r
Papal Decree Eases Climate
Reflects Pastoral Concern on Mixed Marriage The Holy Father, Pope Paul VI, has issued further explanations and regulations ~ncerning mixed marriages
with the intention of not so much changing essentials as of easing the cUmate of this sacred but often tense act. By the decree, some restric-
The ANCHOR ST.PA..
fall River Mass., Thursday, March'24, 1966 ,1
V o I. 10, N o. 12 ©
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tions have been softened, the penalty of excommunication of Catholics involved in marriages before non-Catholic clergymen has been lifted, new rules and explanations attempt to clearly spell out both the Church's doctrine and her pastoral concerns.' Mixed marriages are those that con c ern a Catholic and a non-Catholic Christian or a non-Christian. If there is a real danger that the faith. of the Catholic party will be endangered such a union would be and is actually forbidden not by some legalistic attitude of the Church but by the very will of God. If however, there seems to be no real danger to the Catholic's practice of the faith, the Church has-and still does-reluctantly permit such a marriage. The opposition to mixed marriages is not solely on the part of the Church but is· as strong (if not stronger) on the part of leaders of all religions. Pope Paul restated the words of Pius XI - in -showing that the very union of the parties in a marriage must be bolstered by all means possible. Yet, in a mixed marriage the parties start
Reaff·lrmS Dogma Yencourages t E Ecumenism off their attempts at ever clos~r and more intimate union on a divided footing. The difference of religious beliefs is an important matter. . Validity The question of validity' of marriages of Catholics before a non-Catholic c 1 erg y man is not changed in the least. For a Catholic to be validly marriedand this applies to the past as well as the present - the marriage must be before an authorized priest and two witnesses. Any other arrangement, no matter before whom or in whatever context, is simply no valid marriage, no truly binding union; On the contrary, for a Catholic to attempt marriage before a civil official or a nonCatholic clergyman is a purely civil act. and ·while there is no longer the added penalty of excommunication the action is considered no marriage and a serious sin. Tn the matter of past
invalid marriages, while the added penalty of excommunica tion has been lifted, the invalid! marriage remains invalid and the Catholic party remains in serious sin and cannot receive absolution or Holy Communion until the marriage is validated or until he is no longer living in the invalid union. The lifting of the excommuni cation for the Catholic party that was involved in such a marriage will have little practical effect. It simply is expected to help the ecumenical climate. It does not validate past such ceremonies nor does it plan to make any ferther marriages of Catholics before non-Catholic clergymen valid in the future. Promises To assure that there wiJI be no interference with the practice of the faith of the Catholic party, the Church asks that the non-Catholic promise be for e witnesses that he or she will not so interfere. In the past such promises were to be written and signed by the both parties (Catholic and non Catholic) involved. Such signing can be done away with if the Turn to Page Six
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•
• :AII Is In Readiness for ·Panorama In Taunton
Dual Purpose Show Opens Tomorrow
The most far-reaching under taking by the diocesan Vocations Bureau, since its inception 15 veal's ago, is under the direction
of- the Rt, Rev. John J. Hayes, vocations director, and pastor -of Holy Name Church in New -Bedford,
"United and Dedicated" are .the two words which sum up the dual purpose of the exhibit missions and vocations. Thirty-
The Christian .PanorAma, exhibiting the work of many devoted sisters and mission aries-both clerical and lay organizations - will open its three-day program at Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton at 2 tomorrow afternoon. The biggest diocesan presen tation in years will afford an op portunity to all to see the many facets of work being done to spread the teaching of Christ throughout the world.
Pope Meets
five exhibits will show a pano rama view of the work of dioc esan priests, mission priests, brothers and sisters together with the program of the laity, will enable all who attend the worthwhile program to obtain a birds-eye view of the tremen dous effort being made by the church in spt'eading the Gospel of Christ. A very fine representation from the doll collection of Mrs. Ralph Patunoff will grace one section of the foyer. These dolls are made of varied materials: wood, wax, papier-mache, bisque, china, cloth, metal, rubber, felt, and many other types of mate rials. They also represent the very fine use of imagination. Rev. Michael McPartland an nounced that a hootenanny wilD. Turn to Page Fifteen
English Use On Sundrnv
AmJg~5~@][Ji) VATICAN CITY (NC) an atmosphere carefully compounded of friendliness and formality a pope and an
This Sunday throughout -the Fan River Diocese as in dioceses across the country there will be additional use
Anglican archbishop of Canter ioury met officially for the fit'st time since thl" Reformation. Archbishop Michael Ramsey, spiritual leader of the worldwide Anglican Communion of 17 in dependent churches and 45 mil llion members, arrived at Rome's Fiumicino airport Tuesday foi' bis historic three-day visit. Tum to Page Three
of English in the Mass. The Prayers at the foot of the altar, the Collect, the Prayer over the offerings (Secret), D i a log u e (Orate, Fratres), Preface, em bolism following the Lord's Prayer (Libera nos), Postcom munion and Prayer over the faithful will be in English. In parishes where a language other than English has been per Turn to Page Twenty ,
l['R
Honors FII'. Haering Rev. Bernard Haering, C.SS.R who will address all priests ex ercising faculties in the Diocese at 3 next Tuesday afternoon, March 29, in the Jesus Mary Auditorium, Fall River, receiv Q;A an honorary degree yester~ day ~lt Notre Dame University ~\ vith 19 O~;l?:' internationaU b.~·:'.~olor,ica:. c1.\Ckw.\'ities. \
,
t
Final Jubilee Mass
NUN PREPARES CASSIDY HIGH ENTRANCE FOR F ANORAMA
The fifth and final Pontifical Jubilee Mass commemorating the closing of Vatican Council rr will be offered at 3 Sunday afternoon in St. Mary's Cath edral, Fall River, by Bishop Connolly. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Hub berto S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chancellor, will be the preacher.
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 't966
2
,Proper of, the Mass,
For the F·irst Sunday of Passiontide
POp~/s Appeal
for World's Hungry Passes $5 Million
INTROIT: Do me justice, 0 God, and fight my figb1 against a faithles~ people; from the deceitful and impioua man rescue me. For, you are my God, and my strength.. Send forth your light and your fidelity; they shall leMll me on and bring me to your, holy mountain, to your dwel.. ling-place. Po me justice, 0 God, and fight my fight agains#j a faithless people; from the deceitful and impious moo rescue me. For you are my God and my strength.
VATICAN CITY (NC)-A month's drive to feed the world's hungry inspired by an appeal of Pope Paul VI has reached a total ~f $5,280,000, bringing thanks from the Pontiff and comments from observers that it is an un precedented demonstration given vibrant witness to the of Italian generosity. The abundance ox goodness which progress report and the pa through the grace of God can pal appreciation were pub still be found in the world.", lished by L'Osservatore Romano,
the Vatican City daily, which
launched the campaign after the
Pope mentioned the need in an
, audience Feb. 9. The' Italian
· radio-TV network (RAt), Bolo gna's Catholic daily JL'Avvenire d'Italia, and other publications bave taken it up. The leiter of thanks, signed by Amleto Cardinal Cicogriani, Papal Secretary of' State,. de elared: "The influx of offerings has surpassed the most confident , expectations, making it possible , for the Pope to respond in a manner more adequate . to the urgent requests fOr heip. "For this he wishes to express 'his acknowledgmElnt to all don · ors, the extremely numerous ,army of good souls who have
The letter noted that the Pope has attempted to thank the don ors personally when possible, but that it was hoped' by the publication of the letter to reach ~ose who had given anony , mously or wh,t> had not yet re ceived· a pen:onal letter from him. Meanwhile, a major Indian ,publisher has called Pope Paul "truly the voice' of the con"; scie~ce of humanity". for his part , in collecting' funds for famine stricken India., The, comment was made by V.K. Narasimban , of the Indu of Madras after an , audience with the Pope.
