Flay B~y State Abortion Change Worcester Auxiliary Speaks for Church Catholic spokesmen in Boston rigidly oppose legislation to ease the Massachusetts 125-year-old abortion law, while in Milwaukee an attorney warned Catholic hospitals to adopt policies on abortions to offset the possibility that the state's abortion law may be overturned. Meanwhile in Richmond, the Virginia House of Delegates, by a 58-35 vote, passed a bill- changing the state's 123-year-old abortion law and forwarded it to the Senate. In Trenton, a wide difference
Consider National Projects The members of the Board of the National Council of Catholic Women, meeting on the fiftieth anniversary of their federation's founding, considered seven major problems facing our nation in the decade we nre entering and encouraged the councils throughout the nation to become involved in the sevenfold proposal. Noting that the United Nations Organization was observing its silver jubilee, the boar.d emphasized that "unless man learnS to work and to live in harmony with his fellow man, nationally and internationally, his technological progress can be his undoing." The board also endorsed President Nixon's objectives to eliminate pollution and organized crime, narcotics and pornography and the continuation of thc efforts of all councils to increasc their members' awareness of the problems of hunger and nutrition. Turn to Page Six
Veiled Statues? Traditionally, the statues in churches were all covered in purple on Passion Sunday, that Sunday that preceded Palm Sunday. However, in accordance with the latest liturgical changes, Passion Sunday has been changed to the Fifth Sunday of Lent. Statues are not to be covered with purple veils unless the national conference of Bishops has decreed otherwise. However, the Passion of Christ should be stressed during these last days of Lent and in preparation for Holy Week.
of opinions has cropped up among members of a state abortion law study commission, increasing the likelihood that no action will be taken at this session on amending the statc's 150-year-old law. In Boston, the contention that路 human life resides in a fetus "from the moment of conception" has been reaffirmed by Catholic spokesman before a joint committee of the Massachusetts legislature. Easing the present abortion law was opposed by Auxiliary Bishop Timothy J. Harrington of Worcester, representing all
the Catholic Bishops of Massachusetts; Msgr. Paul V. Harrington -of the Boston archdioccsan marriage tribunal and Attorncy Edward B. Hanify, legal aide for Richard Cardinal Cushing .of Eoston. The committce held a day-long hearing on three measures-- to Cl.bolish or alter thc abortion statute enactcd in 1845, and rc-
Catholics Ve~emently . Oppose Easing
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ANCHOR Vol. 14, No. 11, March 12, 1970 Price 10c $4.00 per year
peatedly upheld by the Massachusetts Supreme Court. Ovcr 500 spectators, including militant members of women's "liberation" organizations, attended. Bishop Harrington and the other Catholic spokesmen reaffirmed the propositions "that a fetus is a human being from the moment of conception, the legal enactments which recognize and apply this truth are correct, humane and should not be tampcred with and that an innocent life should be prizcd above lesser values and is to be safeguard('d." The Worccster Bishop added:
"No matter how many attempts are made to give rationale for gaining social acceptance of feticide, thc basic flaw in the argument will always be that it makes an innocent human being the victim of people who' take it upon themselves to exercise God's prerogative in determining who is to live, who is to die, and when the moment of death will occur." Msgr. Harrington warned against the "inevitable weakening of the moral fibre of our socicty that will definitely result from the liberalization, of abortion."
Asserts Scandal ~'~1 Hurting Church ,
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Many of the Church's problems stem from the introduction of secularism and scandlal in our modern life, stated Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen in an interview at the end of a retreat in Camden, N.J. The retired Bishop of Rochester, N.Y. was critical Modern education - "Thcrc is of the Catholic press, mod- something dangerous creeping ern education, the problem into education. It is becoming of priests leaving their vo- politicized. It is becoming a socations, the Church in Holland, liturgy changes, and Vice-President Agnew's attack on the news media. . A sampling: The Catholic Press - "In its critical attitude toward the Church, it is like the child that grows up to spank its own nurse or spank its own mother."
cial necessity, rather than an intellectual privilege." Promoting scandal - "When 1 go to banquets, I just shrivel up when I hear all the jokes about pricsts leaving the Church or about nuns in mini-skirts. We'rc being made a joke today." Agnew's Attaclk-"I was not Turn to Page Two
Fr. N.orton In New Post The Most Reverend Bishop today announced the appointment of Rev. William W. Norton, assistant 'at St.
FIRST DAY COVER: Sister Fidelma, C.S.J., curator of Cardinal Spellman Philatelic Museum at Regis College, receives album of Melville "Moby路 Dick" Commemorative envelopes on their first day of issue from Asst. Postmaster General Frank Kilian Church, New Bedford, as Lehne. Presentation was made at New Bedford's Whaling Mu- Chaplain and Director of St. seum. . Mary's Home, New Bedford. Father Norton, son of William B. and Madeline (Walsh) Norton, was born in Fall River on Feb. 15, 1941. After studies at St. John's Seminary, Brighton, he "More than half the kids in was ordained to the priesthood SAN FRANCISCO (NC)today come from alco- by Bishop James L. Connolly on "Alcohol is the Big Daddy trouble holic homes," she said. "More May 20, 1967. of all drugs," said actress than half the alcoholics come After serving as deacon at Mercedes McCambridge, fea- from alcoholic homes. Alcohol Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, tured speaker at the annual is the number one drug choice Father Norton has been an assistant at St. Kilian Church since meeting of the National Council of youth." The 51-year-Old, husky voiced ordination. He is ~lso a teacher on Alcoholism, San Francisco Turn to Page Two ' area. Turn to Pa~e Six
Alcohol路Biggest Drug
FR. W. W. NORTON
2
THE ANCHOR-Dloc~se ot Fall River- ~hurs. M~r. 12, 1970
Asserts· Scandal Hurting Church
'OFFICIAL Diocese of Fall River ASSIGNMENT Rev. William W.. Norton, assistant at St. Kilian Church, New Bedford, to St. Mary's Hoqte, New Bedford, as Chaplain ~~ctoc' '" I '
A,,~nmenl eff~t;ve W~~;~.'~~l Bishop of Fall River.
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Eulo,gizes Father Lussier As Christ's True P It
w~I~~~ay It
"A sudden, supreme rendezvous," Rev, Thomas Landry, O.P. descnbed the death of his cousin Rev. J. Orner Lussier, late pastor of Sacred Heart Church' North Attleboro. "Priests must be judged by th~ Heaven~ ly Father by what they h a v e ' I ' , done to His people with the Father Landry described 'the sacred gifts He confided t 43 years of priestly lactivit~ of. . . 0 the late North Attlel:!oro pastor their. c.are and ordamed them i~ the light of his lo(ty descripto mmlster: The Word of God, the Eucharist of God and the Charity of God," the Dominican ~ent on .in hi~ eulogy which had hIgh praIse both for Father Lussier and for the Priesthood. "S.ince these gifts come, accordmg to the· design' of our Father, through the one and only mediation of His Son made man, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, the Word of God comes to the shore of mankind in the Holy Spirit as the Word of Christ, the Eucharist' of God as the Eucharist of Christ, the Charit~ of God as the Charity of Chnst. . "These are the gifts confided to the ministry of priests in close c~mmunion and cooperation WIth the Bishops so that they ?lay be immediately delivered m the name of Jesus to the peopie of God and thereby to the w~~ld. . . . So m the fmal analysis, it is m the performing of this actual and vital ministry of salvation through the Word, the Eucharist and Charity, that any priest shows his true colors' and' the metal he is really made of. . "Thereby also must he be Judged by men and God alike. "Dear friends," the eulogist went on, "I feel very SElcure in asserting th~t * • * when good. Father LUSSIer was instantly affronted by God, on each of these three counts - the Word, the Eucharist and divine Charity, he was not found wanting. His' score was more thap good." •••••••••••••• ••••••
Day of Prayer Mar. I5-S( Mary, Taunton St. Francis Xavier, Acushnet. St. James, Taunton. Mar. 22-St. Joseph, Dighton.
North
....... 1 THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River M.ass. Published every Thursday at 41li Highland Ave~ue, Fall River, Mass. 02722 by the Catholic .Press !If the Diocese of Fall R,ver. Subscropllon proce by mail, postpaid $4.00 per year.
tlOn of' the Catholic Priesthood.' "Never did he question the absolute necessity of insuring first these supreme values ~o the peopie confIded to his pastoral care nor did he ever doubht the priv~ i1~g~ of his. c~lI to this saqred mInistry, nor .dld h. e ev · er ·exp.erien~e any personal l crisis I of pr~estly identity, not E1ven during this last decade, even in our midst o~ turmoil and I confusion. ,Much dId he suffer at times to see some of his brother pri~sts n.ot blesse~ with the Isame interlOr peace. ' . It. was the priestjs "sensus fIdeI" (sense of faith) that guided him in not only criSes but all priestly activity. "He~e lies the ~asi~ reaso~ why FatHer at least m hIS own life, felt so tOmmitted t~ t~e preservation of he special dlgmty, of the Priesth od in ,the Catholic Church an~ in any Christian ~ociety." I : The. Pneshood, th~ eulogist ~ent on was "a dignity, accordmg to Father (Lussier) undeserved by any man, gra~ted' by Christ Himself,. to make of this elected or chosen m~n a partaker in His own supteme dignity as .the Prophet, the IPriest and the Kmg of the New and Eternal Alliance, empowered lunder the same Christ by the It0ly Spirit to deliver .efficiently [the Wqrd, the ~,uchanst and the Charity., of God. ; The energetic activities of the lat~ pastor. well fU'filled the Scnpture when St. Paul stated "Whatever things are ~rue, what~
~:;te~~~o~~~:,le~~~:f:;e~oJ~s~:
whatever of good repute, if there be any virtue, if artything is worthy of praise, think upon these things." I Father Lussier "thought' a great deal 'upon these thhi.gs' and always helped. sol that they wnuld be b,ought ,tnt~ being.:.
Necrology
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MARCH 20 Rev. Francis A. Mrozinski 1951, Pastor, St. Hedwig, Ne~ Bedford. . I , MARCH 22 Rev. Joseph A. Martins 1940 Assistant, St. John Baptist, Ne~ Bedford.
NAMED: E. B. Duarte has been named News Editor of NC . News Service, whose new~ reports appear in this oaper. Duarte joined NC rec~ntly after having served as managing editor of The Alamo Messenger, newspaper of the San Antonio archdiocese. NC Photo.
Alcoho~
Drug
Continued from Page One actress, famed for her 'radio TV and movie work, "told her ~udi ence: "I am walking around with a deadly disease." Miss McCambridge made i~ clear she was speaking about her own five-year nightmare of alcoholism. . . She said alcoholism recently earned the dubious distinction of being America's number three killer-right behind heart disease and cancer. Too many people still refuse 10 think about or discuss alcoholism, she said. "It's a no-no like .cancer was when. I was' a· child in 'Illinois," she added. . Miss McCambridge said there is beginning to be more honesty on the subject. "A man stopped me here' in t~e hotel and told me 'My father dIed of alcoholism,' Wonderful I That's the way to get the mon~ key off your back," Miss McCambridge said.
Looters Employ Stolen Auto PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The director, of the Philadelphia archdiocesan Community Service Corps says his agency~.had no part in the disruptions at three Selective Service offices in the ciry. Father Francis X. Schmidt', director of the 3,000-member corps of teenage tutors and youth workers, said that the sports van bear~ng the label, "Community ServIce Corps: Cardinal's Commission on Human.Relations" in . which .suspects attempted' to escape after a building guard saw them rifling files in the headquarters of draft boa'rds had been reported stolen by his agency. "The use of the CSC van was in no way authorized by the CSC," Father Schmidt said. "The CSC reported it stolen. The police have now charged two suspects with larceny of the esc van." Father Schmidt commented: "The CSC took no part in the planning or execution of the disruption. The CSC condemns the duplicity involved in the unauthorized use of the van and the resultant implication that. the CSC and the Cardinal's Commission on Human Relations were in any way involved in this incident."
Continued from Page One so much concerned about what Agnew said, but more interested in the panic which was created among the newspeople themselves. It was curious that all these people ·Iost all of their cool, all of their calm, and began to be vindictive," Priests leaving-"It would be all right if those leaving the Church were doing it to be holier, but I know of no one leaving who wants to be more mortified, more dedicated to the crucified Lord. I've yet to find someone who says 'I'm leaving to become a saint,''' Church in Holland-"What do we know about the "Church' in Holland except what the press has given us? I doubt if the ma.iority of the 14,000 priests in Holland feel the same way about celibacy issue as the 102 men attending the meeting. And some of the 102 were laymen," Changes in liturgy "The changes in liturgy, after all are trivial and they're of no great consequence. The problem in the Church .is one of personnel, not liturgy. The people are confused about those who are supposed to' be representatives of Christ and arc failing badly." "Secularism has crept into the Church," he said, "so that the passion of m!1ny Catholics is to be identified with Christ. "[ think we have to establish !nside the .Church a spiritual core, a spIritual elite, and I think that it will come from the laity more than from the priests and the Religious. I look to the laity to be the salvation of the Church," Catholic Press The Archbishop traced Catholic. newspapers as haying ,come thro1,!gh tnree .stages: . . .. ' "The Cathoiic press first' carried news that. Wl!S '~ever given by the seCUlar press. Our' people had no other way of knowing what was going on in the Church th~oughout the world and during thIS era the Catholic press rendered a great service to the Church. "Then we entered the, second phase, about a decade ago when th~ ~ecular press began printing religIOUS news. It got the news ahead of us, got it better and got more of 'it. The result was . that we had two competing or-' gans-Catholic and secular. "This. brings us to the third p,hase, wh.ich is very recent. J he C:athohc press, feeling either conscIOusly or unconsciously that the great religious news was being taken over by the secular press, immediately had to do
Mass Ordo FRIDAY - Friday of the Fourth . Week of Lent. Violet. SATURDAY - Saturday of the Fourth Week of L~nt. Violet. SUNDAY-Fifth Sunday of Lent. Violet. Mass Proper; Creed; Preface of Lent. MONDAY-Monday of the Fifth . Week of Lent. Violet.
something to revive or excite, or make the Catholic press different. "One of the very interesting ways that the Catholic press responded was to act like a child who grew up to spank its own mother. So the Catholic press began adopting a very critical attitude toward the Church printing barbed vie~s, exciting controversy and considering itself as almost outside the Church." Archbishop Sheen said this "critical attitude" has caused the people to become confused. The ~ews for the most part, he said, IS seldom ."elevating" and news r~pres~nting the "truly" progressive Side of the Church is given rarely. He wondered if we should have a Catholic press. As for controversy, should the Catholic press ignore it? : "No," the Archbishop replied fIrmly. "It is rather that the first principle should be communication of news, but secondly we've got something to sell so we should sell it. Now the seiling of this would involve an' amount of controversy. All that I'm opposed to is the stress on controversy and that is where the. Catholic press has. gone wrong." -
Episcopal Church Plans Convention. WASHINGTON (NC)-A fifth generation Mississippian who combines cotton production with civil rights activities has pledged that the general convention of the EpiscoPl!1 Church, slated for Oct. 11 to 21 in Houston will "exude openness." ' Oscarr Carr Jr., noted Episcopal layman: and co-chairman of the, convention's' agenda commit. .tee,. sai~ hl<re that.~'AIl voices who c,ome will be heard, whoever they are." Carr was in the area to ad~ress the congregation at Christ Church Episcopal in Alexandria Va., on the coming meeting ex: pla~ning some of the prob'lems whIch he and his committee are f?cing and urging their suggestIOns and support. He has made many such addresses at the inv.it.a~ion of Episcopal cOl')gregatlOns around the country. The "great issue" presently before the agenda committee Carr .said, is whether to reco~mend t~at each diocese "bring additIOnal representatives of minority groups for input at discussion sessions," He said there are "lots of noises" from both sides on the subject.
Mrs. Mary Mcisaac' Funeral Yesterday The, funeral of Mrs. Mary (McDonald) McIsaac, widow' of the late Colin Mcisaac, was held at Corpus Christi Church, Auburndale, yesterday morning. She was the mother of Rev. Edward F. McIsaac, assistant at St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro.
Move Slowly
TUESDAY-Tuesday of the Fifth , Week of Lent. Violet. Mass Proper; (St. Patrick, Apostle of Ireland, may be commemorated today).
The reason why the race of man moves slowly is because it must move all together. -Reed
WEDNESDAY - Wednesday of the Fifth Week of Lent. Violet. (St. Cyril of Jerusalem may be commemorated today).
BROOKLAWN
THURSDAY -: St. Joseph, H~s band of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Patron of the Universal Church. Solemnity. White. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Preface of St. Joseph. No commemoration of Lent.
FUNERAL HOME, INC. R. Marcel Roy - G. Lorrll;lIe Roy . Roger UFrance
FUNERAL DIRECTORS 15 Irvington Ct. '-
New Bedford 995-5166
Prelate· Cotes Negro Contributions To American Life, Civiliz(Dtion
tHE: ANCHORThurs., Mar. 12, 1970
Free Stencils Are Available
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CINCINNATI (NC) - Black documented publication" preAmerica's chief gift to the na- sents chapters on black explorlion's white majority is a reli- ers, workers and soldiers, on gious one, Archbishop Paul F. freedom and democracy, on The Diocesan Purchasing OfLeibold of Cincinnati told De Negro art and literature. fice announc~s receipt of a gift Porres Council, Knights of Co'Gift of Spirit' of over $5600 in duplicating suplumbus, here. "Among the contributions, the plies from the 3M Company, St. Moreover, the N~gro sta~dsas one of particular concern in our Paul, Minn. The supplies, conthe .test of the. ~hlte man s pro- context of religion is the 'Gift sisting of a large number of fesslOn of rehglOn. and o~ de- of the Spirit,' the peculiar spirthermal_ master mimeograph mocracy, the archbishop said. itual quality that the Negro had stencils, are available for use in He ~ecalled that the De Por~es injected into American life and institutions of the Diocese. councll ha~. been formed flye civilization _ a certain spiritual years ago to make a specI~1 joyousness, a love of life, a According to Edward McDon· agh, Diocesan Business Consult· appeal ~o "the black Cathohc dreamful conception of the uniant, many facilities of the Diocommun~ty.. verse, an intense sensitiveness cese, including a large number Archbishop Lelb?ld ackno~l- to spiritual values," the arch?dged .that at th~ t~me, ~s auxd- bishop said. of schools, have infrared copying machines and mimeograph equiplI~ry bishop of Cmcmnatl, h~ had Noting that "the first distincbeen opposed to the fo~matlon of tively Negro American institument necessary to use these a mos tl ,~lack councl! because tion was the Negro church," stendls. The thermal masters, a relatively new product in the he. saw It as a ~on~esslOn to the Archbishop Leibold said: "Gradcopying field, allow users to eVil of segregation. ually it brought a rational hu" BU~ he adde~ that he .had. to -man religipn based on kindliWASHIINGTON'S BIRTHDAY IN ROME: Pope Paul com memo- make up to 1000 copies of an admit that with the dlrectl~n ness and social uplift to bear rated the holiday of our first president by visiting the American original quickly and at low cost. the race problem has ta~en m on the cold formalism of the College in Rome, offering Mass as principal concelebrant and The stencil materials, available the past year or .t~o, m the Puritan heritage. then presenting the chalice he had used at the Mass to Bishop in a variety of sizes to fit all Pr~>Vldence of God It IS the"best "Negroes indeed have made Hickey, rector of the American College. NC Photo. makes of mimeograph machines, thl.~g you could have done. their contribution to organized _ . may be had at no cost from the d A!1 so you have my fullest religion, but back of all this Diocesan Purchasing Office, 446 blessmg and prayerful hope for there has run in the heart of the Highland Avenue, Fall River. continued growth ~s a living re- American black man the greatPickup arrangements may be sponse to the umque needs of est of human achievements that made by calling the office at our d~y in a most critical area," is, IQve and sympathy-ev~n for AUCKLAND (NC)-The right those under authority, therefore, 676·3036. he said. their enemies." of Christians to think for them· m.ust be peculiarly sensitive to selves and to make truly respon- the distinction between their Cites K of C Book sible choices concerJ:}ing their re- own perception of Christ's will Communvon Supper The archbishop reminded the Detroit Protestors sponses to Christ was stressed and their hUQ1an fallibi,lity. Knights that "there was a time by a joint working committee of "In our separate Churches, de- Of Taunton D of i when there was quite a battle Win Acquittal the . Catholic Church and the cisions in Christ's name will be Cardinal Gibbons Circle, Taunwith particular local units and DETROIT (NC) - Seventeen New Zealand National Council made differently and have differ- ton Daughters of Isabella will members of the K of C-never· University of Detroit protestors, of Churches. ing degrees of authority for in- hold its annual Communion with the national organization- arrested after refusing to vacate In a working paper now being about this m·atter of integra- university premises, were ac· studied by the two parent bodies, dividual conscience, but we are . Supp-er on Wednesday evening, tion." quitted by a· local court on the committee said the use of all concerned for a balance be- March 18 at Marian Manor, tween visible unity and genuine Taunton. "As with most such prob- charges of trespassing. authority in Christian churches lems, the greater and saner eleThe charges had been filed in should reflect' the reconciling personal response to Christ's Rev. James F. Lyons, pastor ment won the day and the prob- connection with an· incident in love of Christ and foster a purpose for His Church." of St. Mary's Church and Circle lem was resolved in a Christian which 1.6 students and one uni- Christ-Ii\{e maturity among the The paper concluded: "Nothing chaplain will offer the Mass manner," he continued. versity emp.loye. were arrested members of Christian: communi- that is said above prejudices the and be principal speaker at the To support his' reference to while staging a sit-ip. to protest ties. truth that conscience is inviol- supper that will be servedimme. ., I the fact that·the national K of C military recruiters'., ,use of. the diately after the Mass. "Both. those in authority, and able." organization "never subscribed university's Cooperative Educato this patent evil of racism," tion and Placement Office. the archbishop cited a book, The 17 were brought to trial "The Gift of Black Folk in the despite four requests from the Making of America," published university that the charges be in 1924 by the Knights of Co- dropped. University officials lumbus-"a few years, in fact a· were unsuccessful in persuading few decades, before it was so the Wayne County Prosecutor's popular to hop on the band- Office that the case should be Sixteen pages, clearly written and wagon." tried at the university through He pointed out that "the well- the campus judicial process. colorfully illustrated, tell why you Universi~y officials announced should make your will and how to go the establishement of an adviabout it: 'Charts on page 3 show what Plan to Discontinue sory board, composed of a mayour heirs" can lose if you die without jority of students. It will investiHigh School Classes gatecamplls disputes. A univera will. Page 5 discusses why you need bETROIT (NC) - John Cardisity spokesman said students had a lawyer's help in drawing up your nal Dearden of Detroit has ordered discontinuance of the high suggested creation of the board will. Page 6 goes into detail about school department of Sacred some time ago.
r
Use of Authority
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Heart Seminary here at the end of the present school term pn the grounds that small enrollment makes offering of quality education impossible. . Seniors among the 205 students affected will advance to the seminary's college department while lower classmen will transfer to various Detroit-area high schools. Father Donald L. Walker, assistant principal, asked for confidence in the. ability of the faculty to restructure the total seminary program to meet contemporary standards and advocated "liberal and visionary use of funds and personnel." He emphasized a possibility of "service to the black community."
