes in the past generally, Father Olivier said, there are now more openings for seminarians from diocesan divinity schools and religious orders, To have more than a single (Bishop Perry) Negro in the U. S. hierarchy would put a "better image of the Church before colored Catholics," in the seminary rector's opinion.
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Conference at CU For Minoroty Group WASHINGTON (NC)-A prelaw conference for minority group college students and recent graduates is scheduled Saturday, Feb. 28 at the Catholic University of America law school here. The conference will explore ways minority group students can get into law schools, what scholarships are available. what opportunities are open to min-' ority group lawyers, and how law can be used most effectively to bl'ing about social change. The free o~e-day conference is being sponsored by about 20 law schools. acting in conjunction with the Black American Law Students Association and other law groups.
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FATHER OLlVlE·R, S.V.D. So it is Negro priests and spiritual leaders who should be outspoken and 'on the firing line' to obtain for them what they want." Black or colored seminarians -Father Olivier said he prefers the word "colored"-today are being trained in p.astoral subjects
Document'Reveals Viet Cong Atrocities in My Lcii Area
SAIGON (NC) - Viet Cong leaders have confirmed that some of their own people committed atrocities in the same area where U. S. soldiers are accused of killing innocent civilians. A Viet Cong directive of last October, seized recently, complains th~t "the killing of 12'year-Old children, their parents and, relatives, occurred in some areas." The document refers to incidents in the province that includes My Lai hamlet, scene of the alleged G.I. atrocities of March 1968. The directive had been sent to a "Comrade Tao," It stated that "the most serious thing was the secret executions being. carried out by a number of individuals of the Party Committee in hamlets, districts and villages. The "abuses," as the directive called them, "have occurred daily since T25, thus lowering the revolutionary spirit of the people. As a result we were unable· to gather the people's forces together to defeat the enemy and oppress the guilty reactionaries. ". There is no explanation for the time reference "T25." Schedule Election The document is an evaluation' BELMONT (NC)-An election of what it calls serious weakwill be held March 2 to choose a ness and mistakes in the oppressuccessor to the Rt. Rev. Walter sion of reactionaries in the area A. Coggin, O.S.B., recently re- under our control," It admits signed as Abbot-Ordinary of Bel- sloppy investigation work before mont Abbey here in North Car- "abusing or arresting a sus-' olina. Father Bernard Rosswog, pected person," saying it was O.S.B., administrator, has an- done "without evidence or reanounced. Abbot Walter resigned sons but only out of personal for reasons of health, after 14 hatred." years as executive head of BelPersonal Prejudices mont Abbey, and 10 years as Further, the directive comAbbot-Ordinary. plains, "any individual or agency (it names a long list of agenLack of Wisdom cies) could issue detention orders There is no WIsdom in use- without discussing it with the people or requesting instructions less and hopeless sorrow from hi~her head~uaiters," -.Jo~sl?n
THE ANCHOR-, Thurs.. Feb. 19. 1970
Follow up investigations were neglected so that "detainees were not further interrogated after six, eight or· nine months of detention. Some prisoners became ill and died due to the lengthy confinement and others were liberated by the enemy when he launched surprise rescue attacks. This damaged the prestige of the revolution." The document does not say whether it was incompetence or carelessness but poor intelligence work that prevented the Viet Cong from making the most of attacks against,the enemy. ' "The long trial and judgment of cases detained without proper proof and valid reasons and the unmethodic, lacking-in-depth interrogation have resulted in an impossibility on our part to accurately decide each case and exploit all the necessary information on the enemy with which to expand the scope of our attacks against him." The document complains of personal prejUdices in that "the implementation of the Party regulations on the oppression of reactionaries was not strictly conducted, each one acting at his own discretion."
"Where Does All My Money Go!" .. Where does all my money go? Don't we often ask ourselves that question at the end of the week, or at the end of the month-when the bills are due? You might also ask that question in this way: "Where does my money go. when I eorntribute to the mlsslorns?" When you have contributed to The' Society for the Propagation 'of the Faith your money might have been spent in any one of the following different ways: llt could have provi«lled a II1Iaalve catechist with bQoks to be used in his teaching. Or It· mfight have paicll for part or his sahnry. ($UO.OO a month) Or it mIght have allowed a younll1g man
to begIn his eatechetieall trlllining.
Your gift might also have helped to keep going an orphanage in Japan, or a traclle school In the Con~o, or a elinlc in Taiwan. Your sacrifice might have provided a jeep for a priest in the deserts of India, library books for a seminary in South America, or medicine for a leprosarium in Indonesia. Or perhaps your girt WillS sent to one of the missionary Bishops to help pay the monthny bills of his diocese. It Is a fact that many mission dIoceses could not run--could· not even exlstwithout the help of generou!I friends of the Society. All these things--and more-were accomplished last year because of YOUR sacrifices. 1 he Society holds nothing back; nothing is saved, nothing iii invested. Your money is sent immediately to where it is needed most. Lent is a perfect time to begin sacrificing for the missions. Set something aside each day or each week during this Lenten season and send it to us foil' the missionary work of the Church. Your gift will soon be, on its way to where it Is needed most. What the Society does this year depends entirely on YOU. Your sacrifice IS important-Please make it count! Give what you can, today!
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SALVATION AND SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Please cut out tllis column and send your offfering to Right Reverend Edward T. O'Meara, National ll>i.rector, Dept. C., 366 !FiUh Ave, New York, N.Y. }II)II)@I or directly to your local Diocesan Director. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine 368 North Main Street Fall River, Massachusetts 02720
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Rlver-Thur:s., Feb. 19,1970
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Publicity chairmen of parish or· ganizations are asked to submit news items for this column to The Anchor, P. O. Box 7, Fall River
Revision.ist Bends Facts': To Suit Political Theor~ By Msgr. George G. Higgi~s
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Director, Division of Urban Life, U.S.C.C.
