02.25.71

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BISHOP REORGANIZES CURIA i~-l

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ANCHOR ,\'1"\''''1",,,/111<,\..,,1 """

Vol. 15, No.8 Price 10(

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Feb. 25, 1971 $4.00 per year -

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Most Rev. James J. Gerrard

Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca

Rev.

Two Vicars .General Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D. Bishop of Fall River, has announced that Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca, pastor Of St. John of God Church in Somerset, will join Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, P.O., Auxiliary to the Bishop of Fall River, as a Vicar' General of the Diocese. Thus for the first

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time in its 67 year-old history, the Diocese will have two Vicars General. Bishop Gerrard was first appointed Vicar General by Most Rev. James L. Connolly, former Bishop of Fall River, in 1951 and was reconfirmed in that Turn to Page Two

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DIOCESE 'OF FALL RIVER

OFFICIAL r

,ASSIGNMENTS

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Vicars General Most Reverend James J. Gerrard, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, as Vicar GeneraL

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Reverend Luiz G. Mendonca, pastor of St. John of God Parish, Somerset, as Vicar General. Chancery Office Reverend Thomas J. Harrington, J.C,L., Vice-Chancellor of the Diocese, as Chancellor. Reverend G~orge E. Harrison; Assistant at St. Mary Parish, Taunton, as Assistant Chancellor and Secretary to the Bishop. Tribunal Reverend Henry T. Munroe, Assistant at Holy N~me Parish, New Bedford, as Officialis. Reverend Thomas J. Harrington, Chancellor of the Diocese, as Defender of the Bond. Reverend Roland Bousquet, Assistant at St. Jacques Par· ish, Taunton, as Notary and Secretary. Diocesan Office for Administration and t'inance Reverend James F, Kenney, Pastor of St. Mary Parish, North Attleboro, as Secretary. Reverend Lucio B. Phillipino, Assistant at Holy Name Parish, New Bedford, as Assistant to the Secretary. All appointments become effective Wednesday, March 3, 1971, with the exception of Bishop Gerrard whose appoint· ment took effect on December 15, 1970.

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Bishop of Fall ~iver

J. Harrington

Rev. George E. Harrison

Aim of Church Offices Concern for Faithful Rev.

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F. Kenney

.Fr.·Ke·n'n'eV1".New Fl n''an'ce OffllCer l

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Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., has today announced the establishment of a Diocesan Office 'for' Administration and Finance with Rev, James F. Kenney as full-time Secretary and Rev. Lucio B. Philippino, assistant pastor of Holy Name Church, New Bedford, as hiS assistant. ,Purpose of the new Office is to coordinate the management of all diocesan financial matters Turn to Page Five

Elementary School Application Days

Most Reverend Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, announced today the reorganization of the Diocesan Curia, the diocesan group of priest-assis~antsto the Bishop who aid him in the administration of his diocese,

acting under his authority ,for the pastoral good of the faithful. The Vatican Council reminded all bishops that

"the diocesan curia should be so organized that it is an appropriate, instrument for the bishop, not only for the administering of the diocese but also for carr,ying out the works of the apostolate." (Decree on the Bishops' Pastoral Office in the Church, Chapt. 2, III, 2, 27.)

Fr. H. Munroe Tribunal Head

It also reminded all members of the curia that they "should realize that they are making a helpful contribution to the pastoral ministry of the Bishop." Among the closest collaboraTurn to Page Four

Fr. O'Donnell ,10 No. Easton

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D.,' has appointed three new officers of the Diocesan Tribunal, the church court. Rev, JIenry T.- Munroe, assistant pastor of Turn to Page Three

Bishop Cronin announced today the transfer of Rev. Joseph F, O'Donnell, pastor of St. Augustine's Church, Vineyard Haven to the Immaculate Conception Church, No. Easton to succeed ,Rev. Leo T. Sullivan who became pastor of Holy Name Church, New Bedford on Feb. 11. His appointment takes effect on March :1. Turn to Page Five

Rev. Henry T. Munroe

Rev. Joseph F. O'Donnell

All the Catholic elementa1'Y schools in the Diocese of Fall Rive1' will 1'eceive applications fo'l' new students and tmnsfe1' students on, Sunday, MU1'ch 7 and Sunday, March .t4. Parents wishing to enroll a child 01' obtain inf01'mation should go to the school of the~' choice on either day between f) A.M. and 3 P.M. For a, child ente'ring school fO'l' the /'in;t time 1Ja1'ents should b1'ing a bi7,th 01' baptis mal ce1,ti/'icate. For t'ransfe1' students pa1'ents should b1'ing a copy of the child's last 1'epOl't cal'd.


THE ·ANCHOR--Diocese of Fall R;ve,-'-ThU.\. Feb. 25; 1

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Lenten Penance'

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AUSPICB MARIA

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DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

OFFICIAL APPOINTMENTS I

Reverend Joseph F. O'Donnell, from Pastor of St. Augustine Parish, Vineyard Haven, to Immaculate Con,ception Parish, North Easton, 'as Pastor. I'

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Appointment effective Wednesday, March 10, Hl71. Reverend James' H. Morse, from Assistant at S1:. Mary's Cathedral, F~il River, to Holy Name Parish, Ne.lr Bedford, as Assistant. ' ,

Vincentians Meet Tuesday Night'

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Appointment effective Wednesday, March 3, 1971.

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l!:====:=====:::::::======::::;:====.J I ' . II TW() . Vi~ars General '. Nam«!d - I! Continued from Page One office by Bishop Cronin on Dec.

BISHOP'S FIRST ORDINATION IN DIOCESE: Bishop 'Cronin with Rev. Michel G. Methot following the ceremony in 'St. Mary's Cathedral on Saturday afternoon whereby' Father Methot pecaine the first priest ord.ained by Bishop Cronin in the Diocese.since his installation on Dec. 16,1970.

U.S. Not on List

rard was named la Domestic: 'Prelate by the lat Pope Pius'

Perm.·ss'.·O·n' to ·Te'n'C'oun''t' r:es' For Communion in Hand

15., 1970, whe'n Bishop Cronin XII with the title of Right Rev- \ .assumed ','Ie~dership of the erend Monsignor., \ ' i Diocese. On Feb. 11, 195.9', the Apos- I Bishop Gerr~rd, born June 9, tolic Delegation in !Washington: 1897 in New Bedford, the son of announced the apP6intment by , the late William and Elizabeth Pope John XXI.JI of Ie then Rt. I I VATICAN CIlY (NC) - Ten Livesey, graduated from Holy Rev. Msgr. James J. Gerrard as I countries ~ not including the .,Family High School, New Bed- Titular Bishop of orma and I. United States - have received ford and,~,rtlade his college Auxiliary Bishop to Most Rev: ! permission to distribute Commustudies iit St. Laurent College, James L. Connoll~. '" , nion, in the hand :from the VatBishop Gerrard as conse- : ican's Congregation for; Divine Montreal, Canada. .' . He 'attended . St. Bernard's crated a bishop by Bishop Con- : Worship. Semin~ry, Rochester, N. Y. where nolly on Mar. 19, 1959. The countries that r~ceived he received his philosophical and Father Mendo1r ca ,permission are South Africa, theological training. . I Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Father M~ndonca, fhe son. of I Germany, Japan, Yugoslavia, the Ordained in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River by Most Rev. the late LUlz G. Mendonca and I Netherlands' and' French SomaliDaniel F. Feehan, second Bishop the late Maria R. AI~ei~a, was \land. of the Diocese, on May 26, 1923, born on Sept. 26, ~9t9 1!1 New ! Father Annibale Bugnini, secBishop Gerrard was assigned to Bedf?rd..A graduat~ of Holy iretary of' t1-i'e congregation, exSacred, Heart Church, Oak FamIly HIgh School, ~:w .Bed- 'plained to NC News that the Bluffs, for the Summer. ford, he attend~d the .,emmary :privilege of Communion in the In October of 1923 he went of Ang~a, Ter~elra, A ores., hand (instead of placing the cont.o St. Patrick's Parish, Fall Ordamed m Mt.\ Carmel· ~ecrated wafer on the tongue of River where he remained as an Church, New Bedford on June the communicant) .will be grant-' ass!stan.t until June 1; 1932 at 10, 1~44 by ~ishop Crssidy, .he ~d "to any bishops' conference , ' whIch time he was named Chan- was fIrst assl~ne.d as la~ asslst- ~equesting it. 'cellor of the Diocese and Sec- a~t t9 Santo ChrISto PfrIsh, Fall ! At their me'eting in Washingretary to the Apostolic Adminis- RIver. Father, M~nd0r.ca also ton, D: C., last. November, the triitor, the late Most Rev. James served as an a~slstanr at 1m- lif. S. bishops voted 115 to 107' E. Cassidy. On the death of maculate ConceptIOn Papsh, ~ew ih favor of asking for such perBishop Feehan, Bishop Gerrard Bedford; and Mt. carmelI ParIsh, mission. This was a. m,ajorit y , con~inued in the dual position New Bedford., ' b,ut not the two-thirdsl majo'rity On Sept. 26, 1962[ Father required. ' to Bishop Cassidy, th~ third Ordinary of ,the" Diocese. f\1endonca~as named adminis: Those who want the change Fro~ July" 1930 'until 1941, trator of Our Lady of Health feel that with Communion in the Bishop Gerrard was also a mem- Parish, Fall River and tWo years h1nd an adult communicant 'will be~ of the Diocesan Matrimonial . later was tr?nsferred t~ St. An- be able to "feed himself" rather TTlbunal. . thony's PaTlsh, East l ljalmouth than "being fed'; as an infant. On April 20, 1939, he was where he served as pastor for Those in favor of preserving the named Rector of. St. Ma~y's two years: . \ " old ~ay argue that there, is not Ca~hedral. Fall R.I\'er and reOn O«t. 27, 1966, Fat~er Men- a! tremendously important or' mamed there untIl transferred donca. was named as pastor of even valuable lesson to be to St. Lawren~e's Church, New St. Michael's Church, F~II River Idrned in "feeding oneself." Fa'ther Bugnini does not take Bedford followmg the death of and. became the successor of Rev. Msgr. John F., McKeon, Archbishop Humberto S.I Medei- sides in' the debate, but does not late pastor of the New Bedford ros, when the former Fall River I Parish. .chancellor ,and pastor left the ( - ' , , Bishop Gerrard also served as Diocese of Fall River to \become f49,e Gi',ee'ts Youth, a member' Of the Diocesan' Board the second Ordinary of the DioSenior ,Citizens of St. Joseph's for the Legion of Decency in cese of Brownsville in ~ex·as.Chbrch, Attleboro, have taken Motio~ Pi~~ures a!ld the. Natio.n~I'" On April 12, . 1969, th~newly over the making and financing OrganIzatIOn for Decency, m named Vicar General was trans- of baptismal rob~s pr~sented to Literature. . . -', ferred to St. John of God \Parish, each new· baby of the parish. On Sept. 6, 1952 BIshop Ger- Somerset, where he is still serv- Cotnments the church bulletin: :"""""""""...."''''''.. '''''''''~'~'~'''~'~~';;'~;''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''",m ..," ing as pastor. ,\. . "Wlhat a beautiful thought" to. Second Class Posla~e Paid al Fall, Riveo. • Tn 1967, Father Mcndon~:a ,vas . hav'e the .oldest parishioners welMass., Published· every Thursday 'at 410 named a member of the Diocesan, corrie the newest parishioners Hi~ho8nd Avenue. Far, River, Mass. 02727. 'I I by Ihe Catholic Press of the Diocese 'of Fall J30ard of Examiners -of the into the world and -' into St. River. Subscription price by mail, postpaid Clergy. Jos~ph's." II'

$4.00 per year.

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The monthly meeting of the Fall River Particular Council, St. Vincent de Paul Society, wiil be hosted by St. Patrick's Conference at 7:30 on Tuesday evening, March 2. ' The evening will open with Mass in the upper church and will be followed by a meeting in the school on Slade Street. Parking facilities are available in the school yard.

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Necrology

. FEB. 27 Rev. Joseph N. Hamel, 1956, FOl:lnder, St. Theresa, New Bedford. Rev. Philip' Gillick, 1874, Founder, St. Mary,' North Attle.' ' , boro. .• MARCH I Rev. James F. Masterson, Al'ter' the Second Vatican 1906, Founder, St. Patrick, SomCouncil, Pope Paul VI granted erset. permission for reception of ComRt. Rev. Peter L.D. Robert,' munion by the laity under both P.R., 1948, Pastor, Notre Dame, species of' bread and wine on Fall River. ' special occasions, such as wedMARCH 2 'dings' or special anniversaries. James J. Brady, 1941, , Rev. Because drinking from a common, cup is repugnant to some Pastor, St. Kilian, 1';Iew Bedford. Rev. Antonio Berube, 1936, persons, a more expeditious manner of distribution has been Pastor, St. Joseph, Attleboro. Rev. Tarcisius Dreesen, SS.CC., by way of intinction - placing the ·Communion .wafer into the 1952, Mqnastery of Sacred copsecrated wine and then onto Heart, Fairhaven. Rev. Alphonse Gauthier, 1962, the tongue of the communicant. Pastor, Sacred Heart, New Bedford. . Rev.J. Orner Lussier, i970, Pastor, Sacred Heart, No. Attleboro. MARCH 3 Sacred Hearts Academy in,' Rt. Rev.. Timothy P. Sweeney, . Fall River will be the site for LL.D., 1960, Pastor, Holy Name, the fifth il1 a series of lectures New Bedford. . sponsored by the Diocesan Office of Religious Education CCD at 8' o'clock on Thursday evening, March 4. think ,this concession is extraordinary or' revolutionary. "It is a simple case of certain episcopal bodies asking for permission to change a practice, and so permission has' been given," he said.

f'r.Harrington CCO Speaker

DOLAN-SAXON

'Rev': Thomas J. Harrington, Vice ChanCellor of the Diocese of Fall River will be the featured speaker for the evening's enrichment program. His subject: "Law and Authority in the Church Today" should be of special interest to religious educators for whom the program is intended. Father Harrington's lecture will be repeated on Friday morning at the Offiee of Religious . Education, CCD at 446 Highland Avenue, Fall Rver. All involved in religious edu-, cation, both' in schools and at the parochial level are invited to attend. Admission is free.

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Tribunal

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F911 River-Thur.s. Feb. 25, 1971

Continued from Page One Holy Name Churc~, New Bedford, becomes Officialis or chief judge and administrative officer, succeeding Very Rev. William A. Galvin, J.C.D., pastor of Sacred lIeart Church in Taunton. Father Munroe~ill continue to (·xercise his pastoral min!stry at Holy Name. . Rev. Thomas J. Harrington, .. newly-appointed chancellor of the Diocese, continues in the post of Defender of the Bond of Matrimony. Rev. Roland Bousquet, assistant pastor of St. Jacques Church, Taunton, succeeds Father Munroe as Secretary of the Tribunal und Notary. . These appointments are effective Wednesday, March 3. Father Munroe Born Nov. 21, 1928 in Fall River, the son of Kathryn C. Burns Munroe and the late Henry T. Munroe, the new Officialis of the Diocesan Matrimonial Tribunal is a graduate of Monsignor Coyle High School, Taunton. Following two years at Providence College, Father Munroe pursued philosophical and theological courses at St. John's Seminary, Brighton. Ordained on Nov. 30, 1953 in 51.. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River by Bishop Connolly, Father Munroe was assigned on Dec. 10, 1953 to Holy Nam'e Parish, New Bedford. In 1959, he was appointed Notary in the Diocesan Matrimonial Tribunal and on Dec. IS, 1967 was named secretary of the Tribunal. Father Munroe, while serving as Officialis of the Tribunal, will continue to exercise his ministry in the Holy Name' Parish, New Bedford. Father Bousquet Father Bousquet was born Nov. 8, 1927 in Fall River, the son of Ephraim Bousquet and Lillian Bourque Bousquet. Following training at Monsignor Prevost High School, Fall River he attended the Seminaire de Philosophie and' the Grand Seminaire de Montreal. Ordained by Bishop Connolly on May 22, 1954 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, he was assigned to Notre Dame Parish, Fall River. In 1956 he was transferred to St. Joseph, New Bedford and remained there as an assistant until 1969 when he was appointed an assistant at St. Jacques Parish, Taunton. From 1958 to 1969, Father Bousquet served as a member of the New Bedford Family Life Bureau and in 1963 was appointed Advocate in the Diocesan Matrimonial Tribunal. Father Bousquet also serves as a member of the Diocesan Board of Examiners of the Clergy.

Paraguayan Archbishop Boycotts Council of State .Meetings

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Rev. Roland Bousquet

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J LENTEN SEASON OPENS ON NANTUCKET: Rev. James P. Dalzell, pastor of Our Lady of the Isle, Nantucket, marks the forehead of Mrs. Donald Araujo with ashes during the traditionai ceremony on the opening day of Lent. Martin Foley, left and Mrs. Araujo's daughter, Jill, right wait their turn.