Benedictine Oblates Oblates of St. Benedict will hold a. day of recollection Sunday, March 22 at Portsmouth Abbey, R. T. Mass at 9 and breakfast will be followed at II :30 by a conference. A second conference is scheduled for 2:30 with the day to close at 3 o'clock. Reservations may be made with the abbey or by calling Fall River 675·7804.
Learn of Efforts To Avert !Famine ROME (NC)-The papal secre· tary of state told 1,000 men and women Religious in Rome that the world's hungry cannot exist on "pious promises." Instead, Jean Cardinal Villot urged the Religious to become "apostles of worthy and true development" which takes the form of daily bread distributed to all men. The priests, Brothers and Sisters were invited to the headquarters of the Food and Agricultural Organization, a body of the United Nations, to learn· of its internat.ional efforts to stave off world famine. Representatives of more than 200,000 missionaries working in the emerging nations, the Religious of Rome heard the organization's director general, Dr. Addeke H. Boerma, offer a five·point "startegy for agricultural production, trade and development."
Undeserved Dignity Let none presume to wear an undeserved dignity. . -Shakespeare
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Mar. 12, 1910 •
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Declares Israel Wants 'Peac~
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Liberal Critics Ex~gge~Clh~ Power of Labor leaders .
BLOOMFIELD (NC) - Despite its willingness to fight, no other country would welcome peace as much as Israel, an expert on Jewish·Christian relations mainBy lViIsgr. George G. Higgins' tained here. Director, Division of Urban Life, u',s.c.c. Msgr. John M. Oesterreicher offered that view as he addressed There is a common tendency in this' country to exnn interfaith service at Temple aggerate the power of labor le'aders. They are frequently Menorah. He is director of the Institute of Judaeo-Christian portrayed as opportunistic labqr bosses-the "b~d guys'" Studies at Seton Hall University. of the .labor njovement, so to speak-who run their unions South Orange, N. J. autocratically; with little or . 1 , .' Discussing tensions in the' no regard for democratic to champIOn· thc- c~use of t!lC Mid-East conflict, Msgr. Oesterpoor and the. dlsatIvantaged r.eicher noted: "The Israelis are ~rocedures. The rank-an~- without id£'alizing ,the~ as well. so sure of the justice of their fIle, by contrast, are sentl- As a result-until re~ently, 'at cause, .they find it difficult to mentally and idealistically por- any rate-these critics could imagine some of their visitors trayed as the "good guys". who seldom bring thems~lves ,to would not see their country as could, be count- . , blame union Short.c'o~ingS on . they see it." ' ed upon to do the members; instead, .~heycQn- . "Despite their readiness to the right thing cluded that ~ne lead~rs must fight," he stressed, "the Israelis most of the somehow ·be' responsible." COMMEMORATE' BIRTH OF FIRST PRESIDENT: The proces~ion are totally non-militaristic peotime if only I- . think it would I not . be for the Papal Mass _that honored George Washington on his ple, No other cOl-!ntry would they could get . stretching the point too far to welc;ome peace as much as Isout from under suggest parenthetically at this birthday in Rome. NC ~hoto. rael." . the control of point that, to a cehain Msgr. Oesterreicher said the their domineertent at least, ,we· are currently h"''''t1,jllllllll'''''''lIlll.lt'';''''''111l1'''''''1l''1lI11111lllllltll'''''''''''.''''':';IIIn""'ttllllfll'""UI'OIIII""'II'"m"""""""""""h"!I'III"""l1'''U''''",,,"""It''''''''lt'''''Ul'''''''''''''''"11 deepest claim Israelis have to Ing leaders. experiencing a similar phenomfoundations of union democracy. idcalizing the rank-and-file that their country is "the rejuvenaDerek C. Bok, enon in the Church.' , The New York Times, in sup- I suspect they will find it very tion of the soil by the sweat of dean of Harvard That is to say, th~re seems Law School, to be a tendency on tlie part of porting 'Mr. Meany's proposal, difficult to switch gears all of their brows and the love' of and John T. some liberal critics of the ec- has anticipated' this-objection. a sudden and lend their support their hearts." "For Christians as well as for Dunlop, professor of economics clesiastical Establishment to ,"The election of rank-and-file, to a proposal which might seem at Harvard and one of the na- idealize the rank-and-~ile priest representatives to sit with the to imply that much of their pre- Jews, property is not an 'absotion's leading experts in the and parishioner' (th~ "good elected officers on such (negoti- vious criticism of organized la- lute property right. It is a refield of labor-management re- guys") and to hold ·eCclesiasti- ating) committees,'" the Times bor has been somewhat wide of sponsibility, a stewardship-and the Israelis have proved their lations, are of the opinion that cal authorities (the "b~d guys") editorialized on Washington's the mark. I hope that my prediction in" stewardship. The'y are, therefore, this tendency to exaggerate the almost exclusively rtlsponsible birthday, "would insure full power of labor leaders is a ser- for all of the Church's prob- democracy at the same time that ,this regard will not come to worthy of our support." ious mistake in that it fails to lems, faults, and imperfections. it provided a now absent bed- pass. We shall have to wait rock of reciprocal responsibil- and sec. Meanwhile I would have Land for Tenants . Real Problemsl ' reckon with' membership presity at the bargaining table." to agree with Bok and Dunlop COCHIN (NC)-Thousands of B~ that as it maY,1 the tensures, the influ~~ce of subordiAccomplish Nothing when they say that' by under- tenants who have been living on nat~ labor officials and st~ff dency to exaggerate t~e pow~r . That makes very good sense cstimating the problems which Church land in Kerala state here asslstan~s, and the pre~sure ~f of labor leaders is not simply to me-but I will not be great- many 'labor leaders face vis a in India for many years will sOOn t~e environment on union poh- an academic issue. On Ithe concles and pro,grams. trary, it involves. some very !y surprised if some of the lib- vis the rank-and·file, "liberal become owners of it. Church auIn a major book on labor- real problems in the Ipractical eral intellectuals referred to critics have succeeded-after thorities throughout the state -above come out against Mr. two decades pf biting prose-in have begun to transfer ownerI management relations, "Labor order proposal. " ' accomplishing 'virtually. nothing ship of the land to "kudiyans"and the A~nerica~ Com.munity,:' Pr~fessors Bok an~ Dunl6P Meany's They are ,so much .In the ,habit except' to' -atlfagonize, .'the union landless persons who· have built, t~ be pubhshed 10 Apnl by SI- cite two in particidar:. I) the .. hous~~ on land ,owned by others~ mon and Schuster, Inc., Pr?- inability of 'labor "iekders in of criticizing labor leaders .and leadership '; ., ... I. fes~ors Bok ~nd ~unlop. begm some' cases to exercise wage th~lr perceptive dl~cusslon of restraint, eliminate fe~thterbetl thiS problem by talung note of ding, or refrain from strikes be~ the fact that, at present, most. cause of pressures f~om the commentators seem to assume rank-and-file; and 2) the inabilthat the future of. the. labor ity of labor leaders lin some movemen~, rests mamly 10 the cases, because of rank-and-file hands of Its leaders. apathy or opposition, I to tu~n " . Mis~oneeive ~ole " their talents to new fil~lds: e.g., This ,,~omt of vI.ew, they organizing the poor, mobilizing remark, . ~s. reflected 10 the I;on-, their memoers to fight Ifor constant. c~ltlclsm of labor leaders, sumer protection, and taking the and It. I.S buttressed by a mass lead "in developing more of opl~lon data to the effect meaningful life, for workers that unions are. r~n pretty .m,~ch caught between the elevision' Dispose of Trash as the to~ officials see fit. set and the tedium ofl a semi. and Garbage " They pomt out, however, that skilled repetitive job." . : : one must beware of such Endangers Process in an indoor opmlOn, for. each ~f the grou~s The first of these two roblems t~at most mf!uence the pUb~lc is very much in the ne~s at the view. of organized lab~r has ~ts present' time. It is estimat~d ~peclal reasons for ~Isconcelv- that one out of every ~ight col109 the role o~ the. un.lOn leade,~ lective bargaining settl~ments in j and exaggera.tmg hiS mf~uence. disputes handled by I Federal . Of the, major groups. 10 ques- mediators is being reJicted' by AUTOMATIC tlOn, ~ok an~ Dunlop s~ngle out the rank-and.file. I two I.n particular: Bu~messmen A good (i.e., bad) example of and mtellectuals. Busmes~m~n, this growing trend waS the atthey contend, are l.laturally m- bitrary refusal withiJi recent Today's modern home accumulates a cluded to blan,t,e their own lab?r weeks of one tiny group' of steadily increasing amount of waste ~roble~s on some opportunls- railroad employees to. ~atify an tiC UnlO~ leade.r who has suc- agreement negotiated lin good paper, trash and garbage. Pick-up ceeded" 10 leadmg the workers faith by their union leaders. service is becoming more costly and astra~. . To say ~hat this no~-ratificaless reliable. This IS said to be an under- tion trend seriously ehdangers The only logical and sensible ans~er standable re~ction (and not the whole collective bargaining merely a tactlcal ploy) on the process would be puttin~ it very is a m~dern smokeless-ordorless' gas pa.rt of ma~.~gement represent- mildly. But what to dO about disposer by Warm Morning a~lves, for It would be most the matter? I' installed indoors disagreeable to conce.de that Meany's Solutiort wages are kept unfalrl~. low George Meany,. president, of or that the quest for ef,fl~lency theAFL-CIO, has recently 'come Reg. $209.95 had led to harsh su~ervlslon ~r up with one proposed ~olutiori. ~nco~fortable workmg condl- He urges that unions ~mpowe:r tlons., . their negotiating committees to Inte!lectuals, for their. part, conclude binding ag~eements are saId to be overly se~tlment- without the need fOJ' subsequent No Charge for Delivery and NOll1DaB Installation al about tbe rank-and-flle and, ratification. . I by the same token, overly critiIt could be argued, I ~uppos~, cal of labor leaders. 'that this proposed remedy for. Similar Phenomenon the nori-ratification tre~d might Company Liberal critics of the labor prove to be worse than Ithe dismovement, in the opinion of Bok ease it aims at curing, in that . 155 NORTH MAIN STREET - PHONE OS 5-7811 and Dunlop, have been "unable it would tend to undermine the , I.
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THIS PROBLEM (AIN BE EASILY SOLVED
""lIIl&nJ~' GAS DISPOSER
FALL RIVER GAS
Grants Saturday ,Mass Permission To All Dioceses WASHINGTON (NC) The Vatican has given the heads of all U. S. dioceses and archdioceses permission to adopt at will the Sunday-onSaturday Mass program. Until now, permission had to be sought on an individual diocesan basis. The head of a diocese had to request permission to use the new arrangement within his own jurisdiction. Granting of automatic permission by the Vatican was announced here by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. The Sunday-on-Saturday concept allows a Catholic to fulfill . his Sunday and holy day Mass attendance obligation by going to Mass on Saturday evening instead, or on the evening before a holy day of obligation. A spot check by NC News has disclosed that more than 60 of the 162 dioceses and archdioceses, including several Easternrite jurisdictions, already are using the practice. The bishops' conference said the faculty is to be exercised by the head of a diocese only when, in his judgment, it would be in keeping with pastoral need or advantage. Three Masses Father Edwin B. Neill, Conference associate general secretary, said the Vatican gave blanket permission on its own, without any formal conference request. He said the matter was discussed at the semiannual meeting in Chicago in April 1967, after a number of dioceses had received individual permission to start the program., At that timE!, the' bishops had ;indicated they ,had. ho ,objectl6ns tei the program, but preferred to leave the asking up to each diocesan bishop. The Vatican's Congregation for the Clergy gave the blanket permission. At the same time, the Congregation for the Sacraments gave U. S. bishop;:; permission to let their priests say three Masses on Saturday. Such permission means a priest can offer both the regular Saturday weekday Mass and, later the ;:;ame day, celebrate Sunday Mass.
Chicago Teachers Get Pay Increase
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CHICAGO (NC) - A 10 per cent increase in elementary schOOl lay teacher salaries and a 50 per cent increase in Sisters' stipends will go into effect next September throughout the Chicago archdiocese. The Archdiocesan School Board approved a $6,633 starting salary for fully accredited lay ,teachers and a $3,000 annual Religious Sisters' stipend. The board also approved an additional $300 per year for fully accredited lay teachers with a master's degree, a revised sick leave policy, and $180 per year for hospitalization costs for Sisters. The estimated increase in the payroll for teachers for 1970-1971 will be $2.5 million. The current payroll is $21,405,517.
CPA Director NEW YORK (NC) - Msgr. John J. Grant, associate editor of the Pilot, Boston archdiocesan weekly, haS-been elected a director of the Catholic Presss Association to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of Donald Quinn, formerly managing editor of the St. Louis Review, who left the Catholic press field.
Father James w. Clark Heads Taunton Municipal 'Drug Commission
I.HE .A.NcHORVhurs.• Mar. 12, 1970
Plan to Merge School Systems
By Dorothy Eastman
CANBERRA (NC)-A plan to merge government and mission schools in the territory of PapuaNew Guinea into one educational system was announced by Minister for External Territories C. E. Barnes. Barnes said the plan was recommended by the territory's education advisory committee in order to use the educational resources ~here more effectively and to raise the standards of education. Under the plan, mission schools are, permitted to decide whether they will participate in the unto fied system and will be given ample time to make such Qecisions. Barnes said the new system will add $7 million to the PapuaNew Guinea territory's education bill by 1972-73. He said it will provide greater government support for mission schools entering the new system and at the same time safeguard the identity of the schools and their rights to religious teaching. Under the plan, Barnes explained, the administration will pay mission teachers who are members of the new unified teaching service the same basic salaries paid to the teachers in government schools. The administration will also pay a proportion of the salaries and give grants-in-aid to other teachers at mission schools that meet prescribed conditions, he added.
From his office in' t.he Taunton Municipal Drug Commission Headquarters Rev. James W. Clark can look down on the Taunton Grecn, bustling with traffic in the late winter sunshine. He has a close view, too, of the red brick Bristol County Courthouse Annex through whose doors young people are passing in greater number daily to be sentenced for crimes against the in the work of drug education. state's narcotic laws. It is The motto of the organization to st.em that flow that 'Father that is run by the teenagers Clark contributes so much themselves is "Stamp Out Stu-
of his time and efforts, in addition to his duties as assistant at St. Mary's Church in downtown Taunton. Father Clark was appointed Chairman 'of Taunton's Munici""~ ,,* pal Drug Commission last June. The Commission is unique in that ~.,{. it is the only one in the southeast Massachusetts area that is ~ supported by city funds. On October first an office was opened for the Commission in the Crocker Building on the Green and it is open Monday through Friday from 9:30 to 4:30. Father Clark spends a part of each of his busy days at the office where he is available' for counseling. Sitting in the large conference room of the Commission Headquarters, Father Clark paused for a few moments between REV. JAMES W. CLARK Communion calls to a local nursing home and his classes at Bos"They're facing the hypocrisy ton College where he is studying the Vietnam war, racial injusfor a Master's Degree in Educa- of tion 'and Counseling Psychology. tices and the growing gap bethe haves and the have"I consider this a new adven- tween nots. The human spirit is being . ture and a rewarding. experience, oppressed by the mad race for though I must admit in the be- material things." ginning I had severe misgivings In the many hours he spends about what could be done," he counseling troubled young peoconfided. ple each week Father Clark gets Plunging into his new job w.ith a different picture of 'these characteristic thoroughness, and youthfUl' addiCts than society encouraged 'by the response of all segments of the community, - usually stereotypes. False Security Father, soon put aside his mis- . "All too often there is too litgivings. "I envision the work· of any tle love that has been present in and every drug commission, clin- the lives of so many of these ic or committee to be ope of ypung people who have tragicaleducating all members of the ly succumbed to the false security community in the true facts of of the drug world," he says of them. the drug problem," he said. "So many people are ready to Deep Concern "Hopefully an informed com- judge these individuals as "no munity will become a con,cerned good", worthless members of soand involved community. Unless ciety. This is definitely not the parents and teenagers get to case. The drug user is usually know the true facts then false a very mixed up person who has information becomes bad infor- not emotionally grown up," he mation and the problem gets said. ~'The taking of drugs is mereworse rather than better." "There just is no longer any ly a symptom of the deeper pergood reason for people refusing sonal problem of a failure to . to know the facts of drug abuse. grow up in the real world with I say this because it is affecting its joys and sorrows, ups and everyone. No home today can be down, its pleasures and its pain." To prevent the further spread said to be completely safe from a son or daughter being exposed of drug abuse in their commuto the use of drugs," he said, nity, the Taunton Municipal gesturing to a display of replicas Drug Commission meets biof some of the more common weekly. "We have to be one step ahead vehicles used by the young to of the problem so that we are 'escape reality." able to overtake it rather than lDisplay The display case included au- have it overtake us," Father thentic looking facsimiles 'of Clark said. Some of the tactics marijuana, heroin, glue, paint the commission is using to keep thinner, hashish, cough syrup, . that important step ahead is an barbituates, amphetimenes~ gas- ambitious and diverse community education program. oline, cocaine and L.S.D. Educational seminars have "Most drug users are not intentional drop outs from soci- been held for teachers of all ety," Father Clark asserted, "but grades in the Taunton schools. confused, mixed up members of The commission is working now that society." , with a' special school committee "The pace of so many people to introduce a program of drug living their lives without a goal, education in the schools in aim or purpo,se is, I think, the grades six through 12. Stamp Out Stupidity problem the world is faced with The commission is supporting today," Fatl)~r said. "The situation is present the efforts of the J C's and the among teenagers looking here Teen Council to implement a and there for a reason for living. program within the school sys'There are so many problems tem called "Smart Teens." The weighing upon them. ,How are purpose of the program that they going to exist in a world started on the West Coast and that is so disordered and disor- has had phenomenal success is to involve teenagers themselves ganized," he asked.
,.'f!IJ.
pidity." All civic organizations in the city have appointed members to work closely with the drug com· mission in an attempt to deal with drug education. The Taunton Drug Commission recently hosted city drug commission representatives fJi'Om New Bedford, Fall River and Attleboro to further a program of regionalization, helping to learn from lone another's experiences. "I think it's important that we not duplicate our efforts but be united in our effort and work," Father Clark stated. Treatment Center: To this end Representative Theodore Aleixo recently petitioned the state legisla~re on behalf of the Drug Commission to request a special committee of legislators to investigate the feasibility of setting up an In Patient and Out Patient Drug Treatment Center on the grounds of the Taunton State Hospital by the end of 1971. Father Clark recently testified before the committee and has been assured' of a report within 60 days. The Commission considers rehabilitation a vital part of their work. They consult, frequently with Marathon House residents, and a graduate of Marathon House has been employed on a full time basis by the city. Larry Ajar will operate from a drop in center that will soon be opened in a central location in down-town Taunton. He win be available for group counseling of the type that is conducted with great success as part of the Marathon House program at La Salette Shrine grounds in Attleboro. When a boy is brought into court in Taunton on a drug abuse charge he is given the opportunity before sentencing of talking over his problems in counseling sessions with Father Clark. "Most accept this offer," Father states. Court Conces!Jlolll The court allows Father Clark to counsel the addict and upon his recommendations is willing to continue or to drop a case. "The addict is faced with a choice," Father says "between· rehabilitation or incarceration. One helps and the other destroys a human being." "The use and abuse of drugs has unfortunately become a part of the teen culture and it must not be allowed to remain as such," he said. "The pathetic hands that push drugs must be replaced hy the determined hands that reject them. It is my firm belief that the growth of drug addiction would be contained and controlled if more teen agers and young adults would react in a positive way hoth in wo,rd and in deed." "For the work of every person must be the well being of every other person. The hour is already late," he stated, "and the need is all too evident. Life is only worthwhile if each man is my friend."