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The name of the game these days in tbe fiel~ of American history is "revisionism," which Time mag4 zine recently described as "a new, angry look at the Ame~can past." The revisionists, rejecting the dominant view or the recent past (what they call
"consensus history") . d portray the Umte says the author of
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Time s
rather discerning Essay for the week of Feb. 2, as "a land of teeming passions and deep-seated, almost irreconcilable disagreements." Some of them "accept the class-warfare theories of Karl Marx; most of them owe a con· siderable deb t to Progressive His tor ian Charles Beard, who interpreted the American past as an economic struggle between haves and have-nots. Though t~ere is undoubtedly something to be said for the re-' visionists and their angry approach to the American past, I would agree with Time's essayist when he faults them as a group, for imposing "too strict a pattern on the chaos of history." Another way of saying the same thing is that too many of the revisionists tend to be doctrinaire polemicists first and historians second and that "by concentrating on inexorable social and economic forces, they do not make sufficient allowance for political, cultural and psychological forces." illustrates Weaknesses The Time Essay goes on to say that this weakness on the part of the revisionists shows up especially in their desperate neoMarxist attempt to demythologize American foreign policy by interpreting it almost exclusively in terms of the class struggle. Howard Radosh, a young revisionist from the.history faculty at Queens College, is a case in point. His new book, "American Labor and United States Policy," (Random House, New York, $10), graphically illustrates almost all of the weaknesses of revisio~ism when applied, along the lines indicated above, to the field of foreign policy. , . Radosh would probably classlty himself as a neo-Marxist - radical. So be it. He is perfectly free to argue, in any forum to which he can gain access, that what this country needs is a radical Socililist ~ovement (including a a Sociahst labor movement) which will reject or "transcend" the existing social system. Historians have just as much right as anybody else to take this tack if that's the way they feel about the matter. But historians, of all people, are not free to bend the facts of history to suit their own political theories ·and/or prejudices. Corporations' 'Junior Partners' But this, it seems to' me, is what Professor Radosh has done with a terrible vengeance in his new book, "American Labor and United States Foreign Policy." He does so by interpreting labor's foreign policy exclusively and very dogmatici111y in terms of his Qwn neo-Marxist ideology. Not content to disagree with labor's support of the MarshaH
The Parish Parade
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Plan; for example,. or t~e K?rean War or the War In Vietnam, he feels compelled to charge, and to repeat ad na1lls~am, that "Iabor's foreign policy stems ~jnex orable from the conservative union.movement as it has ibeen '\. fashioned by the AFU-CIO lea(Iers.~ . ; By this he means that, i':l the eyes of these beknighted labor leaders, "labor unions are n?eant to function as junior partners of the large cc,rporations,: and the leaders naturally seek: only those gains that are acceptable to the system's top men; men from the corporation community who' depend for their profits on the continuation of Cold War politics; .the union leaders~, see the chance for limited gains! disappearing if they offer thallenges to corporate foteign policy. . I 'Corporate Unionism' i j "Just as American foteign 1 policy in generiil reflects the do\. mestic organization of the politI l ical economy-and the idea :that domestic progress depends upon foreign expansion-so does l the CALL TO WORSHIP: At a conlabor leaders' foreign polic}j reflect the type of corporate union- vEmt of the Order of St. Clare in . ism that has developed in i the Sangmelina, Cameroun, one of United S t a t e s : ' ! the nuns beats out the call to Professor Radosh permits' his worship on her tom-tom. NC neo-Marxist ideology to Irun Photo. completely' wild once his typewriter moves into high gear. iThe sky then becomes the limit. ~ He says, for example, that! the beside the point) of some ·of the AFL-CIO has played the role of present Administration's foreign a "labor front" for the American- policies, most recently, for exstyle corporate state; that I the ample, its policy with regard to present American economic ,sys- the Israeli-Arab conflict. The big oil boys and some of tern, initiated during ~he presidency of Woodrow Wllson,lhas the big bankers in the United States also know that the Federcom~ to' resemble Mu:ssolini's ation disagrees' with them with Fas~lst State; that AmerIcan I, unions may become as impoten~ as reference to the latter issue. Docile Front the 'Fascist unions were in Nazi Germany; and that .Geqrge .Finally, President Nixon knows Meany sold out to the system -and so does American industry by agreeing to President J6hn- -that if American unions were, son's wage-price guidelines. i as Mr. Radosh suggests, a docile Sloppy IJ[istory i "labor front" for a semi.Fascist In summary, what Mr. Radosh corporate state, they would not is really trying to say is that have taken on General Electric, "since the days of the revblu- for example" in what turned out . tionary, Industria] Workers i of to be one of the most carefully the World, there has been noj in- coordinated strikes in American dependent union movement con- labor history. trolled by its own. rank and :rile But what's the point of citing and not tied to the machidery ,other examples to counter Mr. of the State." Radosh's . extraordinary doctriFrom this he eoncludes that 'naire argumpnt that the Amerthere is no hope for the labor labor movement has sold out its movement-and nlJpossibilitx of members for a mess of pottage . its reassessing' its own for~ign and has' become a lackey to policy until "American labor American industry and to the leaders present Ii Socialist alter- American corporate state. native to American workers The papers are full of such 0/< « *" I. examples every day of the week, That's good neo-Marxist the- but apparently Mr. Radosh has ory but, when used as the exclu- been too busy dreaming about sive norm for assessing labbr's the advent of Socialism in this foreign and domestic policies; it country to have noticed them. degenerates into pretty sloppy That's a pity, for he could have history. Presidents Johnson and written a good book about Nixon know very well, even; if _labor's foreign policy (and we Professor Radosh does not, that need such a book) if he had been the AFL-CIO is not a captive content to stick to his last as a "labor front" for a semi- trained historian instead of Fascist State. doubling in brass asa neoTo be more specific, President Marxist reformer and a very Johnson knows, for example, doctrinaire one at that. that George Meany .did not, Iin fact, support the Johnson AdAble to Take It ministration's wage-price gui<;lelines. Mr. Nixon knows that the No man ever distinguished Federation has been severely himself who could not bear to -Edgeworth critical (whether rightly SO! is be laughed at. 1 •