.Fr. Harrington Chancellor; Fr. Harrison Assistant Bishop Cronin has named Rev. In . 1969, Father Harrington Thoma~ J. Harrington to be received a Licentiate in Canon Chancellor of the Diocese of Fall law and was appointed as viceRiver, and Rev. George K Har- chancellor of the Diocese of rison to be Assistant Chancellor Fall River anqvEpiscopal Secre" · tary to Bishop ·Connolly. and Secretary to the Bishop:' On May 14, 1970, he was Father Harrington, who has been serving as Vice Chancellor, named Diocesan Chaplain of the succeeds Rev. Msgr. Reginald Comitium of the Legion of M. Barrette, pastor of -Notre Mary. On Feb. 4 ·of this year, Bishop Dame Church, Fall River, in the office of Chancellor. Father Har- Cronin named Father Harrington rison succeeds Father Harring- a Consultant on Canon Law to ton as assistant in the Chancery. the Diocesan Committee for Divine Worship. Father Harrington Fah~r Harrison Father Harrington, the son of the late Edward J. Harrington The son of Frank P. and and the late Esther F. Yates, was Catherine R. Sweeney Harrison born July 28, 1938 in New · was born Feb. 14, 1~43 in Fall Bedford. , River. A graduate of Monsignor A graduate of Holy Family Coyle High School, Taunton, High School, New Bedford and the newly named assistant chanHoly Cross College, Worcester, cellor and secretary to the the newly appointed Defender Bishop studied the classics and of the Bond in the Tribunal at- philosophy at St. Mary's College tended the Theological College · in Kentucky and theology at St. at Catholic University, Washing- Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. ton. . Ordained on May 18, 1968 by Ordained on May 30, 1964 by Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, Father Cathedral, Fall River, Father Harrison was assigned to St. Harrington was immediately as- Joseph's Parish in Taunton and signed as assistant pastor at St. remained there until reassigned Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis. on Feb. 5, 1970 to St. Mary's On Feb. 2, 1967 he was trans- Parish, also in Taunton. ferred to the Immaculate ConFather Harrison has also ception Parish, Fall River and served' as Taunton Area Cya remained as an assistant there Director, chaplain at Bishop until he was assigned to study Cassidy High School, Taunton; Canon Law at Catholic Uni~er­ and chaplain of Catholic Nurses sity. Guild of the Taunton Area. In addition to parochial asMonsignor Barrette signments, Father Harrington Rev. Msgr. Reginald M. Harserved as Cape Cod Area CYO. rette, whom Father Harrington Director. succeeds as ChanceIlor, is the son of .the late Zenon D. and Ask Independence Rose Corriveau Barrette. Ana· HELSINKI (NC)-The Luther- tive of Notre Dame Parish in an Church in Finland should FaIl River, Msgr. Barrette was have greater independence, but educated at Notre Dame and there should not be complete Prevost Schools, Assumption Church-State separation, a com- Prep and College in Worcester, mittee of the Finnish Lutheran and St. Mary's Seminary in bishops' declared. Turn to Page Eight

ASUNCION (NC)-Archbishop' Ismacl Rolon of Ascuncion said he will not participate in meetings of the Council of State until the regime of Gen. Alfredo Stroessner stops "the open violations of basic human rights" as well as the anti-Church measures in Paraguay. According to the Paraguayan wnstitution, the archbishop of Asuncion is automatically a member of the Council of State. The Paraguayan bishops, however, have repeatedly tried to have this constitutional provision deleted; . Archbishop Rolon's refusal to. attend Council meetings provoked irate replies from 'other members of the Council. Interior Minister Sabino Montanaro, once excommunicated for his part in police repression of priests and nuns as weIl as lay leaders, charged that the archbishop is "violating his oath to honor the constitution." Raul Pena, head of the education ministry, said Archbishop Rolon's note stating his refusal to attend Council meetings is "full of stupid lies." Justice and Labor Minister Saul GonZalez said the note was ,

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part' of the the Church's "sy:;tematic opposition" to signing a concordat with the government. and added the prelate erred in saying his presence in the council would seal his "political dependence" on the regime. Archbishop Rolon took his dath of office for the council at the end of January during a ceremony in the government palace. But the oath, he explained in his note. to the council states that "the laws of God and of the Church are left untouched." "The Church itself has been deprived of her freedom of expression and of communication," the archchbishop said in his note.

Personnel· Bureau NEW DELHf (NC).,-The Indian Bishops' Conference has set up a missionary personnel bureau to make the services of priest or lay volunteers available to the country's missions. The bureau wiIl coIlect offers of service from priests, Brothers, Sisters, seminarians and laymen and put them in touch with missionary bishops or institutions that arc in need of their services.

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IRELAND ITALY ENGLAND FRANCE AUSTRIA May 10th No hurry, no worry; just the most relaxing three weeks you can imagine, with a small group of congenial people like you! ROME alone would be worth the trip. LOURDES, where millions of pilgrims come. VENICE, sparkling storybook town whose 'countless sights you reach by gondola. LONDON and fabled scenes you've read so much about. Charming VIENNA, treasure· laden FLORENCE, leaning tower at PISA. The cheerful, chatty Irish are waiting for you at Dublin, Killarney and Corll, plus a lot of other wonderful places. Everything (even tips) except your lunches, from and to Providence

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Papal Audience r:----------------,

An audience with His . Hohness, Pope Paul VI, . h dId II IS SC e u e , .as we as a comprehenSIve tour ·of Vatican Cit),. These are onlv a few of the high spots! Write or telepho'ne Father McClenahan for your detailed itinerary.

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Rev. William McClenahan. SS.Cc. So"ed H"od, Provindol Hou,e Itelephone I Main Slreel 993-24421 I Fairhaven, Moss. 02719

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TI:iE:ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.. Feb. 25; 1971 'I

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I EPISCOPAL VISITATION: More than 3,0 Holy Crpss parishioners assembled in the parish hall .on Sunday to' gr~et Bishop Cronin following a Mass offered .by the Ordinary in the Falll River Ch~rch. Left: Rev. Felician Plichta, O.F.M., pastor, ,left, is present . I while Bishop ' Cronin con-

,Offices Concern for Faithful I

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verses with Mr. and Mrs. James O'Brien of 57 Cambridge St. Right: Bishop Cronin shakes hands with John Joseph Budzisz of Garfield St. as his twin sisters Jeanne and Janice and his third sister, Karen wait with their mother and father, Mr. and Mrs.' John Budzisz to greet the Bishop. '.

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Continued from Page One iastical notary of the' Diocdc tors with the Bishop is the Vicar who draws up alii written docJGeneral. By vi,rtue of his epis- ments pertaining to the goverrtcopal apP9intment he shares ment of the Diocdse; takescaJie certain powers of jurisdiction of diocesan archi~es, records all with the Eishop of the Diocese' dispensations and assists, the to insure the smooth functioning Bishop in carryink out the day' of diocesan matters. No\,\', for by day affairs of fhe Diocese. the first time in the history of ' ,Reverend George E. Hamthe' Fall River Diocese, there", son, Assistant at St. Mary Paris~, are two Vicars' Gen'eral. Taunton, has been named as AsBishop Cronin" on December sistant Chancellor and Secretary 15, 1970, upon assuming the to the Bishop.. I le~dership of t~eDiocese of Fall Administration-Finance 1 RIver, re-appomted Most ReverBishop Cronin ~asestablishe<l end James J. Gerrard, D.D., a Diocesan Office for AdminisraAuxiliary Bishop of the Diocese tion and Finance t6' assist in th~ and. Pastor of, S1. Lawre.nce management of diocesan finanParish, New Bedford, as VIcar cia.! matters arid ~id parishes ip General.. , t h e ever. gr'owing complexitie's ! Reverend LUlz G. Mendonca, of ,administration'l ~astor of St. John of God Par. 'Rev~rend J(lme F. Kenne~, Ish, Somerset, has also been ap· has resigned as astor of St. pointed Vicar ?eneral of the Di- Mary' Parish,' No.1 Attleboro, ih ocese, effective Wednesday, order to serve full-time as SecrdMarch 3, 1971. tary of this new dffice. ' I Various Competencies·, Appointed' as as1sistant to FJ- • Other offices, of the Diocesan ther Kenney, is R~verend Lucib Curia have been divided so as B.Philippino, Ass~stimt'at Holy' , ' I to make each more competent Name Parish, Ne::r Bedford. I and an even more 'pastoral force Diocesan Tribunal '! l ' in . answering the . needs of the Th e D'IOcesan ' n b una,I th e1 faIthful. These ' offIces were, for- c''hurch co u r,t 'IS maIO . Iy coniI. I mer y c~ncentrated m the Chan- cerned with handling and expe'cery OffIce-but are now autono- diting marriage artd other jud{ m?us aids to the Bishop and cial cases and pfeparing the~ faIthful., for' decision' in the tliocese and i~ Three, separate groups have Rome. 'I' I bee~ organiz~d: the'C~ancery, Reverend 'Henr~ ,T. Monroe', OffIC:,. the .DI(~cesan .OffIce for Assistant at Holy jName Parish', A~mmlstratl~n and Fmance, the New Bedford, has Ibeen appointL Dloces~n T~lbunal. All ,enhance ed Officialis or Chief Judge and the BIshop s pastoral care of Administrative Offiicer. He sucL souls in ref,:rence to day to. day ceeds Very Rev. wi1illiam A. Gal~ orderly busmess, modern fman- vin J.C.D. Pastor of Sacred cial comple>:ities, and recourse to He~rt p~rish, Taunfon. ! church COUltS. He Will be assisted by R'evl .Chancery Office Thomas J. Harrington~ Dioce~ari Appomted Chancellor of the Chancellor, whosel appointment Diocese is Reverend Thomas J. as Defender of the Bond ha~ Ha~rington, /:C.L., who has been heen confirmed h.~ the Bish~pi actmg as VIce Chancel,lor. He and Rev. Roland ~ousquet, succeeds Rev. Msgr. Regmald M. sistant. at St.. .r,al·Ques pariSh;, Darrett,e, Pa.stor of Notre Dame Taunton, who has heen Ililnlcd Parish, Fall River. , Notary ilnd Secretary to the Tri; The Chal1lcellor is the eccles- ' bunal. i

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Transfers Continued from Page One It was also announced that Rev. James H. Morse, assistant al St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River has been transferred to Holy Name Church, New Bedford, to serve as assistant Pilstor. His appointment is effective March 3. Father O'Donnell Born May 24, 1913 in Attleboro, he is the son of Mrs. Margaret Marron O'Donnell and the late Joseph F. O'Donnell. A graduate of Harvard University, Cambridge in the class of 1935, Father O'Donnell attended St. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, N. Y. for philosophical and theological courses. Ordained by Bishop Cassidy . on June 7, 1941 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, the new North Easton pastor was first assigried as an assistant to Corpus Christi Parish. Sandwich. Following four years at the Cape Cod Parish, Father O'Donnell has served as assistant at St. Lawrence's, New Bedford; Sacred Heart, Fall River; Holy Ghost, Attleboro and St. Paul's, Taunton. In May, 1965, he was named administrator of St. Augustine's Parish, Vineyard Haven. Father Morse The son of George I-L anti Grace C. Prendergast Morse. the newly assigned assistant at Holy Name Parish, New' Bedford was born April 26, 1939 in Providence. Upon completing courses in lhe classics at St. Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn., Father Morse entered St. John's Seminary, Brighton where he engaged in philosophical and theological studies. Ordained on May 20, 1967 by Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall Rver, Father Morse has served as an assistant at St. John the .fvangelist Par-_ ish, Attleboro as well as the Cathedral Parish in Fall River. In addition to parochial duties, Father Morse also served as assistant director of the Attleboro Area CYO and as a member of the Religion Department Faculty at Bishop Feehan High School.

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Diocesan Office for Administration and Finance Continued from Page One and to assist parishes in their business dealings with the Diocese. Rev. James of. Kenney .has reo signed as pastor of St. Mary's Parish, No. Attleboro to accept Bishop Cronin's appointment as secretary of the Diocesan Office for Administration and Finance. The son of the late James Kenney and the late Harriet A. Korzeneski was born in Fall River on Jan. 19, 1918. A graduate of Durfee High School Fall River, Father Kenney received his training in the classics at Providence College and then attended St. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, N. Y. and St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. " Rev. Lucio B. lPhillipino Ordained on June 5, 1943 'by Bishop Cassidy in St. Mary's No. Attleboro on July 2, 1969. In addition to parochial duties, Cathedral, Fall River, Father Kenney served as an assistant father Kenney served six years at St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall as CYO Director' and Boy Scout River; St. Louis Parish, Fall Chaplain for the Fall River Area River; and Holy Family Parish, and from 1951 to 1957 he acted Taunton. ,as Diocesan CYO Director and On May 31, 1966 he was ap- Diocesan Boy Scout Chaplain. pointed administrator of- Our On Dec. 4, 1968, Father KenLady of the Assumption Parish" ney was named a Judge in the Osterville and remained there Diocesan Matrimonial Tribunal. until he received his assignment. In addition to a B.A. degree as pastor to St. Mary's Church, from St. Bernard's Seminary,

THE ANCHOR-r-

Father Kenney earned (in M.Ed. degree from Bridgewater State College in 1964. Father IPhillipino Father Phillipino, the son of Mrs. Josephin~ DeSarro Phillipino and the late Louis V. Phil· lipino, was born June 6, 1930 in Taunton. A graduate of Taunton High School, he received a B.S. degree in Biology from Provi· dence College in 1952. Theological studies were undertaken at the Theological Col· lege, Catholic University, Washington and he was granted. an S.T.L. degree in 1960. Ordained on April 2, 1960 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River by Bishop Connolly, the newly appointed assistant to the secretary of the Diocesan Office for Administration 'and Finance, has served as an assistant at Holy Name Parish, New Bedford since his ordination.

Join Association NAIROBI (NC)-A five-nation bishops' group in East Africa has become the 'first R,oman Catholic body to join the World Association of Christian Com· mlinication..

Pr'of. Neiman Joins Glregorian Faculty ROME (NC) - A New Yorkborn Jewish professor is the third non-Catholic scholar to be invited to teach at the Pontifical Gregorian University, the largest Catholic university in Rome specializing in training priests and seminarians. . Prof. David Neiman, 49, normally a ~)rofcssor of Jewish theology and Old Testament literature at Boston College, began a semester of lectures Feb. 15 at the Gregorian on Hebrew literature contemporary with the New Testament. Both the Gregorian and Boston College arc run by the Jesuits. The other non-Catholic scholars who taught at the Gregorian arc Methodist. Minister Robert Nelson, in 1968, and after him Baptist theologian Dale Moody who lectured at the university in 1969. Prof. Neiman was on the faculty of Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., and of the Academy .for Higher Jewish Learning in. New York before joining ,Boston College in 1966.

John . ahoney IS an activator

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. John W. Mahoney docs more than just talk; he acts. As ~anager of our Swansea Office on Route 6, John ~acts as financial consultant to the businesses and individuals of this progressive area. John also provides loans to meet the. needs of the area. . John does more than just act as a bank manager, he helps the community. This parishioner of Holy Name Church is active in charities such! as The United Fund. and Heart Fund. John is also a !member of The Chamber of Commerce Sports and Recreation Committee. o

This Bishop Stang High School graduate· is. devoting his time and energy to benefit others. 0

The Fall River National Bank has many peOple like John W. Mahoney, serving as activators; helping the community. Rev. James H. Morse . The bank that does more than just talk'

Coyle Supper The Fathers' Club of Coyle High School, Taunton, will holtl its ninth annual Communion supper Sunday night, April 4, with William Drummond as fohairman. Aiding in plans arc committees frolll t he Mothers' Club, Alumni Association and Monogram Club.

MAIN OFFICE 55 North Main 51.

SHOPPERS' OFFICE t~:l

South Main 51.

STAFFORD SQUARE tOOl Pleasant 51.

SWANSlEA OIFFICE R(JUt4~

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Thllrs., Feb. 25,' 1971

£l, Swansea

SOUTH END OFFICE tOOl South Main 51.


., P,i:e·sts ' Senate' Backs Bishops

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Feb. 25, 1971

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- The Bishop's Mission

. The Second Vatican Council, in its Dogmatic ,donthe Chuf(;:~, sp.eaks of the Chu~ch in rich *~d meamngful .terms, calling It "a sheepfoJd whose one and . necessary door is Christ," "a tract of land to.1be cultivat~d," ·"the 'dwelling place of God among men." ~ ,

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' I The Constitution teaches, "Christ, the one Me d Jator, established and ceaselessly sustains here on earth Hish61y Churcn', the community of faith, hope and charity, ,a~a visible structure." ! I

The purpose of the Church, the visible structure, i is, as St. Paul teaches in his letter to the Galaltians, to mpld its members into Christ's image until He is formed in them. .

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This work of the Church is carried out Iin• every pl1ce I and through the ages by. the Holy Father, 'l'th~ succes?~r , ,of Peter, to whom Chnst .entrusted 'the ftedmg of tIlS sheep and lambs." The Bishops, too,. have b1een appointed by the Holy Spirit, and are sliccessors of t?e apostles! as pastors of souls. Together with the Pope' ~nd 'under his a'ilthority, "they have been sent to continue tproughout ~he ages the work of Christ, the eternal pastor. 'I' I The work of the Church, then, is always a pastotal work. The mission of the Bishop is a pastoral missi6n. And in a visible structure this work, to b~ carried obt, requires order and competence and always teal for soyls.

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In the present reorganization of the Dipcesan Cur~ia, the Bishop's motive is the desire to carry o,+t his missibn of teachi.ng; of hallowing men in the truth, ofl feeding m~n. He is always the witness of Christ before men, with the ever-present goal that all men may walk '''i~ all goodness and justice and truth." . I .

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mOORinG Rev. John F. Moore, B.A., M.A., M.Ed. SS. Peter &, Paul, Fall Rivei'

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And, as the Council's Decree on the Bisnops' Pastoral Office' points out, the Bish?p ~mi~t also shpw men tH,at "earthly goods and human mstltutlOns structured acco~d­ ing to the plan of God the Creator are also rel~ted to man's salvation and therefore can contribute muc'h to the u1p. building of Christ's Body." , I

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Those who assist the Bishop as members of the DiO!C-

cs~n Curia are working for the salvation ofl men. In t~e paper work that confronts them, through the statistics that they must handle and analyze, throughout fneetings arid discussions, in the midst of problems and difficulties With which they must cope .they see always and ever that their purpose i.s to be the extensions of the Bishop lin his role bf teaching, sanctifying and governing. Great~r service 9f souls is the motivating force. . I

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'The Tragedy of Bernadette Only last year t.he world press pictured Bernadette Devlin asa new national heroine of the Irish people in their long struggle for. religious .and political freedom in Northern Ireland.' From those first days of international enthusiam, few would have projected Miss Devlin from fundamental rights, Bernadette her apparent role. as the . is seeking American funds to build her center for "socialist new Joan of Arc to her research" in Belfast. Under the

actual position as a violent Marxist agitator that she presently represents in all its archaic aspects. What Paisley is to·the extreme' rightists, Miss ,:Devlin now portrays as 'the extreme ·Ieftist revolutionary,

And their contribution in the areas of their compe'There can be little doubt that tence can and does help men to becom~ saihts. Through 'from th-e streets of· BeI"fast to their efforts men know that the Church is intbrested in all· the halls of Parliament, her gift as~ec~s' of life, the better to serve them in fhe work 'of Irish' oratory brought BernabnngIng them to God. . I I dette fame and indeed personal

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Thus, the pastelral work of the Church goes on.