5
Meeting Discusses Obstacles to Peace ROME (NC) - Conscientious objection, the "just war" and the alleged recent atrocities in Brazil were discussed by an international commission meeting in Rome. Gathering at the headquarters of the Pontifical Commission for Justice' and Peace, the 30 delegates from 20 nations' on five continents were given the task of reflecting "on the more important issues which are obnacles to universal peace." A spokesman for the sponsors, the justice and peace commission, stated that human rights was one of the major areas of concern, specifically the "promotion of an international juridical body for the protection of human rights and their evident violation, such as the atrocities in Brazil."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 1~, 1970
Catholic Women Continued from Page One The national meeting' stressed the . renewal of the NCCW's "commitment of assistance to all young women in poverty through participation in the activities and programs of' Women in Community Service Inc."
Breakdown In a press conference Monday in New Y@rk the Most Rev. Arthur Michael Ramsey, Episcopal Archbi1shop of Can,terbury, said that there had been a general \"brea*down of moral values . . . not only. in the United States but \', in all the Western countries." This is a fact. '. ' And it must be countered with a fact 'top: tha~ merl must return to the concept. of God; and that God has things to say to man, and that while man is ~ree to: obey' or disobey he should not be surprised when 'His disobedience brings chaos upon himself. and his s09iety. .' Men from the beginning of creation' have trie~J tu find a way in which they can serve God a'ndl have :their own way, too. They have tried to keep God \- but': also pander to their own appetites and desires and wil,ls. It is about time they realized that this ,kihd oLcoinpromise leads to moral.collapse. It doesn't ~ork. '
R'acial Imbalance in the schools, human sexuality and the campaign to prevent birth defects concluded their resolutions.
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Conant and Kennedy
As regards social imbalance in the schools, members of the hoard acknowledged "the injustirc of thc de facto segregation in many schools today, found as it is in the north, south, east and west. We commend those who have tried so valiantly to make the 1954 Supreme Court decision on integrated schools a reality. But the fact that the injustice continues at this late date leads us to reconsider the whole problem. Aware of the new emphasis on the beauty of sexuality as a gift of God reflecting the Church's desire to bring our young men and women a recoginition of their important partnership with God in the act of procreation induce the NCCW board members to list Human Sexuality as their sixth project in their over-all program.
:
. Dr. James B. Conant, former president of Haf\('ard, in discussing student activism has maintained \that tp.ere is no general failure of universities, He says tha1\ the "hard ~ore" of sincere activists pn campuses are \"essentially anarchists" and advises dissatisfied students and professors "to be far more cautious about the alli~nces they make." . ' \: There are all shades of dissatisfied people on campus " . \ ', and off. And those who join together:"'" seemingly: against a The statemen~ urged the members of the federation "to join common enemy - may often find themselves being u'sed in the elimination of progcams by those whose aims are not to reform a college or ..uniin their communities which emversity but. t,o destroy it and the' system that et'\eated ~.t.. '. phasize the physical to the ex.elusion of the spiritual nature No one is so ·foolish as to say that colleges and uniof human life." versities are not in constant need of being ~tr~ngthe~ed and made better to meet the changing circumstances of The final recommendation urged all women "to assist in the the times for which they prepare students. But \it mig:1t R~y. John F. Moore, Ia.A., M.A., M.Ed. interpretation of the importance 55. ~et~r 0. ~aul, Fall River be expected that these changes take plac~ as the result of, having each child vaccinated of reason '-:., after discussion and, the drawing up\ ~f phlns ' against Rubella (German M~'sles» s.o~ that,this' Yirus may"not - and' not:.as the result: of violence in rhetoric and ackbe ,traJ1.smi~~p: ...,to It; pregnant As Senator Edward M. Kennedy told a' Trinit~ College ,moth!'lr.s," , '. ~ audience 'in Dublin, the. reformer' must be ratiorlal;' and It has been most difficult day for Sister Bona Forchange must come about not through mindless acts of violence and disruption which seem to aim only at re- tuna, nee Elizabeth Segrams but now just plain Bessy IFfr. Norton to her friends and family. As she relaxed in her new bachContinued from Page One venge but from reason. elor-girl apartment, she' vaguely recalls those first days at Bishop Stang' High School, North Dartmouth; assistant diin the old convent with the Girl 'Scout Week rector of New Bedford CYO and 9:30 since she had one encounter old rule and the' old 'gals.' in her poverty office befor~ she a member of the New Bedford Girl Scout Week summons up images of thel youngWith a shudder, she quickly attended a most important Pre-Cana Conference. ster in a green uniform with a box of cookies under her dismisses them a,s one of luncheon at the Ritz. The ReliFather Norton, as Chaplain arm. \ ' those fashioned bad thoughts. gious Inner City Commitment and Director of St. Mary's Home, Unfortunately, not 'enough people' see behi~d that After all, this is the modern Association knew' where to hold will replace Rev. Albert F. their meetings. image, and realize the training given by dedicated adults nun in 1970! Shovelton who is on a leave of This is the only way that one " She was' happy that the Gon- absence. ' to these young people - a training that incorporates love can encounter the world to ,be salves family took only one-half ~f God and country, a training that aims at teachink mora;l meaningful. She certainly had a hour of her time. After' filling and emotional and physical responsibilities. \ : , busy day and truly has accom- out a few forms and giving them '''''';'''W'''''''''''''''III't1tl''''''''·'''''''''''''''''UlI'':'''''''''IOl''''''''1Il"'UI,IUI""',,,,,, This is another example of the quiet good that is plished a great deal for the Peo- assurances, she was able to dash Bess knew this wasn't her over to Mr. Jack Boutique, a thing. taking place in communities large .and small, all over the ple of God. to' pick former Balogna Father, Wasn't it great that she had The seminar coordinator, the nation. ' ' \ ~ ~ bought that fast little MG to out that new dress that had -been former superior and former distaring at her since her last pay It is another instance of the goodness and decency take her to the inner city office. rectress of shared authority, had check from the Order, the State What one can do with one's own that newspapers and television seldom depict but which asked her what job she was checking account. If she hadn't and the City. yes, she really had planning to take for the Summer, is going on constantly throughout the, land. a busy morning., purchased . that fast little car This is a quiet tide but a strong one., And people, she might have been late for her The luncheon was great. She or, did she think her government ~ met all the 'in-people.' Only, if grant would keep her going. should realize that it is there and e~erting influerce. ' appointment with Mr. Anthony,
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the Church had more of these people in the great battle for salvation..
Bess felt she would stay with her poverty group since. it was having a six-week study program at Osterville on the Cape. It is so nice there in the SumMean'i~gful Dialogue at DinnelJ' Discussion me'r and it would give her a , , She was most impressed with . pIe had called. Her secretary, a .chance to rest before she left Sister Vickey, now the president ,former. Holy Waitress, informed for her vacation in Sardhinia. OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RI~IER ' , of the local parenthood, organi- her that all was quite as usual. Well, enough for the .seminar. . I zation. Her contributions to the This gave Bess' time to rush She had to run, or, she would Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the ,Di'ocese of Fall River I slums were m'ost meaningful. over to the old c'onvent to atnever be ready for the dinner410 Highland Avenu~ , Then, there was Father Lordly, tend the self evaluation ,seminar . the main' speaker. He really of her community. And, it would dialogue at the Jones penthouse. Fall River, Mass. 02722 67.5-7151, , : broke the ice when he insisted be nice to see the old gang This' dedicated family knows how. to do up things. She ar: that they call him just plain . rived in time for cocktails and , , Bill. He really came across with agal!l. PUBLISHER 'And, to'o, it would be a ,mc:an- then a wonderful meal. The ~ a 'vital message, "The Religious Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. , and the Stock Market." , : ,ingful encounter; The ,experts maids were so kind to her. ,However, he should know his from the university, all laymen 'She was deeply impressed by GENERAl,MANAGIER' ASST:, G~NERAl 'MANA ER !,topic since he had purchased a by the way, had such a deep in- the arty peace symbols that decRev. Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. J!,hn P. Driscoll :, seat on the .exchange. There, are sight into the values of commu- orated the living room, during : few theologians who can claim nity life. the meaningful discussion. MANAGING, EDITOR Well, it was getting late and \ this achievement. It was, also' nice to see some H~gh .J. ,Golden, J.D. , After lunch, she returned to .of the old gals wearing a reli-- she did have to run for· she had , ..,.leary Press-'-Fall :River :the office to see 'if any poor peo- gious habit as a sign. such a meaningful day.
'ANCHOR' @rbe ~
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her favorite beautician. It was wonderful of him to take her at the early hour of
Cardinal Dearden Views Celibacy, Pastor's Role in Future Church
'HI: ANCHORThurs., Mar. 12, 1970
Seek Justice Mideast
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MILWAUKEE (NC) The Until now priests have enjoyed a Icader of this country's Catholic preeminence that is perhaps be~n bishops spotted the role of the ing challenged. Before the pastor pastor as perhaps the most im- said, 'We'll do thus and so,' Now GENEVA (NC) - The World portant factor in shaping the he says, 'We'll do thus and so,' Council of Churches told a dele· future of the American Church. and somebody says, 'So, what?' .. gation of Jews here that it will John Cardinal Dearden of DeThe new role of the priest continue discllssions with all troit, president of the National calls for a different concept of parties involved in the Middle Conference of Catholic Bishops, authority, though the authority East conflict to bring about recalso took an optimistic view on remains the same, the cardinal onciliation leading to justice and the outcome of the current celi- explained. Authority, he said, peace. bacy controversy. must be thought of as ministry Representatives of the council Lecturing' to more than 300 of service. met with a Jewish delegation priests at the Albert Cardinal following what was called a seSteady Progress Meyer Institute here on "Toward ries of misunderstandings by Specifically, a crucial point is a Working Relationship-Clergy, leading' Jews of council stateLay, Bishop," Cardinal Dearden reached when it comes to final ments on the question. The Jewstressed the leadership, diplo- formulations for some parish. acish delegation was particularly tion. . macy and good judgment which critical of the council's state"Remember, we're not cona pastor must exercise. ment on the Middle East adopted cerned here with· a 5 to 4 vote, Discussing the celibacy .issue by its central committee in Canduring a question-answer period but with a movement 'toward,' terbury, Elllgland, in August at the conclusion of his lecture, The role of the pastor comes 1969. Cardinal Dearden dispelled down to seeing that all relevant The Canterbury statement doubts that the bishops have factors have been brought in, called for recognition of the po'have been considesred, to see not discussed the issue. He litical independence and terristressed they have issued state- that the movement progresses torial integrity of Israel, but at toward a viable conclusteadily ments supporting celibacy. REACHING MODERN MIND: The School of Pastoral Studies the same time strongly consion," Cardinal Dearden stressed: "But I believe we must at"He is the man, then, who held each Thursday evening in Philadelphia explores techniques demned the situation of Palestintach a great deal of weight on when he sees a consensus has' of modern preaching a:; well as six other "up-dating" courses ian refugees. Th,e statement dethe study currently being made in pastoral practices. Here Father John Burke, O.P., diredor of clared that, "in supporting the of the total concept of the min- been reached cuts off the' discus- the Preachers' Institute at the Catholic University of America establishment of the state of sion and says 'W~'l)' do it,' This istry of today's priest. The reIsrael without protecting the ports are coming in. Until now means a ratification of a deci- joins TV and radio personality Joseph. A. Grady in a session rights of Palestinians, injustice with Philadelphia prie:;ts. NC P.hoto. we've been talking and writing sion," he said. has been done to Palestine Arabs Hence, the cardinal continued, in a vacuum," the cardinal said. by the great powers that should be redressed." "There are those in anquish, the pastor as a member of the we know, and they are crying parish council is an active memA joint communique published out loud, but how many are ber. He is part of the consensus. at the close of the consultation "For him merely to sit in on there, we don't know," he stresswith the .Jewish delegation here Seminary Conducts Pastoral Institute ed. "I fear what has been lost a meeting is to abdicate his resaid: sight of in. the whole discus- sponsibility. He is not diminishFor. Priests "If and when a new statement sion is the positive value of ing his authority in a parish on the Middle East is made, PHI LAD E L PHI A (NC)council but is exercising it in a who must come from as far as the witness of consecrated celithese criticisms, together with bacy to the - Christian commu- way that makes him sensitive to "There's so much going on in the ·80 miles away have been most those from other quarters, will nity-the eschatological value. the Holy Spirit in them," he Church that I felt I had to come faithful in their attendance, be taken into consideration," , . back to school to find out what Father Flood reported, and even I've always felt that isolated said. it was all about.... snow storms have had little efsurveys on celibacy are out of That is how one priest de- fect on class size. context of what the role of a Shows Lunar Rocks Form Harrisburg scribed his reasons for enrolling priest is." Bishop-elect Thomas J. Welsh, in the School of Pastoral Studies rector of the seminary, described I nterfa~t,h Council .Cardinal Dearden calculated To Holy fat~er at St. Charles Borromeo Semi- the School of Pastoral Studies the study commiSSioned by the HARRISBURG (NC) - A new VATICAN CITY (NC) -Grabishops on the priesthood will ham Martin, U. S. ambassador to nary, Overbrook. as only one of several special organization for promoting bethelp determine the basic reasons Italy, visited Pope Paul to give The school, a special gradu- services offered to Philadelphia's ter understanding bctween Chrisfor priests leaving the ministry. him a private showing of lunar ate degree program devoted pri- Catholic community by the sem- tians and .Jews. the fnter-re:igious Council of South Central He added that with the reasons rocks brought back to earth by marily to the continuing pastoral inary. we can hope to cope with them the Apollo 12 space flight. education of priests, opened in Last S'ummer, several hundred Pennsylvania, ha~ been formed here. and to resolve them." Ambassador Martin was ac- January with an enrollment· of nuns became the first women The group, made up of six rep"But I stress we must put it companied by Father Daniel 80 priests in seven courses de- students at the 138-year-old inall in the concept of the whole O'Connell, S.J., director of the signed to. me'et the needs of a stitution when they enrolled for resentatives from the Catholic society. Clergymen of other Vatican observatory, and two changing Church. the School of Religious Studies, Jewish, and Prctestant faiths, will meet periodically to exf:~ith:l are leaving, too. Medical A woman marriage counselor, a part-time degree program for change other Jesuit astronomers, Father ideas. Public meetings men and others are leaving their Patrick Treanor of England and a nun and a local' radio-TV per- teaching Sisters. also will be sponsored so that professions as well. The priest Father George Coyne of Balti- sonality are among the 11community problems may be disrelates to the same cultural more. member faculty at the school, cussed, according to Rabbi Joshchanges of his time and feels Project Equality Father O'Connell said the Pope whose courses range from ua Adler, one of three sponsors the same pressure," the cardinal was very interested in seeing the "Studies in the Old Testament" of the organization. Council to Meet said. lunar rocks. He had watched the to "Human Relations in ContemFirst of the public meetings is In his lecture, Cardinal Dear- landing of the Apollo 12 team porary America," SAN ANTONIO (NC)--Repreden said the notion of all people from the Vatican observatory sentatives of Project .Equality, scheduled April I in the Jewish Team teaching is a feature of the nation's largest private fair Community Center. The topic of the Church working together, over a specially arranged televifour of the seven courses, with a employment program, will as- will be "Religious Signifiance of laity, Religious and clergy, is not sion circuit. priest-counselor team for the semble here March 15-17 for the the State of Israel," Father Edan "option or choice open for The rocks will also be placed ward Flannery, executive secreacceptance or rejection," but a on show in downtown Rome for semil'!ar on marriage counseling federation's semiannual council . tary of the U.S. bishop' Secre,and preacher-layman team for meeting. mandate of Vatican Council II." viewing by the public. tnriat for Catholic-Jewish Relathe "Theology and Practice of "I will be the first to admit," Delegate.s from 19 interreliPreaching and Social Communi- gious projects affiliated with the tions, will be one of the speakCardinal Dearden pointed out, ers. cation." "that many priests have looked Study' Puerto Rico· program are expected to attend to parish councils as a threat. The graduate credit program is the council meeting. In all, more Pastoral Institute J'.:rud Results specifically tailored for the than 350 bodies -of all faiths SAN JUAN (NC)-The Catho- schedules of priests who· must ranging from statewide conferCardinal Announces Rules ,of conduct, whatever bishops of Puerto Rico have study "on the run," Realizing ences to local churches and syn- they may be, are not sufficient Support of Celibacy lic moved toward the establishment that most priests could not come agogues sponsor the nationwide to produce good results unless LISBON (NC)--Manuel Cardi- of an islandwide pastoral insti- to the seminary three days a conferences, whose headquarters 'the ends sought are good. nal Goncalves Cerejeira, patri- tute to aid in coordination of the week for one hour lectures, are in Chicago. -Russell arch of Lisbon, announced his work of the hierarchy and of di- Father James J. Flood, director of the program, scheduled ' strong support here for Pope ocesan councils. NEW HIGHER RATES! : : Bishop Rafael Grovas of two-and-a-half hour classes one Paul VI's emphasis on mandatory priestly celibacy. Caguas was appointed chairman morning or evening a week. 7~% Term Deposit Certificates-$ROO,OOO or more The results, Father Flood said, Assuring Pope Paul of the of a committee to study advisaG% Term Deposfit Certificates - Two years unanimous agreement of Portu- bility of establishing such an in- have been heartening. Priests 5% % Term Deposit Certi«icates - One year guese Catholics on the necessity stitute and to inquire into ways for priestly celibacy, the cardinal it can aid different agencies on 5~% - 9O-Day Notice Boarding School also emphasized the close union the diocesan level to discharge 5 ~ % - Systematic Savings ELKHORN (NC)-Beginning in of the Portuguese Episcopal Con- responsibilities. 5¥..% - Regular Savings The move fOllows closely a September, the former St. John ference with the Pope "in this 5% - Daily Interest similar action taken by the Na- Seminary here in Nebraska will particularly unhappy time." Cardinal Cerejeira added that tional Conference of Catholic become a college preparatory ,. Dividends payable quarterly Pope John XXIII, Pope Paul's Bishops in Washington, D. C. boarding school with "the spepredecessor;was very much con- John Cardinal Dearden of De- cial aim '" ,~ ;' of educating young cerned with defending priests troit, conference president, has men for a life' of service in all BANK BY MAIL from temptation and with re- ilOnounced an advisory body of profess.ional fields," The annewing in all priests the super- bishops, priests, nuns and laity nouncement was made' by a we pay the postage natural virtues which are a liv- was to be formed to study estab- spokesman for the Benedictine South Yarmouth Yarmouth Shopping Plaza Hyannis ing witness to Christ in the lishment of a national pastoral monks of Mount Michael Abbey Dennis Port Osterville council. who conduct ,the school'. modern world.