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ST. PIUS X, SOUTH YARMOUTH The Women's Guild will sponsor a bake sale beginning at 11 Sunday morning in the church hall. A' luncheon and fashion show are planned for Thursday, March 12 at Wychmere Harbor Club. Rehearsals for a va~iety show to be presented in the near future are held each Thursday night at 8 in the hall. Summer bazaar work sessions. take place at 10 Wednesday mornings. Needed for the bazaar are donations of materials and suggestions of articles to be sold. Members have also been asked to submit favorite Cape Cod recipes. The March meeting will take place Monday night, the 9th and will be opened with recitation of a living rosary. ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER A Polish food sale will take place from 10 to 5 tomorrow in the school hall. The annual Lenten potluck supper sponsored by the parish council will be served beginning at 5:30 Sunday night, March 8. Tickets are available at the rectory, from Joseph Banalewicz, chairman, and from all council members. The parish youth council will meet at 6:30 tonight in the lower church hall. A skating party is scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 21. Those interested in attending may contact a youth council officer. SANTO CHRISTO, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women, with Mrs. Palmira Aguiar as president, announces a lobster .supper for Sunday, April 19 in the church hall. A penny sale will follow the supper. Tickets are available from Mrs. Mary Medeiros, chairman, and Mrs. Evelyn Machado, cochairman. . New council officers will be installed in ceremonies next month. ST. ANNE, NEW BEDFORD A whist party will be held in the school hall on Brock Avenue at 7:30 Saturday night, Feb. 21. Proceeds will benefit the school fund and awards will include many door prizes. Tickets will be available at the door. SACRED HEART, FALL RlVlER The Men's Club will sponsor a dinner dance, preceded by a social hour, at 7:30 Saturday night, Feb. 21 at Venus de Milo restaurant. Music will be by the Nightclubbers. Reservations may be made with John J. Patota, general chairman, who announces that proceeds from the annual affair will benefit Sacred Heart School.
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ST. JAMES, NEW BEDFORD Parvuli Dei Cub Scout awards have been merited' by Michael Clark, Daniel Cregan, Manuel Roderiques, Paul Raymond, Jack Tuttle, Michael Carreiro, Timothy Reis and Richard· Jenkins. At a Blue and Gold banquet the boys received congratulations from adult Scout award winners, including Leo Telesmanick and Earl Bonneau, St. George Award; and Robert St. Pierre and Cubmaster William E. Hendricks, Bronze Pelican Award. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER Annual dues for the Altar and Rosary Society may be placed in the collection basket on Sunday. The parish council will meet in the faculty room of the school at 7:30 tonight. All parishioners are invited to attend. A series of explanations of liturgical changes will conclude with a talk and discussion period at 7:30 Tuesday night, Feb. 24, in the school hall. Project Le!sure will sponsor a program on liturgy at 2 Thursday afternoon, Feb. 26, also in the school. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,. NORTH EASTON The Women's Guild will sponsor a "Swing into Spring~' dance on Saturday evening, March 7 from 8 to midnight in the Parish Centet, 20 Jenny Lind St. Music will be furnished by The Modernistics of Chelsea and refreshments will be serveq. Admission is $5.00 a couple. Mrs. Carl Mazieko is 'serving as chairman of the affair. NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women will hold its regular monthly meeting on Monday night, Feb. 23 at 8 in the Jesus Marie Academy Auditorium. Mrs. Fernand Thibault, chairman has announced that a private penny sale will be conducted for members only.
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St. Margaret's Team Victorious
THE ANCHOR--
Thurs., Feb. 19, 1970
At Academy of Sacred Hearts In First Wi81l for Five Ye~~s
Illinois Officials Back School Aid
Straight A students for the second quarter at Bishop Connolly High School in Fall River have been announced by Rev. John Cornellier, S.J., principal. They're Carl Ferreira, junior; Jeffrey Benoit, sophomore; and John Comstock and Michael Raposa, freshmen. Sixty stu- the 37th annual New England Catholic High School Invitadents merited second honors, tional Basketball Tournament, to receiving two or more As be held this weekend at Law-
and the remainder of their grades Bs. Thirty-two earned third honors, representing a B average. At'Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, students on the honor roll include 12 seniors, 10 jun~ iors, seven sophomores and 12 freshmen. And midterm marks at Holy Family in New Bedford have resulted in the admission of 23 juniors and 38 sophomores as probationary members of the National Honor Society. Charles Bake'f is faculty moderator for the NHS chapter. Slight Confusiollll There was a little confusion in this column a couple of weeks ago with regard to students participating in a trip to France this Summer under aegis of the American Institute for Foreign Study. It was reported that all students named were from Mt. St. Mary Academy. Not so, \'lOtes Sister Mary Adele, R.S.M., . .' )'11 chaperone the group. "~" e'iI be seven Mounties, one girl each from BMC Durfee High School, Jesus-Mary Academy and Somerset High; a girl from Beaver Country Day School in Dover, Mass., and two far travelers, one from Neenah, Wis., and one from River Forest, III. Excitement reigned supreme at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, as the annual gym meet ended with St. Margaret's team victorious for the first time in five years. Leading St. Margaret's were Liz Demetrius, captain; Polly Rockett, squad leader; and Joanne Lesiow, head cheerleader. linvitational TOlllrnament Basketball intramurals are under way at Dominican Academy, Fall River, where teams are named, for cars this year. Ready to race are Firebirds, Volkswagens, Toyotas, Mustangs, Chargers, and Camaros. Athletic Association members are also helping DA .first graders to arrange a gym meet Friday, March 6. Holy Family will participate in
Anglican Prelate Defends Missionell's LONDON (NC)-An Anglican bishop who worked in what was Biafra has defended Catholic missioners who were sentenced to jail for entering the country without Nigerian government permission. "Many of us would, I know, be proud to share with them so honorable an imprisonment," declared Bishop C.E.I. Cockin in a letter to the Times of London. He was referring to sentences of six months at hard labor passed upon 21 Catholic missioners in Port Harcourt on Jan. 27. After one week of imprisonment their sentences were commuted and they were deported from Nigeria along with nine other Catholic missioners who had been fined. All had been convicted of entering Nigeria. illegally, and some also of working without a Nigerian government permit.