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®rhe ANCHOR

OFFiCiAL' NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FhlLL RiVER 1

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weekl~ 'by The Cotholi'c Press of the 'bio~~l of Fall RivJr ,"

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Fall R;V~" M",;~:;':::~ .. 675.nr

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Most Rev: Daniell:>,. Cronin, D.O., S.T.D, ,

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GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERlt-l MANAGER Rev. Msgr. Daniel F. Sholloo, M.A. " Rev: J.ohn P. .,Dr,iscoll'

fortune. However, present Irish events themselves have' unmasked Bernadette for 'just V{hat she' is and while her fellow Irishmen continu'e to oppose the invasion of their country, Bernadette now goes on her own course of lecturing Americans in . t.he philosophy of' international Communism. ,Bernadette Devlin by her own words has aban· donel! her 'fellow Irishmen. While her neighbors' . and friends are fighting for their

very malicious disguise of helping her people in their cause for 'justice, Miss' Devlin commenced her crusade at American expense for her ideal of social struggle. Not being satisfied with her own country's plight, she now rebukes Americans in, their efforts tQ free the working class. She has openly rejected the gov, ernment of this. country and has aspired to the devotional and sincerity of all those who oppose "fascism" 'be it Vietnam or the United States. In other, words, what we' are. presently seeing is 'a political novice mal5ing hay to the expense of her own people and the people of this country. Miss Devlin has used every t.rite phrase, and every obsolete 'thought of the radical left. ShlJ is no heroine to the Irish and she is projecting a false image of the true st.ruggle that exists in. Northern Ireland .

, Good .'Wiu. Among Factions. Necessary The Irish question could be 'settled in a single slrokeof the Pen from 10 Downing Street. It was and is an English problem. Just the very presence of over 7,000 English troops in a land area about the size Of southeastern Massachuetts should indicate the intensity of' the English •_

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position in Northern Ireland, This poor lancl is totally dependent,- socially, economically and politically-on England. In general, the English have had their way for centuries. They have played one faction against the other from politics to the Church; they have divide.d and have thus

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The Fall River Senate of Priests assem.bled f<!r its'l month-. Iy meeting on February 12, 1971 with 19 Senators and the Most Reverend Bishop present. It expressed its concern and hacking for the recent statement hy the Massachusetts Bishops on the question .of abortion -and the possible rela?,alion' of the law in this state. The priests proposed tI~at its representatives recommend to the Massachusetts Council of Churches and 'its Right to Life Committee that a forum be established for. the discussion of all moral princip'les dealing with all phases of human life-its beginning, transmission and termination-from the scientific and theological points of view. The Senate also recommended that the by-laws of the present diocesan pension plan for priests be amended to add three.. priests and a competent professional member of the laity to the ·present pension review board, ,and that the present pension plan be re-evaluated by the- review board. The poll being tAken up throughout the diocese on !he spirituality of the priesthood also received strong endorsement from the priests senate. It encouraged all pri~sts, religious and the. laity to express their sincere opinions so that a true ,evaluation may be forthcoming for, the Bishops' Synod in Rome this Fall.

Judge Blocks New. Anti-Obscenity Law LOS ANGELES (NC)-A U. S. District Court judge here has· blocked the U. S. Post Office from enforcing a new federal law that allows' citizens to' refuse delivery of sexu'ally?riented mail they find offensive. ' The law. which provides that'-' sexually oriented mail must be so labeled and allows persons who do not want such mail to be _listed as such with maile;s, went into effect Feb. 1. Judge E. Avery Crary's action, barring enforcement of the :new .law until a hearing can be held. was 'based 01; the possibility that the law ·"may have a chilling effect upon the exercise of fr~e'­ doms of speech and press." The judge allowed the Post Office, however, to continue compiling lists of those who do not want material they consider offensive.

conquered. Miss Devlin has be- . come an apt tool in this division. In waging her own little private war for the struggle of t!')e masses, she has placed herself outside of the Irish struggle and has joined the forces that will continue to keep Northern Ireland a land divided by injustices, persecution and. violent extr'emism. The bloodshed will not cease,the bombings will not stop or ·the soldiers leave until a basic unity of purpose and good will are restored among the many factions that divide Bernadettes homeland. Miss Devlin presently seems to have little concern to effectively use her _.talents, energies and monies to effect, in· some measure, this peace that her people desperate.Jy desire.


Reviews .Three 'New.. Novels With New England Setting

Opposes Mining In Puerto Rico NEW YOR~ (NC)-Six prot. estant denominations have been asked by an ecumenical factfinding committee to oppose projected copper mining in Puerto Rico. The committee cited "the danger such mining will be to the health and well-being of . the people." Appointed in January by the churches, the committee made its re'port at a briefing session for denominational executives at the Interchurch Center here. "The church, when it is also a corporate stockholder, has a responsibility that its investment further the human concerns of

Mrs. Hattie Boone, a character in Louise Field Cooper's new novel, One Dragon Too Many (Knopf, 501 Franklin Ave., Garden City, N.Y. 11531. $5.95), makes exquisite embroidered miniatures out of pieces of material. What she does with 'a needle is much what her creator does with a slightly lamed by arthritis and pen. The latest Cooper opus feeling the exaction~ of age. How wili they manage? is no; departure from the style and pace of her previous novels. Once again the scene \s Connecticut (this time, a sub· urban town), once again a comedy of manners is played out against a setting of affluence and gentility.

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JOHN

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Celia Mumphrey, an elegant widow of 59, has come to the home of. her son-in·law and daughter to look after her three grandchilden while their parents are on a brief holiday. She means to make herself perfectly comfortable during her stay. But then the other grandmother, Mrs. Boone, comes unexpectedly and uninvitedly on the scene, and a duel between these decidedly different women begins. !'Ms. Mumphrey is determined to oust the interloper; Mrs. Boone resolves "to stay at all costs. Witty Comment

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The contest, deadly if always polite, is most amusingly presented. It takes one inventive turn after another, and the narrative is studded with small gems of observation and witty comment. Louise Field Cooper can be depended upon to offer astute character sketches, dialogue at once plausible and gleaming, and a chuckling sympathetic appreciation of human foibles. In this instance, however, the device which she uses to bring .her story to a climax strikes one as far-fetched, and once it has been introduced, the silken continuity cannot be resumed. Kinds of Love Really rural New England is the locale of May Sarton's novel, Kinds of Love (Norton, 55 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10003. $6.95). It is a longer and more serious' work than One Dragon Too Many. It deals with the community of Willard, a very small town in New Hampshire, soon to celebrate the 200th anniversary of its founding. The Chapmans are a Summer family. Rich Bostonians, they have been lighting here for generations. Thee> present senior members of the family, Cornelius Chapman and his wife Christina, are now about to spend their first Wnter in Willard. They are both about 75. Cornelius has suffered a stroke, is making a slow recovery, is unprccendentedly dependent. Christ ina, as elegant as Mrs. Mumphrey in the Cooper book. is

Extraordinary People The town is, they find, a web in which all kinds of lives meet and are somehow woven together. The people are far from cQmmonplace; they are in fact, quite extraordinary. . For example, Miss Plummer, the librarian, had seemed no more than a joke and a. bore. But there was heroic quality in her, and subtle ifltelligence. The powers of endurance of the permanent residents are exemplified by Ellen Comstock, a contemporary of Christina. Ellen has had a cruelly hard life in her years of marriage to the violent Rufus, now deceased. She has always had to' work for mere sustenance, has never had the opportunity to get away. Two of her ·three children have left Willard, and the one who remains, Nick, causes her constant worry. Leisurely Novel Over the long Winter, COl'nelius and Christina accept their limitations and acquire some wisdom. Where they were strong, they now are relatively weak, and in this weakness they begin to see as never before. What they, and others, draw from Williard is a. kind of tough comfort. From it they' learn the consolations of adversity.' This is a leisurely and seemingly meandering novel, but it never lags, and is is peopled with believ'able and variegated characters of all ages. In their differing propensities and capacities, they convey the many kinds of love to be found in human relations: the first love of the very young, the quiet yet deep love of the very old, the love of a servant for the woman employer she tyrannizes, the love of place, the. love of creatures and beauti,es of nature, and so on. The Pa,ragon John Knowles' novel A Separate Peace, published a decade ago, quickly became a minor classic. It was laid in a boys' preparatory school and depicted the mysterious impact of character on character in the relationship of two of the youngsters. Now, in The Paragon (Random House, 457 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. 10003. $8.95), Mr. Knowles moves on to Yale and writes of two ill-matched roommates. One doubts that the' new work will have anything like the popularity of its predecessor. One of the roommates is Lou· Colfax, an eccentric from a family of eccentrics. He is just back from the Marine Corps, has no money, dresses bizzarely, and is a brilliant daydreamer. The other is Gordon Durant, wealthy, snobbish, imperious, in many ways stupid. There is conflict, and ultimately some measure of mutual understanding and acceptance. But by the time this is achieved, the reader simply does .not care.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River--Thurs. Feb. 25, 1971

NAMED: Msgr. John Stock has been named titular bishop of Pergamum and auxiliary to Archeparch Ambrose Senyshyn of the Ukranian Rite, Philadelphia.

FOr=~

LENT: TRAIN ANUN

Growers Favor

. THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSIOII'I AID TO THE ORliENTAL CHURCH

Labor Unions WASHINGTON (NC) - Jesuit Father Cletus Healy, long-time foe of Cesar Chavez' farm worker unionization efforts, told a national gro'wers association meeting . here . that California field' hands are better off working under' the growers ·than Chavez' union. The Jesuit priest also criticized the U.S. Bishops' Committee on Farm Labor that last Spring successfUlly persuaded the growers and Chavez' United Farm Workers Union (UFWOC) to settle the five-year grape pickers' strike at the bargaining table. Father Healy charged the committee had sided with the farm worker in the dispute. Spokesmen for, the committee, which has' been praised for its fairness by the bishops, have denied similar charges of bias made in the past by other critics. Citing "commendable" wages and "high quality housing" provided by the growers for farm workers, Father Healy said the growers' farm labor system. comes much closer to achieving justice than Chavez' union. Two California growers, who also addressed the gathering, said, however, that the industry had to share. the blame for the farm-labor tensions. They said growers had not always paid adequate wages or pushed for needed social legislation. The time had come, they added; for growers to .accept unions.

The reason is that Mr. Knowles. has kept going off on tangents, perpetrating improbabilities, and failing, to establisq a core of coherence.

SHARE Have you ever wished your family had a nun? FOREVER This Lent you can have a 'nun of your own'IN THE ·and share forever in all the good she does.... GOOD Who is she? A healthy wholesome, penniless SHE girl in her teens or early twenties, she dreams DOES of the day she can bring God's love to lepers, orphans, the aging. . . . Help her become a Sister? To pay all her expenses this year and next she needs only $12.50 a month ($150 a year, $300 altoge~her). She'll write you to express her thanks, and she'll pray for you at daily Mass. In just two years you'll have a 'Sister of your own' ... We'll send you her name on receipt of your first Lenten gift. (All gifts are tax-deductible, of course, in the U.S.A.) As long as she lives you'll know you are helping the pitiable people she cares for.... Please' write us today so she can begin her training. She prays some· one will help.

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HOW Look at the nearest $10 bill. What is it actually TO worth? Only what it will buy. These days, it will MAKE hardly buy enough to feed a family for two days. $10 In the Holy Land, it will feed a poor refugee . S·T·R·E-ToC-H family for an entire month. The Holy Father asks your help for the refugees, more'than half of them children. Your money multiplies-as you give it away.

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WHILE YOU CAN

WALTER' GERAGHTY

Stringless bequests are used where the Holy Father says they're needed most.

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The Masses you arrange for y/ill'be offered by priests who receive no other income.

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Dear ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $ Monsignor Nolan: FOR Please return coupon with your offering CATHOLIC

NAME STREET· CITy NEAR

_ STATE _ _ ZIP COOE

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EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

NEAR EAST MISSIONS

Roofing' Contractor

STEEPLE JACK WORK

A Specialty 488 Cumberland Street North Attleboro, Mass.

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Tell your lawyer, when you discuss your will, our legal title is: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION.

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the church," the committee said The six· denominations hold a total of 203,000 shares in American Metal Climax and Kennecott Copper, two large corporations that arc planning to begin mining of copper in Puerto Rico. The committee, composed of representatives from the American Baptist Convention, the Episcopal Church, the United Church of Christ, the United Methodist Church, the Lutheran Church in America, and the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., has left the formulation of specific protest actions up to the individual denominations.

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TERENCE CARDINAL COOKE, President MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National Secretary Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840


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TH~, A."lCHOR-t?iocese·.of .Fall River-:-Thur F~,b. 25" 1~71

,Bish,ops'. To Concentrate on Synod

Says Pre-Cut Sewin~ Kits\" Not Worth t,he, Mon,ey

WASHINGTON (NC)-For the first time since they formed J their natioinal episcopal conference in 1966, the natibn's Cath"Knits are news". does the swkater olic bishops are devoting their but very -?ften ~he ~a~ri~. indust,ry is what'S:. being tal~rd entire', meeting:tliis Spring to one topic-the 1971 Synod of Bishabout for It'S here th(,l.,t kmtsa~,e. reaJly.,becomimg .the thu1g· ops in Rome. Polyester ,doubleknit is, heading many oth~r, fabrics f,or ,The National Conference of Sprin'g '71 ',and predictions .,.-, ':: ': . Catholic Bishops announced here are that in:' five years. knit- :sewe~ 10 order t?1 assemble thi se that its April 27-29 meeting in .'. 'f 'kits IOtO a fashH!Jnable garment. ted fabriCS wIll account or There is no mJgic formula !nDetroit will concentrate ~xclu­ more t~an 70 per cent of all c1uded in these I packages 't~at s,ively on synod preparations, the the fabncs ,on the' market and " suddenly makes a seamstress out synod's two planned topics of that 50 per cent. of all such fab- of a novice, in faet any ,no-dce the priesthood and world justice, rics will 'be polyester knits. that tackles one cif these prbjand election of four American bishops as delegates to the Synliitrer: ::::::::::I'r:'%(#"""""""""", ,ects is going 'to end' up with! a od. finished product that's unfit ito. Rev. Msgr. R. M. Barrette Pope Paul called his first inwear (unless she has a guardian ternational synod in 1967, asangel sitting on her shouldJrs , By sembled a synoe! again in 1969, guiding' her hands - and these and set next Sept. 30 for the are not included With the kits). MARILYN start of another month-long ,synThe only thing Ithat these kits Continued from Page Three do is to package a pre-cut outfit Baltimore. He was ordained od. RODERICK for a woman viho already lis June 15, 1946, by the late BishThe National Catholic Office quite capable of ~ewing her own op Cassidy and served as assist- for Information, press spokesclothes. These kits give her I a in St. Stephen's Parish, Attle- man for the NCCB and the U.S. shortcut on the cutting end. boro" and St. ,Roch's' Parish, Catholic Conference, said the More and more knits are being However, it has been my pJrFall River. He has served as decision to take up nothing but seen in the home sewing market sonal experience that cutting I a Notary and Secretary of the synod matters was reached by because although they are priced garment is one of the easiest Tribunal and, since 1967, as the administrative bodies of both in the upper' brackets they are things in the whd,le operation. i ' Vice Officialis. He became Chan- ' conferences at a three-day me'eteasy to work with and the finAlso, when outfits come pack- cellor' on Jan. 16, 1967. He was ing in Washington in mid-Febished g'arments are a joy to weCir. aged they limit choice of coldr, named a Domestic Prelate on ruary. ' I I "Women are becoming more style, material and, your oV{n March 21, -I 968, and pastor of The 288 bishops of the counaware that when they sew a creativity all to Iskip just OJ:le Notre Dame Church on March try meet each November in garment they P,ut a 'great deal of step. Is it really worth it? It will 3, 1970. He is Vice Chairman Washington and each April else· I I their time a~d creativity into it, soon be up to you the customer of th~ Commissiori for' Divine where, taking up a varied agentherefore only the best of fab- to decide. Rememher, to an ek- Worship. da of NCCB and USCC business. ric is worth working on," says pert seamstress Ithere are rio, Mrs. George' Farrington, whose shortcuts. I name is synonymous with sewInstant Sewing?, ' I ,Ing in the Fall River. area. Mrs. In an age where we dec~y Farrington, who run~ a creative rushing, why must we get eveny sewing school· and also sells de- thing down to an linstant--eve~y seigners' fabrics, added that as thing from mashed potatoes to . 'I ", a woman becQmes more confi- coffee, and now sewing. Sewing dent of ,her sewing ability she is an, area where! one can fj~d turns away fr'om the cheap fab- satisfaction not only in workpresent, rics that waste her time and manship but 'in I c~e~tivity d" ,j goes toward the better fabrics, well. that give her a finished product Jiffy patterns a~e on the ma}to be proud of. ket and in many cases the~1 serve their purpose' well but if - featuring Sewing Kits , something is wotth doing itls While discoursing on home sewing, it's a good time to men- worth doing well Jnd slowly, es, , tion the kits that are flooding pecially in the areJ of sewing. I Conserving erihgy is fine the home 1:ewing market. These fini~hed produdt kits are packaged and pre-cut when the doesn't show it but even the e~­ so that all the homemaker has to' Guest do is get busy at that little old ·perts are finding that the packaged sewing kits Iare misreprJsewing machine. senting what the actual finishetl ' What the manufacturers PA1rRICIA CAHill ! (conveniently) forgot to mention product will be. is that one still has to be a

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The Detroit meeting, however, will not involve USCC matters but will function instead as a , plc;nary 'meeting" of lhe NCCB alone, the, information' office said. NCCB' regional meetings will first be held in II geographic areas of the United State,s to discu~s questions. abo,ut the priesthood. Priests, nuns' and laity will take part in t~ose meetings, and written reports from each region will be 'included on the agenda for the NCCB plenary meeting in Detroit. . Bishop Joseph L. Bernardin, general secretary of the NCCB, has mailed the bishops arioutline of topics to help them plan their regional meeting. The outline is in two sections, one on doctrinal aspects' of the priesthood and the other on current issues about the prresthood. Specific topics include the relationships between the ministry of the priest and poverty, celibacy, community role, laity, and the local bishop. I

Plan Secretariat

HONG KONG (NC)-The cen'tral committee of the Asian ,Bishops' Conference will hold its first meeting ~arch 18·20 here to set up machinery for t11e conference's general secretariat.