Mass Ordo'
The fourth ,ahnual, talent show sponsored by F'almouth CouncU Knights of Columbus will be held Saturday, May 28 at Law rence Me m 0 ria I Auditorium with Gene' Jones as master of ceremonies. Proceeds will bene fit the council's general expenses ' fund and also go towards scho , larships and eIther works of charity. . I Winners will uppear on a tele vision show directed by Jones, as ,they. have in previous years Audition dates for the progra~ will be announced, and further information is' available from Richard J. Fish, Falmouth, or Sherwood W. Elder, Woods Hole.
, FRIDAY - Annunciation' of the · Blessed Virgin Mary. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer Friday of Iv Week of Lent;' Creed; Preface' of Blessed Virgin. ,,SATURDAY - Saturday of' IV Week of Lent. (Sistientes). III Class. Violet. MaSIJ Proper; , No Glory or Creed; Preface of Lent. , SUNDAY-I Sunday of Passion tide. I Class. Violet. Mass Proper; 'No Glory; Creed; Preface of the Holy Cross. MONDAY-Monday of Passion Week. III Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory or. Creed; 2nd Prayer St. John Capis trano, Confessor; Preface of the Holy Cross. . , TUESDAY-Tuesday of Passion " Week. II! Class. Violet. Mass , Proper; No Glory of Creed' ,, Preface of the Holy Cross. ' :WEDNESDAY - Wednesday of Passion Week. III Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory or Creed; Preface of the Holy Cross. THURSDAY-Thursday of Pas sion Week. III Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No Glory or Creed; Preface of th~ Holy Cross. ' "
N,ecrology APRIL 1
:Rev. George A. Lewin, 1958, Past?r, St. Mary, Hebronville.
Falmoul'h, Kof C Set Ta le'nt Show
Bellarmine Honors
Illinois Sel1lator'
LOUISVILLE (NC) -Senate Minority Leader Everett' M. Dirksen will be honored by Bellarmine Collel~e here in Ken tucky on WednE!sday, May 11. The Illinois senator will be given the 12th Bellarmine, Medal by Msgr. Alfred F. Horri gan, college president. The award is ,made, annually to a "person who, on the national or international' scene, exempli fies in a notable manner' the virtues of justicc~, charity and temperateness in dealing with difficult and contJroversial prob lema."
GRADUAL: Resc~e, me 'from my enemies, 0 Lord;! teach me to do your will. 0 Lord, my deliverer from the , angry nations, truly above my adversaries you exalt me and from the violent man you have rescued me. , '
FATHBm ARUPE, S.J'.
,Jesuit ,leader Visits Boston ,April 4th Very Reverend Peter Ar. rupe, S.J., General of the Society of Jesus, will visit ,Boston on MondaY,April
r
FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
Mar. 27-our Lady of Perpet ual Help, New Bedford. St.' PeteI', Dighton. April 3-Our Lady of the Im maculate Conception, Fall River. St. Boniface, New Bed ford. April 10-St. Paul, Taunto~. April 11-8t. John the Bap tist, Fall River.
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words. 0 Lord, give me life according to your word. COMMUNION: "This is my body, which shall be givea up for you: this is the cup of the new covenant in m.v blood," s~ys the Lord; ,"~o this ,as often as you receive it. in remembrance of me/' ,,' , ,
BANK
SISTERS OF MERCY
PROVINCE OF PROVIDENCE
TO SAI'NT· ANTHONY
, "
FOR PEACE
NOW' I'N PROGRESS Devotions Every Tuesday at 10:00 A.M.,
~ 2: 1Ou 3:00, 5:10 and 8:00 B).M.
Sermons by
F. JOYCE, O.f.M.
Invite young ladies to ,sanctify their own souls through serving God' ill the Apostolate of
Teaching Nursing Care of Orphans Training of
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,
Foreign Missions Write to
MOTHER PROVUNCBAL, It.S.M. PROVINCIAL HOUSE
THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River Mass, Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass, 02722 by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. SubscriptiOll priCe II)' mail, postpai41,
OFFEl;tTORY: I p~se you, 0 Lord, with ~l my heart:;
be good to your servant, that I may live and keep yoIII'
"Debut"onSun,d"a'y,"Fo,r, New Missai,',
SOLIEMN NOVENA
FR. FABIAN
TRACT: Much have they oppressed me from mr youth. Let Israel say: Much have they oppressed me frOm my youth. Yet they not prevailed against me; upon l'D7 back the plowers plowed. Long did they make their fu... rows. But the just Lord has severed the cords of the wicked.
i. "
11th,' The visit, of Father Gen eral 'will mark the first, t i m e , '
during the Society's 432 year' history that a Jesuit Superior
General has visited the United " MARYKNOLL (NC) --: U. S.'priests and the people, for' evellF.
States. His brief stop in Boston Roman Catholics, will be able Mass of the year. ,.'
will be climaxed by a Concele-' ,for the lirst time ,on Passion " The new English text, pr~
brated Mass at which His Emi- Sunday to. follow from. a single ,pared by Maryknoll under, the
nence, Cardinal Cushing, will missal the full text of, the, of-, editorial direction of the Rev.
,preside. "ficial English now being used in" Darryl L. Hunt,' M.M., assistant Father General Arrupe, when' the Mass.· "director of Maryknoll Publica elected last Mayas the leader The occasion is the intro- ,tions has been described as beiDi of the Jesuit Order, was com- duction of the Vatican II edition ,"completely up-to-date, free- missioned to inaugurate periodic of the Maryknoll Missal, an all- flowing and at the same time t~ips outsid~ of Rome in ,orde~ to inclusive Mass book containing 'reverent and inspiring," b7 view even, In a cursory fashion all the dialogue prayers-salu-, Richard Cardinal Cushing Arcboo the actual workings of the So tations and responses-of the bishop of Boston. ' ciety. In keeping with this in struction he is visiting the Jesu its of New England for a 9ay. After his arrival at L9gan air- port, he will drive to Weston College, the :resuit seminary in this area, where he will have an opportunity to meet inform ally the. Jesuits presently in training. . At 5 o'clock in Robert's Center' MANUFAcrURERS at the Chestnut Hill campus of Boston College, the Jesuits of NATIO~A;L New England. will gather in' of BRISTOL (;OUNTY order to participate in a Con celebrated Mass. At the Mass, THE AREA'S MOST' A~COMMODATING BANK Father General, the principal concelebrant, will offer Mass NORTH ATTLEBORO .' MANSFIELD
ATTLEBORO FALLS
with four other New England Jesuits including Father John V. O'Connor, S.J., Provincial of the New England Province. Cardinal Cushing, who will preside at the Mass, will be join ed by the newly designated Auxiliary Bishop of Jamaica, Most Reverend Samuel E•. Car ter, S ..T.