Poor Substitute And as he knew not what to say, he swore. -Byron
rence Catholic Memorial Gym. Latest acceptances: From Bishop Connolly High - John Cheney to BU; Paul Hughes, Philadelphia College of Art; Leonard Konaishi and David Rochefort to Stonehill; Thomas Medeiros and Michael Motta to Fordham; Richard Paradis to Loyola of New Orleans; and John J. Sullivan to UMass and Fairfi~ld University. At Holy Family: Paul ChevIier to SMU; Pat Harrington to Salve Regina; Mary Ann Marshall and Leslie Sherbino to St. Bonaventure; Anne Walsh to Regis; and Jo-Ann Weldon to UMass. Also in the college department: Holy· Family juniors and seniors heard an address from the guidance counselor at St. Anselm's College on entrance requirements and course offerings. Busy AlllImnae Alumnae of Sacred Hearts Academy have a busy few months in store. They'll hold an alumnae gym meet in April and will serve refreshments at an upcoming production of "High Button Shoes" by the Prospect Players. Planned for May is a communion supper and installation ceremony, together with induction of 1970 graduates. At Mt. St. Mary Academy Sharon Borges has been named· Homemaker of Tomorrow. She's b'een active in the Fall River Fresh Air youth program and aids in parish CCD work. Jane Martin is the Homemaker for Holy Family. Dominican Academy's basketball team placed second in Bristol County Girls' League compe-_ tition, making a record of 8 wins and 3 losses for the varsity; 6 wins and 4 losses for the jayvees. In 8",match with alumnae, the varsity scored 33. alumnae 24. Also at DA, Denise Arsenault has· been accepted at Bridgewater; Elaine Lapointe at UMass; and Susan Eolin at Salve. Back at Prevost High School, Fall River, is its student body president, Jack Jackson, after a busy week in Washington, D. C. as a Senate Youth Program award winner. In Washington he attended House meetings, met many notables, including Sen. Edward Kennedy, J. Edgar Hoover, Sen. Edward Brooke, and Secretary of Defense Laird, and toured the White House and Capitol. Washington-bound too is a debate team from Holy Family High. Dan Dwyer and Marsha Moses will participate in the National Cherry Blossom Tournament at Georgetown University as a two-man switch-side' team. A cake sale sponsored recently by HF's Msgr. McKeon Debate Society will help speed the tWQ on their way. DA sodalists plan'a Leadership Night Monday, Feb. 23. Guest speaker will be Sister Kathleen Murphy of Boston College. And a junior-senior Mass at DA on the theme "Love and Brotherhood" was recently concelebrated by Rev. Richard Gendreau, Rev. Maurice Jeffrey, Rev. William Hurley and Rev. James Morse.
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SCHOO~ OFFICERS: School officers at St. Joseph High, Fall River, are, seated from left, .Diane Crepeau, freshman representative; Mary Clare Rapecis, school president Jean Rapecis, freshman representative; standing, Christine Viens, sophomore representative; Darlene lemois, senior representaHve; Anne Rapecis, secretary-treasurer; Nancy Melanson, junior representative.
Ready ·)to Serve Restructured Holy· Name Society Adopts Constitution NI;:W ORLEANS (NC) - The sioned Blessed John of Vercelli, Holy Name Society movement sixth master general of the Doin this country was restructured minicans, to crusade for reverhere at a meeting of 85 men ence to the Holy Name in an from 27 Sees, who formed the effort to counteract profanity Natiomil Association of Holy and blasphemy then widespread. Name Societies. The Holy Name movement, The group' adopted a formal continuously under the Dominiconstitution t.o be ratified along cans' direction, was introduced with by-laws at a· national con- in the United States by Father vention in 1971. Officers were Charles H. .McKenna, O.P., in elected at the closing session. 1882 when he organized 15 parThe officers are Louis C. Fink ish units in the New York archof Atlanta, Ga.,. president; Hu- diocese in 1882. Before Father bert Campana, Buffalo, N. Y., McKenna died in 1917, more first vice-president; Stephen An- than 40 unions of Holy Name drusisian, Allentown, Pa., second Societies were formed in archvice-president; James T. Flana- dioceses and dioceses throughout gan, New Orleans, third vice- the country. president; Thomas V. Reagan, The movement flourished on St. Paul, Minn" secretary, and the diocesan level, with the naAnthony Meralla, New York tional direction vested in the soCity, treasurer. ciety headquarters in New York. "This is what we have been By 1963, the movement claimed striving for, a national group," five million members in this Fink said at the conclusion of country. the constitutional sessions. "I Since Vatican Council II the visualize this organization as a movement has been criticized as cooperative group. We will con- outmoded and out-of-date in tinue to preserve the purposes of . some quarters. the centuries-old confraternityUnder the new organization reverence for the sacred name of God and that of Jesus Christ, plans, the country will be diand the salvation of souls of the vided into seven regions, with a regional vice-president as the members of the confraternity." key officer of a respective area. Seven Regions And Father Brendan Larnen, O.P., director of the National Office of Holy Name Societies, New York, said that new organizations with renewed vigor, "is I ready to begin anew to serve Holy Mother Church." The group also heard an adJuly 1 - July 5 dress by Archbishop Philip M. Hannan of New Orleans, who To QUEBEC stressed a need for continuation To CAP. A/\ADELEN of the Holy Name Societies. To MONTREAL The Holy Name Society ·has and ST• HYACINTHE enjoyed confraternity status in the Church since 1564. But the ROOMS • 4 MEALS movement dates back to 1274 when Pope Gregory X commis$65.00
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CHICAGO (NC) - Three more top lIIinois political leaders have addE!d their support to some form of aid to nonpublic schools. They are Superintendent of Public Instruction Ray Page, Secretary of State Paul Powell, and State Auditor Michael Howlett. They join Gov. Richard Ogilvie and Lt. Gov. Paul Simon, who earlier spoke out in favor of the aid. In another development, John Cardinal Cody of Chicago asked the Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Men for support in the campaign to obtain state funds for nonpublic schools. Declaring the need to be urgent, Cardinal Cody said, "We're not asking for a favor. We're asking for recognition of a .right." He referred to what nonpublic school officials call a right to "a fair share of our tax dollar." Page recently told delegates to the lIIinois Constitutional Con.vention in Springfield the Assembly should find a way to allow legislative action to nonpublic schools. Powell, in Sauk Village, 111., declared: "The main problem of Catholic schools collapse would be to the taxpayers of Illinois."