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ANNAPOLIS (NjC) -, PossibleStresses Development' options for aid to Marylarid'~ NEW DELHI (NC)-Develop-, nonpublic schools ~a~e increased ment projects costing more than here with the introduction of two $500,000 . were financied in the new tax bills in thb state legisl~. past year by India Caritas, a ture. ,branch of the inte~natioi1al Cath-' State Sen. Edward To Hall olic relief agency Caritas Inter(Rep.) proposed a Itax refund tb ' nationalis. parents with children at nonpublThe 1970 annual report by 'the Iic schools. Hall's bill would all., eight-year-old group showed an Iowa' flat maximhin refund 'of additional $40,000 was spent 'in .$200 for the first dhild and $100 disaster relief. for each additiona1[ child, regardll Economic welfare projects less of income level. . sponsored by the Church group ~ -, I,' , Meanwhile, 'another Republi, included irrigation and drinking can legislator RObett E. Latshawl \vater project costing' more I than $40,000, distribution of Jr., introduced his bill in the - agriculture machinery, tractors Maryland House o~ Delegates 'and seeds valued at $45,000 and allow parents, of nonpublici school chiiaren' tak exemption~ Jiol,lltry and animal' husbandry for educatiomilcosts. ' " ',,! , pr'ojects costing $27,000:' , I 'Also in' 1H70, the organization -'- qov.~M,arvin :.M~ndel's ])cmoi 'imported gifts, from similar cratic administration has already Church groups in foreign c?un- . ',b~9.n ,stu,dYing~'tul,t.i~n vo~ch?~, .. tries that included nin'e: ambul- ',~l,!n . p~op,osed. ' by j a ,sI?e~lallY'T ' .. ances. 1,818 bales '~( 'c1othing appointed ~OIl)in!ss1ion to StudYI . , 'and ,a large quantity of hospital ~tate Aid to :Non1Ub1iC ' Educa-i 'equipment. tlOn.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--:Thurs. Feb: 25. 1971

Mom's Horosco.pe Accurate In Every Last Detail

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The age of Aquarius has started a new enthusiqs"m" for horoscopes. Our diocesan paper thought this merited a full page article covering the history and morality of astrology. It explained how the findings are established," The report concluded with ' a sample-a complete run- ical mentality." That one is abdown on one particular date. Oddly, they had selected my birthday. I couldn't resist comp;u'ing my horoscope to my l i f e . , 路 , "A conservative but, determined nature,", it stated.' I always select dark solid colors for slacks, even when fashion dictates wild prints. I generally adL::::'::.:::::::::~':::::::(::::::;':C~j"

By

MARY CARSON

just to a new clothing trend about the time it goes out of style ... then feel committed to it until the clothes wear out. "Strong sense of values." I did find the bed sheets in the supermarket a nickel cheaper than any place else. And by buying bread late Saturday afternoon, you can get it for halfprice. And the sneakers that cost twice as much, last three times as long as the "bargains." "The ability to build." There was that 100-foot cement wall we built in the garden. And look nt the size of my family! " ... to sustain." If necessary, I can make one week's groceries last 10 days. "... to endure." I've stayed with this group for 16 years, but I wonder if I'm confusing inertia with endurance. "Somewhat fanatical ideas." I keep expecting my children to &et along with each other. Things to Say "Outspoken, highly independent personality." With eight children in the house. I generally have a few things to say about untidy rooms, unfinished chores, and unreported trips, to anywhere. I even cling to that outmoded idea that just because I'm the mother. I have the right to censor their selection of TV programs. "Fitfully enthusiastic." My en路 thusiasm certainly comes in spurts: On odd occasions I get all fired up about house cleaning, and it generally finishes up rather fitful. "Buoyant." I float pretty well. "Easily swayed by environment." When I consider living with these kids, I'm not only swayed, Lalso feel a little faint. "Many short journeys but. dis: like for some." Those trips to the supermarket-I hate them. "Studious, inquisitive and log: .

Queen's Daughters Rev. John F. Moore, Anchor columnist and curate at SS. Peter and Paul parish, Fall I{iver, will address the Queen's Daughters Monday night, March I at Sacred Heart church auditorium, Taunton.

solutely correct. I 'study the mess" in my kitchen, ask whose "day" it is, and reach the logical conclusion that it is going to take more than the child's sense of responsibility, to 'see that the job gets done. "Witty and humorous method of expression." That's something, of a latent spirit. The wit'ty comeback always ,strikes me about two hours after it 'would have been appropriate. "Will use knowledge profitably." I was a whiz in math in school, which has enabled me to develop "Carson's Law." "The confusion in a household is directly proportional to the square of the number of children." Whether or not it's profitable depends on whether knowing the source of the problem is any aid in the solution.

CCA AREA DIRECTORS MEET WITH BISHOP: The路 mechanics, theme and procedures of the 1971 Catholic Charities Appeal are discussed by area chairmen with Bishop Cronin. Seated: Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, diocesan director; Bishop Cronin, Rev. Edward C. Duffy, New Bedford area. Standing: Rev. John J.,Regan, Cape Cod and Islands area; Rev. Bento R. Fraga, Taunton area; Rev. Roger 1. Gagne, Attleboro areCl.

Still Washing "Success in literary or commercial field." There's this column ... but if it's so successful, BELLEVILLE (NC)-A bishop said 'these arc troublesome times would suffer much." how come I'm still washing my The I1\inois ordinary formerly own dishes, and doing five loads who formerly edited a diocesan when evil forces within and newspaper" said the Catholic without are striving to destroy edited The Messenger, Belleville of laundry every other day? "Frequent cha'nges in employ- press' will defend the Church's the Church as established by diocesan newspaper established ment." After many years of teachings against current (orces Christ: The Catholic press can in 1935. He is a former board and will defend the sacred member of the Catholic Press three babies in ~iapers, there is seeking to destroy the Church. Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste of -teachings, provide the means of Association. He told the people no question about that. "Devoted affections." Still Belleville, in a statement for communication and be an instru- of his diocese:, "There never was Catholic Press Month, tradition- ment for uniting the community a time when The Messenger was love the same man I married. "Love of domestic' life:" I 'ally observe? during February, of Chri'st. Without it the Church more needed:" must, or I'd have quit-or' been fired-long ago. . "Love 'of food." Ah, yes ... especially if it's brought to me and with: the dirty dishes are taken away. "Seeks harmony through family and home." If I can't find it here, I really don't know where to look. "Some disappointment in, life." Whose life has no disappointments? "Amiable attitude." Depends This on who you ask - some Sisters don't think so. silly "Somewhat foolhardy, at times just fully assertive," ,Well, needlessly those same Sisters will agree to '< that! So you see, there really is nothing to this horoscope business. Right?

Catholic Press Defends, Church Teachings

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Oppose Honoring Cardinal's Memory ROME (NC) - The Italian Communist party's official news- ' paper has set off a campaign against a city council ,proposal to name a Rome street after th<.: late Cardinal Francis Spellman of New York. . . The newspaper, L'Unita, commented that it might be more appropriate "to give Cardinal Spellman's name to it bank ~ .rather ,~ than a street" because, according to L'Unita, he Was a -friend of the b,ig bankers~ L'Unita' characterized Cardinal Spellman as, a man '''who enjoyed going to Saigon to bless the green berets"-a ref~rence to " his many Christmastime \::,isits to U. S. armed forces in Vietnam and elsewhere. " The paper also noted that Rome still has not nnm~d a street after Pop'e John XXIII. .

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THE ANCHOR-

Forms Poverty Task Force

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Thurs., Feb. 25, 1971

Pia ns "Apostol ic ' Career' .Center .F,or ' Si.sters· DETROIT (NC) - Creation\. of an Apostolic Career Center for Sisters has been announced here by Cardinal John Dearden of Detroit as an outcome of con·, ferences with the major ~uperi­ ors of Religious orders of women here. The' center, to be associated with'the Archdiocesan Personnel Office, ,which previously was concerned only with lay employes, will seek to find positions befitting Sisters' talents and training. Cardinal Dearden explained that most of those the center expects to serve will be teachers - Sisters and "Brothers -- to' be displaced by closings of many financially - pressed Cat h 0 Ii.c ' schools in June. Auxiliary ·Bishop Thomas J. Gumblet9n of Detroit commented that "many pastors are enthusiastic about the future of Sisters in the pastoral work of the Church. "Sisters are very versatile," he said, "and it is not at all unusual to find Ph.D. holders in their ranks or holders of triple master degrees. Their field of possible parish service is unlimited, both. in conventional and' - post-yatican roles. Many would make ideal pastoral aides."· Traditional positions open to Sisters cited by Bishop Gumbleton' induded' music director, religious education teacher, or program' coordinator, cateehetics trainer, audio-vi~al technician, or even clerk or typist. Parish Functions Less traditional might he careers involving- visits to the sick and the old, 'bringing Holy Com'munion as extraordinary ministers of the Eucharist.' Many Sisters would be qualified, to be' counselors. to individuals and families _on such subjects as , ', .. ,'available hea'lth reso'urCes,' bud-' geting and child development. .They could be tutors, engage in' adult education, extend technica'l assistance to parish wor· ship committees,. train· aColytes and lectors, and perform many other parish functions now largely in the hands of priests. "This does not exclude important 'tasks within the archdiocesan structure,' many .of which already are :filled by Sisters," Bishop Gumbleton said. "And, of 'course,' many of the 25 archdiocesan vicars may wish to open employment to Sisters able to act as resource persons, expediters and managers of the many vicariate programs now existing or coming into existence."

Part- Tilme p'rieslfs' LUSAKA (NC) - The, Roman ,Cathplic Bishops' Con'ference of 'Zambia is considering petitioning the Vatican for permission , to establish a system of "supplementary priests" to relieve the , critical shortage of clergy here. Supplementary priests would be men regularly engaged in secular occupations who, after- training, would bc' ordained to serve as priests on a part-time basis.

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) -Bishop Walter P. KeIlenberg of Rockville Centre has announced formation of a diocesan task force for poverty, race and aIlied problems in Long Island, communities. The, task force, headed' by _ Msgr. Henry J.- Reel, pastor. of St. Aloysius Church ill .~reat' Neck, resulted from recommendations made to the bishop by thc . 'diocesan priests' council. . I'inan'cial support for the task force will come fro,m fundS re'tained 'in the diocese foIlowing last November's Campaign for Human DevelQpment fund raising effort. Local ,dioceses area aIlowed to retain up to 25 per cent, of the total funds coIlected in the campaign. The majority of the money is forwarded to national headquarters for use where Deeded.

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ATTLEBOR~

SCULPTqR: Philip ,Kraczkowski, Attleboro native, is nationally known sculptor. He stamds with life-size bronze busts of J. Edgar Hoover and Lowell Thomas and holds examdies of his Caricatures of American types, shown waiting at bus' stop.

Philip

f~acz,ou:ski,

'Attleboro Farm Boy,'

Attftns N(J~~onal Fame as Sculptor, BY, Marion Curran'"

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,would reach Dean Martin. "It did," Mr. Kraczkowski laughed. "Dean Martin got a message that the' FBI wanted to see him. Since it happened to be the same time that Frank Sinatra was being investigated, Martin appeared promptly at FBI headquarters with his agent and his lawyer! I guess he was delighted to find out the reason for the summons. I received"a long letter of appreciation from him later." Recently, Mr. Kraczkowski has been involved in a completely different type of project. He has been commissioned by the Royaf "Worcester' "Company'of " England to design smaIl pewter figures which will be in a range many people can' afford. Again, his designs wiIl concentrate on Americana, such -as cavalryfi? ures.

you'll ever meet. I couldn't get man -Rockwell and the highly deaway from it, even though I veloped sense of humor or the "I'm Just a formyr farm boy, knew ,I should. sculptor.' ,"I love" doing" them>'" doing what. I Iik~_ ~e'st;", PhiliP: ,"Finally, about three o'clock he admitted, "I sit there and Kraczkowskl, natIOnally known, one, mornfng, I realized that chuckle while I'm working on sculptor, explained to his audi- .what I had felt most :about Mr. them." e.nce. "j\1any of my ~best inspir~Hoove'r. was~ his determination. His celebrity caricatures ~lOns have been 'a: result o! .standI had it! I raced upstairs to my have included one of Jackie mg on Park Street Ipere m At- father and shouted :'Pop! I've Gleason presented last year to Attleboro Farm Boy 'Ueboro, just watching the peo- got J. Edgar Hoover!' Pop re- the Great One at the Comedians' "I'm lucky to be one of those pie.". I. plied calmly, 'O.K., son' go to Golf Classic for the benefit of Speakmg at a meftmg of the bed.' " handicapped children, of which rare people doing what I reaIly Women's Guild of' St. Joseph's Mr. Kraczkowski also did a Gleason was chairman. This like to do," the sculptor explain~hurch, At~leboro, [he warned:~ bronze bust of L.oweIl Thomas, year's .chairman, Jack' Lemmon', ed. "I was brought up in a dairy Yes, perhaps even ~omeof you commissioned by -the 'Explorers' will .receive one-of himself farm here in Attleboro and hated people here .ton,_ !gh1"'~w, iLl.. t.u,rq ,C1u,b. ,': ':It's fascinating dealing' 'abouttp' mour-it an, electric. golf. the {arming. ;In ,grammar school I always loved alI my art classes' out t~, be the subject of my next with. p~ople like .that," ~h~ sculp-, ~<l:r.t-:"'complete with a flat tire! and in high school I took manual work.. \ , . ter said, "talkmg WIth them '. Mr. Kraczkowski has a long 'about, golf, skiing,' and so on. Dean Martin arts. ,When I. finished, my brothlist.?f credits as a ~culptor, in-, LoweIl Thomas, later bought a 'One Mr:' KraczkroWski did last er, who was at Bryant, talked c1udmg the ApoIlo, medals', an- bust himself." 'year "not on commission," he me into going to art school, other one of which he will ' d o ' ' Rhode Island Schooi of Design. Americana Figures said, "I just thought of it .: .. I must admit I'm a drop-out. I to commemorate the recent suecessful' ApoIlo .14 mission; the MedaIlions, plaques, bronze was. of. Dean Martin with a never finished, bU,t I'm a dediCivil War Series,th1e' Kennedy-' busts....,;...ciII· work Mr. ,Kraczkow- golf club 'inone hand and a cated artist and I love it." I ' " glass in the other. I went from Johnson and Johnson-Humphrey ski loves, but he has two favorInauguration Plaque~, and the . ite projects, his' series of Amer- Scottsdale to Los Vegas and , ,~'I've 'had an awful lot of I found that Dean Martin was apI,-!ck," he added. "Many things Pilgrim Heritage Series of medal- icana' figures, and his caricapearing later that month. Knowhappen that you don't expect. , lions. tures. . . 'inghow diffiCult it was to conI believe it was through the Perhaps the work!I of which . The ,Americana fig'ures. are' tact suCh .a personality, lap, Dean Martin incident that I was he is most proud of is a Iife~ bronze statues about 5 inches invited to do the Comedians' size bronze bust ofJ. Edgar'; taiL depicting various. Indians proached a Mr. CampbeIl at FBI Golf Classic caricatures. I was Hoover, commissioneJI by retired i and military, men of ,the West. headquarters there, introducing members of the F.B.!., Mr: Kra- \; "These are collectors~ items and myself as 'the one who did the eve!l invited to play in that I " . bust of The Chief.' Mr. CampbeIl tournament; that's quite a thrill czkowski explain~d hf had three each ti~e I do one I no~ify those assured me that the caricature for an Attleboro farm boy!" sittings with the F.B.f. chieLand . I who., have the coIlect,lOns- and worked for ,the res,t from photo-' 'I they buy the latest., The -"Apagraphs. i'As an exam~le of hOWl che on Horseback" I just finish.: frustrating this work I can some- e~d is nu~ber 108 in the se~ies. , times be," he said, "at the sec- I I m fascmated by the IndIans and sitting, so many !peoPle had and have t~av~ed to Scottsdale, • Savings 'Bank Life Insurance tried to give me ideas of how he ~nd Phoelllx to study' them.' I . should be portrayed,l I lost the : never know w.hen a~ ~nspiratio~' ' • Real Estate Loans feeling of the person. You try I for another figure \YIII occur. • Christmas and Vacation Clubs not to listen and let it affect I The most delightful of Mr. • Savings Accounts ~ou, ~,ut unconsciou~l~ you do Kr~czkowski's creations are his I' cancatures of' famous 'personallisten. . • 5 Convenient Locations "Anyway, I started to d(luh~ l,ities and of unknown but typical what I was cjoing, anc( when YOll' IAmerican' characters. These lat. NEW BEDFORD doubt, your work gets worse," \ter·, made, with colored resin and hc continued. "For three'days, I istanding about 12 inches high, was the most miserable pcrso;, Ishow both t~e influen.ce of Nor-

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THE ANCHOR11 Attleboro Mother of Seven l'fakes 'Colorful, Thurs., Feb. 25, 1971· ParJl§h Parade Bright, ,Happy' ,Vestments for 'Area Priests Named Damien Publicity chairmen of parish or· ganizations are asked to submit