Gra,duate Program
BASS RIVER 'SAVINGS BANK
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Favors School Ad flo Parents
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa'lI River-Thurs. Mar. 12, 1970 ,
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Welcomre. Irish Fashion~ , To Haute Couture ,Wdrld:
SPRINGFIELD (NC) - While delegates to the Illinois constitutional convention argued whether nonpublic schools should B,v Marilyn Roderick, receive 'state aid, a leading state .¥ official took a different stand on With a hint that Paris may be slipping as the one arid the issue. only fashion center of the world, it may be wise for buy,_ Treasurer Adlai E. Stevenson , I I III endorsed the proposition but ers to look for greener pastures and of course whe~e wpuld with a new twist He favors givone find greener pastures than in that EmetalQ Isle ac~oss ir.g aid to parents. rather than the sea-Ireland. Oh, Ireland· .' t Ie the schools. has been long recognized for a bog to skIp ~hrough,.lt would Asked why he doesn't support . .' 'make a smashmg eve~mg wrap aid directly to schools, StevenitS handsome hnen and hand- -in fact, I did notice that quito son said he believes that method crocheted lace but it has a few of the better Ski shpps if: unconstitution<ll. He said "it only been in the past decade that are ~dvertising. this Iimport~d makes sense" to give aid to puIrish designers have taken the cape Just for thIS purpose, but pils in nonpublic schools which beauty of the the price is a very worldly $150. he identified as "part of our natural materiHand-Crocheted IDrlesses , whole educational plant." If you remember thE1 crochet. Stevenson said the entire ques-' als that abound in this land and ing that your grandmother used tion of state aid to nonpubilc . schools should be considered in turned it into to have in every n:ook and h i g h fashion. cran~y of your hom~,. rou'll ap-.'>", " , t h e light of improving the overSybil Connolly preclate the exqulsl~e ~anp.TO SPONSOR TALK BY SENATOR: Members of St. Ignatius all quality of education in the is of course the crocheted dresses Clod~ch IS d,e-.'. , , . . state. undisputed leadsigning in Ireland andI seJ.1dit;tg G u,'lld ~nd t.h~ lOfyo1a M.en s Club ~f BlshoPlkConnob"Y dHlgl' h Scdhoobl. "The state can help and it er of Irish couabroad. They are very dehcate, Fa River lOin orces In sponsoring a ta to e e Ivere y should" the treasurer said. "If ture both in her with beautiful workmanship and Senator Edward M. Kennedy on Sunday evening. April 12 at the st~te can provide $100 milnative land and styling. ' . ' . I . t the Venus de Milo. Mrs.' William A. Renaud. ticket chairman." lion more for its public schools, abroad. Her designs are elegant, Her deSIgns are becommg so Ralph Martin, gener91 chariman ane! Antone l. Silvia of New it should provide at least the $32 feminine and above all utilize popular in this countryIthat this Bedford finalize the plans with Fr. John G. Cornellier'. S.J. million in assistance to children the handsome wools and rich month's Woman's Da:y has an principal, for dinner, dance and program for the evening. in nonpublic schools," as pro, posed in the legislature last year. linens of her native land to their article devoted to thetrt and any fullest. readers who' are tale*e~ wi~h Meanwhile, at the state's conHand weaves have a special ~e cro~het hook can Wrlte for stitutional convention, delegates richness about them and the tnstructlons. ; at odds over the state aid ishand looms of this land seemed After looking at and writing' sue sought to reach a comproto spring from the grey twilight, about the Ir!sh fashiorys I have mise before the ,question is finalthe hazel woods and the straw- a strong deSIre to tra'iel to t~e Alleged 'Dismissal" of Professor Sparks Iy voted on. berry leaves that are part of it. country a':ld see thes~. cloth~s Boycott of Classes For centuries the cloth had been not only fIrst-hand but m theIr Council of Churches there but the 'clothes' that natural setting. It's c"rtainl~: a NEW ROCHELLE (NC)-The guideline of the American Asemerged from it didn't do it jus- long way to go for a shoPPIt;t~ president of the college of New sociation of' University Profes- Decides to Disband tice and certainly didn't woo ~pree, but one that lopks as :If Rochelle for women said she is sors. FRESNO (NC) - The Fresno The local AAUP chapter said those fashion-conscious people It would be well worth the effort. "bltter'~ over news reports of a Council Churches here, in who saved their Irish wools for All I need· to do now lis find, a two-da'y student boycott of it had investigated the mattter Californiaof has announced its staid suits and serviceable coats. leprechaun with his pot of gol'd; classes ·here. and had found no link between demise after two years of con- " Home Industries • The boycott was called over Frain's contract not being re- troversy. The change in the Irish atti- EcumenicalO,rgOnizatlo,n the alleged dismissal of WiI- newed and his daughter's reAt one time the council conIiam Frain, a sociology' profes- fusal to recite the pledge. The sisted, of, 60 Protestant church I tude toward fashion seems to U d f S d have developed in direct proporrge or tu ents sor. . school's teacher association also members. The, decision to disI It was rumored that "the pro- expressed' the same opinion. , LONDON (N C) - A band was made after only 15 tion to the prosperity of the British country. Now that everyone Council of Churches' I working fessor was being dismissed beStudents voted to' suspend ~hurch representatives voted on doesn't have to depend on the group has recommended the cause his 12-year-old daugher their boycott of classes to ai- the motion. potato crop the people of Ireland establishment of an ecumenic.al had refused to say the Pledge low time for "the forces of In the fall of 1968 the council can be proud of their cottage organization to care fot the 7Q,- of Allegiance. Mary Frain re- reconciliation to work," Sister dismissed its executive director crafts and even take these looms 000 foreign students sthdying in cently won a Federal Court Mary said. A committee is study- and a fulltime secretary when out of ,the cottages into the' Great Britain. 'I i ruling 'on the right to remain ing the matter, and Sister Mary many member churches objected 'shops. ' " The. working 'group has be.e,n seated in school during the Robert said she will issue a to its stand in favor of the Calid h bl ff pledge statement in the near future. fornia grape" boycott and other Along with this pride in the stu ytng t e pro ems? orelgn "Th~t'~had absolutely nothing social action issues. home industries, the long over- students for the past tro year.s. due prosperity' and the interest Half of these studeIl;ts are m to do with it," Sister Mary Ro- 'Peace' Activists Vow Mrs. Don Albright who has in traditional crafts, Ireland.'s Londo,n, wh~re one-tenth of the bert Falls, president of the colbeen acting as part-time director rld s fore t d l I lege operated by the Ursuline O More Disruptions for the past 14 months, said: "If rise as a member of the fashion v.:. Ign s u em popu aworld could also be attributed tlon hves and works. I ,nuns, said. WASHINGTON (NC) - Mem- the death of the Council of to the interest of the young. The Churc~es w~re ur~ed to She also pointed out that bers of a small activist "peace" Churches means a broader reliThey are as mini-skirted and set u~ a. natIOnall) ~olordmated Frain was not dismissed, but group which has admitted re- gious organization will be organ.'. . orgamzatlOn based m London that "it was a regular case of a 'sponsibility for disruptions in ized, I think this is a positive modIsh as, t~elr Lond?n nelgh- with a full-time staff where the non-renewal contract,'" bors and thel~ enthusla~m may stpdents, regardless Jr belief, \. , Non-renewal of contract, Frain Philadelphia and Washington, move. But if there is no voice without being arrested, are de- for the religious community, I v.:ell be car~mg over mto the could obtain help and advite. said, is me'rely another way of termined to continue such activi- think this is very sad," fIeld of clothmg. The organization would also saying dismissal. ties. Frain said he was given no . America is welcoming the ~e- keep the British public Iinform~d They refer to themselves as sIgns from the emerald Isle WIth about the lives' studies and reason for his contract not beopen arms and many of 'the to~ needs of foreig~ students. i ing renewed. He said his daugh- the "East Coast Con~piracy to flight stores carry a line of the '. I ',ter's pledge refusal may have Save Lives," "Conspiracy" members claim Irish imports. One of the most : h d h' d' h dramatic bits of wearing apparel Welcomes President's I a somet mgto 0 WIt it, they destroyed Selective Service to hit our shores is the Kinsale Ed . M I i but added, "I really don't know." draft files housed in three buildcloak, a romantic flowing rush . ucatlon essage '. Reasons for not renewing a ings in Philadelphia on the night professor's contract are not of wool that looks as if it should WASHINGTON (NC) I- Presi- given, Sister Mary Robert said, of Feb. 6. The group also said be skipping over the moors, or dent Nixo.n's announcement of explaining that this follows a that on the following evening 273 CENTRAL AVE. they entered General Electric's through the bogs. . the ,creation of a Comnlission on lobbying offices ,here and ripped However, even if you haven't School Finance was called "cruI 992-6216 ' cial to the survival of all educa- Cemetery Workers up the corporation's files. Spokesmen for the Police Detion, not just Catholic education" Cont'lnue St'rl'ke Maryknoll Journalist by Msgr. James Donohhe, direcpartment in Washington and the NEW BEDFORD tor of the Division of Elementary NEW YORK (NC)-Dead bod- District Attorney's office in Leaving Priesthood and Secondary Education, United ies continued to pile up as New , Philadelphia acknowledged that York's 1,700 gravediggers and no charges had been filed conNEW YORK (NC)-Father Jo- States Catholic Conference.' Nixon, in a special m1essage to. cemetery manag€ments remained 'cerning the disruptions. Howseph F. Michenfelder, Maryknoll journalist whose writings and Congress, said he wasI creating in a deadlock, over negotations ever, law enforcement officials travels in Latin America won the commission by executive ~r- ,ill an eight-week-strike here. in Philadelphia noted an investiThe strike has virtually halted gation was underway and hinted him prominence over the last der to investigate the I financial decade, has asked to leave the .and organizational needs of noh- all burials in 44 nonsectarian, some arrests might be made. public, as well as pUblid, schools. Catholic and Jewish cemeteries priesthood. "The President," Msgr. Dono- in the metropolitan area. The . Offici,als at Maryknoll's world Hugh-Water Mark teadquarters outside of Ossining, hue said, "has seen that the key city's health department said no I believe that any man's life N.Y., confirmed that he took to helping all America:n educll- health emergency exists at preswill be filled with constant and leave of absence in mid-February tion is to wrestle with the crisis cnt. that is engulfing th~ private Bodies at the 12 Catholic cem- unexpected encouragement if he after requesting laiciz~tion. 365 NORTH FRONT STREET I eteries here and in the diocese makes up his mind to do his Father Michenfelder, 37, went schools." , He said "if private s~hools go of Brooklyn are being placed in . level best each day, and as nearto St. Louis on an extended visit NEW BEDFORD with his mother there. His re- down the drain the future of receiving vaults until burial can ly as possible reaching the high992-5534 ligious order said it knew of no all American education kvould be he arranged, an archdiocesan water mark of pure and useful in doubt," ' spokesman said. living. -Washington immediate plans of his.
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College 'Rumor
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BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY
DEBROSS OIL co. Heating Oils and Burners
HIE AN':HORThurs., Mar. 12, 1970
Rodericks Decide to Ba·nish All Televisioin' to Bedrooms. By Joseph and Marilyn
'Giondhi's Truth' Wins Book Prize
Rodeli~ck
We have made a crucial decision to preserve the sanity of the inhabitants of our home: all television will be relegated to bedrooms, i.e., there will be no television viewing in the living room, family rOQm or any place other than the bedr~oms. This means D'Adamo, has put up a display that we have had to invest that makes one want to spend in an additional portable TV St. Patrick's Day in the Emerald so that we now have port- Isle. Even though I heard ables in the girls' room, in Jason's room and in our own room, all of which are pretty much out of earshot of the central living areas of our home. This may seem like an extravagance, but it is a small investment in terms of peace and tranquility. Aside from the fact that we have been warned of the iIIeffects of the high decibel level of modern living, out-of-the-way TV is guaranteed to prevent frayed nerves. With the television in a central location and with the children arguing, the dish washer running, someone on the telephone, etc., life is hardly bearable in the small houses in which most of us live. Just Sit The immediate effect of bedroom television viewing is that O:1e can read a book without being interrupted by a blaring commercial, or sit quietly and think, or jus~ sit in a stupor after the day's activities. But most of all it means that the television viewing we do as Individuals does not interfere with the interests of the rest of the family. For instance, my television viewing is limited almost entirely to sports events and old movies, while Marilyn watches only a show or· two oa week. The children on the other hand are full-fledged watchers and miss very little thl;lt is on between six and eight-thirty every night. This is probably the most exhausting time of the day for parents and the quiet that results from having the children in their rooms watching TV is worth untold gold. Should one of the children decide not to watch there is nothing to keep her or him from coming downstairs and reading a book, or doing homework, or merely sitting and talking with a parent without having to scream over a flickering, blaring program. There is nothing new in this. The radio had a place of preeminence in most homes when it first had mass circulation and then was slowly withdrawn from the center of the house to take its place' on a bookstand or some other secluded spot; so too the television seems to be going the same route. In the Kitchen As I've mentioned before in this column the children in my class at school have each chosen a country for their own and all during the year gather as much material as possible on their country. Each has the opportunity to put up a bulletin board displaying the material he has gathered and all in all everyone in the class, especially the teach: er, has enjoyed the project to its fullest. This month, naturally, we're featuring Ireland and one of my hardest working students, Paul
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Law of Nature Success breeds success because everybody wants t.o. aid _ the successful, thereby fulfilling a law of nature. -Feather
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nothing but good of this beautiful land from my mother and grandmother as I was growing up, I don't really think I got the urge to visit there until I was steeped in Irish lore by all the information Paul has been bringing in to class. We Know Lit·tIe I find it quite ironic that many of us of Irish descent glowingly celebrate the good St. Patrick's day with honest pride in our ancestry yet truly know very little of the land of our fathers and of their reasons for migrating to this country. March 17th of course is the day when all Irish-Americans and many other ethnic groups with leanings toward the Irish celebrate by the wearing of the green and the honoring of their patron saint. It's a day when ACIES CEREMO"'~Y: Members of the Legion of Mary from corned beef and cabbage, and all areas of the Diocese renew their pledge at the annual Acies green beer of course, adorn the' ceremonies conducted Sunday afternoon in St. Mary's Cathetables of all Yankee Hibernians. dral, Fall River. We've come a long way since the hordes of immigrants braved the horrors of steerage to reach this country, but it takes gallant young people like Bernadette Baltimore Priests, Parishioners Participate Devlin to remind us that in some areas of the old sod attitudes In 'Project Welfare Fast' are still not what they should be and the reasOnS that many of BALTIMORE (NC)-When you Zerhusen lived on meals eonour forefathers emigrated to this are eating on 17 cents a meal, sisting mostly of starch such as country still exist. "it ·hurts going Lo bed hungry, spaghetti, macaroni, bread and This recipe for a refreshing St. every night." oatmeal. Patrick's Day salad mold is from That was one of the thoughts "We 'found, as many others the kitchen of Miss Elinor M. of Father Eugene Ruane after did, that you just can't afford to Lenaghan of Holy Name Parish he and 75 members and friends buy proteins and carbohydrates in Fall Rilver. Miss Lenaghan of St. Ambrose padsh partici- on 17 cents," he said, "and we has visited the charming Emer- pated in a week-long "Project went to bed with hunger pains at ald Isle quite a few times and Welfare Fast." night." declares it's as lovely as we After a week lhose people who At Ash Wednesday services at imagine it to be. St. Ambrose about 75 people took part in the fast.met at St. St. lPatrlck's Day Salad tentatively pledged themselves to. Ambrose .to discuss their experiI package of lime gelatin observe the week's welfare fast ences of eating on welfare budI No. 2 can of crushed' pine- beginning Feb. 15. .J' get. apple Participants were' given the Father Ruane f,aid the general 1 cup sour cream option to live on a per-meal wel- feeling among the participants 1 cup chopped walnuts f b d f' h 30 17 was that the food allotment was or definitely inadequate for good are u get 0 CIt er 1) Dissolve gelatin in one cup cents a person. of boiling water and stir in the Father· Ruane explained that, nutrition. juice from the can of pineapple. due to high housing rents, most The findings of those involved Put in refrigerator to chill. welfare recipients are limited td in the fast have been forwarded 2) When chilled whip in the about 17 cents a meal. Those to PresidEmt Nixon and Governor sour cream, the crushed pine- people on welfare living in public Marvin Mendel. • apple. and the walnuts. Pour into housing, where rents are a bit a mold or pyrex dish and chill. cheaper, spend about 30 cents a Episcopal Leadership Miss Lenaghan uses a 9" by 5" meal, he said. size dish, and for a dressing she The purpose of "Project Wei·' Sets Reduced Budget thins out a small amount of may- fare Fast" was to make people GREENWICH (NC)-The polonnaise with fruit juice. . more aware of the problems faced by those on welfare and icy-making Executive Council of to give new and contemporary the Episcopal Church, faced with Schools Save Taxpayers meaning to' the l.enten season. a drop in' contributions from its Father Ruane faid he and two 3.6 million members, approved $250 Million in Year. priests from St. Ambrose, Fa- a .$13,065,032 budget for 1970, PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Catho- . thers Robert Serio and Henry down more than $1 million from lic schools in the Philadelphia last year's budget. archdiocese saved Pennsylvania Of 101 dioceses which had taxpayers more than $260 emil_ Bill Limits Personal been assigned mathematical quolion during the 1968-69 school tas of the budget for the year, a comprehensive report is- Tax Exemptions' church's national programs, 47 WASHINGTON' (NC) - Sen. fell short of pledges. sued by archdiocesan officials Robert Packwood of Oregon has One, the Diocese of New Mex.indicated. In the first consolidated finan- introduced legislation that would ico and Southwest Texas, said cial report on the See's entire allow a maximum of three chil- it would refuse to contribute beschool system, it was revealed dren per family for personal tax cause of a controcersial $40,000 that during the past year it cost exemptions. He cited over- grant made in December by a $39.6 million to operate 287 par- population as one of the primary council vote of 23-21 over the ish elementary schools and 31 causes of the environmental objection of Bishop Charles J. diocesan high schools, with a crisis facing the world today.. Kinsolving III, to the Alianza Packwood said his legislation Federal de los Pueblos Libras total enrollment of 254,000 stuwas an effort "to ease the strain (Federal Alliance of Free Peodents. , Msgr. Arthur J. Nace, archdi- on an overtaxed environment." ples) of Albuquerque, N. M. The Alianza group's subseocesan controller, said the $39.6 He also introduced a bill that million represents less than one- would legalize abortion in the quent appeal for funds from sixth the cost of educating a District of Columbia and ex- Archbishop James P. Davis of similar number of students in pressed hope all 50 states would the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe, N. M., was refused. follow suit. public schools.
'17 Ce,nts a.
Meal
NEW YORK (NC)-Dr. Erik H. Erikson has received the 1969 National Book Awards' prize for his literary work on philosophy and religion. Erikson, a psychoanalyst, was honored for his book, "Gandhi's Truth," a st'udy of the Indian leader's doctrine on nonviolent resistance, published by W.W. Norton. He was among several winners . who received $1,000 awards made annually by the National Books Commnttee in seven categories of literature "for distinguished works written by America.ns and published in the United States during the preceding year." In the philosophy and religion category, judges (valuated books published in 1968 and 1969.
Supreme Court Rejects Albortion Case Appeal WASHINGTON (NC) - Sidestepping involvement in the widening controversy over abortion laws, the U. S. Supreme Court let stand a California Supreme Court ruling holding the state's 120-year-old abortion law unconstitutional. The nation's highest court had no comment in rejecting an appeal from Camornia Atty. Gen. Thomas C. Lynch from the California high court ruling. The old California law prohibited abortions except when "necessary to preserve" the .expectant mother:'s life. The California court by a 4-3 ruling held the "necessary to preserve" phrase was too' vague for a physician to know when he was acting legally or illegally. The court also questioned the right of a state to interfere with a woman's "right to lifc and to choose whether to bear children."
St. Ignatius Guild The St. Ignatius Guild of Bishop Connolly High School, Fall River will conduct an open meeting at 8 on Monday night in the school's auditorium. Mrs. Albert Auclair, chairman has announced that the program will consist of a talk and discussion by guests from Marathon House. The public is invited.
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THE ANCHOR--
Thurs., Mar. 12, 1970
Urges Churches To Speak Out On .Terrorism SOUTH ORANGE (NC)- '
Christian churches ha ve been urged not' to remain silent .in face of increasing attacks by Arab terrorists on civilians. Issuing the plea was an official of theU. S..Bishops' Secretariat for Catholic-Jewish Relations which warned: "To keep silent could only lend encouragement to the reckless and violent." It was signed by Father Edward H. Flannery, executive secretary of the secretariat In the statement, the priest prOtested the "crescendo of terrorism" of Arab guerillas in the Middle East crisis. Father Flannery said later, in a clarification, that his statement was a personal statement issued in his own name and not by the secretariat itself. He called on the churches and the world community to demand that the Arab nations take immediate steps to bring about an end to such activities. Second Statement Noting that Christians are expected to exercise "their civilizing and healing role" in society, the statement declared: . "Be it against the onslaughts of an Attila in. the fifth century or the bombing of a plane full of innocents in the 20th, they must cry out for justice, mercy and for peace." It marked the second time in' as many weeks that Fat.her Flannery has signed a statement concerning the growing attacks of Arab terrori!its who have been blamed for, among other atrocities, placing a bomb aboard ~n Israeli 'bound airliner which 'exploded, killing 47 persons. . Accomplices in 'Crimes The priest, also a member of the Institute for Judaeo-Christian Studies at Seton Hall University here, was one of several signers of an institute statement released Feb. 24. It suggested that all welfare organizations withdraw support from Arab refugee camps unable to guarantee the camps won't be used for "train.. ing in hatred and violence." , . Decrying the recent Arab atrocities. and expressing condolences for the Jewish victims of the attacks, he stressed that more is needed than condemnation and sympathy. The statement declared: "An equivocal call must be made upon the Arab countries, fjrst and foremost, to do all in their power to put an end to the callous disregard of' moral law and human values. They must understand that this can only injure their cause and their image in the civilized world. To the degree that they' condone or aid the actions of the groups responsible, they make themselves \, ac. complices in their crimes.
S~hedl!lle Di$~t!lssi@n
On PubHc RelCJltions
CHICAGO (NC) - More than 40 Jewish, Protestant and Catholic news and public relations organizations will sponsor a re~ ligious communications congress here April 8 to 10. The convention theme will be "New Dimensions in a Secular Age." The sponsors include the Catholic Press Association; the Associated Church Press; American Jewish Congress; B'nai B'rith; 'Canadian Church Press and the United States Catholic Conference's division of public information.
SEEK MEETiNIG: ~ive Af~ican black, priests w~it out.side t~e plena~y session of the So~th African Bishops' Conference in Pretoria, seeking a meeting With the bishops to present rac!al grievance:> of blclc~ Iclergy I in.. the coun~ry and .an appeal ~or. greater Africanization of. the ,Church in South Africa. The priests met With the bishops and views were exchanged. The priests are, left to right: FathJrs J. l.' Louwfant, A. Mabona, P. M. Mkhatshwa, '0. Moetapye Moetaphele
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PRETORIA (NC}-C~arges py blaclC priests that Catholics are practicing racism, as '~ell as the priests' appeal for greater "Africanization" .of the Church, point up the difficult _task Ifaced by bishops in ·a white-dominated country with ablacR: Afric~n' majority. , A group of five. bla~k .pries~.s, alumni of St. Peter's semmary m Hammanskraal, . ha~ lissued I a "manifesto" citing the grievances of black priests ~nd accusing South, African '1 Catholics of prac'ticing apartheid; the gJvernment's policy of strict racial I !. segregation. . The priests, togeth~r w!th a group of white and J;>lack I~y men, were granted a hearing :to elaborate on their grie~1ances,'by the South Afrkan Bishops' .when they met in plenary. s!,!ssion here. I I In the manifesto the black priests' charged th~t white priests treated them like "glqrified altar boys:" They Iurged ~he bishops to expedite Africani~a tion and to establish a national .department of Al'ric~n affairs, principally "to look after the interests of the black Catholics:" / I Subservient Role :• I The demand for Africanization in this country domin~ted b~ a white minorityposeis seriqus problems for the bishops be.tause their influential white Icongregations will have none of it and the black congreg,ations are far from ready to. take o~er the ,in- , stitutions. '1'
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MEXICO CITY (NC) - Tl'lousands of persons are e~pected~ to attend the second world meeting (ultreya) of the Cursillbs de Cristiandad, a Christian renewal movement, to be heldj here May 21-24. , The first world mee ,ing was in Rome in 1963, when about 8,000 persons attended. I . , The Cursillo de <I:ristiandad (little courses in Christianity) movement began in I Spain i in 1949, and has spread throughout the world. The 'mo~ement ;ineludes a three-day ses~ion of lectures, discussions and liturgical services. "j I'
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In addition to all this, the South African government is violently opposed to any integration. In the discussions with the bishops, the group of priests and laymen claimed that bll;lck African prie~ts play' a subservient role in' pastoral work. The group also stressed the need for a firm stand by the bishops when faced with the growing implications of the country's. racial pol-' icy. ana urged greater c'olisideration of African pri~sts' de~ire to work in, tow.n parishes rather than rural areas. Give Facts One <if the priests said: "We are 'not in opposition to our bishops. We only consider ourselves members of an open community. Your problems are our problems."· . The five black priests are Fathers i-L. Louwfant, A. Mabona, P. M. Mkhatshwa, D. Moetaphele and C. Mpkoka.