APRIL Z
Rev. Ad6lph Banach, O.F.M., Con v., 1961, Pastor, Our Lady of Perpetual Help, New Bedford.
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tHe ANCHOR --:,'.,.
Thurs., March 24, 1966
Service for Jubilee Mcross . Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, as sistant at St. Margaret's Church, Buzzards Bay, preached at the fourth Vatican Council Jubilee Mass offered Sunday afternoon in St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis, by Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River. Speaking to a congregation from the Cape Cod Deanery, Yather Mahoney stated that ."Christ has conquered Satan and
it is through Him and with Him and in Him that we have the correct answer. We Christians have the solutions to p'roblems' age:-'meri of faith and visi~n will .see solutions to problems through faith ,in Him. Yes, the. (:hucch indeed was in need of a Council a~d the entire 'con cept of Vatican II is our. need for change - renewal in' Jesus' Christ". In explaining the Church, the Cape Cod curate emphasized the teachings of the Council on The Constitution of the Church. "While the Church isa commu nity of men on earth and even a society with structure and lews, it is, above all, the pres ence of God's merciful action among men. The Church is . where men, through the grace of God become brothers".
of
In developing the above point, Father Mahoney stressed the de scription· of the Church as a bride and a flock with Christ as the good shepherd. Repeating the words of St. Paul, the preacher proved the dominance
Roman Visitor
of the teaching 'The Church is ,Continued from Page One the Body of Christ' in the Paul The overworked word "his ine writings. toric" rings clear and strong in To attain the fuller unity in this case for several reasons. The Christ, Father Mahoney classi fied the 16 documents of Vatican previous visit of the then arch bishop of Canterbury, Dr. Geof IJ[ as guidelines for us. "How frey Fisher, to Pope John XXIII, ever," the preacher continued, symbolized a new era of good "aU of the lofty aims of the feelings, but was strictly per Council could well be for sonal and unofficial. Archbishop nothing unless each individual I Ramsey's visit was formal and Christian strives for holiness ' official. The archbishop himself a holiness which is impossible said he would get down to bus without the imitation of Christ."
,\ iness with the Pope, speaking "The growth. of the Church 1, to him of the relations between and the spread of her teachings the two churches and the impact are not the exclusive work of ttie clergy-The Decree on the of these relations upon feeli.ngs and consciep.ces. Apostolate of the Laity clarifies Throughout the visit the Pope this. point." , and his subordinates took every "The most holy council earn care to tender Archbishop Ram estly entreats all the laity .iIi the sey the honor considered due to Lord to answer gladly, nobly the spiritual leader of so many and promptly the most urgent of the world's Christians. At the invitation of Christ in this hour public prayer ceremony in the and the impulse of the Holy basilica of St. Paul's-outside~ Spirit". COUNCIL JUBILEE MASS ON CAPE: Very Rev. the-Walls today, Pope Paul and Concluding his address, the preacher at the fourth Jubilee William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, Archbishop Ramsey will enter Mass accentuated Christ's com Hyannis; Bishop Gerrard, celebrant of the Jubilee Mass; the churchsid~ by side. Besides this hour of common ing by saying: "The Son of Man' Rev. Francis L. Mahoney, assistant at St. Margaret's,: prayer, Pope Paul and Arch came to serve and therefor, 'ser bishop Ramsey met twice. The vice is a key to renewal. The Buzzards Bay, discuss the fourth area celebration follow first official encounter was a activity of the Church and its ing the Mass. solemn one yesterday, the second members must be one of ser-' of the archbishop's three days vice" in Rome, in the Sistine chapel 'In fact, "The ,Church has, so of the Vatican. However, imme
to say, declared herself the ser vant of humanity, at the· very Commonweal Editor Says Rise of Layman diately before this formal meet
ing, they were able to greet
, time when her teaching role and Tied to Catholic Press Revitalization one another briefly in a small her pastoral government have, room off the chapel. Together by reason of the Council's sol Apostolate' of the Laity, the CINCINNATI (NC)-A Cath emnity, assumed greater splen olic magazine. ed~tor observed "channels of communication" they stepped out into the splen dor and vigor: the idea of ser that laymen who will "make still remain to be established, dor of the chapel, beneath the histor:' of salvation from the vice has been central". reform and renewal the urgent O'Gara commented. , creation to the last judgment as concerns of their lives" are Lines Are Narrow evoked by the brush of Michel needed in today's Church. ~I think we need specific angelo. They sat next to one James O'Gara, managing ed means to bring informed lay another in armchairs. The Pope itor of the Commonweal maga opinion into the deliberations of read his prepared statement in zine, told a Xavier University the Chuhch. I think we need Latin and Archbishop Ramsey matter." he added: ''This is the Forum audience that "emer specific means to promote an ,en read his in English. The two gence of the layman in the larged dialogue in the Church, men then exchanged gifts. best form of physical fitness." Perhaps the most important Father LeBlanc, a sports buff Church" must go hand in hand between a Bishop and his priests, . since seminary days, organized with a "revitalization of the and between a Bishop and his meeting of all from the point of people - and here too I think view of future relations between little league baseball and foot Catholic press." Minds and Courage the Catholic press can help get the churches was their private ball teams' for some 100 boys and Both press and laity have been matters started," he asserted. meeting last evening in the served as part-time coach. He afflicted with timidity, apathy, "There are certainly limits to Pope's apartments. They met erected a complete playground and complacenc:\" he charged, free speech in the Church," but without an audience and could with athletic field stands and concession booths at his parish adding that the clergy also must he went on to say that "these get down to the business of how responsibility for the limitl; usually have been con to ease the tensions between the school and did most of the work share problem. . ceiVf~d too narrowly." two churches. himself. He donated a bus to "Many of us, clergy and laity, Mandeville public high school are still suffering from the for use of its athletic teams and traumatic effects of the Protes frequently accompanies the boys tant Reformation," he said. "We on away-from-home games. hear too much about protecting He carried on this work while our minds and not enough about directing his own parish, where cultivating them. We hear too he built a $350,000 addition to much about prudence and not the school. enough about courage." In short, Father LeBlanc is O'Gara admits "the picture is equally at home wearing a biret not a simple one." ta or a baseball cap. He's ana Even when the layman is en For tive Delcambre, La., and was a couraged to express his interest Easter crack baseball and basketball and opinion, as he is in the Vat player as a seminarian. ican Council document on the and
1 ' .'.
1.
Urgent Cone,ern
Honor Priest for Achievements As Physical Fitness Leader MANDEVILLE (NC)-Leave it to Father John LeBlanc, O.S.B., 58, and he'd run an open-air school. "You can teach more charac ter' on the playground than you can in the classroom," the pastor of Our Lady of the Lake church in this Louisiana community eontends. Belief in this theory of educating for 30 years has eharacterized the work of the Benedictine priest. Recognition for his years, as an advocate of athletics came to Father LeBlanc when he re. ceived the Louisiana Junior Chamber of Commerce Award for leadership in physical fitness. He was selected for the honor in a field of 30 candidates in the state. He was cited for his con tinuing and outstanding sports achievements with children of St. Tammany civil parish (coun
W). Part-time Coach Mandeville Jaycee chairman Barry Zuber said Father Le Blanc "puts shoes on cold litUe feet and food in the mouths of the hungry, and whether they be Catholic or Protestant doesn't
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~HE ANrJ-lf)D -Diocese of ~oll River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 1966
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'~@~@ M~®[fG C[}u®~~ (C[JuQ®~
Of A~r ~orce C~a~~@S~s WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr. (Brig. Gen.) Edwin R. Chess will become Chief of Chaplains, United States Air Force ,on Sept. 1. He has been nominated for the tem porary rank of major general. A priest of the Chicago archdiocese, Msgr. Chess has chaplain to receive this medal been deputy chief of chap in World War n. lains, USAF, since Sept. 1, He also served with the 57th 1962. He will replace Chap Bombardment Wing, and was
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PATERSON (NC)-Auxiliary Bishop Lawrence B. Casey of Rochester, N.Y., will be en throned, as the fifth bishop of Paterson in St.. John the Baptist cathedral here May 12. Arch bishop Thpmas A. Boland of Newark will be the officiating prelate.