The

news items for this column to The Anchor, P. O. Box 7, ~all River

BY MARION CURRAN

"Colorful. modern. bright and happy." Those were the qualities ST. CASIMIR, Rev. Normand. Boulet of St. JoNEW BEDFORD seph's parish, Attltboro, wanted The Rosary Sodality will spon- for his new vestments-clothing sor a cake sale Saturday and to fit the new spirit and liturgy Sunday. Feb. 27 and 28.· follow- of the Church. ing all Masses. Polish pastries He approached Mrs. Oscar will be featured. Soulard of 28 Rocklawn Ave. in OUR LADY OF PJERPETUAL Attleboro with the problem. She was a natural selection for she HELP, NEW BEDFORD A silent cake sale will feature had been making the baptismal a meeting of Our Lady of Per- robes given to each infant bappetual Help Society. to be held tized at St. Joseph's Church. at 6:30 Sunday night. Feb. 28 This later project has now been in the church hall, with Mrs. taken over by. the Senior Citizens Club of the parish. Helen Bolewi'cke presiding. Although willing to make the Society members will receive corporate Communion with the vestments. Mrs. Soulard was membership of the Holy Name hesitant about what design Society at 5 o'clock Mass Sat- would best fit Father Boulet's urday evening, March 27. A ham intention. "Believe it or not," and bean supper and card party. said Mrs. Soulard, who prefers sponsored by the Holy Name to be called' Renee. "that first Society, will follow in the hall. design was created by an altar The Adam Miewiewicz Society boy, Michael Rocha, who gave of the Polish Roman CathOlic me a little pencil sketch which Union will hold a ham and included the words 'love. joy, and bean supper from 5 to 8 Sa'tur.- peace·... With the sketch, Renee went day night, March 6, at Miekie· wicz Hall, 2031 Purchase Street. about composing her design. Bright colors were essential. so New Bedford. she chose gold braid, and blue. HOLY NAME, red and gold Jelt for the letters. In the center she placed a twoFALL RIVER A concelebrated Mass will toned blue peace symbol. Only Three Weeks take place at 7 Sunday night. Feb. 28 in the parish school. RegTowards the end of June. istrations will be accepted for Renee started. The mother of "Focus on Hope" and "A Short seven children, she had ,to work Course on the Bible." which be· at night. "I was very afraid of gin Sunday, March 7. Mor'e in· making mistakes at first," she formation is available from admits. "It was hot work beSister Evel,pl'! {{og,ers at the rec-. , cause I had to have bright lights. tory. • to do' such....finestitching. If took The CYO will sponsor a \;lus 'me almost two months to finish trip to a Boslon' Celtics game to- that first vestment for F~ther morrow night. The next regular Boulet. Now it takes me only CYO meeting is set for Monday three weeks,' working on an avnight, March I. erage of an hour or so a day. And this time of year, with the OUR LADY OF ANGELS, children in school. I'm not limFALL RIVER A 'Family Mission in English ited to working at night." It didn't take long for Renee's will be preached the week of fame to spread. A week after March 14 through 20 by Rev. Father Boulet wore his vestCharles J. Dunn. S.J., rector of !llents for t,he first time. he Bishop Connolly High School. A CYO fashion show will take , called Mrs.' Soulard and asked' place at 6:30 Wednesday night, .if he 'could' bring a'round three March 10 at the Coachm'en 'classmates who were' visiting him. Soon she had agreed to restaurant. make vestments for Rev. RichChildren of Mary will receive ard Gendreau of St. Michael's corporate Communion at 8 0', parish. Ocean Grove, Rev. Robclock Mass Sunday morning. ert Carter of Sacred Heart parMarch 7. Breakfast and a meet· ish.·. Fall, River, and Rev. John ing will follow in th~ church; of' Our Lady of Lourdes, Gomes hall. . Taunton. . SACRED HEART, .Quite a Thrill FALL RIVER Meanwhile. Renee made vestMrs. John Patota and Mrs, ments for another friend ofWalter White will be hostesses Father Boulet: Rev. Edmund for the open meeting of the Fitzgerald of Holy Name. Fall Women's Guild scheduled for 8 River. In the Autumn. Father o'clock on Monday evening in Boulet asked if Mrs. Soulard • the school hall. would make one as his ChristRev. John F. Moore. assistant mas gift for his pastor, Re,,'. at SS. Peter and Paul Parish and Roger Poirier. The difficulty' lay Anchor columnist, will show in finding a ·different design. So slides of Ireland. they went shopping, looking at many different types of vestST. JOSEPH, ments, until Mrs. Soulard found ATTLEBORO the type of design needed. An organizational meeting will be held. tonght at 7:30 to prepare for a minstrel show that , Interior Communion will be staged during the month . VATICAN CITY (NC)-Christ of May. experienced immense suffering. Knights of the Altar will leave but He was not a sad man bethe schoolyard at 12:15, Sunday cause He had an "interior and afternoon for a tour of St. John's superior communion with the Seminary, Brighton and a visit Father," Pope Paul VI told a' with Archbishop Medeiros at the recent audience in St. Peter's archepiscopal residence. basilica.

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Award Recipient

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. WASHINGTON (NC) Dr. Chapmal) H. Binford. a 70-yearold pathologist. has been named the recipient of the 1971 Damien-Dutton Award for outstanding efforts to eradicate Hansen's Diseasc--Ieprosy-and to ,rehabilitate its sufferers. , Dr. Binford is medical director and chief of the pathology research laboratory of the Leonard Wood Memorial and the American Leprosy Foundation. and chief of the Special Mycrobacterial Disease Branc~ and registrar for leprosy of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington. U. S. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii, chairman of the 1971 World Leprosy Week. Feb. 1421, will present Dr. Binford the award before the statue of Father Damien DeVeuster in the U. S. Capitol. The Damien-Dutton Society, which sponsors the award. is named for Father Damien and Brother Joseph Dutton who worked among leprosy sufferers on Hawaii's island of Molokai.

Forms Association To Help Writers TAIPEI (NC) - The Chinese are avid readers and television has done little to change this. With a high literacy rate of 97 per cent and nine years compulsory schooling. the reading pub· lic in Taiwan grows daily. Jesuit Father George Donohoe from San Francisco, realizing that writers obviously exert considerable influence, established the Young Writers' Association at the Cardinal Tien Educational Center here in the techniques of journalism and other writing.

RENEE. SOULARD "You can't magine how rewarding it is to see what you've done being' used at the Mass," Renee exclaimed. "That first time' Father 'wore his, at Mass in August! And then at mid-. night Mass at Christmas, to see both of the vestments on the altar! It was quite a thrill for me." That midnight Mass was made even more beautiful by altar cloths made· by Renee for two new altars given to the church, and by n~w white monk-style altar boys' robes made by mothers of the boys. Mrs. Soulard p.as been sewing for, many years. "My mother taught me the rudiments of sewing and mending. embroidery and so forth," she explained• "but I ddn't use it much until after I was married. When the children .started coming along I bought a sewing machine. took lessons, and I've been sewing ever since, including stuffed anim,!-Is .and toys for the children."

After she finishes her current orders, Mrs. Soulard will probably receive more requests. "It's not hard but it's very timeconsuming and requires a lot'of exacting work," she said. But she added, "It's wonderful to see the smiles on the priests' faces when they put them on. It's worth every bit of, effort put into them."

famous for

QUALITY and

SERVICE I

Smiles Reward Her Her children include Anne Marie, 22; Michele, 20, their novitiate of the Dominican Sisters of the Presentation in Dighton; Giscle. 16; Claire, 13; Christine, 11; Patricia, 9; and one, son, Peter. 7. Her husband, Oscar. is an accountant with Gamache and O'Brien in Attleboro.

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THE ANCHOR.:...Diocese of Fall River-Tnurs.Feb. 25,·1971 .'

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Hits Writer'sSugg~stio~ To RepecdLabor ~aws';

Kevin ,P., 'Philip.s, a' 'young political' scientist, t~rned, natfoilally ,syndicated columnist, never 'ti~es of saying; 'ip , season' arid, out of season, that the Republican Party) if it- ,: ' . plays its cards 'adroi~ly, can and will becoht~ theQe~ ma'\':, :. ,': ,',". ' jority party, in this country.' 'Mr. Philips is persuaded that down ca'pital [formation,' t? dis-' "conservatism '. . '. is in the tort the s~ructu,re, .a~d Q~lan~e , " " '. . of production! to ltmlt, and dlsthroes of self~exa~matlOn courage' a'pp~entices" to i,drive and, change and the struggle ha~ a ,national si~nificance Ii.ttle, ,noted by t~,e, L1be~UI Estabhshment press.,

non-union members into 16werpaid' jobs, a~d, to reduce 'th~. totalproducti;on and tl)e '[total real wages ,a~d real income of , the whole, body of woi'ke~s belOW. what it \ otherwise ~.'ould -' have been." , ' I By What to do about the prob'I ' lem? The ans~e.r· to that: one, MSGR. says Mr. Hazlitt, is very simple: (1) Repeai the\',Norris LaGUardia GEORGE' G. AGt ,of 1932 ~nd (~). repea,l ~he wa gner-Taft-Jar',t1e y Act, Of .1935 'HIGtGIN5 and 1947. " Unlike Mr. Philips, P;ofessor Hazlitt is' not concerned *bout Oldstyle" ,standpat: conserva- the fact that this would: take fism 'h,~ writes in a recent col- us back to "ljIoover days. II' .On u~n:' inade sense in bygone the contrary, taking us back to years as the defensive' protective those good old jdays when u~ions cre,ed of a traditional social and were very w1eak is preqisely economic elite. Today's young what Mr. HazHtt has in mind, , DISCUSS PHAS'ES OF DIVINE WORSHIP: Members of the Dioces~n Commission for conservatives, by contrast, are "Repeal. of the~e laws." he ,~ays, said to understand that "con- "would merely \return the Uhited ' Divine Worship study aspects of Liturgy, Sacred Music and Art with the ,Ordinary of , I scrvatism i,n the post-industrial States to the pre-1932 federal the Diocese. Left to right: Bishop Cronin, Rev. James F. Lyons of Taunton, chairman of society' 'cannot loole' back to legal situationst " "II 'Hoover Days' , ' the newly constructed commission; ,Mrs. Robert E. O'Neill of Hyannisport, commission Hoover days, but must be a promember; Rev, kevin F. Tripp Of Fall River,' secretary. ' ' I " ! gressive ideology advancing popProfessor Hazlitt's tell-tale use ular sentiment and needed re- of the word' II,merel " in: this Y forms against the opp'osition of, context gives his hand away institutionalized liberal interes~ completely. He not' only Wants , I groups." , to take us !Jack to "Hopver If we assume, for present p'ur1 days" but also Iseems :to be isug'.:' , " !"" 'poses, that this so-called "turn- gesting that ,taking such a giant about" in the conservative ,elec- ' step backward lought to be conWASHINGTON (NC) - In a Father Fritsch stateq, grave con- sultants assists in gathering and torate is a demonstra'ble fact and sidered as the ~Qost normal thing new move for more direct in- cern over the rate at which un- evaluating technical information I ' not simply 'a matter of wishful in the world and that anyone 'volvement in national environ- controlled technology has eroded necessary for specific projects. . thinking on Mr. Philip's part, who objects td, it is makirig a mental problems, Jesuits in the the quality of life in the current The existence and formation then it must be said that the mountain out of a molehill. I United States' are allocating generation. Corporate profits, he ,of the new center is a departure "Liberal Establishment press" is I trust that the editors of .The manpower arid .funds to help added, often influence or even in Jesuit work ,in the United not alone in having failed' to National Revi~w don't agree improve the quality' of life. dictate, the results of what pur- ' States. Though still continuing take note of it. J e1iuit Father Albert Fritsch, port to be unbiased technical to maintain institutions of learnwith their favohte labor econoing, interested Jesuits are being Dreary Rehash mist in this regard. Let's hppe, of the newly formed Center for studies. encouraged to enter more directNew Departure , in' other words'l that they know Science in the Public Interest,' The National Review, for ex- enough history to be awarJ of has announced a working plan "Moreover," he added, "scien-' Iy into modern society. ample, isn,ot a ~'liberal" publica- the fact that his brand of laissez, I to involve more Jesuits in the tists and engineers in both the tion: On the contrary, it would faire economics ~s as dead as :,' the' critical aspects of human envi- private and public sectors are Prelate Reassigned probably lay claim to the distinc- dodo and that Iany. attempt: to ronment throughout the 50 frequently indentured to their VATICAN CITY (NC) - The .tion of being the No. 1 "conser- revive it by repealing all of lour states. I financial supporters and are thus vative" weekly, in the United basic labor le1gislation' would The center here, is establishing precluded from speaking out for Vatican's pronuncio to India, Canadian-born Archbishop Marie States. Nevertheless in a num- make the labor' strife of the 130s Summer study' programs for the public interest. ber, of issues - notably in the , ', , Joseph Lemieux, nas been re'participating Jesuits from the 4 "And while private industry 'area of labor economics _ The and the, early '1 0s' look :like a Sunday school picnic. ,II regions, and other special groups have assigned to Rome to take charge order's geographical National Review is' definitely (provinces) iri the United States. slibstantfal resources to protect of St. Peter's Basilica. loo~ing back to ,"Hoover days.'" 'In fairness tol the memory, of put main the vested interests, the public The programs will Take; for example, Henry Herbert Hoover(, it should be Hazlitfs feature article, "No- added that it \\jould also make ' attention on soil pollution: solid has virtually none. "'. · L f""· h the last of ou111 pre-New Deal waste disposal, organic residues At present the staff is combody.. W ms at ' eap rog , m t e 'presidents turn over in his gdve. particularly in plastics, radioPLUMBING & HEATING, I!\IC. posed of three' Ph.D:'s-in meteJan. 26 issue of NR. Hazlitt's ' I Hoover made his' share of mis- active contamination, strip min- orology and oceanography,: orpiece is a dreary rehash of old ' I '' Sales and Service ~ ,takes, but he ~as too smart a , ing, and general' soil' practices. for Domestic ~ ~ ganic chemistry and' biochemis,style laissez faire economics in man to ignore the lessons! of and Industrial •~ The Summer-long' projects wJll try - ' 3;nd a lawyer. The small its : mo~t simplistic ,.form.' The' history: '11 , Ojl Burners also involve a sttidy of federal staff is backed by a bo'ard of adgist of the article is that wages ,I 995-1631 transportation policies with spe- visors' including scientists,' engi~hould be. tletermined ~by s u p p l y : ; 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE the\ranspcirtacial emphasis on ~nd dema.nd and, th,is being the, SC,or~s, Civi1t Rights!, ' tion needs of the poor, pollution neers" and' public-interest law-. NEW BEDFORD yers: In addition a panel of con: ' case, labbr lmicift~, 'which insist I hiJ setting wage rates by'collec-' ovement Is ,. 'ction'i' levels in the maj~r, dties;' ta~­ tive bargaining; are,' doing a LOS :ANGELES (NC) - 1ihe,.. tics of' highway 10!.>byiSts, fuel 1111111111I11I11111111I111I1111I11111111111111I11I11I11I11I111I1111I111I11I111111I1111I111I11I11I11I1111111111111111I11I11I11I1IIIIIl1l1i III1111 :great disservice to consumers in, Chicanl;? civil rig*ts movemen~ is additives, and a critica'i review general and to workers in par- accomplishing little,with protest of literature dealing with alternatives' to 'the iiit~rnaF"corribus~ ticular.' demonstrations, ,'ISup'erior Court , " I, I ' ,. ., :' Indeed, says Mr. Hazlitt, "La- Judge Leopoldo Srnchez declar~d tion engine. , The center, has developed, )or unions are today" the chief ata news conference here. of BRISTOJ,. COUNTY . Sanchez said he does not be; !;~~~:S~orT~~~rce';h~:ryth~fu~~~~ lieve streetdemohstrations coJld Just because a bank offers you :formation is said to b,e '~an ,ob- be held: in East~os Angeles,i': a Plum~ing & ,scure form 'of the Marxist exploi- predominately Mexi~ari-American a Savings Account tation <!ogma." community, wit~out, attractirg doesn't mean it can ,offer you Has Simple Answer violence-prone elements from inOver 3'5 Years side and outside the area. ! a checking account , ,of Satisfied ,Se~vice Insumniary; says Mr. H,~zlitt, , The judge is thJ:recently electReg.'Master Plumber 7023 ,':The net over-all effect of union ed vic'e~chairman' bf an' exeCiiti~e Bu't Do JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR. 'rolicy historically has been to unit of a national committee ~s­ 806 NO. MAIN STREET NORTH ATTLEBORO (2)' _MANSFIELD (2) ATTLEBORO FALLS J:cducc productively, tp discour- sisting ,the U.S. bishops' Cap, Fall River 675·7497 age new investment;· to slow paign for Human Developm~nt. 1111I11I111111I11I11111111111111I11I111111I11I1111I1111I1111I11I1111I11I11I11I11I1111I11I11I111111I11I11I11I11I11I111111I11I11I11I1111111111I11I

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VaticanOfficials, Religious Discuss Mutual Problems ROME (NC)-Three representatives of American priests and Brothers .belonging to Religious orders in the United States spent three days here discussing mutual problems with officials of the Vatican and of the International Union of Major Religious Superiors. The three arc Passionist Father Paul Boyle of Chicago, president of the Conference of Major Superiors of Religious Men in the United States, and two other officials of the conference, Jesuit Father Walter Farrell of Detroit, and Christian Brother William Quinn of Washington, D.C. Father Boyle said they met with Cardinal I1debrando Antoniutti, prefect of the Congregation for Religious; American Holy Cross Father Edward Heston, secretary of the congr~ga­ tion and other Vatican officials during a three-day visit here. The three also met the top officers of the International Union of Major Religious Superiors, headed by Jesuit General Father Pedro Arrupe. Exchange Views Father Boyle said the discussions, the third in a period of a year, were "encouraging" and that both sides exchanged ideas and views freely. Discussions included means of improving communications between the U. S. conference of Religious men and the various Vatican offices. The three American Religious also discussed post-conciliar changes in the training ,of Religious seminarians, the movement toward "small group living" among Religious as opposed to the more traditional and larger community life. Another topic was how can American Religious contribute to the preparation for the forthcoming Synod of Bishops in the Fall of this year, which will have as its principal subject the priesthood,

Proteders Heckle Pact's Obselrvance ROME (NC)-The 42nd anniversary of the signing of the Lateran pacts by which Vatican City became a soverign state in 1929 was marked at a Roman palace with a diplomatic recep" tion inside and protesting demonstrators outside. The reception was an annual one given by the Italian ambas: sador to the Holy See, Gian Franco Pompei, and attended by Cardinal Secretary of State Jean. Villot, many Vatican diplomats and other diplomats from countries accredited to the Holy See.

Finally Ordained ROME (NC)-Almost 20 years late, two Slovaks whose aspirations to the priesthood had been balked by communist Czechoslovakia's religious comissars have arrived at their goal. Fathers Emil Sibik and Jozef Kral were ordained 'Feb, 14 at Rome's Slovak College of SS. Cyril and Methodius by Bishop Paul Hnilica, who himself had hrcn ordained a priest and a hishop in secret during the dark ycars of Czechoslovakia's Stalinist-line represssions.

,THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 25, 1971,

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Holy'· See - Ita Iy Pacts, Hailed

Msgr. RusseliR. Novello

VATiCAN CITy (NC) - On the eve of the 42nd anniversary of the Holy Sec's treaties with Italy regulating Church-State affairs, the Vat.ican City daily L'Osservatore Romano hailed their "highly positive value" for both Church and state, Secularist groups have been calling for the nullification of these so-called Lateran pacts. One point of bitter contention has been the marriage legislation sanctioned by the pacts and, the Holy See claims, ignored by Italy's new law introducing divorce into the country. Under the 1929 Lateran agreement, Italy guaranteed the civil effects of Catholic religious marriage. L'Osservatore said Feb. 10:

Mr. Mich;\el O'Connor

Rev. Fernando Veiga, C.M.