NLlns to Withdraw Frc)m Central School CONCORD (NC)-The Sisters of the Holy Union will withdraw . from Rose Hawthorne Central School, a million dollar elementary and secondary unit constructed here in 1953, because of a shortage of personnel. Rose Hawthorne is the second major educational institution to announce a phase out here and the 10th school of the Boston archdiocese closing in this academic year. Sister Ruth Elizabeth, principal of the secondary division and Sister Lucille, Elementary director announced the decision to close the schools, originally founded 20 years ago, in a letter to the parents of 650 students.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Feb. 19, 1'~70 ,&. t-
Stress· True S.igns
"
Rites
Continued from Page One the priest can bre!1k it and disSure, some man could do all tribute the parts to at least some this otherwise. But for' ordinary of the faithful . . ." (No. 283) you and me, here and now, it The rite of the breaking of the must be done in the open that bread, the sign of unity-who!>(' 1 may lean on my fellow man name. designated the Mass in and be moved by his example apostolic times--does not quite By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy ! also. For naturally social man, appear that when little hosts If the novel Travels with My Aunt (Viking, 625 Marites are necessary. are employed, cut out beforehand But the rites must clearly although there is a real practical dison Ave., New York, N.Y. ~0022. $5.95) were by so~e and truly interpret the feelings, advantage there for nl,lmerous unknown. author, one might say that, though slight,: it desires, truths that they show. communicants. was dexterous and literate. But because it i.s the latest This is precisely the point of The gesture of the breaking of , I the new rites of the Mass-an the bread is there. It must not work of the veteran Graham bed and couldn't get the' sh~et ernest effort to clarify and in- be an empty one. Greene, it is more strictly to lie properly." All in all, a tensify each rite and its orderly The altar must be more than judged and found to be triv- appointment, given the,sour.c~: influence on other rites. Then a decorated box containing a ial. Its narrator Henry Pull~argaret Mead, .the d~s~mthe rites will mean something slab of consecrated marble. But' . . .' gUlshed anthropologist, beheves real and valuable to man. He'll it must appear as a table. "The 109, ,45, IS a retired bank. ma~- that the present generation gap sense it the' more; he'll pray the table of a fixed altar should be agel': a bachel~r content With his is intrinsically different frlom of natural stone, but any solid, more. d~hhas and his anything previously encountered Many rites have found their becoming and ski1lfully .conin 'hlJ,man experience. She exdmners ordered way into the Mass simply be- structed material may be used b y d i a lin g plains this in Culture and Cqm. cause they meant something to . . ," (No. 263). CHICKEN. His mitment (Natural His~ory Prl7ss, It can, "if opportune" contain an individaul saint or someone mother's death Doubleday, 501 Franklm Avenue, in authority. That does not make autfIentic relics of saints. It is does not greatly Garden qty, N.Y. 11531. $5).1 the rite bad or weak. It was not essentially, a tomb; it is a discommode him. Her studies ha.ve convinced fine, valuable an~ "meaningful" table. . but his Aunt her that there are three kinds: of The altar is a symbol of Christ for that individual and his asAug u s t a's ,culture. "postfigurative, in which and of His unique sacrifice. It sociates. It was a true rite. BISHOP CANO appearance at children learn primarily from But when it was. simply add- IS good that there be but one, the funeral does. their forbears; co·figurative, i 'in ed on to other rites, it could therefore. Other minor altars which both children and ad4lts Augusta is 75, "well have lost its original great should be "few in number. In ~ -'worth. red - h air ed, learn from their peers; and prenew churches they should be a woman of the world. She has figurative, in which adults le*rn The individual rites, things, placed in chapels' somewhat not seen Henry since the day of also from their <:hildren," The persons associated with the litur- separated from the nave," (No. 267). . his baptism. first twq are well lmown, but the WASHINGTON (NC) - The gy have now undergone a careNow, re-entering his life, she third is entirely new. '; To wash one's hands is traful scrutiny. ,That which conGolconda movement of priests proceeds to change it drastically.' . Within a. single generation for social reforms in Columbia tributes to true liturgy has been ditional. But the truth of the She has traveled the world over, there have been revolution~ry is opposing. the coming presi- retained; some discarded rites sigl1 is, diminished if, as in the and her journeying is not· yet changes in scienc,e, technology, dential elections there because have been restored; newer rites old Ritus Servandus stated: "the priest is to wash his hands, Le.. done. She induces the stay-at- rapid travel, insta~lt communi~a the people have no reil! freedom have been coined. the extremities of his thumb and home Henry to come along. tion, medicine, agriculture, etc., of choice and are being forced Orderliness I Henry's travels are more than etc. Great care has been exercised index finger." to follow party discipline, ac"All men are ,equally imri- cording to Bishop Gerardo Val- to so arrange the various rites geographical. He had supposed The chant of the Introit achis own family and his own grants into the new era," unpre- enda Cano. that they are more natural and coinpanying the procession con, background to be prosaic and pared "by 'our understanding I of tains the verses of a psalm, the "The arrangement between the teach all participants not only Glory be to the Father, and a thoroughly respectable. Bit by the past, our interpretations I of the jewel value of individual bit, as he explores them under on-going experience, or Qur t,wo major parties to alternate in rites but the effective whole cel- repeat of the antyphon. But if the sardonic guidance of Aunt expectations of the future * >I< (, power does not have the sup- ebration. there is no chant, this structure Augusta, they prove to be a Most children are unable! to port of the people at large," . A greetjng at the beginl1ing becomes artificial and losses all country he had never known learn from parents and eld~rs he claimed. That arrangement of the Mass is fine. But when its meaning. I~ is enough, thereonly strengthens the present alfore, to read the antyphon only and more exotic than he could they will never resemble."