Plan Interchurch F'eace Meeting NEW YORK (NC) - A man who has headed both his nation's armed services and its Christian forces is slated to lead a worldwide interchurch conference on peace. For 10 years T.B. Simatupang was chief of staff of the Indonesian Army while his country struggled for its independence from the Netherlands. Now retired from the army at the age of 50, he heads the Indonesian Council of (Christian)' Churches and plays a key role in the World Council of Churches. In' April he will share with an equally distinguished Roman Catholic 'layman, Vittorino Veronese, president of the Bank of Rome, . the chairmanship. of a conference on the Christian concern for Peace. The conference, to be held April 3 "to 9 on the outskirts of Vienna; is sponsored by the .World Council of Churches and the Roman Catholic Church through their joint Committee on Society, Development and Peace.
Insolence Breeder Prosperity is the surest breeder of insolence I know. :-.Twain
Owen Cardinal McCann of Cape Town told the gro'up: "We will do what is possible to meet the proposals put forward by you. We sympathize with your good feelings' in, furthering the cause of the Church but we expect the same from you." Other bishops, in reply to statements made by members of the delegation, gave facts and figures concerning the responsipilities .~lready .. ,giv.en ' Af~ican priests in their dioceses and the scope' of ,activity offered iaymen and priests in the course of the years: They stressed that there is great need for trust on' both 1?ides..
Strengl/'hens Office Dealing With Clergy DETRQIT (NC) - John Cardinal Dearden has buttressed the two-year-old Archdiocesan Delegate for the Clergy office, giving .to the director prerogatives which the cardinal formerly held. Auxiliary Bishop Walter iJ. Schoenherr, who heads the office, has been given direct responsibility for appointments of priests. In addition, Bishop Schoenherr will devote full time to pastoral work with priests and seminarians, meeting with them, attending their' retreats, familiariZing himself with their aspirations. Cardinal Dearden. also appointed Father Robert V. Monticello. as assistant delegate, han•dling the organizational work of the office.
BELLEVILLE (NC) - The priests' senate of this Illinois see has given a vote of confidenc~ to two diocesan officials who had been asked to resign by one 0\ its own members. Father James Genisio, elected to the senate as a representative of the East St. Louis deanery in November, had urged that Msgr. Leonard Bauer, vicar general for II years, and Father Bernard Sullivan, chancellor' for three years, resign their posts. A resolution passed at this month's senate meeting stated that "being full aware of the weighty responsibility" of the vicar· general and the chancellor "and cognizant of their human limitations, but recognizing the many, years of their loyal and faithful service to the priests and people of the diocese, we, the priests' senate, pledge our support to them and the offices they hold in the diocese." Tbe resolution also recommended to Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste of Belleville "that no consideration whatever be given to. charges and accusations made by anyone who chooses to ignore existing channels," such as a diocesan mediation board estab: Iished for arbitration of grievances. Father Genisio, chairman of the history and speech department at Assumption High School, had charged in a Sunday sermon that Msgr. Bauer and Father Sullivan were "too narrow of imagination, too limited of vision, too chained to the boilds of man- , made: legalism." He said .they were "too overwhelmed by the staggering effects of total craven submission to various types of supposed all-knowing and ,all-, wise authority.'''' .' ',. . , ! .: - .,' ~
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Conference Views Tax Reform Act. WASHINGTON (NC) - With tax problems of nonprofit organ- izationssteadily growin~ in importance, up to 700 persons gathered here to discuss the impact of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 on tax-exempt organizations. The act extended the unrelated business income tax to all exempt organizations. All investment income is taxable except when it is debt financed. Various aspects of the act dealing directly with churches were outlined by some of the speake~s.
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Colombia Has Youth Pastoral Institute BOGOTA (NC)-A new Youth Pastoral Institute to provide organized guidance for youth in Latin America has been opened here. The institute is a joint project of the Latin American Bishops' Council, the Society of Jesus, the Salesians and the Sisters of the Presentation. The three Religious communities operate .a large number of educational institutions throughout Latin America. Father Jesus Andres Vela, S.J., director of the institute, said that "thought, study and research on the Church's approach to youth problems is the key concern" of the new institution. Between 40 to 60 per cent of Latin America's population is under 20 years old. The first training course opened here for 60 youth leaders, lay and Religious, and will run into November. The graduates will be assigned t.? youth work.
Overlooked Trait He was so generally civil that nobody thanked him for it. -Johnson
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CHICAGO (NC) - Open House Sunday, a venture designed to acquaint the public with the quality plus the needs of Catholic schools in Illinois, has been hailed as a success. An NC News spot survey of the state's six dioceses revealed that Catholic schools were visited by state and local officials, public school administrators and teachers, and non-Catholic as well as Catholic parents. A sizeable number o( persons reportedly crowded into Catholic schools, many of which held regular classes stressing the common subjects, such as civics, math and science, taught in both public and nonpublic schools. Some schools displayed science fairs and other special academic projects.' Still others held assemblies 'at which speakers pointed out that if Catholic schools are to continue, they will need public assistance. Of the 2.7 million elementary and secondary students in the state, approximately 448,000, one out of six, attend nonpublic schools. Lift for Morale Reaction to Open House Sun路 day was generally good in all six Sees, the Chicago archdiocese and the Belleville, Joliet, Peoria, Rockford and Springfield dioceses. Comments ranged from "satisfaction" expressed by school officials in Belleville, to elated principals in Peoria exclaiming they were "floored" by the favorable response. Auxiliary Bishop William E. McManus of Chicago, chairman of the school department of the Illinois Catholic Conference, described the event as a "great lift for the morale of our teachers, parents and students." "I've never witnessed more enthusiasm for the cause of Catholic education than I saw yesterday in the schools I visited," declared the bishop. "Those who have predicted Catholic. schools are dying or are dead will now have to sing. a different tune." The project, believed to be the first of its kind held in the country, was tied closely to the state Catholic conference's. efforts to obtain $32 million in state ahid for nonpublic schools.
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WINNING PROJECT: Christine Anne Padesky, 16, of Marshcilltown, Iowa, demonstrates her prize-winning project in the 29th annual Westinghouse Science Talent Search. Christine's project is a device for electrical measurement of oxidation-reduction reactions for certain compounds of the rare metal, ruthenium. NC Photo.
Science, Religion-Both Search for Truth Catholic Students' See No Conflict WASHINGTON (NC)' - Ten Catholic students amdng 40 finalists in a nationwide science talent search s'ee no conflict' between science and religion. A scientist's work reveals "what God has already done," said Larry Morrell, 17, a member of St. Helen's Parish in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "It's as simple as that." "Science is a search for truth and so is religion. I don't think there can be a conflict," added Christine Padesky, 16, of Marshalltown, Iowa. Today's complex scientific discoveries. demand "more perseverance" in honest religious questioning, believes James Litton, Jr., 17, a member of Our Lady of Loretto Parish in Hometown, III. "We surVived Darwin and his theory of evolution, and we'll survive creating life in a test tube," he said. The consensus of the group was that God has a definite place in the life of a modern high school student. John Winslow,
Cardinal Carberry To Head Center WASHINGTON (NC) - John Cardinal Carberry of St. Louis has been elected board president of the Center for Applied Rer.earch in the Apostolate, the national Catholic research and planning center here, succeeding John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia in the one-year term. Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of I.'altimore and John Cardinal Cody of Chicago have filled the presidency of the five-year-old center, which is involved in scientific church planning at various levels. Current projects include studi芦;s of church personnel, vocations and seminaries, urban and rural diocesan planning, social theology, campus ministries and overseas problems.
THE
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Thurs., Mar. 12, 19/0
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Red Magazir.e Accuses Bishop BONN (NC) -- A communist weekly in Yugoslavia has accused a bishop of World War II collaboration with the nazis, embezzlement and inducing priests to violate the secrecy of the confessional. The Zagreb weekly Vjesnik u Srijedu (Wednesday Messenger), published by the Socialist Federation of the Working People, a communist front composed of various groups, made the charges against Bishop Stjepan Baeuerlein of Djakovo i Srijem. The article was based on a white paper drawn up in 1968 by the pro-government Peace Priests' movement and given to the apostolic delegate in Belgrade. Because there was' no Vatican reply to the document, the weekly said, the priests have decided to publish it in the press. The charges 'against Bishop Baeuerlein, who has German ancestors, include collaboration with German and Croatian fascists during World War II, persecution of Peace Priests, hostility to the socialist society, embezzlement, the organization of a spy organization, and the inducement of several priests to break the secrecy of the confessional. Observers in Yugoslavia, however, claim that Bishop Baeuerlein is highly esteemed in his diocese, and claim that the weekly attacked the bishop in an attempt to prevent him from becoming a candidate for the still vacant archdiocese of Zagreb. Franjo Cardinal Seper was archbishop of Zagreb before becoming prefect of the Vatican's Doctrinal Congregation in 1968.
of Oceanside, Calif., sees firm conservative-:-ean do the resolvbeli~f in God as "a sound way to . ing. "All the different opinions" begin adult life." New Policy Affects Charle's Czeisler of South Hol- within the Church should be exland, 111., added that religion pressed. "Maybe it's time for Mixed Marriages PORTLAND (NC) Three should exhibit a "relevant lit~ another Council," she said. "I statewide diocesc~ in the New urgy" because "this generation is don't know." England area have adopted a not going to go for rote memoruniform policy governing anization and repetition as a means Continues Crusade nouncement of banns in mixed of expressing faith." marriages, effective March 30. But Thaddeus Kochanski, 17, For School Prayer The dioceses are Portland; of St. Thomas Parish in West BROCKTON (NC)-Mrs. Rita Burlington, Vt. headed by BishHartford, Conn., thinks "very Warren, 42, aptly can be des- op Robert F. Joyce, and Mansudden changes" in church lit- cribed, as a determined woman. chester, N.H., headed by Bishop urgy "drove some people away." Now at liberty on bail follow- Ernest J. Primeau. Portland's "I see a Church that is very '. ing a $20 fine and 60-day jail Bishop Peter L. Gerety explainconfused," Christine Padesky sentence, the Brockton house- ed it has been a long standing added, with internal factions wife has pledged to take her practice not to publish the banns "warring" against one another. crusade for restoring prayers in in mixed marriages. "Something is going to have public schools "all the way to Under the new rules, he said. to be resolved very soon," she the U. S. Supreme Court." pastors in the parish church of said. But she emphasized that Judge George Covett of Brock- the Catholic party involved may not just one faction-liberal or t~m District Court gave Mrs. announce the banns after securWarren two 30-day jail terms ing approval by the parties. He for an attempted "sit-in" in the said the dispensation for the mixoffice of the school superinten. ed marriages should be obtained Deported Newsman dent on Jan. 30, and a $20 fine before the banns are published, Scores Government tor keeping her daughter Teresa, but that the publication should SALISBURY (NC) - Minutes 13, out of school as part of the be omitted if it violates the before he and his wife boarded classroom prayer crusade. She is norms of the other religions ina plane here to go to London, free on $300 bail pending her volved.. deported newsman Anthony appeal. After the court session, Mrs. Schmitz tQld NC News Service Cowardly Listlessness that he hopes to return to Rho- Warren said hel- daughter was It is better by a noble boldness desia when the nation'~ ruling being tutored by a qualified white minority restores the tra- teacher outside the state of Mas- to run the risk of being subject s:ichusetts. She said the 13-yeal" to half of the evils we anticipate, ditional rights of democracy. old girl would remain there than to remain in cowardly listSchmitz, formerly assistant pending the outcome of future lessness for fear of what may editor of the Rhodesian Catholic court appeals. -Herodotus happen. . newspaper Moto, was deported because of the. paper's blast at Rhodesia's new constitution. The paper's editor, Father Michael Traber, was also ordered out of the country. The deporting order came after a Moto cartoon depicted white hands crushing black bodies. The cartoon's caption read: The proposed new constitution will insure that government will be retained in capable hands * ,~ ,~" Moto's editors took 653 Washington Street, Fairhaven the quotation from a Rhodesian 994路5058 government white paper outlining the new constitution. ,
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mal 12, 1970
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By Barbara Ward
Additional. School Closings in Dubuque, Nationwide Pattern Continues
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Probably few Christian citizens took much hotice :of the recent passage by Congress of this year's foteign aid •0 bill. After all, .it happens every year. And eve.ry fl ear, t.p the proposals are reduced. This year was ilo e ceptiqn. The President had asked for' . . . $2 6 billions Congress has Cong~ess, supported ,by the '. . Amencan electorate, thinks that . now voted $1.8 Qllhon - a the best way to salfegu:ard Amerfigure which includes $350 ica's place in the world marke~ millions for millitary aid - and provides for genuine assistance a sum at least 30 . per cent less than President Nixon requested. It represents about 0.25 per cent of America's gross national product (the sum of its goods and' ser- .. ' vices). This is only one quarter of the one per cent of GNP promised by governments for foreign aid at vari-. ous times in the Sixties and recently re-proposed by such expert 'international bodie!'i as the pe.ar~.o.n Commission or .theu.N. Committee presided over by Dr. Jan Tinbergen. . The overaIl figures give a rather blurred' impression of the consequences. of a reduced flow of ·aid.Since Africa is at the end of the qu~ue, there may weIl be a halving of the sum proposed to help Ghana consolidate its economy after its recent gel1 uinely free. elections. Nigeria, shaken by the aftermath of civil war and local shortages, will equaIly face a drastic reduction. . Green Revolution The aIlocations to India also appear to be ~h~rply reducedfrom $~O.O million to perhaps $400 million. Yet thes(~ are the years of potential "green revolution" when aid to large scale investment i~ rural areas, for improved hybnd seeds, for water, for fertilizer-:-might finaIly take the whole vast land; with its 600 million people, beyond the risk ;of famine. It is a strange outcome. After all, the American people do not refuse to spend money on their relationships with other lands. In fact, America spends between $70 to $80 billions a year on weapons and machines whose contingent purpose is to blow ?ther ~eoples up. Nor do AmerIcans mtend to stay home or h~ve no co~merci~1 re!atio~s With ,a world m whIch .wlth SIX per cent of the populatIOn, they consume 40 per cent of the pri~ary resources, a high pro· portIOn of them located overseas. Indeed,~ome of the great international c(lrporation~ depen~ for a large part of their profit on overseas operations. This year,' f~r IBM, the percentage is as high as 45 per cent. So we must conclude that
. With~ld Statement MEXICO CITY (NC) - The Mexican Bishops' Conference, despite many appeals that it intervene on behalf of the so-called political prisoners, did not issue a statement on the controversy because many of the bishops said they did not have clear information on all factors in the case. Ninety·one prisoners have been held since 1968, when they were arrested in connection with riots during a clamp-down on student unrest.
its mines, its plantdtions, its trade, its industrial in~taIlations -is to arm to the teeth and let more pea'c~ful and cdnstructive KIRK A. SHINSKY . policies largely look after themselves,' r But can anyone say that thiS IS Catho~ic reaIly how one en<:our~ges commerce, stabilizes sotiety and opens the way for peaceful WASHINGTON (NC)-An AIfuture? Let'us forget .tHe rhetoric -of national self-suffi<iiency 841 d . lentown, Pa., high ,school senior ·inward-Iooking . isolatip-nism. Ion who hopes to become a nuclear the onehand,of "g~obaloney" physicist has been awarded a and instant world fed~ralism "on $10,000 four-year scholarship as top winner in the 29th annual t~e other. Let us simply ask the direct, sober questlqn: What Westinghouse . Science Talent . ~akes for a· peaceful commu- Search competition. Kirk Alfred Shinsky, 17, a mty? I' m,ember of Our Lady Help of Shared Acts : The answer must' furely ~be Christians Parish in Allentown, that peace flows not'tnlY from did a project on the interactions proper, disciplined orces lof . between two colliding beaf11s of order - which, incide taIly; the high-energy protons. He built his tot~I1y sovereign, total lawllfss. own equipment used in the nations are not. It SP~Ings fr<;>m study. a h~ndred shared acts pf. ,iustife, . 'Shinsky was one of 40 finalSOCial concern" generosity and ists chosen from among' almost forebea~ance. When, ~s in G~r 20,000 competing students across many, In. 1929, m.assl~e uner.n- the country. The 40 were sent to ploym~nt IS ~ot reheve~. by SW:lft Washington for the end of the re~edlal actIOn, the H~t1ers ~~t science competition. Ten of those ~helr chance. When, asll~ RUSSia finalists were Catholic students, In 1917, .a~d before th~~ In 1995 , two of whom attend· Catholic . -. " ,,' a ~espalr1ng peasantr~ st~rves high schools. . on ItS own I~nd"r~voh.ltlon IS the Manoug Ansour, ·15; of Forest· result. "I: Hills, N. Y., and Christine Anne' Even in peaceful England, the Padesky, 1.6 of Marshalltown, first decade of this century was Iowa, were the other Catholic fuIl of unrest, springing from students among the top 12 winworklessness and misery lorg ners. after the long boom of the Victorian era. There is Simply ho evidence from history to suggest that deepening miser~, coexisting with the complete indifference of the rich, is a recipe for social peace. I : NEW YORK (NC)-The New So there is only one way in York State Conference of Cathwhic~ we. can c1ai~~ th~t t~er~; is olic Bishops has warned that no· n~k. Involved m ~edlcatlrg Catholic school enroIlmentin the ~1.8. billion to world w l~a~e ar d state may drop 40,000 by next Justice. and nearly $80 b~llion Ito September, with "damaging" potentl~1 world. destrUftl?n. We consequences for public schools. can clall'~ that the planrt l!'i not a The eight bishops who make commumty: and that ~ther peo- up the conference appealed for pies are aliens, not neIghbors. support from the state board of World Environ,ent regents and the state education i. But can we m.ak{j such! a department for legislation to asclaim? The year we ~ave just sist the paren'ts of non public left behind - 1969 ~ s~owed Ius school children. The warning and the appeal our little planet as, it. I~oks frqr:n the moon and· a quar~er of our were contained in a letter to "village world" watched together State Commissioner of Education on telev!sion as man I first put Ewald Nyquist, signed by Terfoot upon it.. The year ahead"- ence Cardinal Cooke of New 197Q-will bring us td the fitst York and by BishQps Edwin B. inte~natiQnal conferen~le on pt.e- Broderick of Albany, Stanislaus serving our world en ironment. :T. Brzana of Ogdensburg, Walter It will show us, am ng otHer A. Foery of Syracuse, Joseph L. evils, how the filth I of .e~ch Hogan of Rochester, Walter P. country helps to pollute' the Kellenberg of RockviIIeCentre, oceans for all the othe1rs. Yet Ito James A. McNulty of· Buffalo, destroy the sea's delicate biol6g- and Francis J. Mugavero of icill systems, which are responsi- Brooklyn, As the text of the letter was ble for 75 per cent of the oxygen in the atmosphere; car destroy made public here in Albany the the air we ~arthlings m~st board of regents voted 11-2 in favor of current legislative effort breathe or die. I : Is this not neighborhood? i Is to repeal the' so-calh~d Blaine this not community? ~oes it not Amendment, the state constituprove we have no <:hance of opt- tional provision barring direct ing out of our "vill~ge'? The aid to church-related schools. / only choice is to live in it as' a Three years ago the reg~nts community or to see it and our- supported repeal of Blaine by a 10-5 margin. If the current reselves destroyed. I . .' This is the real isshe behihd peal effort succeeds in' the legis'the aid bill. Do we thoose ito lature, the issue will still have to live? Can We make .our choice in go before the voters' in a refer? · t Ime. !' . emlU,m.
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DUBUQUE (NC)-A three-year education plan for the Dubuque archdiocese includes closing of two secondary schools, an ele-. mentary school consolidation, grade cut-backs in five elementary schools, and withdrawal of nun teachers from one grade s<:hool. A total of 861 students are affected. Last year, 1,375 students were displaced from the archdiocesan system in closings of 10 elementary schools. Next year's total system enroIlment will be 30,000. Increased operating costs and
Student Wins Top Award
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T'O KEEP
LENT THE HOLY FATHER'S MiSSiON AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH
With the season of Lent, comes the question, GOOD "How can I best keep. Lent?" 'The answer is we WHEN must make sacrifices on our own and nothing is IT ·a sacrifice unless it hurts. What will be your HURTS sacrifice? .• Just think of the missionaries in our 18 ~merging countri~s who keep Lent all year long. Sacrifice something big this year. When helping others hurts bit, you know you've made a sacrifice.