~('IHI
The Pope has a Peace Corps of his own? Ves, , come to think of ft. Its members, our native ' priests and Sisters, give their lives to Ute poor in poverty, chastity, obedience.••• ThIs week in hungry southem India they get food quIckly to the starving. They speak the people's lan guage. know what they need, share suffering with them.... Want to leave your mark. In (!litia? Helpa poor girl become a nun. Her training costs only $12.50, a month ($150 a year, $300 alto gether). Your gifts are tax'deductible. 8he'll write to you. ~ray for you, and you'll be part forever of all the good she does..••. Take- part? We'll send you her name on receipt of your first gift.
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WASHINGTON (NC)-A pres..: attending Sunday Mass, a :lia~ idential citizens committee here which is receiving nationwide attention these days, a commit- is interested in getting handi capped people into' churches as tee spokesman said. Severely handicapped persons well as into jobs. are not so much "shut in" as In pursuing its aim of obtain ing "equal opportunity" for the they are "shut out," he added. Handicapped persons affected by handicapped ''to choose and pre thoughless architectural plan pare for occupations commen ning are to be found everywber~ surate with their abilities and their potentialities for learning he asserted. and acquiring skills," the Presi It is estimated that there dent's Committee on Employ a quarter of a million persons in ment of the Handicapped has this country who use wheel sent out tens of thousands ef chairs, 200,000 with- heavy leg copies of specifications for mak braces, 140,000 with artificial ing buildings accessible to the limbs and five mimon cardiae handicapped. patients who are careful about The specifications apply to climbing steep steps. There are also 17 million per churches as well as to industrial . sons over 65 years of age, many and office structures. Architectural barriers prevent of whom "are not as young- WJ and discourage thousands from they used to be."
are
deputy staff chaplain at 12th Air lain (Maj. Gen.) Robert F. Tay lor, Chief of Chaplains since Force Headquarters until the . 1962, who will retire on Aug. 31. end of hostilities in Europe in World War II. . Msgr. Chess. 53, was born in Chicago; attended St. Mary of Has Bronze Star
the Lake Seminary, Mundelein,
Separated from military ser 111., and was ordained to the vice in November, 1945, Msgr. priesthood in 1937. He was ap Chess took post graduate studies HEAD: New Chief of pointed a chaplain, first lieuten -and did parish work until re ant, U. S. Army Reserve' on Jan. called to extended active duty Chaplains, U.S. Air Force, is 17, 1942, and won the Air Medal in August, 1948. He served in Msgr. (Brig. Gen.) Edwin on his first assignm~nt, with the Okinawa and Korea, receiving R. Chess, a priest of the 47th' Bombardment Group. He the Bronze Star Medal in Korea. arc,hdiocese of Chicago, who was the First Army Air Corps He was staff chaplain at has'been nominated for ran'k Seville, Spain, and deputy com of Major General. General mand chaplain, U. S. 'Air Forces in Europe, Weisbaden, Germany, Chess 'will become Chief of where he received the Air Force Air Force Chaplains on Sept. Commendation Medal: 3@~ 1. NC Photo. Msgr. Chess was integrated LOS ANGELES (NC) A into the regular Air Force in group called Project Prayer is planning legal action in an effort 1959, and in 1961 was named c.>mmand chaplain, 'U. S. ' Air ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) to reverse court rulings against Force Security Service, San An -A booklet, "Outlines of the 16 prayer in public schools. tonio, Tex. When he was named Documents of Vatican II," has The group will launch suits in deputy chief of chaplains in been published by the Long states where such rulings have 1962, he was promoted from / ;Island Catholic, Rockville Centre been handed down and intends colonel to brigadier general. diocesan newspaper. It is avail': eventually to carry the Issue to On Dec. 24, 1962, Pope John able at 50 cents per copy and in the U. S. Supreme Court, which special bulk rates from the Long delivered the original prayer XXlII made him a domestic prelate with the title of right Island Catholic, P. O. Box 335, dec,isions, Sam Cavnar, execu reverend monsignor. .Rockville Centre, N. Y. 11571. tive director of ProjectPrayet, . told a press conference. Cavnar said the group will base its first actions on a recent I Maryland ruling that jurors cannot be obliged to affill"m be lief in God as a condition of jury of the service. I He said: "The judges them CONGREGATION OF selves are required by law 'to dffirm a belief in God when they ST. CATHERINE OF SIENA take their oath of office .and therefore the decision handed offer to young girls desirous of serving God down by them was done so un in the Religious life constitutionally. If it is unconstitutional to re Thc~ Dominican Way, of life quire jurors k .affirm belief in God, the greup argues, by the teaching, day nursery work and: catechetical work same logic it is unconstitutional on the missions. to require such an affirmation of judges, and' this would 'make For further information apply to unconstitutional every act, in cluding th" school pray'er ban REV. MOTHER GENERAl of 1962, by every court requiring 37 I~ark Street: Fall River, Mass. the oath from their judges."
on tlH'. S;1\1.A. Fathers.