· , liance of political and economic it is buried among the prayers ·-once. have guessed. Suggests Way Out at the foot of the' altar or' said power, he added. The chanting of the Offertory Then there are' his travels into , To the young, the past is un'inas the priest walks to the altar antyphon is destined to create A majority coalition of Liber- it loses its meaning. the amoral byways of Aunt Au- 'telligible and a failure and the gusta's ~ilieu.. He, .all caution future unguessabh~ bu't men~c als and Conservatives, called the Now, it shall be the first an atmosphere of happiness and and propriety, ~s at first sh.ocked ing. "They are ready to make National Front, was formed in words of the priest as soon as generosity during the bringing ~y the successlO~ of men I.n. ~er way for something new by', a 1957 to put an end to' the vio- . he reaches, his place of presi- of the gifts. Its words, of themhfe and by the Illegal activities kind of social bUlldozing - like lence that had characterized the dence and turns toward the selvE\s, are rather insignificantin reference to the entrance and by v.:hich she keeps herself in the bulldozing in which every political life of Colombia. The people. antyphon which luxu~les. But gradu~lly he comes tree and feature of the landscape Front has alternated between a The announcements' do much communion to 1.I~e her as~ocI~tes and ,to is destroyed to make way for ~ Liberal and a Conservative as its for the efficient running of a have been revised to assure presidential candidate since that parish but most often they do their nourishment value for piparticipate happily m her crook- new community," I ed schemes. They rebel against their elders time, and this year a Conser- not even closely explain the ety. If it is not sung, therefore, it is omitted. Mechanical, Monotonous because these still. retain privi- vative, Misael Pastrana Borrero, Gospel. To leave them for the Repetition, of itself, does not is the candidate. A~! the end of his peregrinalege and power, but are unable ,faithful to read by themselves Bishop Cano claimed also that is often taking a dangerous assure greater value. It is normal tions (or at least of as many of to give any effective guidartce to repeat an", acclamation or a them as are here recorded), he as to the utterly unknown fut~re even if the Front';; candidate' of- chance. supplication: Sanctus, Kyrie, but regards himself not as a man into which every one is heading. ficially wins, he will still Il:!ck Now, they will be a remind- not a declaration and especially who has abandoned former A way out is suggested Iby popular support because tjle, er to the people just before not a, declaration of humility. It standards, but as an ex-prisoner', Miss Mead. She believes that we Frc;mt "is imposing its candidate they are dismissed, the Mass ac- is therefore more truthful to say who has been' freed of, former are approaching a new cultJre. ' on the people in spite' of the tually being over. Just like you once alone "0 Lord, I am not shackles. "I call this new style prefigura- fact that its leaders know that do to a friend just as he leaves worthy .. ," There are some clever comic tive, because in thi.s new culture a more mature electorate is your house, "Don't forget, Joe, To repeat or overchange with episodes in this lightweight it will be the child-and not the clamoring for a free, conscien- next Thursday, 2 o'clock," symbolism risks hiding the truth piece. But after only a few chap- parent and grandparent that rep- tious vote." The prayer for peace is an ters one is under no uncertainty resents what is to come." i important preliminary to the re- and the visibility of the sign and as to what the issue is going to This reviewer, for one, fiqds ception of Holy Communion. But often renders them artificial. Brazil Trains Guard be. Mr. Greene is skillful in Dr. Mead persuasive in her de-' it must ,not be be some theoreti- Therefore, many of the genu:;!:etching odd characters and lineation of types of culture familcal,peace or some general hope- flexions and signs of the cross have been reduced. ' bizarre settings, but the story iar from the past, but rhetorital To Protect Indians ful prayer. Multiplied signs finish by sigBELO HORIZONTE (NC)-The itself is thin and transparent. and exhortatory, rather than exNow, it will form the indisMuch of the familiar Greene act, in what she says of a new first all-Indian guard group, pensable relationship that must nifying nothing, says' the noted formed to protect Amazon exist before we break and eat liturgist A.M.' Rogues, just as paraphernalia is 'trotted out in cult\lre.· tribesmen from white settlers, bread together. "If one remem- there is a risk of accomplishing these pages: the grotesque i has completed training here. The· bers that he has something them mechanically. St. Thomas dreams, the scene in a lavatory, La.yman· Inst~alled I action came in the wake, of wrong in his relationship with Aquinas explained that most of the scene at a crematorium, the I l worldwide charges of mass mur- his brother, let him leave his the signs of the cross, in the naughty words, the wry remarks As University Head ders committed against Brazil's sacrifice. Fix things with his Canon of the Mass were remindabout things Catholic (even, can PONCE (NC) -The fl'rst la1yIndians. you believe it, some joltes about brothers. Then return and offer ers of the Passion and Resurrection of Christ; the words ,of the monsignors). All this is familiar, man and Puerto Rican nam'ed Although the training, spon- the sacrifice," warned Our Lord. institution, the people's acclamapredictable, mechanical, and president of Puerto Rican Catho- sored by the National Indian The expression of peace - a monotonous. lic University in its 23-year his- Foundnation, began long before handshake in the U.S.