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FEED 0 In Indla,."our priests and Sisters subsist on THE ounces 9f,rice each day.. so they can share what HUNGRY, .they \la'!e with lepers' and orphans~ $10iwill feed'", 'j;, a family for, several weeks at least. $50 will feed . five families. $100, ten families ... Only $975 gives a priest a two-acre 'model farm' to raise his own food and teach his parishioners how to·· raise more food. Archbishop Mar Gregorios will write to thank you.
Foresee Public School Crisis
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fewer teaching Sisters are given as causes of closings and cutbacks. Sisters will remain in the majority (54 per cent) among the, personnel in the archdiocesan educational system; but due to retirements, shortages of voca-. tions and other problems faCing Religious orders, decreases, are expected in each of the next three years. An expanded CCD program, adult religious education and a special 'planning commission to study archdiocesan educational efforts toward the poor and cultural minorities are planned. .
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CHILD clothing, a blanket and love ... We'll send you a photo (If the boy or girl you 'adopt'. MASSES 0 Our priests will offer promptly the Masses FOR you request. Do you wish to remember a loved LENT one this Lent? Your Mass offerings are usually the only income our priests overseas receive.. JOIN 0 Enroll yourself, your family and friends in THIS this Association. You will be helping Pope Paul ASSOCIATION inone of his most ambitious and heartfelt works, while sharing in the blessings of thousands of Masses. (The offering for one year is $2 per person, $10 for a family; perpetual.membership is $~5 per person, $100 for a family.)
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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
Awa it Governor's Precise Proposal On School Aid
tHE ANCHORThurs., Mar. 12, 1970
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Fr. McCaffrey Elected Abbot
ALBANY (NC) -Officials of the New York State Catholic Committee, citing GOY. Nelson Rockefeller's stand
BELMONT (NC)-Father Edmund F. McCaffrey, O.S.B., 37, was elected abbot of Belmont Abbey, one of the country's most unusual Church jurisdictions.. He was chosen to succeed Abbot Walter A. Coggin, O.S.B.,., who resigned Feb. 10. When the election results ure approved by the Holy See, Abbot-elected McCaffrey will have jurisdiction over the abbey territory which incrludes Belmont Abbey CoUege. He will be 'the fourth head of the 94·year-old abbey here in North Carolina. Fr. McCaffery. an alumnus of the college, is a native of Sao' vannah, Ga. He .ioined the Benedictines in 1952. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1959, and presently heads the college's social science division. Belmont' Abbey was founded in 1876 by Bendictines from St. Vincent's archabbey in Latrobe, Pa. It became an independent community in 1884. The first abbot, Leo Haid, O.S.B., was appointed vicar apostolic of North Carolina in 1887 and was con· secrated a bishop. He died in 1924. The abbey was raised in June, 1910, to' the status of an independent abbey, only such jurisdiction in the United States. The status gave the abbey dioceselike jurisdiction and its abbot authority comparable to the bishop of a diocese although none of Bishop Haid's' successors were consecrated bishops.
on nonpublic school aid, declared they are waiting for the governor to specify the type of legislation he would support. Gov. Rockefeller told newsmen that the legislature would provide financial assistance to nonpublic schools in the state this year. But at the sar,ne time the governor said he was opposed in principle to a bill that would provide direct grants to parents of children in non public schools Rockefeller said he was against the tuition aid bill because "such a program could result in parents taking their children out of public schools and might destroy the public school concept of this country." The bill, sponsored by Republican Sen. Edward' J. Speno of Nassau, is backed strongly by the New York State Catholic UNIQUE DISTINCTION: Mrs. Mark J. Hurley of San Francisco enjoys the unique distinction of Committee. The governor's statement sup- being the only mother of two bishops-in the United States, at least, and possibly in the world. porting nonpublic school aid On March 19 Mrs. Hurley will have the pleasure of seeing her son, Bishop-elect Francis T. Hurley, came on the heels of two related left, ordained to the bishopric by his brother at right, Bishop Mark J. Hurley of Santa Rosa, developments: Calif. Bishop Francis Hurley will serve as auxiliiary of Juneau, Alaska. NC Photo. The New York State Conference of Catholic Bishops warn· ing that unless parochial schools receive immediate aid, many would have to close,' and as a result, the pubJjc schools might have to absorb 40,000 more students by next Fall. SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The among the members of the fam- wait for them to teU me," she Ask Tuition Aid uniqueness of being the only ily, visible when the two bishops explained. The New York Board of Re- mother in the United States, joked gently with their mother Both Bishops Hurley were gents, the state's educational maybe in the world, with two as they posed for the photog- coaxing their mother to plan an supervisory agency, urging the bishop sons little disturbs the rapher. Opposes Concept Alaskan visit. legislature to meet "an educa- quiet serenity of Mrs. Josephine Both took great .delight in "I was invited to take a trip tional crisis" by making it finan- Hurley of San Francisco. pointing out to her that the lati- there last year," she said, "But Of Easy Abortion ARMIDALE (NC) - Anglican cially possible "within constitu· The Hurley home" just down tude of Juneau on a map "is ex- I'm not much for travel. I have tio~al limits, fOI\ ·noilpublic.: the hill from St: Brendan's actly the same as that of Dublin, to have an incentive. Now, it Bishop Clive' Kerle has come out with a strong defense of the schools to continue existing with- church near Twin Peaks, was Ireland." seems I've got one." out a further substantial de· once again the focal point for re"Mark called me" she said, As for her son being so f¥ rights of the unborn child, in crease in pupil attendance." porters and photographers as her explaining how she was told the away, naturaUy, like any mother, comments on ·proposed abortion Charles Tobin, secretary of the second son, Msgr. Francis T. news of the appointment of her she would like to have them legislation he made to an Anglican synod that met here in state Catholic committee, praised Hurley, 43, was named auxiliary second son as bishop. close to home. . Rockefeller for· "recognizing 'the bishop of Juneau, Alaska. But she added: "When you Australia. ,"But he didn't say anything "The sanctity of human life serious problems of nonpublic He had flown in from Wash- ther\. Just asked if I was going give them up to God, you reaUy schools." But he pointed out that ington, where he worked as as-, to be home for the day, that he give them up. It· is a fact and must be asserted, including the potential human life of the emyou accept it." the governor did not offer any sociate general secretary of the was in San Francisco. bryo," Bishop Kerte said. precise proposals. National Conference of Catholic Incentive to Travel He noted the trend by which Tobin said he expects Rocke- Bishops, to tell his mother the "Then later someone knocked the world was moving away feller soon to spell out his rec· news. at the front door (our kids have !Name Fr. Whalen from the Christian view that ommendations. Tobin added -that "It's no different today," Mrs. always ,used a special family- To New CU Post abortion was moraUy wrong. He "meanwhile the Catholic people Hurley said when asked how it knock) and I thought it might be WASHINGTON (NC) - Father said, the Christian principle was of the state are urging strongly feels to be the mother of tw.o my daughter. But there' was that the way to provide assist- bishops, first Bishop Mark Hur- Frank and I knew something John P. Whalen, acting rector of that man was not a biological Catholic University of America acddent. ance is through the tuition aid ley of Santa Rosa, Calif., and was up." in 1967 after a tense period of New life begins at conception, proposal." now Frank. . "I stopped listening to rumors liberal - conservative confronta"It's no different than when long ago about the boys~ Now I tion, has come back to, the cam- Bishop Kerle said, and contains all the elements which made up people used to ask me what it pus with the new title of vice· the hereditary factors in ,the Two Conferences felt like to have two sons as president for university relations. fully developed human life. "The priests. All we ever asked of Commission to Help Name Secretaries T.he priest, who two years ago potential human life has rights had encouraged the naming of also," he said. "The embryo is a WASHINGTON (NC) - Father them was that they be good Mexican-Americans It's the same 'today." priests. Edwin Neill has been appointed SAN 'ANTONIO (NC) - A laymen to top posts at the 6,- 'potential child' just as the child The Hurley home is a quiet associate general secretary for Commission for Mexican-Ameri- 600-student university, will be is 'a potential adult.' " the National Conference ofCath- oasis for the members of the can Affairs has been formed by working under the first lay presplic Bishops and Father James Hurley clan, which includes the San Antonio archdiocese to ident in CU history, Dr. Clarence Double Effort S. Rausch was named associate daughter Phyllis (Mrs. Martin begin "an aU-out effort" to aid C. Walton who assumed the general secretary for the United Porter) and her husband and members of that ethnic group, presidency last September. The one who doesn't pull his Father Whalen will coordinate . weight is not asked to pull, while family of three, a son and two States Catholic Conference. They will serve under Bishop daughters. A younger son, Jo- Archbishop Francis J. Furey an- faculty-student relations, alumni the one who does, pulls for two. relations, and public relations in Joseph L. Bernardin, general sec- seph, and his wife and tWQ sons nounced. -Solzhenitsyn It is believed to be the first his new post. cretary of both conferences, who and a daughter live in Burlinannounced the appointments. game, Calif. Another son, Des- agency of its kind established The two priests replace Msgr. mond, died when he was a jun- in a diocese in the United States. 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll111111111111111111111 Chairman of the commission Francis T. Hurley, who was serv- ior at St. Ignatius High School. ing as asseciate general secreThere is an easy camaraderie is San Antonio attorney Matt Garcia. State Sen.. Joe J. Bernal, tary for both units and who rea former school teacher and soc(:ntly was named auxiliary bishOccupy Building cial worker on the city's predom, NATIONAL BANK op to Archbishop Joseph T. Ryan, apostolic administrator of ROME (NC) - Two hundred inantly Mexican-American West 01 BRISTOL COllJIITl' Juneau, Alaska. students occupied medical schOOl Side, will serve as executive Father Neill and Father Rausch buildings at the Rome campus of director. had been serving as assistant the only Catholic lay university 90-DAY NOTiCE Bernal noted the objective of general secretaries in their re- in Italy, demanding that study . the 22-member commission is TIME spective units. OPEN programs be changed and schol- "to lend weight to the new great arships be paid. Police were thrust forward to improve the ACCOUNi Il Mutu;\! Protection • • called to clear the buildings. It status and conditions of MexicanInterest Compounded A team is mutual protection was the first time there was stu- Americans." He said a first step Quarterly society formed to guarantee that dent violence on the Rome cam- toward that goal will be a comOffices in: no one person can be held to pus of Milan's Catholic Univer- munity organizatiQn program blame for a botched committee sity of the Sacred ,Heart. Last concentrated in San Antonio's NORTH ATTLEBORO ATTLEBORO MlLS MANSFDELD job that one man could have per- year students had occupied the barrios and in rural poverty pockets. Milan campus for several days. formed satisfactorily. :-Baker D1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111III1111II1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111II11111!1
Mrs. Hurley Mot·her of Two Bishops Asked Only That They Be Good Priests
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.~HE A~CHOR::-Diocese of FaIlRiVl!r'-Thurs.~r. 12, 1,9 70
Gowon, Tells Bishops to Co deriln Priests for Anti.. Nig·e~ma A~c ~)'f !
. ALBANY (NC) - Three New York universities, although still thought of as Catholic institutions, have been ruled eligible for state aid. State Education Commissioner Edwald B. Nyquist ruled that Fordham University and Manhattan College in New York' and St. John Fisher College"in Rochester are entitled to public assistance because none of them are controlled by a religious denomination or "teaches denominational tenets or doctrine." He' said the schools, which have restructured their govern-
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LAGOS (NC)-The head of the betwe~n Nigerian aut orities land Nigerian government has told the Holy See. . the bishops of this country that Archbishop Jolin ao Aggey they must condemn priests in of Lagos, chairman f the hishEurope and America engaging ops' conference, ~lSSU edthe idelin "anti-Nigeria acts." egate that. the Niger an bis~ops 'In a message to Gen. Yakubu are ready to coopera e with I the . •_ Gowon, the bishops reaffimed civil authorities alS 'ell as with their loyalty to the federal mil- the l:Ioly See., : itary government. Commending : Gowon sent his Gowon's magnanimity, the bish- than a month and half ~fter ops also pledged. (heir' support the surrender of Biaf a, the ,forfor the national rehabilitation, mer Eastern Region of Nig$ria, reconstruction and reconciliation" which had seceded in May, 1967, , prograins~ bringing on a civil w r. I ." , In, it "message to the Nigerian The message was sent t~ree Bishops' '. Conference meeting days after 29 Catholi missiopers her~ Gowon said reports indicate deported from Nigeri arrived in that ,"certain Roman Catholic Rome with repor:ts exten'sive • DR•. WI~L1AM B. WALSH I ,priests in Europe and America hunger in what had ,een BiMra, still continue to engage in anti~ Deny Char e ! Nigeria acts such as organizing' Several of the mis ioriers said' collection ,of funds for the recon-the condition ',of priso ers' of !war struction'ejf'a.'Biafra' which does . should be brought t the adennot exist>' . tion of Nigeria fede al authori. Gowon also warned'the ·bish- ties and of the wor d. One! r e - ' . ops that "the· image of the ported that a dozen risoners of Roman Catholic Church in gen- war were dying hI Po t Harc~urt . eral and the future of' the Cath- prison, which held bout 2~000. . NOTRE DAME (NC)-Dr. olicreligion in Nigeria in partic-POW's. '1' William B. Walsh, 49, Washular" is being damaged by such The missioners sai that, de"hostile acts." spite the manifest g od will of ington, D.C., physician was "You must show your dis- those working with t e Nigetian selected for the 1970 Laepleasure at the harm being done Red Cross, including orne E~ro- tare Medal of the University of' by your colleagues abroad, by pean teams, 'food i suffiCient Notre Dame for founding Project condemning them outright," he quantities was failin to r~ach 'HOPE and dispatching a hospitold the bishops. even the cities,' let alone i the tal' ship to' aid people in develvilla~es.. . i. oping nations around the world. Ready to Cooperate. !'Ilg~na . had ac:cus d ~lss,lOnFather Theodore M. Hesburgh, The apostolic' del~gate for Central West Africa, Archbishop anes m BI~ra of. pr ongmgl the C.S.C., university president, Amelio Poggi, asked the bishops w~r .by their r~hef fforts. !The praised the physician-humaniin his opening address to uphold mlsslon~rs demed h~ ~harge tarian in announcing his selecthe efforts of the apostolic dele- and said tha~ ~I~ey dlstnb\fted tion. The honor, highest confergation in order to reestablish a food. only to clvllJtans and noit to red by the university, has been loyal and sincere atmosphere of soldiers. awarded annually since 1883. It understanding and collaboration ,. I takes its name from Laetare Sunday, the day the award tra-' ditionally is made. Joint Venl'ure t '1 Dr. Walsh entered .. private WASHINGTON (NC) - "The OW u I . practice as an internist and heart Living Light," official quarterly BOSTON (NC) n institute specialist in Washington in 1946 journal of the National Center for the study of hum n gen~tics and in 1958 founded the Peopleof Religious Education - CCD, and related law has een fodned to-People Health Foundation, Inc. will become a joint publishing by the Boston ollege l-aw and Project HOPE (Health Opventure with Our Sunday Visi- here School and New En land Medi- portunity for People Everytor, Inc., of Huntington, Ind. The where). arrangement will begin with cal Center of Tufts U iversity. He cut through governmental The unit will be k own asj the the . Spring issue, tentatively scheduled for publication in early Center for the Study f Law land red tape and obtained from the Human Genetics. I Navy a 15,000-ton hospital ship May. Its co-directors re Father used' in the Korean conflict Robert F. Drinan, S.., who Ihas which he refurbished as a 132More Efficiency taken a leave of ab ence from bed medical center known as the It is more than probable that his .post as dean f the 'Ilaw 5.5. HOPE. the average man could, with no school to run for Co gress, land The S.S. HOPE set out from injury to his health; increase his Dr. Murray Feingold, director of San Francisco on Sept. 22, 1960 efficiency fifty per cent. -Scott . the Tufts Center f r Gertetic on its first voyage to Indonesia Counseling and Bir h Defects (where. two native doctors served 250,000 inhabitants) and· Evaluation. In a statement cning I the South Vietnam (where the maimcenter, the co-directo s indicated . ed and wounded civilians of the that medical' pro ress ihas war needed care). prompted a revaluati n of '.'presMore than 1,500 volunteer. ent moral, religious and p~i1o- American medical personnel 'have sophical concepts." i The center was d s.cribed as performed in' excess of 11,000 the first in the natio to conten- major operations, treated some trate on a study of the moral, 129,000 persons and trained emotion'al, legal an scientific 5,000 indigenous people in medaspects of family,pla ning, birth ical and paramedical techniques defects and therap utic allOr- on the mercy. mission, tions. ". . I ' Home Employing the r sources of several' disciplines, I w, sot:iol· In 1969, Project HOPE turned ogy, medicine, religl~n and psy-' its attention' to some problems chology, the, center. ill 'ser'[~ as at home, establishing a teaching an information .cent r on gene- program to provide trained medtics and' related fielrs for i the icaland health personnel in the communication media legislators Mexican-American community of and the general publi . I Laredo, Tex., and managing a hospital serving a 16-million-acre c:*"1 Navajo Indian reservation at . DIRECTOR: Texas State Sen1"11I .;l,w Ganado, Ariz. ator Joe J. Bernal, a former DENVER (NC)-:-F her Daniel Dr. Walsh divides his time be· social worker, has be'en named Flaherty, editor of t e National tween administrative duties in executive director of the Sari Register, weekly Cat olic publi- the Washngton headquarters of Antonio archdiocese,'s newly cation, said there is 'nothing to. "Project HOPE" and sojourns estabHsl:ted Commission on a. Gallagher Report. tating that aboard ship. l\1uch, of his time is Mexican-American Affairs. A Pat Frawley is attem ting to buy devoted to raising the $5 million .native of San Antonio, Bernal the Register." Fath r Flaherty, ·a. year it takes to keep his medialso said the Register is not ¢on- cal center afloat. He is' currently will direct the commission's ac- . sidering selling to' anyone! at, gathering support for a second tivities aimed at moeting the this. time. Frawley owns ithe .mercyship, a step.toward a goal social needs of the See's large T.win, 'Circle; another national of at least one S.S. HOPE for Mexican-American population.- . Catholic weekly.. .. : each continent. .
ing boards and academic policies, have become independent .of former ties with religious orders "both in governance and teach· ing."· The decision makes Fordham eligible for an estimated $1,077,600 during' the current school year, while Manhattan would qualify for $143,200 and St. John Fisher for $102,400. Under New York law, aid is banned to educational systems if they are "Wholly or in part under the control or direction of any religious d~nomination."
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President Nixon Urges Senate To Ratify Genocide Convention WASHINGTON (NC)-In c'alling upon the Senate to ratify the United Nations' genocide convention, President Nixon has asked it 'to do something it has put off for 20 years. Briefly, the convention calls upon the nations that sign it to abstain from acts "committed with the intent to des.troy in whole .or in part a national, ethnical, racial or religious. group as such." The United States was a leader in getting the UN General Assembly to adopt the convention in 1948. But strong, and at times bitter opposition developed in this country and the Senate failed to ratify it. Today, 74 nations on both sides of the Iron Curtain have ratified the convention. The United States is not among them. The convention was formulated by Dr. Raphael Lemikin, a Polish refugee who became a professor at Yale. The word "genocide" was coined from Latin and Greek roots meaning the killing. of people. It was generally accepted as being inspired by the attempts of Nazis to exterminate the Jews. 'World Has Changed' Many will have difficulty in seeing what could keep this country from ratifying an international document for such a purpose. But two decades ago, many persons strongly professed objections which included these points: ratification by the. U. S. would be contrary to our Constitution; the-definition of genocide in the document was vague; the convention stripped national sovereignty of any meaning; and occasional lynchings and the survival of racial discrimination. could be made the basis for ~harging this country with the practice of genocide. Times have changed since . hen and so has the make-up of the Senate. It will be interesting to see how much, should the ~enate decide to take up the matter of ratification. The American Bar Association was among those voicing early opposition and politicians, clern' 'men and others were sharply divided on the issue in the 1950s. But now the association's Section on Individual Rights and Responsibilities says: "The world has changed and the presumed risks have proved groundless." Twenty years ago, earlyoppo-
tHE ANCHOR~ Thurs., Mar. 12, 1970
sition seemed rooted to some extent in a dislike some persons in this country had for the United Nations, which sponsored the convention. But the UN has grown in stature since then, and the visit of Pope Paul VI to its headquarters in 1965 accelerated widespread acceptance and support for the international body. In 1950, a Senate Foreign Re· lations subcommittee recom· mended ratification, which Pres· ident Truman had proposed in 1949. But the subcommittee inserted four "understandings" to spell out with some' precision just what this country took the convention to mean, and still the document was not ratified. A number of countries have ratified the' convention with reservations, and it is likely that some "understandings" will be proposed in the Senate if it takes up the issue again. The secrr~tary of state and the attorney general are said to have advised President Nixon that there are no constitutional barriers to ratification.
Prelate Named In Damage Suit
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u.~ SEMINARY TEACHER: Rabbi David Neiman, a member of the Boston College theology department faculty, has been named the first Jewish scholar to teach at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. Dr. Neiman, who has led Boston College studE!nt expeditions in the Holy Land, is shown examining reo search materials. NC Photo.