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FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN. President MSGR. JOSEPH T. RYAN, National Secretary Write: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoo. 330 Madison Avenue' New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840
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The Catholic Inter-American Cooperation Program began at an unprecedented meeting late in 1959 between a group of U.S. and Canadian bishops and a delegation of bishops from Latin America brought together by the Holy See. Latin needs for material ""'''istance and manpower ganizations seeking to aid Latin -= America-stimulating attention, were frankly discussed, bu t interest and desire for personal the visiting bishops asked commitment to Latin America
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among all U. S. Catholics. Once true understanding is achieved, friendship will grow, and from that friendship, active moral and material cooperation will flow. Power of Car4ler Groups As indicated by the Mexican
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their neighbors, ment of attitudes should be especially their placed in the enlistment of the Catholic neighalready estblished groupings of bars to the Catholic society. Speaking in IIWrth. The Subgeneral, the foundation of ad hoc eomml· ttee ~Lor organizations to foster under Inter-American standing of Latin America does Cooperation of the U. S. Bishops' not appear to be advisable; such eommittee for Latin America (a a practice might lead to a sep eommittee of the Catholic bish- aratist movement that will end ops of the United States based by reaching only a small fraction at the Latin America Bureau, 01. the Catholic population. True, NCWC, Washington D. C.) set small unlts -within dioceses for about creating a program speci- fostering interest in Latin Amer fically designed to promote un- ica among all other organiza derstanding and friendship and tions in the diocese can serve a accelerate mutual concern be- useful purpose. tween U. S. and Latin American The basic prineiple, however, Catholics. Their program in- should be accepted that the eludes: . CICOP idea is to be communi 1. Ann u a I Inter - American cated to all existing career eonference-An annual interna- groups. These groups are in tional conference presenting the great part covered by the fol l1'.acts of LaUn American life lowing lisL: bringing togetiler U. S. and Latin 1. The diocesan clergy Catholic leaders from various 2. Religious communities' of walks of life, and giving them pl'iests and brothers the opportunity to dwell upon 3. Religious communities of fue basics-economic, social, cul- sisters tural, spiritual-which constitute 4. Grade schools, high schools, Latin American Society. colleges, universities 2. Local Conferences and 5. ,Mass membership organiWorkshops - Intensive encour- zations of men and women, pa agement of regional and local rochial and non-parochial eonferenoes, workshops and G. Lay apostolic groups, partic "'Latin American Days" further- ularly those such as Papal Vol ing the work of the national 14uteers who serve Latin America eonference and multiplying its 7. Professional groups (doc effectiveness. tOrs, lawyers, educators, nurses, 3. Latin American Studies- social workers, etc.) 'Promotion of Latin American n. Business men's organiza studies in colleges and uni- tions versities and of educational co'-9. Youth organizations operation of every kind. 10. Organizations for social' 4. Mass Commu'nications-Dif- and 'economic betterment fusion of knowledge about Latin 11. Newspaper and magazine America through every channel editors and staff of communication and especially 12. TV, radio and similar mass Ulrough the mass media. communications organizations 5. Inter-American CooperaMeans for lJ'ncllerstanding ~ontion Week-To provide a iocal period each year during What shall be the means which the various parishes, 01'- whereby t his understanding ganizational and educational ac- shall be achieved? tuvities featuring Latin America Nearest to ideal conditions for may be emphasized in special coming to know and understand l'fashion, many bishops a n ciI the Latin Americans are attained major superiors of the United by living 'vith them. True, indi States advocate the observance viduals have lived within the of Inter-American Cooperation territory of other peoples for :Week. years and yet have failed to Inter - American Cooperation come to understand them. Week is the last week in JanuNevertheless the few who with ivy. During that week every'. the right disposition and under Catholic organization in .the proper circumstances live among United States is asked to hold an the Latin Americans are the ebservance to promote greater truly privileged in 'getting to understanding and friendship know them. Most missionaries ~ward Latin America. enjoy this happy experience. Goal for AU Catholics. Brother Thomas More, ProvinThus this movement aims at cial of the Xaverians, succeeded IllOthing less than a personal through a relatively short jour eommitment, great or small, by ney of a couple of months. every U. S. Catholic to some "FatherDarby, president of the (furm of cooperation with the Conference of' Major Superiors the Chllll'ch in Latin America. of Men," Brother QXplains, "led It is not in itself a fund raising a group of us through ten coun movement for Latin America, tlt'aes of Latin America. Each of 1Il01l' does it seek to provide perus returned a different person, GOnnel to work there. It does not, a differen~ Catholic, a different lin short, duplicate the good work religious. We saw at first hand done by many other organiza- the problems about which we tions, encouraged by the same talk at home; we met face to bishops who advocate CICOP, iace with the people. We lived Iiluch as the Papal Volunteers for through the days of .the Latin Latin America. American, which otherwis'e we CICOP has a unique goal es- of the north comprehend only oIentia! to the success of all 01'- vaguely by hearsay.-
H~e"t1@~S
J FK Mewo<r)ry
lEcliltlS[]l by John J. Considine, M.M.
especially for one thing: that the gulf of understanding separating North America f1!' 0 m La tin Am e ri cab e closed and that at long last their
5
THE ANCHORThurs., March 24, 1966
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VIETNAM REFUGEES: War-ravaged Vietnam has thousands of civilian casuaItie~ and refugees-homeless, hungry and poverty-stricken. This young. refugee girl had the added responsibility of caring for her younger brother thrust upon her by the Viet Cong's slaying her parents and relatives. Now in the safety of a camp maintained by Catholic Relief Services-NCWC, overseas aid agency of 1 . f d I th Amerl'can Catholics, both of them wil receIVe 00, c 0 ing and medical attention. NC Photo.
'New Retreat' Students at College in Iowa Employ Entirely DifferenteFormat to Fit Academic Life' DAVENPORT (NC)-Students at St. Ambrose College here in Iowa have completed their first retreat under a new format de signed to fit better into academic life. Father John S. Smith, student chaplain, says the. experiment' has proved "eminently worth while" and that st.· Ambrose may be a pioneer in a whole new concept for college retreats. No retreat master was im ported this year. Students fol lowed their regular class sched ules. Faculty members were asked to devote one-half of their class periods to a lecture on per sonal commitment to God or ethical standards and to leave the other half for discussion and questions. Students were required to at tend only three night lectures, one of which broke sharply from
PARMA (NC) -::- Earth from the hill of 81. Patrick in Ireland and from Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia were placed inside the cornerstone of a new church here in Italy. It is to -be called St. Patrick's and to be built in memory of the late President John F. Kennedy. On the feast of St. Patrick, Bishop Michael Browne of Gal- way participated in blessing the stone in the presence of Arch bishop Evasio Colli of Parma and Msgr. Patrick Kennedy, a cousin of the late president, and officials of the American and Irish embassies. The church, which is to be modern in design, will also have a parish center for social and spiritual activities. Construction is expected to be completed by late Autumn for solemn dedica tion on Nov. 22, the anniversary of the president's death. A Mass will be offered there annually on Nov. 22 for the late president in tribute to his world leadership, according to arch diocesan authorities.
the traditional approach to re treats-a lecture on the ecumen ical movement by Dr. Robert Tobias, a professor at the Luth eran School of Theology in Rock Island, Ill.
DURFEE .FALL RIVER
St. Ambrose College, Father Smith note~, looks upon the ex periment just ended not as a "retreat" in the traditional sense but as a groundbreaking "dia logue."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 1966
Speaking of Penances
Answering A Challenge Today's young adults were born and brought up in the early nineteen fifties. This was an era of comparative affluence-jobs, salaries, an expanding national economy. It was a far cry from the depression days of the nine teen thirties. The nineteen fifties produced, an era that was react ing against the fltricturesand discipline of- World War II. Men and women were sick of the hardships and rigors of, war and service life and an "anything goes" and "let's have a good time" attitude tQok over. Into such an affluent life and permissive atmosphere were tQday's young adults born. Small wonder, then, that the idea of a religious voca tion with all that it implies-s'acrifice, serving others, dis cipline, poverty-has to work extra hard tQ get through to today's young adults. And yet these same' young men and women do have a marvelous capaeity for helping others. They dQ have a great store of generosity that can be called upon. They dQ have a willingness to give of themselves in a noble cause. The -Peace Corps, the 'volunteers for different Church lay missionary groups, the involvement of so ma!ly in the civil rights movement, all are proof that today's young people can be and are touched by a cause. The character and life and work 9f a priest, a broth er, a sister must be presented to them in its essentials. The challenge of the vocation must be outlined in black and white. The superficialities-dress, privileges, extern als-must be brushed aside and the vocation placed in its, proper perspective, as a call to participate more deeply in the life and saving work of Jesus Christ. Affluence and permissiveness, luxury and having one's own way-these try to stifle the invitation to do this work as a priest and brother and sister. But every age has had its difficulties and every young adult of every age his problems and decisions. The Vocation Novena now taking place througl! the Diocese, the Christian Panorama Vocation Exhibit in Bishop Cassidy High School in Taunton this week-end these aim at helping young people see in this day and age the challenge of a religious vocation and the very real possibility that this is the decision God i:3 calling upon them to make. '
Decision In 1957 the Supreme Court of the United States laid down, as a guidelfne of obscenity, the test: "Whether to the average personfl, applying contemporary community standards, the dominent theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to prurient interest." In addition this Roth test, as it is now called, required a finding that the material be "pahently offensive" and "utterly without redeeming' social value." The Supreme CQurt on Monday of this week upheld the conviction of a distributor of obscenity in accordance with this test. And t~e decision took into account that 'a publisher's advertising and promotion of his material are also a guide to the publisher's motives. The majority de- cision denounced "those who would make a business of pandering to the widespread weakness for titillation by pornography." The decision struck a. blQW at those who "boasted that they would take full advantage of what they regard ed as unrestricted license allowed by law in the expression of sex and sexual matters." It is fortunate that the Supreme CQurt did not shrink from accepting and acting on the case that tQuched upon matters vital to the mQral climate of the whole nation. It is realistic that the Court's decision took into account the promotion of material since so, many publishers of obscenity prattle about its b~ing of medical or phycho logical value while promoting the same material with, as the decision said, "the leer of the sensualist."