Area Residents Invited to Lenten Series Sponsore~ by St. Michael"s Church Parishioners of St. Michael's necologist, obstetrician and surChurch, Fall River, are inviting geon, Dr. Lynch has frequently all area residents to a series of appeared on radio and teleyision. five Lenten conferences, starting He is, the author of "A' Marriage Sunday evening, Feb. 28 and Manual for Catholics" and many continuing, through Sunday eve- ' articles on marriage. As an auning, March 28. All conferences thority on Catholic attitudes will be held from 7 P.M. to 9 towards sex education, birth conP.M. in the church hall and will trol and abortion, he has conducted many forums for parents be followed by refreshments. Two former drug addicts from and high school students. He is a graduate of' Boston Marathon House, Attleboro, will' speak this" Sun<.tay, recounting College and Tufts Medical their own experiences and the School, former president of the Marathon House techniques of staff of St. Margaret's Hospital, rehabilitation. Such public and former vice-president of the speaking is part of the pr,oject's staff of . Carney Hospital.' He educatio~al program, desigried aiso serv'es on the faculties of to benefit both audiences and Tufts Medical School and Boston , College School of Nursing. speakers. In 1957, Dr. Lynch received Michael O'Connor, A.C.S.W" coordinator of the Attleboro the Linacre Award for a study Area Mental Health Center, will on therapeutic abortion. speak on "Emotional Challenges Msgr. Novello ' of Growth and Christian Love" The CCD Director of the Boson March 7. Holder of degrees ton Archdiocese, Msgr. Russell from St. Joseph College and , R. Novello, will speak on "You, Fordham University, O'Connor Your Children and God" at the 'was formerly assistant director program scheduled for March 21. of the Children's Diagnostic CenThe prelate is a cum laude ter, Mineola, N. Y. graduate of Bowdoin College and As well as directing the mental health center, he serves on Pope Praises Zeal ' the board of, directors of the area's Comprehensive Health Of Slovak 'Priests agency 'and on the advisory VATICAN CITY (NC) - Pope board of the Attleboro Council Paul VI has praised the zeal of of Churches. " "Threats against the Family Slovak priests working in variin Modern Day Living" will be ous parts of Europe with emidiscussed by Dr. William A. grants and exiles from Czecho-' slovakia, Lynch at the March 14 session. Seventy of the priests and a An internationally known gygroup of students from the Slovak Institute of Saints Cyril and Methodisu were presented to Methodist Schools the Pope by Bishop Andrew In Rhodesia Close Grutka of Gary, Indiana, a paSALISBURY (NC)-About 200 tron of the institute. The Pope Methodist-run primary schools congratulated them "on the zeal in Rhodesia have closed because which animates you in 'carrying the United Methodist organiz'a- out your ministry." tion here has refused to make up a five per cent cut in the government grant for teachers' salaries. Last June the Methodists went on, record against· t\1e·. salary I;) d' \..-0. UHC.' cut, stating that they would not make, up what the government should spend tax money for. The salary cut affected all Church-run schools in Rhodesia, Twenty-six churches have been 365 NORTH FRONT STREET operating 2,871 primary African NEW BEDFORD mission schools with 14,000 992:553:4, t cachers instructing more than 5~9,OOO pupils. ooooooooooooooooooooc

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also holds a master's degree from Harvard University and a doctorate from Catholic University. He taught in high schools for three years and was chief of educational rehabilitation at Framingham VA Hospital for three years before his entrance to the seminary. After ordination, Msgr. Novello was engaged in parish work and was a juvenile court chaplain. Following his reception of the doctorate he taught at Catholic University and then at Cardinal Cushing College, Brookline. Since 1963 he 'has served in his present position as CCD Director. In Portuguese The lecture series will be climaxed March 28 with .a Portuguese-language conference by Rev. Fernando Veiga, C.M., discussing "The Christian before His Conscience." Father Veiga is superior of the Portuguese Vincentians in the United States and is well-known as a missionary and speaker. Coordinating the Lenten program for St. Michael's parish is Rev, Luciano Pereira.

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"Under the religious 'aspect the greatest benefit of the Lateran pacts is the reestablishment of concord in the consciences of Italians and among the consciences of Italians, This concord must. be, and is still, the starting point for the f.ull solidarity of Italians in promoting the progress of their country in freedom," The Vatican daily observed, however, 'that the Church "reaffirms her' availability" to help overcome' problems.

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THE ANCHOR-:-Dioccse .

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Fall River-THurs. Feb. 25" 1971 "

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YOUNG ARTIST: Miss Joanne Barbrie, self-taught arList Of St. Joseph's parish, Attleboro, works on religious ,painting. A painting, depicting Lenten theme of repentance for sin, is reproduced in the adjoining three columns.

Ge'orgetown' Head Says Colleges Sh~rk Moral Responsibilities OR~EANS (NC)-Most academic year. . today have backed a"Our freshman class at Georgeway from moral and spiritual town is quite sophisticated and responsibilities toward the'ir stu- would rather talk things out," dents, the president of, George- Father Henle said. town Un'iversity saJd at li'n alum- ... "AnYwaY;·'most· collegedtreshni gatherjng here. men now have had the chance to . be radicals during high school "And it just isn't right," Fa- and are now ready to try somether Robert J. Henle,·Jesuit head thing else." of the Washington, D. C.-based university, claiming that it is an educator's job "to work with young people in counselor roles."

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I Justice Marshall Block~ L~we;r Court Decision CHICAGO (NC)-Abortion on would prosecute physicians I vi-' mondecency, to. stand wth I

Father I-ienle predicted that the nation's economy may not be able to handle increasing education co'sts by 1980. He cited a need for "a system of planned reform . . . in which a more effective use of a school's faculty is implemented."

us in defense of God's. great~t gift demand, legal in Illinois for two olating the l87~1 abortion I~w. Acting on a. petition filed' by -the gift of life. P . . weeks, has' become illegal once . the Illinois attorney general, Signing the pastoral were Carmore. The turnabout resulted from Marshall said the entire appeal dinal John Cody of Chicago and "But also believe," the a ruling in Washington by_U.S. would be referted to thell. S. Bishops Albert R Zuroweste of i BelleviiJe, William A. O'Connor priest said, "that increased Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Supreme Court. I . , Marshall, who blocked a lower . Pastoral Letter I of Springfield, John B. Franz of sources of income will have to court decision declaring the Marshall saidl his stay w6uld . Peoria; Romeo Blanchette of come from the federal governstate's 97-year old law against remain in effect until the high Joliet and Arthur J. O'Neill of ment as well." Rockford.' abortion unconstitutional. court' can rule on the app'leal. Among financial burdens that The effect of the low-cortirt de- No hearing dateI was set.' Warned Physicians colleges today must bear, Fa273 CENTRAL AVE. cision handed down Jan. 29 was The justice's lorder came i on The Chicago' archdiocesan ther Henle said, is an insurance to legalize abortions during thoe the heels' of stat.ements issued Conference of Catholic Hospirate which has "skyrocketed," 992-6216 first 90 days of pregnancy. But by the Illinois Catholic bishbps tals, comprising 25 member inpartially due to the. property' Jl.lstice Marshall's action re- and by Chicago 1Catholic hospit- stitutions, also ,voiced opposi- , damage caused by student demstored for the time being the als, both reiterating the Church's tion to abortions.- The' confer~ onstrators. But he noted things NEW BEDFORD ~,..,... N. old state law outlawing abor- stand against abortion. . I : ence said, however, that it rec- seem to have calmed 'do'wn this tion. The . separatel actions were ognized ,"existing problems' asState Attorney General Ed, prompted by tile lower couks sociated with· cri'sis pregnancy I . , . ward V. Hanrahan said Justice ruling, plus reP10l'ts that allor- and offer our guidance, resources Marshall's ruling ,means that tions were being performed I in .and programs to those who need abortions performed. after the . hospitals and medical centers. support during this crucial perilower court ruling were illegal. . .1 I od." . In a joint pastoral read recentHanrahan had said earlier he Iv in parish chutches at Sunday Several abortions reportedly Masses througho~t the state,the were performed in Chicago hosROUTE 6-between Fall River and New Bedford tlold' TOUtS bishops supportJd the right I to pitals after the lower court's , . ruling. _ BOGOTA (NC) - The first life of the fetusl in the womb. One of Southern New England's Finest Facilities official high-level Anglican"We have been stunned irtto. The Illinois State. ·.Medical So. I I Catholic talks in Latin- America a certain aware~ess of the e<;lse tiety had· told member-physicitried to discover areas of collab- with which public regard· for aM· to "proc<;ed 'with caution" for oration 'in which both churches life can shift," tHe pastoral s~id. on ahortions. The 'society warn"can work together to serve The bishops callbd on "all nien .. ed that if the statute was reinboth man and God," according and women whd are .concerrted .stated-as has nbw happened to Catholic Bishop 'Antonio about life and Ithe quality: of temporarily-' doctors perform,FOR, DETAILS CALL MANAGER....;636·2744 or .999-6~84 . Quaracino of Avellaneda, Argen- human .life, all who have a sense ing abortions could be charged 'ofbrotherhood, J sens.e of cor- with violating the Jaw..' . tina..

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Suggests Raisin.g Tuition To Keep Schools Qpen

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Feb. 25, 1971

Assistant Director. Named NEW YORK (NC)-Jamcs A. Prior, veteran media and public relations expert who helped the American bishops in their successful Campaign for Human Development, has been named assistant director of the United States Catholic Conference's communications department. . Prior, '36, has worked 15 'years in media and public relations fields. Most recently he directed publicity for the anti-poverty

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick As parents of children who attend Catholic schools we are necessarily concerned about their closing and there~ fore listen closely to what we are told. A number of things bother us. For instance, we have taken the financial crisis of the schools at face value and we do not deny that a Harvard Coop, we came across crisis does exist, but we do a huge stock of the albums on and I couldn't resist hearquestion' its extent in terms sale ing the complete opera from of dollars and cents. Today, for example, we read that a school in Providence is heing closed because it is running a deficit of $15,000 this Yl'ar and the pastor anticipates a deficit of $25,000 next year. One cannot refute this. However, the 210 children in that school are going to be deprived of a religious education, which is truly a crisis. But I cannot see how we can justify the closing of a school for $25,000, a comparatively small figure. Admittedly, this is not a small figure to the pastor of this particular parish, but in light of the total impact on the future of the Church, it· would seem that other resources should be tapped to keep. this school open.

start to finish. We haven't stopped playing it since.

and educational Human Development Campaign 'which raised more than $7.5 million in its Nov. 22 .nationwide collection. Included in the department are the National Catholic Office for Radio and Television, the Natoinal Catholic Office for Motion PiCtures, both in New York and the National Catholic Offic~ \; for Information and the National Catholic News Service, both in Washington.

fr. Adrian van Kaam

Crucifixion Theme

Three Lectu res By Psychologist

If you haven't already heard "Superstar," it's a rock opera that opened in London last year with . the crucifixion of Jesus Rev. Adrian van Kaam, and the events leading up to it as the theme. Often the blaring C.S.Sp., Ph.D., Professor of rock sounds of the music ob- Psychology at Duquesne Uniscure the words, but there 'is versity, Pittsburgh, will conduct a booklet inside each album a one-day Institute at John Hanwith the lyrics. From experience cock Hall, Boston, on Saturday, I found that the best way to March 29, from 9:15 A.M. to 4 listen to this moving opera the P.M., on the general theme, first couple of times, is with "Spirituality Today." Father van Kaam, founder the lyric book in hand. Never before have the cruci- and Director of the Institute of fixion and the people involved Man at Duquesne, has conducted appeared so real and human to many research projects on the me. Judas becomes a person, Psychology of Man. not an axample, Mary MagdaDuring the Institute, Father Graduated Tuition lene, a warm woman as she van Kaam will give three lecWhat other resources? It sings one of the most beautiful tures on the topics, "Spiritualseems school officials have just songs of the whole opera, "1 ity and the Religious Life." about exhausted the possiblity· Don't Know How To Love Him". "Spirituality and the Leveling of getting revenue from the fed- Herod is portrayed as a sleazy Society," and "Spiriutal Attieral and state governments. monarch, with his taunting song tudes." The talks will be followWhat of parishes who have no backed up by a cheap honkytonk ed by questions and discussion. For applications and details schools? Could they not sup- piano, while those who screamed port those parishes who are for Christ's death come across contact: Rev. Robert F. Quinn, as a truly frightening mob. . C.S.P., Christian Culture Insticarrying the burden of the costs Many ~rttics of this opera feel tutes, 5 Park Street, Boston, Ma. of educating all children? A levy of as little as $3,000 a year ex- that .it is almost sacdlegious, 0210K Registration must be clusive of partial payment of but perhaps because I'm quite made in advance. religiously I tuitions would certainly go· a unsophisticated long way toward solving some feel that it's a religious experience, and I'd like to thank the of tlJe problems. What of graduated tuitions younger generation for recog. based on parents' .ability to pay nizing .it. If there is a Lenten menu in and tile .!lumber of chilc;lren· in PARIS (NC) - At the suggesyour house, then by all means a family? Certainly at $7.50 tion of Pope Paul's representaput this clam pie high on the monthly most Qf us feel that tive here the faithful of the diowe are getting a bargain. Many list. It's quite delicious. cese of Pamiers in southwestern parents could afford to pay Clam Pie France 'are being consulted about twice that if it were necessary. the nomination of a new bishop. bunch parsley Are there no. other alternatives? Bishop Henri Lugagne Delpon 1/3 cup chopped onion I cannot believe that we are of Pamiers, 49, was killed· in an 3 Tablespoons butter giving up the stJip s9 easily. The auto accident Dec. 15. 3 Tablespoons flour· federal and state governments Under the. direction of ArchI Y2 cups light cream make a convenient scapegoat, " bishop. Louis J~an. Guyot of Tousalt and pepper but this is too serious a probnow serving as apostolic louse, 2 cups chopped clams (I used lem and I believe itsconsequences will be too dearly felt canned clams and this was about administrator of the Pamiers diocese, questionnaires includin'g for too long a time just to allow two and a half small cans.) .two questions, one on the analPastry for two crust· pie the schools to close without goI) Line an 8 inch pie dish ysis of the present situation of ing for broke. with your own pastry and the diocese and the other on the In the Kitchen sprinkle the bottom with finely qualities .expected of a future parsely (very, very bishop, have been distributed in chopped We of the older generation the' diocese. .. finely chopped) have been accused of not listenPriests, Religious and lay per2) In a heavy saucepan s.aute ing to the voices of the young sons have b~en asked to reply the onion in the butter until and the messages that they are generating; and if this is true soft but not. brown.. Stir. in the individually or in groups. there m'ay be a great deal that flour as smoothly as possible . Commenting. on the survey, we are missing. For example, if and cook the mixture for several the diocesan bulletin' stressedthose of us over· 30 dismiss minutes. Pour in the light crea'm that the procedure will contrib"Jesus Christ, Superstar" as and cook, stirring constantly ute to making the new bishop a until it is thickqned.· Season' "bishop of all the people and music for the younger generanot as the employer of the tion we're missing a moving ex~ with salt' and pepper: . 3) In the pie shell arrange al- priests." perience. One of the young teachers in ternate layers of the chopped The bulletin said that the surmy building mentioned how clams and the sauce. Sprinkle vey will be finished March 15 great the record was and he of- the top layer with more chopped and that it "is not only addressed fered to tape part of it for me parsley and cover the. pie with to practicing Catholics." The to listen to. While the tape did a top crust, thinly rolled. Crimp analysis of the survey will be not come out as well as we had the edges to seal. the responsibility of the dioce4) .Bake the pie in a 425 san priests' council and the rehoped. I could still' hear enough of the plaintive lyrics to realize oven, brushing thl; pastry occa- sults will be communicated to that I would like to look into sionally with I egg yolk mixed Archbishop Guyot to Archbishop with I teaspoon water for about Egano this further. the Righi-Lambertini" The other day, while Joe and 30 to 35 minutes or until the papal nuncio; and, after his nomination, to the new bishop. I were browsing through the pastry is golden brown.

Consult Fgithful On New Bishop

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Wanted: Christians Alive! In his ~nly I:t~er !n Scripture, St. James offers a pertinent ~nd ~hallenglng distinction for us as Twentieth Century Christians thiS season of Lent-I971. He says, "If faith is alone and has no actions with it, then it is dead!" (Jm. 2: 17)

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Is it not our Faith that makes a difference or should make a difference, in our approach and respoll1se to life? Lent is a time to rekindle our life of faith . • . a faith that affects us, not only individually as persons, but a faith that affects others. ~s we examine our personal life of faith during Lent, Jet us ask ourselves whether it is "dead or alive" when faced with the terrible reality of suffering human beings, or as James calls them "brothers and sisters."

Every person is confronted with the world situation; every responds either by doing something to help, expressing opmions (but not doing), or by complacent indifference. But re~ember, you are not "every person"-you are a Christian person. What difference does that make? pe~son

The nonreligiously-motivated humanist can and does provide food, clothing, medicine, education, and sClcial development to aid the helpless poor in under-developed cou!,!tries. As Christians we must do this too, but even more. That "even more" is what makes. the difference. We all have that "even more" . . . we call it ."our mission·." Lent is also a time to rekindle our missionary spirit (dead or' alive?) for, unlike the mere humanist, we !!iee beneath the human live of helping people, the reality of Divine Love and the acting'. presence of God. The missionary today is certainly a person .whose faith is very much alive! He serves the overwhelming spiritual, and material needs of the poorest of the poor. His faith constantly demands continued sacrifice and renewed dedication, but then, a person whose faith IS alive is a person who loves. And we all know the demands love makes on us! _. The missionary needs, lllbove aU, the prayers, encouragement, and support of us, his fellow Christians.· A missionary serves in the name of Christ; he serves in your nlime and mine as wel!, for we are the Body of Christ. today, member for member. May you discover your faith more alive and filled with the newness. of life this Easter because during I~ent you feU more deeply in love with your brothers and sisters! May your life witness the truth that your faith does make a difference. Please begin today. Clip out this column and send . a generous sacrifice for the missions.