ROCHESTER (NC) - Catholic students returned to their schools after diocesan officials suspend· ed classes for one day in sympathy with a punlic school boycott linked to a desegregation dispute. As Rochester public schools closed for a dav in face of a walkout by students and teachers, Catholic schools in the city followed suit the next day, but for different reasons. Father Daniel Brent, Rochester diocesan supel'intendent of schools, said two factors were involved in the closing. "We are sympathetic with the frustrations of minority groups in seeking quality integration," the priest told NC News. He noted also that the presence of pickets at the public schools, plus the fear of demontrations, were viewed as indirect safety hazards to the Catholic school students. The public school dispute erupted following· the Board of Education's rejection of a cone troversial desegregation plan. Members OK minority groups,' teachers and some parents supported the proposal which would have reorganized the city's district into several zones designed to create a greater degree of racial balance in the schools. But th'e plan,had been atacked sharply by opponents who protested it would increase the number of children requiring bus transportation.
CLEVELAND (NC) - The mother of a severely burned eight-year-old boy, .who insists she isn't suing the bishop of Cleveland, is legally doing exactly that, according to her lawyer. "We're not suing the bishop," remarked Mrs. Elaine Crossen, whose son was burned severely First Jewish Professor at 400-Year-OkJ Double Burden last July 4 when his shirt caught fire as he lit a candle Three helping one another Pontifical Gregorian University at Our Lady of the' Highway bear the burden of six. -Herbert BOSTON (NC)-A jewish rab- versity of Chicago, and earned Shrine here. She said she und'rstoOd the .bi .here is· becoming accustomed his doctorate at the Dropsie College for Hebrew and Cognate suit would be filed against an to the trail blazer's role. Dr. David Neiman has been Learning in Philadelphia. ins~rance company, but James During the last two Summers Ugan, her. attorney, who filed a appointed the first Jewish visit$950,000 damage suit in a local ing professor in theology at the Dr. Neiman led archaeological court in connection with the in- 400-year-old Pontifical Gregorian and biblical students on Boston College expeditions in Israel, cident , said that Mrs. Crossen University in Rome. Since 1966, Dr. Neiman has making important discoveries. is in fact suing Bishop Clarence been the first full time member Last Summer at Tell Megadim, G. Issenmann by name. of the theological faculty at 10 miles south of Haifa, the Bishop Issi:mmann,' trustee ,of Jesuit-run Boston College. group found a lost Romanthe shrine, is named as one of He expects to take over the . two defendants in the case. The Rome appointment in the Spring Byzantine city. The year before other is the Chattanooga firm of 1971, teaching Jewish litera- on the other side of- the slope, Dr. Neiman's group located a which manufactures the shirts. ture contemporary with the New Phoenician city lost to history Explaining the legal proce- Testament. for more than 2500 years. dure, Ugan said that in damage "It's a very big step toward suits, "You don't sue the insur- greater 'understanding between c. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :...;;=.;: + ••• ance company, you sue the in- Judaism and Christianity," Dr. sured," which in this case is the Neiman, an ordained rabbi, said YOU CAN NOW EARN bishop. of the Rome appointment. During the last 20 years Dr. A BIG Neiman said he had found a "sincere desire on the part of Christians to learn more about .' the nature of Judaism and the Jewish people." He added: on Saving Certificate Passbook Accounts "In contrast to' traditional Christian views on Judaism, Minimum Deposit-$100 Maximum Deposit $30,000 which were based on imperfect interpretations obtained from Dividends paid and compounded quarterly second-hand sources, the modern and every dollar is insured in fuil. Christian theologian wants to learn the nature of Judaism diNO NOTICE REQUIRED FOR WITHDRAWAL rectly from the source. "That is why there has been such an expansion of Jewish studies at Christian colleges, graduate schools and theological seminaries." Dr. Neiman studiectat City College of New York, the Uni-
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Appeal to Pope PACIFICATION AT WORK: When Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird visited Vietnam, he was taken to An Hoa Village, only a few miles from the Cambodian border, to see how the program of pacification works. The area is said to show .many signs .of prosperity returning. The cabinet officer walks With Fr. Joachll:" Nguyen Van Nghi, local pastor, in the courtyard of the Catholic church, where people of the village assembled. NC:-Photo.
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Nincteen Washington, D.C., archdiocesan priests disciplined by Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle for disagreeing with Pope Paul's birth control encyclical have appealed to the pope to intervene. The 19 asked that the Pontiff create an impartial court to settle the dis- . pute.
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Add the name of Michael Zito, Feehan senior, to National Merit finalist~. Also at the Attleboro schodl, Michael participated in National Honor Society induetioh cerdnonies, speaking on leadership. Christine Kane discJssed char~ acter; Suzanne Marquis,. 'I..: scholarship' and Claire Sa- opmg an understandmg of" hu.' man values. I very, service. Guest spea~er Reading for Pleasure centers for the program was Mrs. around. the reading,1 di~cus~ion
Robert Nelson, whose topic was and enjoyment of a ~ht~m n,u~ "The Importance of Work." The ber of books, varyl~g m.. type, chapter has 53 active members chosen by the stude~t. FmalI~, and 48 provisionals. a study of the A,?epcan MUs~Twelve from Holy Family in ca.1 Theatre acquamt~ .the pupil New Bedford will attend the Wit? the sound of ~IS th.e~tre annual area convention of NHS . as. It developed f:rom the sl,'Tl ple chapters to be held Wednesday mmstrel show of. th '. '1800 s to March 25 at Bridgewated Stat~ the rock musicals of today! College. Sponsoring school is Alumni of Stang Hikh in North Bridegwater. Raynham Regional. Dartmouth wa~t to r~mi~d gradThe program will feature a de- uates of their upoommg rebate on sex education. union night, to Ibe ~~ eld SaturSMA Mini-Courses day night, April 1~ at Th~d's Seniors at Sacred Hearts Aca- S~ea~ Hous~. A S.OCI, I hour: bedemy, Fall River, have been giv- gmm.ng at 6.30 w.lIl. ,e follor ed en the opportunity of taking by dmner ~nd dahcm~. seminars or mini-courses. PurReservations shoul~ be made' pose o( these courses is to broad- by Monday, March 3q with Sanen one's horizons and to expand dra ,DeCarlo, telephone 995-2846 experiences for cultural devel- or Yvette, La Fra:ncel telephone opmeilt. Meeting three, days out 995-3325. . I of a seven day unit ~or one Good Ship Pin fore : se~ester, the students. m these That indestructiblel ship, 'the enTlchment c?urses. are marked HMS Pinafore, will be afloat on a pass-fall basIs.. ' Saturday and Sundayj at Bishop A total of seven semm~rs are Connolly High with la cast. inoffered. They are: ClaSSICS for I d' Con II Pli t ~ d Enjoyment, Creative Writing, c u 109 no y. evos n I Dramatics Interpretation Film- Jesus-Mary students... . '. And Jesus-Mary J mors 'are makmg, Great Books,. Readmg planning their prom for Friday f?r Pleasure, and AmeTlcan Mu- night, April 17, with the theme slcal Theatre. "A T' f U" . f E' t' h Ime or s. CI ~SSICS . or .nJoymen IS.t e To be displayed in Boston is readmg, diSCUSSion, and enJoy- th t 0 k f Mt St M r ment of the Greek and Roman e. ar w r ~ . . a y myths· most frequently referred semor Barb.ara A, Laeerda.. tI er to in literature art and adver- work has. been '(r~OsFn ' bYithe fsing " . Boston Globe, regl?nal sponsor I Major emphasis on the writing of a nation~1 contestj con.duc'ted and editing of a short story is by ScholastiC Arts mt~azme., presented in Creative Writing. ,Also at the Fall .~Iver AcaReviewing basic principles of demy, Dawn Hannafm has been platform speaking, studying tech- accepted by. Emman~el. Collrge niques in still acting, and prac- and .has received a partial. sc?oltice in learning .to intHpret dra- arshlp to- the Boston /nstltuqon. matic selections if-: the objective Other acceptan<:es .include,; at of the Dramatic Interpretations Jesus-Mary: Pat Forest, BridgeSeminar. water State; Michelle I LeveSque, Film-making introduces to the Salve and SMU; Murie, Lapoin.te, student the grammar' of the film SMU; Diane Dumas, ISMU; and and the basic techniques of Claudette Fontaine, Nrtre Da,me film-making. At the culmination of New Hampshire. ; of this mini-course students proAt Dominican Aca, emy, I'all duce a film. River: Pat Campos, Pat Leduc, The function -of Great Books Marcia' Pavent and Jeanine Dore, Seminar is to study selected lit- all to SMU; and. Dehise Franerary masterpieces while devel- coeur and Anne Sllucih to BCC. . I I
SNACK TIME: Part of fun of residential school is after-school snack time. Enjoying bite and sip are Mt. St. Joseph ,High School .students Madeline Motta, Claire Marcotte, Renette Durette and Moniq'ue Beaudoin. School is located in Fall River. At Holy Family: Wayne Rose, Stonehill; Theresa Sirois, Bridgewater; Dennis Winn, Bryant. Plus the good news that' Jane Martin has received a full-tuition scholarship totaling $6400 to Stonehill College. Jane's used to honors: she's a Homemaker of Tomorrow; a National Merit finalist; NHS president; editor of the school paper and a glee c1ubber and cheer leader. Journalism Convention It was off to New York"this .morning for students at Feehan and Mt. St. Mary with their destination the 46th annual convention of the Columbia' Scholastic Press Associatio'n. Six stu<!ents are going from';' each' school, accompanied by Sister Susan Connell, Feehan moderator and Sister Carol Mary, Mount ditto. It won't all, be work in New' York-the students plan to see at least three Broadway plays. ' And senior Mounties have begun, the agonizing process of choosing their graduation gowns, in line with their tradition of wearing long white dresses instead of academic .garb. So far three stores have displayed their selections to the fashionwise girls., , It'll be a father-daughter dance on St. Patrick's night for Jesus-Mary students,' with the school 'auditorium the scene of festivities. ' . At SHA the dad-daughter ,dallce has already' taken .place. with JoAnne Conlon crowned as queen ~nd Pat Harney the lady . in waiting. 'St. Pat's will be celebrated at Feehan with a performance by the Beelzebubs, a 14-man singing group from Tufts. University. Also. at Feehan, the FreshmanSophomore Social was recently held, with its theme "Liniment, Lace and Love," All sorts of possibilities inherent in that title
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III', YOUNG CHEFS: !'fere's one group of future husbetlnds w1ho won't be at a loss in the kitchen. Members of "Boy Chef" class at Feehan High in Attleboro are, from left, Dennis Stl laurent, . John McQuade, Jason Santos, Mike Holland.
PHILADELPHIA (NC) - More than 40,000 persons have signed a resolution sponsored· by the Cardinals Commission on Human Relations which calls for inclusion of farm workers under the provisions of the National Labor Relations Act. The largest group ~f signatures was gathered by students of St. Hubert's High School. More than 5,500 persons signed petitions which originated at the school.
ROME (NC) - The official in charge of American Catholic relief activities in the Middle East said withdrawal of welfare support for Arab refugee camps, suggested in the United States as a way to curb Arab terrorist 'attacks on civilions, would be un-Christian because many would be punished for the acts of a few. Msgr. John G. Nolan, currently ~n Rome but based in New York as, national secretary of the Catholic Near East Welfare Association, was asked to comment on a, 'Public statement issued by the Institute for JudaeoChristian Studies at Seton Hall University, South Orange, N. J. The .Institute had deplored, growing terrorist attacks which have killed 48 civilians in the past week, through bombs exploded aboard airliners in Europe and the machinegunning of a tourist bus in Jerusalem. It asked that' all welfare agencies withdraw Arab refugee camp support unless there .are guarantees they will not be used as hatred and violence training grounds. "Such a policy," said Msgr. Nolan when reached by NC News, "seems to be the outworn practice of punishing thE! many because of the few. This strikes me as being hardly Christian.
Classes will entertain each other at a St. Pat's assembly at ,Dominican, where three individual days of recollection for freshman, sophomore' and junior classes have been scheduled. They'll be held at the CYO Bishops Are Silent "Loft." On F'risoner Issue '; Volleyball Team The 1970 volleyball team has MEXICO CITY (NC}-Despite been named at SHA. The mem- many appeals that it intervene bers are Sue Lapointe, Chris on behalf of so-called "political Stanton and Pat Correia, seniors; prisoners" here, the Mexican' Pattie Brophy, Kathie Kay, jun- Bishops' Conference did not issue iors; Milady Khoury, Mary Jane a statement on the controversy Silvia, Barbara Conlon, Mary because many of the bishops Ellen Tansey, 'Joan Lawton, Lynn said they did not .h~ve clear inCheney, Denise C~rriveau; soph- formation on, all factors in the omo~es; Na~~y' M~Murry,. $.itn case: .., r . .'" 'r ,,' LaSage, Carole . Kay, Cathy This was the explanatioll ,given Palumbo" freshmen. by Bishop Sergio Mendez Arceo A representavie from PSI will . of Cuernavaca after a conferaddress Holy, Family students to- ence meeting. Bishop' Mendez day and on Tuesday, March 24 has often supported controversial there'll be a speaker from the groups in his own diocese. Naval Academy at Annapolis. '. The 91 prisoners were arYesterday Feehan students rested in connection with riots and faculty bade farewell. to here in July and October of 1968 their foreign exchange student, during a clamp-down on student Maria Luz Ureta, who has re- unrest before the World Olympic turned to Santiago, Chile after Games here. .They have been an illuminating session' at the held in this city's Lecumberri Attleboro high school. jail without trial since that time. Nine juniors have been accepted at Sacred Hearts Acad- Foundation Honors emy. At Stang High in North' Dart- Catholic Teenager mouth NHS induction ceremoVALLEY FORGE (NC) - A nies are slated for 8 tonight. Catholic teenager who organized Bishop Stang School Council ,the first "Youth for, Decency" will sponsor a banquet honoring rally last year has received· the the basketball team on Monday- Freedoms Foundation's highest· night, March 16. honor. Eighteen-year-old Mike Lavesque of Hialeah, Fla., was .Ask President Act named winner of the foundation's $5,000 George Washigton To Aid Nigerians' NOTRE DAME (NC}-A reso- Award. He is a' member of St. lution asking President Nixon to John's the Apostle Parish in take speedy action in alleviating . Hialeah. Lavesque, youngest person the suffering in Nigeria is being circulated by Students for Biaf- ever to receive the foundation's ran Relief, a national student or- top honor, was cited for his ganization headquartered at the. role in organizing a rally attended by more than 30,000 youths University of Notre Dame. Thomas A. Hamilton, director last March in Miami's Orange of the organization and a Notre Bowl to demonstrate the' 'comDame freshman, called for "a mitment of youth to morality in greater and concerted effort with their daily lives: As· a result, all the sovereign peoples, of the similar rallies were held in other world to instrument a drastic parts of the country. change in the conditions of hunger and starvation in the country of Nigeria." He cited the support of senators, congressmen, private citizens' groups and organizations, and reminded Nixon of his own 245 MAIN· STREET statement to the effect that "this is not the time to stand on cereFALMOUTH - 548·1918 mony or to go through channels ARMAND ORTINS, Prop. or to observe the diplomatic niceties."
ORTINS Photo Supply
Comp'etes Probe
'THE ANCHOR-Thurs., Mar. 12. 1970
Of Grape Dispute In California
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Advocates Love Replace Despair
FRESNO (NC)-Auxiliary . Bishop Joseph F. Donnelly of Hartford, Conn., has completed a further fact-finding
investigation of the table grape dispute linked to the farm-labor controversy in the San Joaquin Valley. Bishop Donnelly. is chairman of an ad hoc committee appointed by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops to look into the conflict. He was accompanied on his tour here by Msgr. George G. Higgins, Bl director of Conference Department of Urban .Life, who is acting as secretary of the committee. For five days the two toured the farm areas in Fresna and Kern countries, visiting with growers and with farm workers in the fields. During the tour, 'Bishop Hugh A. Donohoe of Fresno, a member of the ad hoc committee, accompaned the visitors to Delano for discussions with members of the South Central Farmers Committee which represents most of the large grape growers of that area. Union Boycott , bra WE '. -'¥:. Further discussions were held Bernard B. Direnfeld, National ComANNIVERSARY MEDAL: Pope Paul VI receives from also with leaders of the United manderof the Jewish War Veterans, USA, a gold medal commemorating the 75th anniversary Farm Workers Organizing Com- of the organization. Mr. Direnfeld made the presentation during an audience at the Vatican. mittee, AFL-CIO, headed by NC Photo. Cesar Chavez of Delano. The union, involved in a longstanding dispute with the growers, has urged a nationwide boycott of the tabJe grapes to force the growers to the bargaining table. But the growers, who OLYMPIA (NC) Combat holes," Msgr. Sampson said he among members of armed forces, charge their field hands don't want to join the union, have, re- chaplains make better clerygmen has found "religion, morality, he said, is "a particularly diffiwhen they return to civilian life, and morale are the least probe cult problem," but added that he fused to recognize it. The full committee, which in- Maj. Gen. (Msgr.) Francis L. lems where the danger is the doubts it is more prevalent among the military than among cludes also Archbishop Timothy Sampson,' army chief of chap'- greatest." The men are so occupied with college students. Manning of Los Angeles, Bishop lains, said here in Washington. "It's a problem of our generaCombat experience tends to gaining their objectives and surWalter W. Curtis of Bridgeport, clergymen, especially vival, he said, that they have tion," the chief army chaplain Conn., and Bishop, Humberto make Medeiros of Brownsville, Tex., priests, not only broadened, little time to think of anything said. In Prison Camp will reconvene in Fresno on· Msgr. Sampson said, but also else. Msgr. Sampson started his Msgr. Sampson admitted there March 23 for further talks on gives them wider acceptance the issue. They will make a re- among the people since they be- are moral and morale problems military career as a member of port which is expected to be lieve chaplains get to "know . in Saigon. The use of drugs the 101st airborne Division in World War II. He was a paradiscussed at the bishops' semi- the real nitty-gritty of life." . trooper during the Normandy inannual meeting in San Francisco Reinforcing the folk axiom vasion and was taken prisoner that "there are no atheists in fox on April 20. by the Germans. He later escaped only to be captured a second time while WASHINGTON (NC)-Legisla- making a combat jump. He spent tion to liberalize current anti- the final year of the war 10 a abortion laws was killed off in G~rman prison camp. a surprise move in one state, apBut Msgr. Sampson is not nosproved in another and set back talgic for "the good old days," t.emporarily in a third. "For some reason, I am unAt the Georgia legislature in a able to explain, today's chapsurprise secret ballot move a lains are better motivated and House committee killed off for certainly have a better rapport the time being legislation which with the troops now than we did would permit relaxing the laws. years ago," he said, "and it Supporters of the, bill had ex- shows in their ministry." pressed confidence the measure Msgr. Sampson spoke during would clear the legislature at the a brief stop at nearby Fort Lewis current session. on his way to Vietnam. The Washington state legislature in Olympia cleared an abor- Announce Position tion-on-demand bill, which now will be voted on by the people On Pressing Issues UNION (NC) - The national in a November referendum. A temporary setback slowed board of the Catholic Daughters consideration of a measure in of America at a meeting here in Hawaii which would give the New Jersey took stands on aborisland state the most liberal tion" pornography, crime, drug abortion law in the nation. The addiction, voting discrimination legislat,ion, which would permit and state aid to nonpublic any abortion to be perfomed by schools. Mary C. Kanane, national rea licensed physician at the request of a pregnant woman, gent, reported the board concleared the Senate in Honolulu demned abortion and supported by a 17-7 vote. a bill that would allow local cit- / When the legislation came to izens to make final decisions in the House, it was sidetracked in deciding what is pornographic. a committee. Under. the arrangeIt also called on local governCITY COUNCIL HONORS COLLEGE: Mount St. Mary's Col- ment three, senators and three ments to fight crime and drug House members were named to addiction, scored discrimination lege was commended by the Los ,Angeles City Council for "a work on a compromise measure. in housing, voter registration, edpioneering effort to give special assistance to the educationally Under consideration is a resi- ucation and employment. The disadvantaged." Councilmen Thomas Bradley, left, and Marvin dence requirement designed to board asked for support of legisBradue present scroll to Sister Cecilia Louise Moore, C.S.J., keep Hawaii from becoming an latures in granting financial aid college president. NC Photo. to nonpublic schools. "abortion mecca,"
Says Chaplains Become Better Clergymen Msgr.. Sampson Cites Combat Experiences
Liberal Abortion Laws Set Back
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Commenting on human-torch suicides of the young, a cardinal ha!! called on the older generation to recognize the "nobility" contained in such actions and to offer love to the young in place of "the downward path" of despair. Gabriel Cardinal Garrone, prefect of the Congregation of Catholic Edu,cation, pleaded with his generation to insert the principle of honesty in the world so that the young would be helped by "the strength and sweetness of real love." , The prelate's remarks were carried in t.he Vatican City'daily newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano in the wake of two acts of self-immolation by students in Italy and seven more in France. His attributing such suicides to a false and deceitful world was reminiscent of previous statements from Rome. Pope Paul VI made similar observations on the occasion of the "mattyrdom" of Jan Palach, the Czechoslovakian student who immolated himself on Jan. 16, 1969, to protest the Russian occupation. The late archbishop of Prague, Josef Cardinal Beran, in exile in Rome at that time,' stirred up a cont.roversy by praising the idealism of Palach, even though he clearly condemned suicide.