C D (News of parish Confraternity 01 Christian Doctrine activities is wel comed for this column, as are &ugges tion of subjects for future columns. Correspondence may be addressed tD Edward P. McDonagh, 5 Hunting Street, North Attleboro, Mass. 02760.1 By Edward P. McDonagh
"The Little Flock," We5 ly Confraternity of Christi~ Doctrine television progr~ will feature the Christian Panorama vocation exhibit a2J 9:30 this Saturday morning em WTEV, Channel 6, New Bedfo:rcl,
~f@~ ~OU' J9<eWS JJ<e$l!.!lDfr rEdJntcl1' QM~$tHons JJ,Mdagsm SurvmvCIlI ~Inl ~l1'e$en~ S@wmeft' Russ5a Atmosphere NEW YORK (NC) - Prayers for the s'urvival of Judaism in Soviet Russia have been called for by Father Thurston N. Davis, S.J., before the Ad Hoc Commis-, sion on the Rights of Soviet Jews. Father Davis, editor-in-chief of the Jesuit weekly, America, told the public hearing of his recent inspection survey of reli gious freedom in the Soviet Union. He said that both Jews and ,Roman Catholics there face "special difficulties" because of their "outside connections as members of an international group of believers." -Government Agents . The Jesuit declared Russian Jews were "more 'afraid of re prisals than any other group" and that .they are living in "con stant apprehension that the black years of the Stalin' period -1948-l953-when so many of
their leaders were sent off to exile and death-may return." "One possible key to the plight of the Jews in the Soviet Union," he said, "lies in what was to us the ominous activity of the lay committeemen who surround the few aging rabbis. It is difficult to believe that these salaried laymen' are not government agents." Rabbis Are Old Father D a vis questioned whether Judaism can survive in the present atmosphere in Soviet Russia, 'stating: "The remaining rabbis are, so old; the Jewish community lives in such appar ent fear and insecurity; there seems to be so little Jiope that a seminary will be established." "There is no question," Father Davis concluded, "but that the Jews of the Soviet Union need the prayers of their fellow be lievers-and of us alL"
Papal Decree on Mixed Marriages,
may not formulate this promise Continued from Page One Bishop of the diocese judges without violating his conscience the Ordinary (Diocese's Bishop) this to be advisable. Under ordinary conditions the must refer the case with all its particulars to the Holy See." promises are to be made in writ If because of local conditions ing but it is up to the local Bishop to decide and determine -and not the will of ,the mar how the promises are to be i~ riage partners-the Catholic ed eluded in the official marriage -ucation is rendered impossible, the' local Bishop may dispense documents. from their undertaking such an, However, the obligation to obligation so long as the ~ath raise the' children as Catholics is. olic party will do all he or she still the grave duty of the Cath can to bring up the children as olic party and the non-Catholic Catholics and the non-Catholic must be helped to accept that his part y will guarantee this Catholic partner has such an through expressed good will. obligation thac is grave in the Ecumenical Implications sight of God. Prospective souls I - Mixed marriages-always cel cannot be sacrificed simply to ebrated before a Catholic priest achieve family peace; God's will -since they are truly Christian must ,conscientiously be re marriages are to be celebrated spected. with all the Cl)urch's joy _and If the non-Catholic party' can rich ritual. They are to be cele not bring himself or herself to brated in a Catholic Church permit the exercise of such a with Mass and the Nuptial duty on the part of the other Blessing. partner, then it would be more The non-Catholic's clergyman honest to face the problem may, of course, assist at such a squarely - and ecumenically celebration and he may be per OFfiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE Of FAU RiVER and not force hjs or her opinions mitted to address some words of on the Catholic party. good wishes and exhortation and Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River The non-Catholic must aiso may also offer some prayers :in 410 Highland Avenue understand that he or she is common with Catholics but only Fall River, Moss. 02722 675-7151 forging a' union which is truly after the Catholic ceremony has one and indissoluble. Thus the ended. 'This can be done, of PUBLISHER non-Catholic is "invited to course, with the consent of the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Phi)., promise openly and sincerely local Bishop and with due pJ:e- GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MA.NAGER that he (or she) will not create cautions to avoid the danger, of. Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P..Driscolft . any obstacle in the fulfillment scandal. There is never 1\> be a MANAGING EDITOR of (the Catholie's) duty. If the simultaneous exercise of re Hu9h J. Gol.den non-Catholic party thinks he spective rites.
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The vocation exhibit featuring displays representing 35 ren.. gious communities and lay ap~ tolic groups, will be held the weekend of March 25 at Bish~ Cassidy High School, Taunton. Groups of children and adulils from all parts of the Diocese have made plans to attend the three-day panorama. Two groups will leave Fall River Saturd~ with seventh and eighth gradeUJ visiting the program from 1 to 4 in the afternoon and senior high school students from 6 to 10 m: the evening. A hootenanny is scheduled from 8 to 9:30 Satm: day night. Cathedral Setting For the exhibit, the foyer oil Cassidy High School will be transformed into a huge cathe dral setting. Stained glass wiD dows by Sister Teresita, S.U.S.c., head of the high school art de partment, will depict aspects oI! the spiritual life of the Christian.