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SALVATION AND .SERVICE are the work of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Please cut out this column and send your offering to Reverend Monsignor Edward T.. O'Meara, NationaB Director, Dept. C., 366 Fifth Ave, New York, N.Y. 10001 or directly to your local Diocesan Director. The Rev. Msgr. Raymond T: 'Considine 368 North Ma.in Street Fall River, Massachusetts 02720

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F-all Ri~er- Thurs. Feb. 25,! 197,r- .

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.Letter To A

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Teen~ger

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Christ and Technologry

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Dear Judi, . I love to receive letters from a pretty teenager, especially ,when she is my niece and writes about mat~ers of great concern, to her <lnd to me-God, lik, and hap· , piness. .'You spo,ke of the speci"l Mass for your Vatican II class as really beautiful and so uplifting.

By

FR. JOSEPH M. CHAMPLIN

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Why? Was it the girl playing folk guitar? Everyone singing? The priest's casual, psrsonal sermon about love and what it really is ancr how Christ is love? Was it the smallness of your group' and the feeling of closeness which everyone felt? Whatever the explanation, you said this service seemed to an"swer questions, about finding fulfillment in life and happiness on earth. At, the same time, Judi, you ask me how, in the 'future, can you keep from getting lo\y so easily, so frequently; how can you' keep from wonder,ing if' Christ even exists; how can you always be st.rong and

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I have faith. I I don't have any easy, simple answers, ' Sometimes God, sc'ems Ivery ncar when wei pr~y 'or' worship. <llmost sense his "presence ~ and experien~e his love. You did! during that Mas~. Others' d9 at major momentt in their liv,eswhen they are sad or glad, when they feel guilt or forgivertess, when they fall! in love or Ifear ,the future. OU~ hearts are ?pen to God on these occasions [and we eagerly ,..Jail.. for- him to' speak. To celebtate the Euchill:ist" under such. circ~rnstimces and in ,'\ . [ . those moods may yery weill uplift and comfqrd, and enlight~n. I don't think it's' bad to ~ run for church and plead, with pod, .at these ci'i.tical junctures of ilife. But to pray only then, to w.orship onlytherl, to join with others for Mass lonly then ldves a bit to be- desired. : . Gratitude i~ Necessary ; My mother (Aur grandmot~er) often, war:ned r+e: "It's finei ·to ask the Lord fori what you wiant or need, but be sure you th~nk him afterwards.'i " , . I. Skipping ChUrCh when one doesn't feel ~ike tt or when :the setting is less tran ideal selms to me much li~e,forgetting: to say: "thank 'youl:', I know Sunday' worship 'ip.I'manYrr;(eerh~ps. most) places'runF a poor second Turn to ,Pag~ Seventeen, I ,

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Social AwareneJs· · 1

1" I There has been much talk provide ,increasetl convemencee these d~y~; about "mindless tech- for the human dce. Most of th'e nology," a mythical villain who time, th'e ideas ptecede the teChis leading us into a cold, Godless nology by many !years. Technolworld of transistors, computers ogy finally succeeds in makihg and push-button morals. Certain- an idea work prattically throukh Iy,' there are grounds' ,for ,fear social pressure, ..which, can prothat Man's individuality is being dUc~ the. necess~r~r, exp~nditJre 'threatehed by, technologic,al'a~, , Qf, tIme and J!lone¥ to, bnn~ th~vances, ' - ory into ·r~ality. Just as the home dishwasher By aCCIdent; fE~rta~n peor(e has encr<?3ched u'p0~ traditions happen to end u P gettmg credih., I ' , • of "whose turn IS It to wash and, whose to dry/' and the ({,;,;,;r;';';'i;';;';'~;,;;~;,;,:;{~(,r;I,;~{If;,;,

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color T.V. has eliminat(:d Mother's reading the serial in the By ,Saturday Evening' post in tl')e evening, technology has also BURTON L. 'brought us relief from "dishpan BENSON hands" and a fantClstic commu. nications machine that cari bring the whole world to our living .room. The "good old daY~l" were but the' social. pJessures ready , probably not so good as we see should have thec~edit ,for inveA-. them in retrospect! We also hear tion. If Edison' hadn't given us people today suggesting ,that the electric light j ~omeqne el~,e technology is our' new god. It wO,uld have, closely on his heelt is almost as if they are looking The world' needed ,and, wanteCi ,upon technological achievements more Ij'ght.' Tehnology r~: as a separate happening from sponded .. DaVinci lconceived th¢ human, dev lelopJ'!1ent. T~is is the helicopter centuries ago. When same kind of middle-ages think- the world really, putI the pressurei ing that accusecl Roger Bacon of ,on for helicopter~' during . thf being in league with the devil Korean wars, all I the prevIOus' because he brought gunpowder work of the helicopter inventork to light in Europe. was conce~trated lin a techno~ Bringing ,Theory Into Reality logical effort that made DaVin~ Technology, as we might de- d's original idea a l)racticaIity~ I -I fine it more exactly, is the conA,tomic energy ard the atomi T version of ideas practical, work- bomb were conceived in the' I able devices and techniques thatTum '0 P'g, 1ev'o'''0

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call the Genesis account 'of creation. "For when, by the work of his hands or with the aid of technology, man develops the earth so that it can bear fruit and become a dwelling worthy of the whole human family ... he carries out the design of God, Manifested at' the beginning of time, the divine plan is that man should subdue the earth, bring creation to perfection, and develop himself. When a ITl6n so acts he simultaneously obeys the great Christian commandment that he place himself at the service of his brother men." (Church in the Modern World, 57), At some periods of 'the Church's -history, Catholics and other, Christians viewed science with alarm or suspicion. , At other times a native scientism, tended to consider the' Creator as a remnant of prescientific superstition. Perhaps much of the time ChristiaJ.ls saw little relation between their daily, work and God, between human' creativity and the creative activity of God. Sometimes Christians even considered 'work as, a punishment occasioned' by man's first sin. Most often, perhaps, work was seen ,merely as a means of a livelihood for self and family.' ',' , The, Churd, today recognizes that human activity placed at the service of others - whether manual labor; scientific research" , I ~echnological s~iIIs, or p~ofes­ TECHNOLOGY: A marvel of human creativity made siOilaI' services - share in and possible through modem technological advances: NC Photo.. carries on the creative activity "That's one small step for_ 'ern technological development . of God. Through his work man l1)an, one giant leap for man- was also suggested by the astro- shares, with God in making the kind." Millions marvelled at the nauts. On Christmas Eve, 1968, wodd a better place for men to sound of these words as, they as the world glimpsed the pock- live healthy and happy lives. Dedication to Hard Work watched' Neil Armstrong step mocked moonscape through the cautiously from, Apollo 11 onto television cameras aboard the As the Council teaches, men the.'surface of the moon. Fri.eiHl American spaceship cruising just "can justly consider that by their " and foe all over the world 60 miles above the moon,' very labor, they are unfolding the Crepraised this astonishing achieve- ancient words that spanned the ' ator's work, consulting the adment of scientific kilOwledge centuries now crossed interplan- vantages of their brother men, and the courageaus ,spirit of man. etary space into millions of liv- and are contributing by their The moon missions-whatever ing rooms: "Apollo 8 has a mes- personal industry, to the rehabilatheir merit in, relation to other sage for you. 'In the beginning .national priorities - symbolize God created the heavens and the more dramatically than any earth.' " other' events of this century the The sheer marvel of human By marvels of, human creativity creativity witnessed that evemade possible through modern ning as the three' astronauts . FR. CARL J. technological advances. The ef- read the biblical story of creafort to place t"':'o astronauts on tion from moon orbit, brings PFEIFER, S.J • the moon and return them to home better than thousands of earth drew upon and reminds us words the Christian belief that of the most sophisticated tech- Goel and man are united in a nplogical achieveme'nts in phys- creative venture. The world tionin history of the divine ics, 'medicine, communications, which God created "in the begin- plan" (Church in Modern World, engineering, photography, aero- ning" (Gen, 1:1) was given to 34). ' ' nauti(:s and a score of other sci- man to complete. "Be fertile and Technology of Service to All entific disciplines. ' multiply; fill the earth and subThe recognition of man's co,Astrommts Read 'Genesis due it," God commanded the creativity' with God in building a The lives of the astronauts first man and woman (Gen. 1:28). better world should be an incen-, depended not only on their own With' them He would continue to tive for Christians to recognize skill and judgment but upon the create "new heavens and a their responsibility to tackle the calculations of computers and new earth" (Is 65: 17) and to staggering problems of our 'age. the efficiency of millions of me- ,"make all things new" (Rev. Pollution can be overcome only chanical and electrical parts. In 21;5). Creation is not merely a through dedicated concern 1'01'a less dramatic but equally real past event, blit a dynamic, pres- the health and happiness of way, we all depend on thousands ent activity in which men and bthers, concern that is translated of 'products of technological sci- women have a part with God. into scientific research ancl ence for our nourisment, shelter, Bringing Creation to Perfection technological skill. So, too, will transportation, communication The Second Vatican Council the gigantic problems of our and entertainment. interprets the value of human bankrupt cities be alleviated Th' ",' "gnU,,"o," of mod· creativity in words which reTurn to Page Seventeen


'Social Awareness Continued from Page Sixteen 1930's. When a real need arrived during World War II, technology made that thinking a reality. The idea of a computer was thought up by Babbage a century or so ago. When the pressures of engineering and business became great enough, the Univac I and Whirlwind MIT computers were born. Byproducts of Inventions The exciting byproduct of each technological advance IS the hundreds of new usages which suddenly become apparent as the technology becomes ma.ture. As the technology grows at an ever increasing rate, the responsibilities of the technologists increase. S~, as the atom W,IS being harnessed, the atomic bomb became a reality. Fission spawned fusion and the hydrogen bomb. Supersonic aircraft, born from jet propulsion, now pose serious atmospheric pollution problems. Technology has the tendency of growing upon itself. Given enough money and brain power, together with the fantastic power Of modern computers, hundreds of man-years of technological advances can be achieve~1 in an ever decreasing amount of time. The days of privately-financed research and development operations, such as Edison conducted, are just about over. Practically all R&D facilities are supported directly or indirectly by the government. Our space program could not conceivably have been financed by private corporation. Medical research, in the main, is, government financed: Perhaps only drugs, today, have,,~ significant degree of privately financed research. Because technology has become so expensive and complicated, it has become less and less a private matter but a political one with the entire social structure being involved. It has been estimated that the power required to reduce one gram of matter to zero gravity could light several large cities for a year. So the financing of anti-gravity technology becomes hugely expensive. We are famil. iar with the expense of technology because of the current SuperSonic Transport (SST) controversy. The social pressure demanding this speed of transportation is probably not enough today to justify the expense. Obviously we will eventually have an SST and much more, when we really want. it! 'Tradeoff' Very probably we ~vill have relative immortality, teleportat ion (the transmission of matter by electronic ~eans), the control of gravity, computers and robots to do most of oUI' work. These are just a few ideas that technology could probably make practical reality if the social pressures build up enough to demand tbem. We are as wrong to blame the technology of television for ropbing our children of their heritage of reading and conversation as we would be to blame a gun for killing. Mankind asked for and got both of these prod ucts of technology. He is currently asking for more leisure, ('v('n faster transportation, freedonY from pain and death, and f'l'pansion for his race to the stars. Man's technology will

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THE ANCHORThurs., Feb. 25, 1971

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eventually be, a slave to thesl' wants and fulfill them. Our concern should not focus itself upon the fruits of knowledge (technology) but upon the seeds of technology (social wants and needs). It really is a "tradeoff." How much humane-' ness are we wiiling to tradeoff for convenience? How much MUST we trade off for our survival. Never call technology "rhindless!"Technology is simply the reflection of mankind's use of his godliness, his free choice to use knowledge. Only we arc to blame if we enslave 'our, selves!, Discussion Questions I. What do you think a~e tIw limits 'of man's technological skills? 2. How can technology be' channeled to increase the human· ness of man instead of tending to de-humanize him?

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~echnology

Continued from Page Sixteen 'through the hard work, technological skill and sound judgment of men and women dedicated to improving man's life on earth. Charity needs to. be incarnated in creativity. Today technology is a necessary nleans of feeding the poor, clothing the destitute, creating unity and harmony among men, healing the sick. Through technology aimed at serving people:s needs, the Spirit of Christ is at work in the hearts of men through the energy of His Spirit. He arouses not only a desire for the age to come, but, by that very fact, He animates, purifies, and strengthens those noble longings too by which the human family strives to make its life more human and to render the whole earth submissive to this goal" (Church in Modern Continued from Page Sixteen World, 38).. to the warm, personal, close celWhat the Council teaches is ebration you shared, it; that put in sirnpler language by a cl\lssroom a few weeks ago. grade girl, "You can tell a ~ . fifth The churches frequently arc too, Christian by how they love crelarge, the congregations quite ,BISHOP CRONIN MEETS MAN OF THE YEAR~ ative things and how they love different, , the .singing wooden James E. Bullock, a member of Holy Na~e Parish, Fall other people." . and half-hearted. the reading Discussion Questions River is congratulated by Bishop Cronin on being named poor, almost unintelligible, the I. What is the Christian signisermons not truly tuned in to Man of the Year by the Fall River Chamber of Commerce.' ficance, if any, of the modern your interests. Much of this is technological advancements? avoidable and I hope that by the 2. What does the Second Vattime you reach adulthood ican Council have to say about churches ''Will be smaller, ,the the value of human creativity? singing more enthusiastic, the ELY (NC)-Fathers Philip and 'find out in a real way what it's reading and preaching of better Daniel Berrigan "are better off all about." quality; , Urge Catholics Try Disagrees With John But, even so, is Mass for giv~ out of circulation until they ing or getting? Is it only to say . change tlYeir wayst according to He said that he has 'not seen, To Build Peace LUANDA (NC)-The bishops "please" or also to utter 'a their 57-year old brother who written, or talked to his two in this Portuguese African ter"thank you?" Is it to give grati- works as a caretaker at a lodge brothers in six years. ritory urged Catholics to try to tude or merely, to gain favors? 'near this mining resort town "And they haven't gotten in ' Is it for praising God or solely here in Minnesota. touch with me to try to explain help end the guerrilla warfare that has been going on in AnIn a letter to the editor of their views," he added. "Evifor finding Him? gola for about 10 years. the Minneapolis Tribune and in dently they didn't think it was I hope, Judi, you have ~any a later phone conversation with Black African liberation worthwhile. " more Eucharists which are beauAnother Berrigan brother, J e- groups . seeking independence tiful and do 'uplift you. But I NC News, John Berrigan said of likewise pray that you have faith hs brothers' anti-war activities: rome, who teaches English at from Portugal have been fighting Portuguese troops since, and strength to worship around "I simply don't agree with them, Onandaga Community College, 19GI. Syracuse, N. Y., said that he the altar even at dull moments that's all. In a joint pastoral letter is"Their influence with young dsagreed with his brother John, and in drab places. sued after their' annual meeting people has been bad and they but that "In our society every Love, here, the bishops of Angola said will do untold harm in the future one is entitled to \l hearing. Uncle Joe. "I love them, I trust them, I they recognize the misuse· of unless they straighten up and am with them totally," he said wealth in Angola and reject the fly right," he said. Scores Economic "I figure they're not being pa- of his brothers Daniel and Philip. imposition of European customs He said his reaction was one on the African population. But triotic, carrying on the way they Development Plan they also urged avoiding vio"shock and disbelief" when of CHACO (NC) - Bishop , Italo are, taking the civil law into lence as a means of changing he learned in January that they against their own hands, going di Stefano' of S'aenz Pena desociety. nounced a government plan for the government in burning draft had been indicted on charges of conspiring to kidnap presidential records and pouring blood on the economic development of aide Henry Kissinger and dynathis area as "materialistiC colo- them and so forth." mite federal heating systems in nization that ignores the interBerrigan said that he, like Washington, D. C. ests of the people of Chaco." his brothers, is "not in favor of 3 SavDngs Plans The \Argentine government the war," but that he has, beHome Financing plan calls for the development cause of his patriotism, "never of 12,000 acres in Chaco prov- gone beyond speaking and writince, principally by attracting ing against it." He said that he ONE STOP foreign corporations to the area. has written letters to the editors SHOPPING CENTER "I feel that the people should of both the San Francisco Exam• Television . ' Grocery have been consulted," Bishop ncr and the Minneapolis Tribune • Appliances • Furniture di Stefano said. "They called a protesting U. S. involvement in 261 Malo St., Wareham, Mass. 104 Allen St., New Bedford meeting here and they arc' Southeast Asia. Telephone 295-2400 Bank·By·Maii Service Available against the project." Berrigan declined to comment 997-9354 He. said the people fear that on the' recent conspiracy indicttheir land and their labor will ment against his brother, Josephbe exploited, and that the only ite Father Philip, because "I ones to profit from the develop- haven't been in a positiori to ment will 'be the, foreigners.

Thanking God

Brothers Voice Mixed Reactions To Activities of· Berrigans

Offering You

CORREIA &SONS

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE BANK

JEREMIAH COHOLAN

Woman Barred CHICAGO (NC)-Mrs. Polly O'Grady of Park Ridge, the only woman to apply for the Chicago archdiocesan deacon training prograhl, was turned clown by pror,ram director Father John Ring. Canon law forbids onlinntion of W0I11~11 to the dia,conate.