-may be tion, the priestly prayer of the Culture, Commitment tory was installed here in colbr- the genocide charges reached embarassing for some. But truly, Amnesis are much clearer reFew indeed are the evidences ful ceremonies at St. Mary, the wide circulation, the graduation if there is someone in the church minders. of the keen Greene eye, such Queen church. of 24 Indians into the nucleus of with whom one cannot shake as "The waves were continually Gov. Luis A. Ferre, a member a protective force was well pub- hands, can one easily approach pulled' up along the beach as of the university board, and licized 'and has tended to give the Communion table? though someone were making a prominent Puerto Rican eduda- crederice to the charges. ,Truthful Signs tors watched as Archbishop Luis The host is made of bread. It ONE STOP Aponte of San Juan, board chafrJulius Carinal Doepfner of is therefore important that it Sense of Realism' SHOPPING CENTER :man, invested Dr. Francisco Jose Munich was among European appear as bread. "The nature of leaders who requested an inves- the sign demands that the maI think a sense of humor is .Carreras, 37, as sixth rector. I «) Television _ Grocery The university was founded tigation of the charges of geno· terial for the eucharistic celethe emotional equivalent of a - Appliances ~ Fruniture sense of realism. One should not in 1947 by former Bishop James cide in Brazil and other coun- bration appeal as actual food. 104 Allen St., New Bedford take everything seriously, and E. McManus of Ponce, now llll tries. German Cathlic mission- The eucharistic bread, even everybody takes some things auxiliary to Terence Cardirial aries working in South America though unleavened, should there997·9354 seriously. -Maccoby Cooke of New YOI'll<. ! partially supported the charges. fore be made in such a way that
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Greene's la1t~st Thin, Transparent 51'ory
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.• Feb. 19, 1970
SCHOOLBOY SPORTS IN THE DIOCESE
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: ~ Ice Hockey Becoming MajorCape Winter Competition
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By PETER J. BARTEK Norton High Coach
Southeastern Massachusetts annually sends strong contingents to the Massachusetts secondary schoolboy basketball' tournament and this year the area will again be well represented. However, while the Tech is in progress, another schoolboy tournament will may come true. Meanwhile, Fall be the focal point of interest Ri~er:and ~t!I~~oro are considermg the feaslbdlty of constructf or many Grea t er Bos ton ing ice rinks. sports enthusiasts. But, to Until that time, the minibe sure, that tourney, the State schoolboy hockey championships will receive very little attention in ,.the southern section of the C~mmonwealth.
If everything goes according to plan, however, it will not be too long before this area is also send.ing ~trong representation to the Ice rmk tQurncy. When the . " time' 'arrives the representative will undoubtedly come from, of all places, Cape Cod. Presently, only four high schools within the diocesan territorial limits offer hockey on a competitive basis. The schools, all Capeway Conference clubs, are Lawrence High of Falmouth, Dennis - Yarmouth Regional, Bourne and Barnstable. The teams have their own league which, hopefully, will be expanded to include all Capeway Conference schools. If the proposed New Bedford skating rink becomes a reality, then the wish
league will continue to function as a phase of the Cape hockey program that includes both prehigh, school and post-graduate leagues. The youth hockey program is divided into two units the Pee Wee and Bantam DiVisions'. In .the Pee Wee group, there are' six clubs, in the Bantam four teams battle for division h~nors. WHen the schoolboys are not skating, both the Falmouth ice arena and the Kennedy Memorial rink in Hyannis are being used by the clubs in the Cape Cod Amateur Hockey League. With a program so well defined, the forecast for a State hockey championship is encouraging. Hopefully, in the not too distant future, hockey will be played from the Attleboros to Cape Cod, and, Southeastern Massachusetts will be sending strong clubs to both state tour. naments-basketball and hockey.
Hoopsters Ready for Tech Tourney The hoop season is rapidly drawing to a close with only a few scheduled games remaining. Lawrence High of Falmouth has won the Capeway Conference Championship, Durfee High of Fall River is the Bristol County titlist and Case High of Swansea is home free in the Narragansett League pennant race. All are expected to rate with the best in {heir respective classes in the Tech tourney. The only championship that has not yet been decided is the Cape & Island League which will go to the victor of the Nauset-Harwich game slated this week. However, before the Cape schools leave for the Boston classic, the leaders in both the Capeway Conference and the Cape & Island circuit will meet ir. the Principals' Tournament to determine who reigns supreme on the Cape.
At this writing, it is impossible to determine exactly who the participants in the tourney will be, but the consensus is that Lawrence High of Falmouth is the team to beat. 0 Coach Ray Charron's Clippers; the sole qualifier to date, will have to wait to find out who they play in opening round competition. Their opponent will probably be the loser of the Nauset-Harwich tilt. The C & I contest loser will have to stave off a rally by third place Martha's Vineyard, now in third place, in order to compete in the tourney. In the larger school league, Barnstable was engaged in a neck-and-neck fight for second place with Dennis-Yarmouth. The campaign ended in a deadlock. The teams will meet in a play-off to determine which will go to the Principals' Tournament.