Also on display will be a foot mural, "Tb.e Christian Apos-
tolate," by Sister M. Mura, C.S.~
and a triptych by Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Bodio of North Easton,
depicting the work of the pries&! 8S he ministers to human needs. Mrs. Ralpli Patunoff will show: a portion of her large doll col lection, and a liturgical arts dis play will also be open. Exhibit hour8 for Friday will be from 10 in the morning to 8 in the evening; for Saturda:!Jl, from 10 to 10; and for SundaJ: from 2 in the afternoon to 9. Many Exhibitors Christian Panorama exhibitoJ:'lS will include Congregation of the Sacred Hearts (Fathers and Sis tel's); Stigmatine Fathers and B rot her s; Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD); Our Lady of Victory MissionaJ7 Sisters (Victory Noll Sisters); Brothers of Holy Cross. Also Maryknoll Missioners; Serra Club - Diocese of Fall River; Christian Family Move ment (CFM); Diocesan Clerror, Oblates of Mary Immaculate; Xaverian Missionary Fathers. And Papal Volunteers fo.r Latin America (PAVLA); lLa Salette Fathers; Sisters of Mep. cy; Dominican Sisters of St. Rose of Lima; Sisters of Ste. Jeanne d'Arc; Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred HeartEJ. Mission Groups Marist Fathers; Society of st. James; Society of African Mis sions; Carmelite Fath~rs; Fathem of Holy Cross; Sisters of St. J'()oo seph; Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur; Medical Missionaries cd Mary. The Legion of Mary; Carme)..
ite Sisters for the Aged and Ia
firm; Dominican Sisters. of the
Presentation; Society of St. ViD:. cent de Paul; White Fathers CIIII Africa; Franciscan Friars of the Atonement. . Montfort Fathers; Xaveri3lli Brothers; ,Passionist Fat h e I'~ Sisters of St. Dorothy.
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All Roads ·Will Lead· to Tau·nton . I· Tomorrow a.s;' Diocesan. Teens Throng to Qhristian Panorama
THE ANCHOR-
spoke to SHA Fall River girls as part of the observance of Social Workers' Month. Scholarshnps, in addition to those already noted, include one to Bette Raposa of SHA Fall River, who is the recipient of an honorary scholarship from A1bertus Magnus; and an award from Providence College for $1400 a year to Walter Sylvia of Coyle High. Walter has also re ceived a $150' scholarship from Boston College, plus a $600 yearly federal loan. Juniors at Dominican met their mothers in an exhibition basketball game won by the daughters; and in the annual varsity-alumnae tilt, the varsity came off victorious. At Holy Family, senior stu dents sang at a Mass closing a retreat for inmates of the city jail; and also at the New Bed ford school Richard Jalbert has been named the area's outstand ing small and large school player by a refel1'ee's organization. He will receive an award later in the school year. And students are busily swapping pictures in the annual ritual that follows arrival of those important stu dent snaps. Want a candy bar? Dominican Academy can supply you. The annual sale of the sweet stuff is now under way. Also at DA, sophomores took time off from school to visit Fall River's Temple Beth El. Their tour was conducted by Rabbi Mandelcorn ane::. they were deep ly impressed by the beauty of the temple and the meaning of ceremonies as explained by the rabbi. Colleg'" Acceptances It's off to college come Sep.. tember for Catherine Griffin, DA, accepted b)' Emmanuel; and Roger Lizotte. Richard Charland, Gerald Desrosier, all of Prevost, going to Boston College. And the Prevost tennis team will meet New Bedford in April; Taunton, Old Rochester, Dartmouth, Apponequet, Durfee, Coyle and Fairhaven in May; and Falmouth in June. Also at the Fall River boys' school, a Marian Bible Vigil and ceremony of consecration will be held by the Sodality at 6:30 to morrow night. Sodalists who haven't been living up to the organization's ideals and rules of life will be dropped at this time.
All roads will lead to Taunton tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday as Diocesan teens throng to Christian Pano rama, the mammoth mission exhibit that's been months in the planning. Among highlights will be a hootenanny for teens and many slides and film showings. It's all at A c a de m y senior, has been awarded a .$2,400 scholarship to Bishop Cassidy High in Stonehill College, as well as a Taunton. At Mt. St. Mary $2,000 grant from Merrimack.
Academy, . Fall River, the reli gion department is sponsoring a series of Lenten. lectures by guest speakers. Heard from last week was Msgr. Humberto Me deiros, who spoke on "Accepting the Challenge of Christ." An oral French contest spon . sored by the Federation Femi nine Franco-Americaine of New England had as first prize win ner in the high school division, Simonne Dufour, The Anchor's reporter for St. Joseph's Prep Schoul, Fall River. Simonne's sister, Denise, a student at SMTI, was college level winner, and taking third place in the high s c h 001 division was Diane Pichette of Dominican Academy, Fall River. The area winners will meet other New England contestants Saturday, April 23 at Assumption Prep School, Worcester. Car Wash Upcoming is a National Honor' Society-sponsored car wash, to be held by Prevost members all day Saturday on the Prevost High School grounds in Fall River. In charge is Paul Garant. Also sparked by the NHS was a Career Day yesterday, during which group discussions were held in classrooms and represen tatives of various businesses and professions visited the shool. Music's in the air at Coyle and Cassidy highs in Taunton and at Mt. St. Mary in Fall River. The Taunton schools will present "The Music Man" next month, and also next month "Camelot" will be staged at the Mount. Coyle students have a hand in the latter production too, with Edward Riley, Charles SUnder land and Paul Desruisseaux· slated for roles, as well as boys·. from Prevost, Stang, and Dur fee highs and from SMTI, And throughout the Diocese Latin students took the annual exam of the Association for the Promotion of the Study of Latin. Scores will be announced by mid-May ane. schools having three or more Summa Cum Laude scorers will receive tro phies. Win Scholarships Patricia Niedbala, Dominican
7
.. Thurs., March 24, 1966
Also a recipIent of a Stonehill scholarship, this for $2,000, is Mary Ann Demetrius of Sacred Hearts, Fall River. Mary Ann is following in the footsteps of her sister Ellen, a '65 SHA graduate, attending Stonehill on a similar award. Yet another Demetrius, Elizabeth, wiE enter SHA Fall River in September with a tui tion grant.