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THE ANCHOIF-Diocese of Fall" River- ~hurs. Feb:

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S~tr.esses Cath'olic Supp~p~t· for 'Sc;hool~, Need·, 'for State Aid 'Gratuitous ~Assumption'

ops on ; the subject' of Cathol,ic , ' school,S. Smc~ :1 have devoted a has managed to keep' its head its widespreatl ,popularity :makes . considerable amount· of my produring most of the romantic it not one bitl,lTlOre well-fo,tnd,ed, fession, al ~n~'P9Ie,m~cal resources madness 'of, the last five, years, ' The evidence· of Catholic support ,to defendmg C~tholIc schools for cannot by: an stretch, of the for 'their schools i's overJrhelm- the last decade,one might say .imagination be considered ~·pro· ing, "and'regent eVidenc~ also that if this is h0:-V C~tholic eduCatholic," Hence I imagine there shows that the Catholic schools' ca.tors treat theIr' fncnds, thcy. was a good deal of' surprise in receive eXU'eritely strong sopport scarcely need enemies, ;, Stateme~t of the Obvious, ' non-Catholic circles when, the from th~ clergy, too. 'd 't ;,II The meetmg of the archblshmagazine recently publis~ed an One hears It sal repea eu y, ' . ops,. ,of . course, ,article entitled, "Politics' and ",We, can't, m k e th e tUI,'t"IOn t 00 ' ' ,was somethmg . 'h ' 'h "t h' 'h';' well wlthm theIr" prerogatIves, Parochiaid," by Murray' Friedhig ,n But WI' at 00 I~, IS but at, the risk, of being deman and Peter Binze,n. remains to be seen and the only 'd . '. b th t nounce once agam, y a, . h I people who can deCIde t at are, 'h' b' 'h I t ' th t . . I '. C' 'h "I" wort y IS op, , e ,me say a analySIS, at I 0 les I regre t t'h a t" WI"th' th' de I'b m the fmal ' elr I erthemse Ives. ',; 'th d'd' t ft t The enrollment has slipped in atIOns ey "I, no, see ~ ,a I " h t have present some representa-,, By a th e d'e I'Iht g" h ' t hese years, 'muc ' I wn " ters anu, Li th e lIves of the " students, teac ers, of t h e h ea dl me J'b I C th Ii C " S' f and CatholIc laIty that keep the I ,era. a a I press, oJ1le, a schools going.' ' may be due to m· , . " ', ' thIS slIppage M./ t d' I t' For It ' , IS the, students, , , ' , teachers, " crease d cos t s, some a I~sa IS' 'th h t " . , and laity who, have, m the fmal f ac t Ion WI IW a goes, on m " ," " ' GREELEY " , 'hi analySIS, created and' supported Cat~ol..c schoolls, but muc Imore the Catholic schools' for the last of It IS due to smaller· age co, , . th e earI Iy years 0f gramI century. They h or t s m " ,are . the ones " who I d t' th Ordinary readers of liberal mar sc h·00'I an' a e ., vIr t ua I are bemg dlscnmmated ' , agamst I . I Id h e assumed of a b sence 0f new, sc-h 00 I c 0 ns:truc- by the refusal of state. aId; they Journa s wou av. 't" th I I t' d d I are the ones who Will have to course, that the article would be Ion m e ~s, eca e. I ' -' .. ' . . b It is interestit~g to note, that make the sa.cnflces If t~e schools against para,chial school aId, ut \" to contIn u e .e,v en mthe abin fact the two authors made an a t th e recen t secre t'" mee, t'mg are . f I f A " hb' h i ' sence 0 ,state aid, and extremely strong case in favor 0 merlcan arc IS ops ' o n ' . they are of it _ a 'case which would p,er- Catholic schools a good dea( was the on~s on wh~m the ,future of " " ,m. CatholIc depends, haps not be,, too surprising to ,sal'd a bou t "th eI mora Ie cnsls , 'educatIOn . . I That t'here I thmk thIS IS ',merely a state. 'c 'educ the care'ful readers of the New Catholl a tion t f th b d e a VIOUS an not. a is one I do rtot doubt, bOt it men 0 , t i t , b an 0' challenge to anyone's .leadership. Republic, Over the past several d' oes seem a me 0 e pen 0 h h :11" . Years the New Republic has I, h ' hi' f ne .as t e appa · , t t taken a very benign attitude ques IOn as 0 ow muc 0 ' .mg ImpreSSIOn ' m certam ,clrc.les eve.n a thl's morale cds h') can' be' attrib- that toward Catholic schools. t t f th b II b he Cll()sing' . dow,ri . of s, (J,tem,en 0 e 0 VIOUS WI e There is a strong hint in the uted to t tt t d h II h Friedman-Henzen article that the some Catholic I schools (us~ally , ~ons I ~.e as a c a enge to t e principal reason for opposition without consultation with i the eaders Ip. for .aid to Catholic schools is a Catholic laity ihvolved~, and1 the subtle, nonetheless' deep-seated failure to open \new schools. bigotry. The two authors say, Deeper Laity Involvemen~ "Catholic resentment at being One spokesm1an for the ~ish. forced to support public schools ops advocated ~isitation by pasBishop Connolly High School with their taxes while getting tors to the peo~le in their p~,rish . of Fall River 'won the Class C no public help for their own to reassure them about Catholic Championship i~ the New Engschools :is understandable. They schools. I would certainly not be land Catholic Invitational Basknow that the United States opposed to thatl sort of acti~ity, ,ketball Tounrament played at alone among Western nations re- though a deeper' involvement Lawrence Central High School v stricts its aid to ,stat.e schools," with the laity ih making firian~ this ,past week. 'Anyone who has spent any cial decisions about the sch60lsIn the Semi·final on Friday, time reading the history of nine· and new schdol construction Connolly beat St. Patrick, of . teenth century bigotry knows might do a goo~ deal more for Watertown, the Title holder how, powerful" suspicion and morale. \ . from last year, by a score of hatred for Catholic schools is It also oug~t to be time! to 54 to 4B. Both ;John· Mitchell in the nati~ist' soul. That this declare a moratorium on Ithe an<,l Jim Kalife scored 20 poInts suspicion persists into the twen- foolish questior of whetrer each. Ron Travassos. hit for B tieth 'century under the guise of there ought to be Catholic points and Charlie Shaker, Jim an e.\aboJl'ate theory' about the ,schools in the' ihner' city orl in Nicoletti· land Gary' Considine separatioll of church' and state the' suburbs. Th~ only answer is' each· scored' two points. Jack is not surprising. that there oughtJo be school~ in Curry's Cougars were in front But it ,does seem to. me, that both places, Wough differ~nt all the way. those' who p'ropou~d the theory varieties of firlancial suppbrt In the ~inal of 'Sunday afterin the face of the fac't that every ought to be aVailable for' the noon the Cougars played St. other Western 'nation gives aid different schoOIS.\ I Columbkille, of Brighton. It was to . Catholic schools ought at Thus, most 'suburban schobls a close game all the way. At least to ask, themselves whether can be self-suppdrting if the lay the end of the firs,t quarter. Cohere might not be just the taint people in the cofumunity decide lumbkille was ahead with a of nativism -lingering in the that the school isl worth suppott- score of 19 to IB,At the inter· depth of their unconscious. ing. The inner-city school v-fill m'ission, Connolly was in front I am' not ~ure how the Su- function only if lit. is support~d 30 to 29 and at the three quarpreme' Court will rule on some by the whole chu~ch and the dio- ter mark, Connolly again led of the cases pefore it, though I cese. presUmabl Yi\" there wo~ld 45 to 43. am convinced that constitutional be no doubt .at all about our' But Columbkille was' in, foul ways to aid parochial schools Willingness to engage in this sdrt trouble' and during the fourth' can be found if people have a of activity. I. '. I quarter both Steve Fleischaker serious intention. to find them, _ befende~ o~ ;Schools' I and Peter Mee fouled out, With In all likelihood, the picture will , I run considerable risk in say- ' superb effort they, had covered vary from state to state with inganything on these, ,subjects. , John Mitchell very well and some states deciding that it is 'Recently, a bishop dispatched 'i a held him to 12 points. But in an intelligent and sensible thing' , secret denunciation to the rest the final minutes of the game, to aid Catholic 'schools and thal: of the AmeriCan !liierarchy i~ . Mitchell ran up 13 points and it might, in fact, be a saving for : plying that I wa~ against· state the Couga'rs opened up their the taxpayer; other states may aid to Catholic SCrOOIS. and that lead. The final score was 64 to 'cut off their nO,ses to spite their. I was challe,ngin g the,'I,eadershi p 54. faces. " :.: . , ,of·,the bishops on Ca.tholic edJ. ' John Mitchell had 25 points, But I must.' say that I' ani . "cation. . .". i Jim Kalife 17 points, Ron 'Tra- ,. astonished with the widespread This is to laugh, of course, vassos 13 points, Jim Nicoletti, opinion among, Catholics that in since most Catholic lib'erals are 7 points and Gary Considine 2 the.absence of· state. aid Catho- ' convinced I sold otit to the bish. points. Although backcourt ace The New' Republic, the mod-

Iic schools c I finot survivJ"I This

cnltel~i left-liberal journ.al which, is a gratuitous assumptiop, and

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Bans Unwanted Ad Mailings WASHINGTON (NC)-Anyone in the country who wants to keep unwanted pornographic ad

mailings from reaching his mailbox is able to do so. The assurance came from Postmaster General 'Winton M: Blount, fortified" by new legislation approved last Summer as part of the postal reorganization . system. Charlie Shaker didn't appear in Blount said those who wish to the scoring column, he set up take advantage of the new law, the win with his fine ball con- may obtain· a form from any trol and his many interceptions. post office and register his Coach Jack Curry nominated name and' address. center John Mitchell as his most The Post, Office .will -'keep a valuable player in the tourna- computerized list of persons who ment and John was presented file the form. with the M.V.P. trophy, Mailers of pornographic adMonsignor Robert W. McNeill, vertising material are required Director of CYO in the Arch-· diocese of Boston, presented the· under the law to check the list to insure such' mailings will not awards to the winning teams. Connolly took home the Bishop be sent to those who object to receiving such materials, it was Mac Kenzie Trophy for first explained. place in Class C division. Mailers who ignore the new ban against smutty ad mailings may be subject to criminal prosELECTRICAL ecution under the new law. Contractors

Connolly, High Quintet Tourney Champs in Class C Competition I

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DEPART FOR MISSIONARY WORK IN INDIA: Sr. Patricia Sullivan, O.P. left, and Sr. Marie Claire Salois, O.P. right are bade Godspeed by Mother Marie Ascension, O.P. center, vice-provincial of the Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Tours as the two nursing sisters leave tp establish a: dispensary in Kuttikad, Karala State, So. India.

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SCHOOLBOY SPORTS IN THE DIOCESE

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--Thurs. Feb. 25, 1971

Billy Walsh of New Bedford

I' St. Anselm Soph Among Top Scorers Helped Holy Family Win

By PETER J. BARTEK "

Norton 'High Coach

...... _.i~l .... _....'_~,_ ..... __ .. _~~~ __ ...~I Som~rset Enjoying Finest Hoop Ca~paign in Years

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Tech Tourney Now that he's in cullegl', Walsh faces a .similar dilemma.' Competing against players threeto-four inches taller, Walsh has' encountered little 'difficulty in the early st.ages of the season . , . at least from a scoring standpoint. His high-arching, fall-away jump shots have, been falling through the hoops with amazing regularity. •

BY LUKE SIMS

A year ago, Billy Walsh was called one of the "finest prospects the' school has had in a long time." The man making the statement was St. Anselm's freshman , coach Frank ,Harlan. That was a year ago, Somerset High will host Holy Family High .of New Walsh is a member of Bedford in tomorrow night's top Narragansett League at- theToday, Saints varsity and, although traction. The Raiders, perennial Narry leaders in football Harlan is no longer a coach at and baseball, have· fashioned, one of t~eir finest hoop the Manchester, New Hampshire campaigns in, many. years. hope that they can come up, with school, the plaudits continue to And, now find themselves one more super effort and top- flow in the ,direction of the New in a position to rival the cir- ple the Blue" Wave for the first Bedford resident and former Holy Family standout. cuits best. Coach Ray Mc- time in years. Walsh, won a varsity ,.starting In the first meeting between Donald, in his first full season at berth when the season was nine Somerset, has been receiving a the clubs Holy Family edged the games old: Since then he has effort from' his Raiders 45-44 in New Bedford.' maximum been shooting at a torrid 59 per charges all season long. And, as With 'a, homecourt advantage' cent clip from the field and is a result, the, Blue Raiders enter Somerset may.just reverse the well up in the double figure prethe final week of the season decision: ' game scoring average. Entering play this week the only one game behind pacesetter He ran up a team high of 17 Holy Family. ' McDonaldmen needed a victory points in an 83-59 loss to North- , Forwards Dave Driscoll and over Dighton-Rehoboth while eastern and tallied a game high Mike Jenkinson, guards Bill Bar- Holy Family has to beat Seeof 26 markers as the Saints rar and Dennis Jew along with konk, to set the stage for tomorrouted P.lymouth State, 86-67., center Don Henriques have been row's contest. Somerset with Billy was a top gunner in a performing in yeoman like fash- two wins this week could gain 106-85 win over Bridgeport when ion all season long. It is their a share of the Narry title. he pumped home 21 points and he added 15 as the Saints lost Holy Fam'ily's Gomes 'Star of· the Day' to Central Connecticut, 86-75. That honor would surpass the invitation'to both the New EnStanding "only" 6-2, Walsh is thrill of defeating Case High of gland Catholic and Tech tourna- listed as a guard in the team's Swansea which the Raiders did ments annually. press guide and is one of only Nobrega coached teams have two teenagers on' the varsity. last week for the first time in won two Tech Class C titles and He's the only second year man seven seasons. Three Narry clubs have al- . six Narry championships. to crack'the starting lineup. The Parochials were defeated ready qualified for Tech tournaLast seaSon, Walsh suffered a ment competition and defending in semi-final Catholic tourney painful ankle injury that kept champion Case entered play this play last week by Marion High him on the sidelines for most of week needing one more win' to of Framingham. However, fresh- the first half of the freshman man Steve Gomes was sighted season, but when he returned join the elite group. The Cardinals who hope to by a Boston newspaper as "star to action" the 6-2 sharpshooter join Holy Family, Bishop Con- of the day" for his 31 point poured in the points at the rate nolly High of Fall River and effort. The 14 year old youngster imSomerset in tourney play will entertain Dighton-Rehoboth in proves with each performance. 'Birthright' Offers His presence at Holy Family will To Help Women the season's finale tomorrow. Eleven years ago Coach .J ack certainly keep the New BedfordWASHINGTON (NC) - Sixty Nobrega took over' the helm at ites in the basketball limelight Washington area residents conHoly Family and since that time for, at least, the· next three cerned about the growing ease the Blue Wave has received an years. in getting abortions here have i

banded together to provide an alternative for women with unBishop Connolly High enters a return matcJ:1 to New Bedford wanted pregnancies. Organizers of the new volunthe Tech tourney as a darkhorse, High last week as the Whalers but cannot be' taken lightly in assured themselves of the' Bristol teer service, called Birthright, will staff a 24-hour-a-day referview of its performance in the Co~nty League title. Stang, County runner-up, at' ral center to tell pregnant womCatholic tournament. The Cougars, in their first this writing, needs one more' en where they can' receive medtourney appearance, walked off victory to qualify for Tech com- ical, financial or psychological help to continue their pregnanwith the Class C title by defeat- petition. If the Spartans do gain a cies. ing St. Columbkill High of Birthright' is' "dedicated to the berth, the County will have three Brighton 64-54. Elsewhere around the diocese, representatives in Boston Gar- proposition that every child, l3ishop Stang of Dartmouth lost den during play-off time. They even early in its life in its will be New Bedford, the Arti- mother's womb, is a human besans of New Bedford'Vocational ing with the right to life, and Name Msgr. Randall and Stang. every woman has the right to Undefeated Barnstable is the have her child,", according to Market Consultant only Capeway Conference team Birthright organizer Jane CanNEW YORK (NC)....:..::Officials. of the Catholic Major Markets to receive an invitation to. the nelly. Office space and initial fundNewspaper Associ;ltion here an- Tech thus far However Fairnounced that they have retained haven like Sta'ng andC~se en-' i~g for the service'.s telephone tered this week's play needing bIll ha.ve been. provIde? by the Msgr. John S. Randall, former editor of the Rochester Courier- only a single triumph to gain C.athohc ChantIeS SOCIal agencles here. Journal, as a consultant to the entrance to the classic. board of directors. With the season almost over,' Protesters Evicted Msgr. Randall was one of the it' is interesting to . note the' ff'lIIH(ers of Catholic Major Mar- strength of New Be'dford area HONOLULU (NC) - Eighteen l\('ts in 1967 and has been secre- teams. anti-war 'protesters including (;ll'y-treasurer of the association New Bedford, Stang.and Vocathree Brot.hers, two nuns, -and a sineI' its incorporation. U.S. soldier absent without t.ional finished one, two, three leave from Vietnam have been Catholic Major Markets is the in t.he, final Bristol Count.y evicted by' police from the camIwtional advertising represent- League standings. Holy Family pus of the ,Catholic Charminade ative for 23 diocesan papers is on, top of the Narry loop College he're and charged with <I1\d places advertising in 60 [\nd Fairhaven' is runner-u:) in trespassing. ' the Capewriy Conference. ' other diocesan newspapers:

Banner Year for New Bedford Area Teams

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Asks Court Deny 'Atheist Request WASHINGTON (NC) - The Department has asked the Supreme' Court to deny atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair's request. that American astronauts be prohibited from reli-, gious activities on moon flights. Mrs. O')-Iair, who won a Su'preme Court ruling against prescribed school prayers in 1963, claims the Apollo 8 and II astronauts engaged in religious ceremonies to establish Christianity as -the official religion of the United States. Justice Department Solicitor General Erwin Gris";old argued t.hat Mrs. O'Hair lacks the standing to challenge astronauts' ac- ' tivities on the basis that the federal funds supporting moon flights were used unconstitutionally for religious purposes. Even if she had a taxpayer's claim, Griswold said, the astronauts only carried personal religious items which had the effect "of improving the morale of the astronauts and thereby contributing to' the success of the flight." Mrs. O'Hair, who lives in Austin, Tex., filed 11 federal co~rt suit protesting that the Apollo 8 flight was made at Christmas, , 1968 to coincide with the reli' gious holiday and that the astronauts read from the Bible on man's first orbit to the moon. .I ustice

BILLY WALSH of 14 per game to lead his mates to a respectable season. Walsh is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Paul Walsh, 233 Arnold Street, and is a communicant of St. Lawrence Parish. His younger brother Paul is a starting guard on the Holy Family High basketball squad and recently helped spark the'Bl~e Wave into the annual New' England Catholic Invitation Tournament and to within two victories of ciaiming the Narragansett League championship. While Billy was a member of the HFH varsity, he led the Narry League in scoring during both his junior. and senior years topping the 1,000-point caree'r total during his final season. His greatest thrill was helping his team to the Class C Tech Tournament title two years ·ago. His two free throws with 10 seconds to play gave the Blue Wave its first lead of the night and the eventual championship over a much bigger North Andover quintet.

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I THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Feb. 25, 1971 . - . - . .I . I

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