Holy Family in Lawr.ence Play-Off
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Ed Casey of New Bedford
Seeks Golden Gloves Heavyweight Title Won Fight With 'Best Punch, I .Bver Threw'
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It was just a year ago this month tha t Ed Casey graced the sports page of The Anchor. It was Golden Gloves tournament time, and the New Bedford heavyweight had
something to prove. He promised he'd win the Southern New England championship and earn a berth in the New England Championships. "I really believe I can win the New England heavyweight weight Championship trophy lay title this year," said Casey shuttered on the ring floor of Lowell's Memorial Auditorium, in his usual optimistic tone. the result of a hard right by A championship would more, Lenny West of Albany, N. Y. than prove his point. . Since he was a ninth grade student at Keith Junior High, he was the center of ridicule and harassment from various outlets. .. His. six-foot. 260-po.und fr.ame. . dwarfed those of his classmates. ' He look~d more like a professional football player than a 14year old freshman in l1igh school. "Everyone thought I'd be a good " football player," recalled the likable New Bedford native. But Ed didn't like the grid game. ."".f When his uncles began to ridi- ". cule him, Casey decided to give it a try. "I worked hard at it but I
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Casey was dejected by the setback but vowed to "win it all" next year. Last May, Casey reported to Fort nix, N.J. for the six-month army stint. When .he obtained his release from active duty, he had trimmed down to a svelte 196-pounds. He wasn't out a week, when he already had four days of training in the New Bedford YMCA gym. Ed was training hard for this year's Golden Gloves competition and was eager to climb into Full River's Bank Street Armory ring (site of the competition). Finals Tonight
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Finally, a dejected Ed Casey ED CASEY Casey smashed Lowell champion hung up the gridiron garb. Ben Dragoli into submission with a hard right to the jaw during Lost In Finals The harassment raged on, es- New England heavyweight title the final· qualifying night last pecially from his uncles. It was fight. The victory earned Ed a month. "It was the best punch then that Casey knew he had a trip to Lowell to compete in the I ever threw," said the defendpoint to prove. . New England finals. ing champ, who later revealed . "I had to prove to them I There, he wasn't as fortunate. the punch had broken Dragoli's wasn't a coward," recalls Ed. It His cherished dreams of win- jaw. was then that he took up the hing the Rocky Marciano heavyThe finals are scheduled for fight game. Feb. 19 and, if successful, Ed He trained hard to get in Judge Finds Priests, will be Lowell bound again. shape and in a matter of months Casey is the son of Mr. and he was down to 208 pounds. Former Nun Guilty Mrs. Irving F. Casey of 7 FrankIn the Spring of 1968 he was WASHINGTON (NC) _ The lin Street and is a member of a member of the New Bedford government's case against the / Our H' Lady of Purgatory Parish. boxing team that won the trophy D. C. Nine, charged with breakIS younger sister Joan is a stuat the New England Golden ing into Dow Chemical Corpora- dent at New Bedford High. Gloves Championships in Lowell. tion offices here last March, proA 1968 graduate of New BedCasey made it to the finals be- ceeded at a fast pace as two of ford High School, Ed once enfore losing a decision to Dave the nine defendants were found tertained ideas of attending Foley of the host city. guilty. Bristol Community College, but Ed was 8-3-0 in his first full has since decided to concentrate Mrs. Catherine Melville, a foron the New England Heavyyear 0 f competition, but he hoped to improve that record mer Maryknoll nun, and Father weight campionship before fur.h . Bernard Meyer of Cleveland Wit a tItle effort the following were found guilty of willfully thering his education. year. Hl:S almost d' made A it. destroying Dow property in an .••_ erve 10 rmy anti-war demonstration after ~ELECTRICAL Casey realized' his initial goal they pleaded no contest to one when he scored a decision vicContractors tory over Cape Cod behemoth charge against them. Todd Peters in the Southern U. S. District Judge John Pratt declared both of them guilty, saying he based his decision on their pleas and the evidence pro'Innovations Cause duced by the gov.ernment. P'roblems in Crisis He said the evidence showed WASHINGTON (NC)-Concern . them "guilty beyond a reasonhas begun to spread in religious able doubt" of taking part in a circles about the impact of raid of Dow offices last March scientific innovations on the 22 during which equipment, 944 County St. files, papers, and other docuhuman cClndition. New Bedford A recent three-day meeting on ments were destroyed. "Judaism and Christianity View the Technological Future" in Princeton, N. J., made it clear environmental crisis is more than just air, water, noise, and people pollution. . Man's environment, and his physical and spiritual wellbeing, speakers said, are affected by the mere presence of technoA whole yectr of safe-keeping In our vault costs Igical developments in addition to the pollutants caused by them. Just S6 You get complete theft-proof protection
For the past few Winters, In the, race for individual scorGreater New Bedford basketball ing honors, Jay Regan of Dartfans have ·followed Holy Family mouth edged out Ken Dorr of High of New Bedford and Bishop Barnstable and Falmouth's Dave Stang High of Dartmouth, to McDonald for the Capeway ConLawrence for the New England ference title. The Dartmouth sharpshooter Catholic tournament. This year only one diocesan school will be caged 256 points to 254 and 253 entered in the invitational tour- for Dorr and McDonald, respecney. It's Holy Family. tively. However, the Dartmouth Many Stang followers believe youngster participated in only 10 that Coach John O'Brien's Spar- 'league contests compared to 12 tans deserve an invitation based for Dorr and McDonald. Regan 12 games compared to' 230 for on a successful campaign plus finished the campaign with an Fleming. The race in the Narry League past performances at Lawrence, impressive 25.6 point per game but the fact remains Stang has average against his Capeway is almost over with Pete Trow of Conference opponents. Old Rochester leading pack with been by-passed this year. Entering the final week of ac- 467 points in 14 contests. The The Jack Nobrega coached Parochials will be in the Class B tion in the Bristol County Mattapoisett. youngster is folbracket. The second place Narry League, Joe Mills of Bishop lowed by Steve Beausoleil of loop finisher will be out after its Stang has a comfortable lead piman Regional Vocational in second consecutive Catholic o);er Mike Fleming of' Durfee. ' Fall River who has 402 points !"ills has scored 261 pointS in in 13 games. tourney title.
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