East Germany Ends Notices, to Church BERLIN (NC)-East German registration offices have stopped notifying Catholic parishes of residence changes by Catholics. The Leipzig Catholic paper, Day of the Lord, says cancellation of a previously routine practice has jeopardized the pastoral care of Catholics in East Germany, charging that the change in government practice has made it impossible for East German priests to visit Catholics who have moved into their parishes or .to provide pBlstoral care for the sick and needy. The paper appealed to all East German Catholics to register voluntarily without delay at parish offices and to notify parishes of changes of residence by family members, boarders and roomers. This is a "Church law whose observance is especially urgent at present," the papE'r said.
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'The Parish Parade
18
Advise ReodBn'~ Tr@'f~l~
Books Before
Publicity chairmen of parish or· ganizations are asked to submit news items for this column to The Anchor, P.O, Box 7, Fall River'
Jour~~ry
02722.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. 301m S. KeJrmedy ST. IELlZABETH, EDGARTOWN Mrs. Pauline Berube, chairman has announced that the Women's Guild will hold a St. Patrick's Tea on Sunday afternoon. March 15 from 4 to 6 in the parish hall.
I was once astonished by a person who, after a
whirlwind' trip through Europe, did not know Iwhere' he had been. He had snapped pictures· by the huildrJds. When
he came to show them to his friends, he could identify
neither the subject nor t h e ' i I . "A Mr. Morton enriches the trav. scene m mo~tcascs. "ny - eler.· prepares hill) t9 see ~orl:' one recogmze that? he than a blur of buildings, ena"les would cheerfully inquire. It him to understand artd to savor might be as unfamiliar a build-' the special quality oftplaCealfter ing as St. Peter's or Notre Dame. place. Quite as strange Lottman's Det urs. I is the per.son Herbert Lottman, Iauthor: of who, on the Detours from thl~ Grand Tour (Prentice-Hall, Engle~60d Cliffs, verge of a. trip, . N.J. 07632. $7.95). c~nnot co.mdoes not know Itttt:') where he is go- :;':':! pare with Mr. MOIllon as a . H e d oes .n,,·,,:.: «l· h mg. writer. He h as none LI'f ~ t e ~pek n o~. 0 f cial felicity with which the g~eat course. m a genveteran paints sceneS and con· 'eral way. But veys atmosphere. I ' he has done His range is considerable: nothing. to acItaly, France. Bel'giutP, Greece. ~uaint hims~lf Turkey. Sweden. Norray. Denm advance with . . . mark. England, Irelalld. But' he the various places he IS to VISit. makes no pretense of covering But. how could he? Through . any of these. I ' readmg. . Rather. he is c<onc~rned with . This readi":g would take m one or more speci.fic ~spects, of history and bIOgraphy. It would each. or with some thrread which also include some select travel connects two or more of them:' Incentive to Trarl eler ' cooks. Among. the lat.ter are those of the non-pared, H . V . . . I Morton. who has helped countHe gIVe" .us no conventlOllal less thousands to enjoy England. tour of, Paris. but co?centra~es Ireland. Scotla.nd. the Holy Land. on the Roman re~alns to jbe Spain and Italy through his found there. somethmg of which book;. t~e .ordina~ traveler I may. Ito Now someone has had the hiS Impoverishment. be tota11ly happy idea of culling prime pass- unaware.. . .. ·1 :. ages from his volumes on Eng· In V~mlce. he IS mti~ested! m land, Ireland.' Scotland, and the Wmter .se~son or In a reWales, and combining these ma!kable prmtmg works at S,an with a wealth of excellent color Lazzaro. I photographs. The result is callMr. Lottman's book is indeed ed (pace De Valera's people) off-beat, cram',lled .' '1"it~ odd H.V. Morton's Britain (Giniger- facts. and offermg mcentlve for Dodd Mead 79 Madison Ave. the traveler to g,et teady f.or New 'York, N.Y. 10016, $12.95): his journey by some Istudy, Ito L don Example' go off t?e beaten track. and Ito on ." keep hiS eyes open I for the . Mr. Morton writes. The be- idiosyncratic and the' ~niversal. lief that one cannot undersand I noticed one whopping error a country. a town. or a human in the book. Writing of the Italbeing for that. matter. u~lless. ~ou ian town of Asolo. Mr.j Lottm~n know some~hmg of ~helr orlgms says that Giuseppe Sarto (later and experiences. IS stronger Pope Pius X) was I baptized w~th me than e~er. and I a~ there "at age' 10." len days. stdl always askmg myself. I maybe. but certai.nly not .10 wonder who stood here long years. . : ago·... I That question he answers for . the reader, and thus enriches the Catholic AgElnclies i traveler, again and again in E d B fotl these pages. norse en«! I I Take London. Mr. Morton en· WASHINGTON (NC) - T~o abies the reader to see it as it Catholic agencies have lendorsed was in its beginnings: a Roman a benefit showing of a documen-. town. one mile square, complete- tary movie on the' lif~ of Dr. Iy walled about. To this day, Martin Luther King Jr.~ set for that area is the domain of the, showing March 24 in 1,~00 theaLord Mayor: ters in 300 cities throu~hout tn,e Enriches Travelerr country. ! The tourist who goes to Chi. The commu":icationsdepar~chester after having f(~ad Mr. m~nt of the Umted States Ca~h Morton will look at the four ohc Conference e':prefsed\. ~t~ main streets with a different support of the ?ene~:lt al' a. tn~ eye. having learned that they ut~. to Dr. Kmg. Arfhblshop represent the original city plan Phlhp . M. ~annan of !jl'ew Oriof the Roman occupiers 1800 leans IS chairman of the departI ,! years ago. ment. If he stands on the beach at Anot~er endorsemenf cam Weymouth. h~ will recall, thanks from Bishop Raymond J. G~I~ to Mr. Morton. that when George lagher of Lafayette. Indl.. chalri III went bathing there, a band man of· the. conference I depart~ struck up "God Save the King." m~nt on sO~lal deve~opme~.t.. H~ Maybe the musicians knew said. the -fJlm. entltledl Kmg~ .something of the monarch's A Filmed. ~~co.r~-Mon~gomer~ swimming ability. to. ~e?1phls, . VIVidly req.alls the primitive raCial segregatIOn anc~ the struggle against 'it d'om the Consciousness of Virtue mid 1950s through the 11960s.'~ Moral courage is a virtue of Proceeds of the special show~ higher cast and nobler origin ing of the two and one-h~lf hout than physical. It springs from a film will go into the j"Martin, consciousness of, virtue and Luther King Jr. Special Fund."1 renders a man, in the pursuit or The fund supports a tax Iexempt defense of right. superior to the general philanthropic foundation.: fear of reproach. opposition or which seeks to carry 9ut Dr.! contempt. -Goodrich King's principles and. id~als. 0
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BURKE WALSH
Wa'ish .Retire~ ·From 'Agency WASHINGTON (NC) - Burke Walsh. veteran assistant director of NC News Service whose 44 years with -the ;news agency made his name almost synonymous with NC. announced his retirement this week at the age . . of 67. Walsh was already a seasoned. newsman when in March 1926 he joined NC News. then known as National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service, as a reporter and rewrite man. He became assistant director in July 1938. . He joined NC News Service six years after its founding and has served under all four of its directors: the late Justin McGrath, Frank A. Hall. Floyd Anderson and Richard M. Guilderson Jr. Walsh was a combat correspondent in Italy during WOJ;ld War II, and in 1944 was in the vanguard of newsmen accompanying U.S. troops when they took Rome from the Germans. In the post-war period, Pope Pius XII conferred on Walsh the Knight of St. Gregory award and the U.S. Secretary of War gave him a citation and ribbon for his accomplishments as a war correspondent.
Parish Parade ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, CENTRAL ViLLAGE A public whist will be held at 8 on Saturday night. March 14 in the church hall. Mrs. Louise Viera is serving as chairman. ST. PATRICK, FALL RIVER A fashion show for the benefit of the parish school will be held at 7:30 on Sunday night. March 22. The public is invited ll,nd then~ will be no charge. ST. GEORGE, WESTPORT Tickets will be available at the door for a variety show sponsored by the Women's Guild to be presented at Dartmouth High School auditorium at 8 Saturday and Sunday nights. March 14 and 15.
Opposes Canonizing IEnglis~ Martyrs LONDON (NC)-Father Joseph Munitz, S.J.• has charged that the proposed canonization of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales is designed only to buttress Church authority and structures against the challenges they face today. He accused Church authorities of using the martyrs to "deliver" a message that "runs counter to the most healthy movement in the Church today."
ST..BOHN OF GOD, SOMERSIET"' "Come Alive" is the theme for Ihis year's CCD Day scheduled for Saturday. May 16 in the Somerset Junior High School. The day. dedicated to ecumenical involvement, will open with registration at 9:30 and conclude with the celebration of the Holy Eucharist at 5 in the afternoon. The public. Catholic and Non-Catholic. is invited.
HOLY CROSS, SOUTH EASTON The annual St. Patrick's Dance and Buffet, under the sponsorship of the women's club will be held at 8 on Saturday night. March 14 in the parish hall. Tickets are $5.00 per couple and may be obtained from the co·chairmen, Mrs. Charles J. Malcosky or Mrs. Thomas C. Denesha. Joe Upton's orcnestra will furnish the music and it is opened to the public . ST. HYACINTH, NEW IBEDFORD The parish will hold a bean supper on Saturday night and servings will be made between 5:30 and 8. ST. S1l'ANiSLAUS, . IFALL RIVER Confirmation services will be held at 7:30 Sunday night and the usual 7 o'<;lock Mass will-be celebrated at 5 for this week only. Members of parish societies will for.m an honor guard for Bishop Connolly at the confirmation. The annual parish retreat will begin Sunday. continuing through Sunday March 22. The school board will meet· Wednesday night, March 18 in the school, following the 7:15 Mass. Mrs. Walter Bronhard, president of the Women's Guild announced the following future programs: a Communion Breakfast on May 17 under the chairmanship of Mrs. Peter Putraszek and Miss Mary Niewola and a joint installation of officers with the Men's Club on May 23. \
OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS, FAlLLRIVER The Council of Catholic Women will sponsor a whist party in the church hall on Saturday night. Members of the Liberal Club will receive Communion in a body at the 8 o'clock Mass on Sunday morning. CORPUS CHRISTI, SANDWICH Mrs. Mary'Earle. chairman has announced that the Women's Guild will sponsor a fashion show and a dinner on Friday evening. April 3 at East Bay Lodge. Cocktail hour at 6:30 and dinner at 7:30. The fashions will' include clothes.. shoes and coiffures. Men's fashions will also be shown. Tickets are $6.00 per person and may be obtained by calling Mrs. Anita Bangs at 888-0601. Reservations close on March 25.
ST. MARY, NORTON The St. Mary's Women's Club will host the District No. 4 meeting at the parish center. Miss Angela Medeiros will preside. Mrs. Nellie Ayvasian. a Russian refuge and a membe'r of . the International Institute of Providence, Will speak about her life in Russia and other countries. A question and an· swer period 'will follow. Refreshments will be served hy a committe under the direction of Mrs. Carol' Rei and Mrs. PhyHls Andrade. Plans are in progress for supplying the cake booth with homemade items for the annual bazaar. ST. JOAN OF ARC, ORLIEANS The parish will sponsor a St. Patrick's Day Dinner Dance on Saturday esvening. March 21. at the school haH, Bridge Road, Orleans. There will be a Social Hour from 7:30 foHowed by a Bouffet Dinner featuring Seafood Newburg. Mel Von and his Orchestra will play for your dancing pleasure. Tickets are limited to 75 and early reservations are necessary. When you order your tickets be sure to ask about the Pot O' Gold. CaH the Ozon's, Lucien or Kay. 255-1588. ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE, SWANSEA Miss Barbara O·Brien. Home Extension Economist at the Bristol Agricultural School. will be guest speaker at the March meeting of the Ste. Anne Sodality. Her topic will be "Food Sense and Nonsense," . The meetihg will be held at the church haH on Wednesday evening. March 18 at 8. ST. THOMAS MORE, SOMERSET The Women's Guild will sponsor a dance. "Spring Interlude," from 8:30 to 1 Friday night, April 3 at The Coachmen, Tiverton. A midnight breakfa~t will be served and the Hi Hatters will play' for dancing. Mrs. William Sherry and Mrs. Charles Hague are co-chairmen of the affair, for which dress will be informal. HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER Parishioners interested in serving on the Holy Name school board may submit their names to any present member for nomination prior to Monday. April 20. Elections will be held at the May' board meeting.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 12, 1970
SCHOOLBOY
SPO~TS
IN THE DIOCESE
19
Bob Hickey of Yarmouth Port
Wins Recognition at Colby as Track Star Holds Maine's Two-Mile Championship BY ILUKE SIMS
. sneakers, getting into shape or maintaining it During the offseason (Summer months), he enjoys running through the streets of his home town or along the many beaches !n the area. Maintains Steady Pace A six-footer, Hickey is a rangy individual who relies on wind rather than speed to carry him to victory. Thanks to his training program, the CaPf' teenager has. disciplined his body to the point where he remains a threat in every race. Setting a steady 'pace at the start, Bob is usually content to maintain it throughout the early goings and turning to a kick in the final lap or two. The format has re~sulted in nothing but success in his brief but impressive college career. With two years of eligibility remaining, bigger and better things can be,and are, expected from the Cape runner. By the time he's a senior, Bob Hickey may very well be the fastest "Mule" in Maine.
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Nobody wants to be No. 2 but Case High of Swansea can take great satisfaction in the fact that it has only one peer among the hundreds of Class C schools in_the Eastern Massachusetts basketball ranks. Coach Bob Gordon's classy combine suffered its years at the Case helm. The sole loss in the last game of five young bachelor coach was lookthe season, the heart-break- ing for his proteges to move to ing setback coming only the front when Connors met after star performer, Paul Connors, was forced from the lineup with a sprained ankle, with the score tied in the closing minutes of the third period of the divisional tourney title encounter. And, Connors was within three points of the Tech record of 103 points in four games when he suffered ,his injury with three minutes remaining in the third period. The devastating loss of the senior forward came at a time when the momentum was running with the Swansea Cardinals who, after having trailed the Essex County representatives throughout the early stages, had just evened the count. Things were looking up for Gordon when the roof fell in. The Brookline High graduate had led his charges into the Tech tourney four times during his
with his most unfortunate accident in his last effort with the Swansea aggregation. Bob, who commutes between Brookline and Swansea, except during the basketball campaign when he lives in a motel four days a week, has provided the top opposition for Holy Family of New Bedford in the Narragansett League in the recent past. The social studies instructor, who has a Master's Degree in Education from Northeastern University, had high hopes of repeatin'g his '68 Tech championship when his club moved to even terms with Andover. Gordon demonstrated his talents two years ago when the other regional small schools learned of the . power that the former Brookline star had developed in his Narry titlists.
Andover Blunts Narry League Supremacy. Case, which has lost only two Narry games in the last three years, and, which has been undefeated on its home court during: that time, has compiled an enviable record under Gordon who has taken his boys once to, the quarter finals, once to the semi finals, once to the finals and once to the cllampionship in the Tech tournament. Gordon's record speaks for itself. It needs no lily gilding. The Andover triumph has temporarily blunted the three-year Narry league superiority in the Eastern Mass. elimination competition. Holy Family twice clinched the championship in the last three years while Case accounted for the other title. The New Bedford Parochials were dumped in the quarter finals this year. But, while Case has to be sat¡ isfied with second billing in th.e Tech, Gordon and his lads have no close contenders for the Southeastern Massachusetts club with the best season's record. The Swansea combine wound up the campaign with a 22-1 mark, far and away the best of any team within the diocesan territorial limits. .
While Connors repetitiously 'grabbed' the headlines in his team's long string of victories, Gordon's well-rounded combine never would have gone as far as it did without an equally stalwart supporting cast. Connors was the only regular returne~ on this season's club. The competent quartet that the Swansea mentor moulded to work with his high scoring ace comprised Rick Beaulieu, Dennis Leonardo Craig Smith and Bill Griffin. Case, in reaching the Class C finals, did better than any other area representative in the Tech tourney. The other aspirants fell by the wayside in quarter final contests. This group included Holy Family, Durfee of Fall River, Lawrence High of Falmouth and New Bedford Voke. The Swansea basketball team, which has not been affected as much as the football club by the current double-shift school program, expects that Bishop Connolly High will have to be reckoned with during the next couple of seasons. The Jesuit institution which made a commendable showing in its first season in the Narry, looms as a future power ready to challenge Case and Holy Family. 0
,
Falmouth Skaters Drop Heartbreaker Lawrence High of Falmouth, Fidler fired a slap shot that Falappearing in its first Southeast- mouth goalie Terry Smith had ' ern Massachusetts Hockey Tour- . no chance of stopping. nament, lost a hearbreaker like The Capesters defeated IpsCase. wich in opening round play, 2-1, The Cape skaters, who came in overtime, but just couldn't up with a strong showing, get one past Malden Catholic proved to Boston fans that Cape goalie Jim McBride in the third hockey is ready to rival the best period and the overtime. the state has to offer. .Dean Williams accounted for Coach Jim Higgins' Clippers both Falmouth goals, scoring in battled Malden Catholic to a both the first and second periods. stalemate until 58 seconds of The left winger also tallied both sudden death overtime when Joe Falmouth goals in the victory
E. Hickey, Jr. was never noted for his prowess "in track while in high school., but since entering Colby College, he has been running his way into the Mules' record books. A 1968 graduate of DennisYarmouth High School, 19-yearold Hickey devoted his athletic time to the diamaond, where he played a variety of positions 'on the Dolphin's baseball squad. In September of that year, he entered the Waterville, Maine college on a Dennis-Yarmouth Fund Scholarship and, one year later, was making a name for himself in the field of athletics. As a member of the Mules' varsity track team, Hickey holds the state (Maine) two-mile championship and turned in a great individual performance last month when he sparked Colby to an impressive showing in a meet with Bowdoin. In Air Force ROTC Bob captured both the mile and two-mile events and was, among the top team pointmakers. The brilliant performance followed closely on the heels of a double victory (mile and 2-mile) in a dual meef with state rival, University of Maine. Hickey enjoyed a banner crosscountry reason for the Colby harriers and has continued to impress during the Winter track campaign. Bob is the son of Mr. and Mrs. RobertF. Hickey, Sr., 92 Main Street, Yarmouth Port, and is one of two Hickey youngsters. Younger brother Malcolm is a student at Dennis-Yarmouth. The Hickeys are communicants of St. Mary's Episcopal Church. .A Business Administration major, Bob hopes to enter graduate school after four years in the Air Force. (He is enrolled in the Air Force ROTC program at Colby). Honor Society Student A fine student as well as an outstanding athlete, Hickey was a National Honor Society member at Dennis-Yarmouth and has
Says Peace Japan~ National' Aspiration VATICAN CITY (NC)-World peace is the "national aspiration" of Japan, that country's new ambassador to the Holy. See told Pope Paul when he pre: sented his credentials. Ambassador Hisaji Hattori told the Pope- that from the experience of the past century Japan has learned the. importance "of peaceful settlements of all disputes" and the need for cooperation among nations to achieve development and prosperity. The Japanese diplomat cited the theme of this year's world exposition in Osaka-"The Progress and Harmony of Mankind" -and pledged to work toward its fulfillment. The ambassador also launded the Pope for his international efforts for peace.
over Ipswich. The loss was a disappointment for Coach Higgins and his Clippers, but Falmouth's all-season play is a tribute to the efforts of all who helped form the Capeway Conference Hockey League.
BOB HICKEY maintained his high average through two years at Colby. In addition to running and baseball, Hickey enjoys all sports and is active in Scouting where hf' holds the rank of Eagle Scout. But of all his interests, pavement pounding heads the list. A dedicated individual, Bob spends a great deal of time in
Interfaith Group Seeks School Aid ST. LOUIS (NC) - Thirteen Catholic, Lutheran and Jewish residents of Missouri have incorported the Missouri Association of Nonpublic Schools. The group will function as a not-for-profit statewide citizens' group to promote passage of legislation beneficial to private school students. The association has already registered with the Missouri legislature as a lobbyist group, a spokesman said. The 13 incorporators, who form the initial board of directors, will meet soon to elect officers and begin developing legislative proposals for the next regular session of the Missouri General Assembly in January of next year. Funds to operate the organization and its activities are being solicited by special collections in the parish churches of all four Missouri Catholic dioceses, as well as among the Lutheran Church (Missouri Synod) and Orthodox Jewish communities, a spokesman said. According to a recent estimate, there are approximately 175,000 children in nonpublic schools in ,Missouri. The largest number, about 135,000, are in Catholic schools.
N1ewBedfordCYO Girls Basketball A special attraction for girl's basketball buffs will take place on Tuesday' evening, March 17, <It the Kennedy Youth Center. In the preliminary game at 6:30 St. Joseph's of Fairhaven will play St. Theresa's of New Bedford in a make-up game.' The main attraction of the night has the girl's league coaches pitted against the league referees. For the girl's league coaches are Donna Poirier, Terry Belliveau, Susan Linton, Trudy Alves. Lnura Ferreira, Ann Fortin, Leonor Luiz, Pat Corbett and Mr. 1..co Monty. Their coach for the evening will be Marie T. Hampson, secretary of the Youth Cen~er.
For the league referees the pJrticipants will be-the three Guilmette Sisters, Beatrice, Barbara and Bernadette, also ThomeUe and Phyllis Monty and Ann Marie Livingston. The referees for the evening are the league directors, Mrs. BEatrice Guilmette and Michael " Starkey. The general public is invited to attend thns very unusual attraction.
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