Rita Laflamme and Janet Roy are chairman and co-chairman of Jesus-Mary Academy's senior prom, to be held Wednesday, June 8 in the Fall River school's auditorium. Planning, decorating and financial committees are busy arranging for the event, and fundraising activities will include a hootenanny today and a car wash Saturday, April 2. At Bishop Feehan in Attle boro, the student body played host to the Newport Navy Band; while at Mt. St. Mary, the school paper, "Mercian," won a first prize award at the annual Co . lumbia Scholastic: Press Associa CLASS PRESIDENTS: From rear to front, class pres tion convention in New York idents at Dominican Academy, Fall River, are Diane Ratte, City. The award indicates that junior B; Vivian Fiola, junior A; Madeleine Souza, senior. the paper is outstanding in its divisi01~, that of girls' private at St. Joseph's Retreat House, Snyder, coach, and Joan Medei schools. Valatie, N. Y. This retreat will ros, team captain, divide honors Holy Family juniors beat the be for juniors and seniors, and for guidance of the outstanding seniors this month in the annual also for the upperclassmen' will team. junior-senior basketball game. be retreats April 4 and 6 at To En¢er Contest Sore point for the seniors, re ~loucester and at La Salette Re Veronica Plaziak, junior at Mt. ports Jeanne Benoit, is that they treat House. Other Coyle stu lost by one point. In a following dents will attend a retreat at St. Mary, is the school's nominee for a writing contest sponsored game, freshmen at the New Bed school April 5 through 7. annually by the National Coun ford school beat the sophomores. At Prevost High, a French cil of Teachers of English. In Six seniors from St. Anthony's, Club is a new activity being May she'll submit samples of .New Bedford, will attend a offered students during the her writing for judging, includ model UN' General Assembly Wednesday club and activity' ing her autobiography, and an session at Salve Regina College period. It's being moderated by extemporaneous "dash-off." Thursday, April 7. SAH has bee~ Brother Celeste and its purpose SHA Fall River students heard given the unusual assignment of is the promotion of French talks by Fall River city council representing two disputing through viewing selected films, lors who discussed with them countries, India and Pakistan.. reading French magazines, hear the operation of city govern Representing India will be Paul ing speakers and participating ment; and Prevost boys heard ine Cormier, Lillie Leblanc and in discussions. The La Mennais . addresses by Leo Brookins on Ronald Gobeil, while Pakistan's Club, anotheI new organization social work and by Norris Gaebe delegation will include Antone at Prevost, beard a talk on "The on the values of business educa Andrade, Doris Dube and George Secular Priesthood" by Prevost tion. Also discussing social work Boudreau. graduate Rev. Edward Mitchell, .was Michael Gallagher, who Vocation Project last Sunday. For Vocation Month, girls a.t , Cathy Sullivan is volleyball St. Joseph's Prep are making . varsity captain at Dominican special posters, and will travel Academy; and at SHA Fall to Taunton to view the Christian River the varsity :volleyballers Panorama exhibit; while boys have won the first five of their
at Coyle will think seriously scheduled 11 games, puttting
,THEIR MISSION-To glorify God by recapitula about their futures this weekend them 'in the lead for league ting all things in Christ as reconciliars with in the course of a closed retreat championship.· Mrs. G e 0 I' g e
SISTERS OF OUII LADY OF LA SALETTE
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Serving the Church in Home Olnd WorM Missiol'1ls-
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For Information Write tel:
REV, MOTHER SUPERIOR 621 Second Street
Fall River, Mass. or
VOCATiON DIRECTOR ·PATRICIA NIEDBALA
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THE ANCHOR-Dioc~,se ~f.fall River-Thu1rs. Mar',24, 19M
8
Missionary Sister Is "IBIU\>cheU', Music-MakeU'
rFone (C~~®lf~ c~o~~ S[p>rrOmJ~l ~ o~~fr~~ [OJ 0[Jl(i) 0[fTI~ ~~ ~~ Afrfr [j ~ ce fro CO) lru CO) ~ TV
DEFIANCE (NC)-Sister Geno evieve, who is a missioner heado ing from Ohio back to New Gui nea, can~ function now as 0 butcher and a music-maker. She is a Mission Sister of the Sacred Heart, who has been back in the U.S. less than a year. While here, she made some visits to the plant of a meat packer and she took some accordion lessons. Her New Guinea natives cut meat every which way, she said.
Now she will show them how to slaughter and portion cows and other meat animals. Her natives love music, including some of our cowboy songs. They make their music with a drum. Sister ,Genevieve hopes to add variety,
By Mary Tilllley Daly "I'm Home's heart! Warmth I give and light, If you but feed me. I blossom in the winter night, When you most need me." This "Inscription for a Fireplace," aut h or e d by firewatching 'seem to provide namesake, but no relation, sufficient fascination and relax poet Thomas Aug u s tin e ation as the flame dies down,
the embers glow, and we find Daly, is an oft-quoted quatrain ourselves in entire agreement at our house as we gather 'round with A. A. Milne's Christopher our own fire-' , Robin when he says, "What I pIa c e . Winter RELIGIOUS CONVOCA1'ION: More than 800 sisters , ni g h t s ? 0 f like doing best is Nothing." and brothers from the Diocese 'met at, Stang High, No. eourse. Scarce- If pyrotechnic aptitudes can ly evening be' transmitted through heredity Dartmouth, on Sunday afternoon and heard Bishop Connolly' 11' h'e n' 'we're or environment, these are ap discuss and comment on the Council's Decree on Renewal home" in the parently part of the heritage of of Religious Life. Left to right: Bishop Connolly, Sr. Pa Woman 'State Official Winter'is that, 'our ,offspring for the'y, too, he art it cold;' "Admiah' a g'oOd fiah" in their' trici·a Gertrude: S,N.D., of the host' school; and Sr.' Ama Wins College Honor
!l ton e c'o I d '. own homes; and So do their deus, RS.M., of Attleboro. children. , EMMITS~UItG (NC)-Bishop,
So m e how', , Ser,vant olr Master , i> George 1:.. Leech- of Harrisb\ug, though, '" 0 I d Realizing, witll Thomas CarPa., pres~nted the Lou~se De:' Smokey" seems lyle, th,at "Fire is the best of ser Marillac 'Medal of St. Joseph doubly precious during the'-chilly vants; but what a master!" par.Questions, C9mplaints, Greet Milwaukee College h~reto Geneyie've Blatt. Autumn evenhlgs befqre it'sents of small children must,' Of time to shirt central heaUngarid Archdiocesan -School' Board ' Pennsylvania's Secretary of In , 'course, take precautions and, be ,', ' . "" , , 'ternal Affairs. during, these crisp,.arou~d-the-" ever on ihe alert with common MILWAUKE,E (oNC) The of getting qualified teachers in The medal is awarded annu edges days of that elusive sea- sense vigilance: never leaving a Milwaukee archdiocesan school ,these, small towns., 'ally by the college' to an out , son, Spring. child alone in a room with board held its 'first open meetfng ,Msgr. Goebel blamed Catho- 'standing Catholic laywoman. " "We don't need a lire to night?" we suggest to the, Head fire, always have a really :pro- "',here and a ,barrage of questions lic:colleges' for 'helping to' create ,:. Miss Blatt was cited for her "ex·
tective screen, making sure the and complaints greeted it from ,t1~e teacher-sh~rtage. "Most col- traordinary contribution to the
of the House as we come inside, last ember is ,extiIiguished by, ,the 75 persons who attended the 'leges,'.~ he said, "encourage stu- 'we)fa~e of the citizens of her warm fromthl;; exertion of gar'; afternoon session. ' dents to, take jobs in the public ',state and her country." dening in the somewhat: pallid, bedtime. The 12-member board, first in schools because they will make
'Spring sunshine. "How's about ,Keeping this ','s4~rvant-master" more money," he said.
saving the wood for a really cold relationship ever in mind, the archdiocese's history to in'Hoiy Family, Alumnae
night?'" ' hearth.,fires, like other' good 'elude laymen and nuns, received We don't however, get to the 'things of life, arc meant to be a host of inquiries on curriculm, , Members of .the Class of '.195,6
Duo-Piano Concert 'teacher' salaries, need for quali point: of cleaning out th~ ashes, enjoyed. ' " " ' Friends of St. Anne's Hospital, of Holy Family High Schoo),
, Long':present as' a 'source of fied teachers, aid ,for poor par-_ Fall 'Rive'r, will present ~t' duo New' Bedford, will hold th-eii' 10
remnants of last night's fire ("wondei:ful to build' on") ,for~ ,such, enjoyment at our house ,'ishes, central administration and piano concert Sunday, 'May 22 year reunion Saturday night,
we ,know what the response will was the old oak tree,for years improved Sister-teacher ratios. in St. Anne's auditoriun'i, with June 11 at Long Pond Lodge,
be:' ' p r o u d adornment of the back-' Dr. George K Vander Beke,~ proceeds benefiting the hospital Lakeville. 'A social hour from
"Save the wood and spoil ,the yard, now a dwindling I::!ut ,still chairman of the board, presided. building fund. Players will be 7 to 8 will precede a buffet and
oil bill?" , nine-foot pile of logs, Open Like the other laymen, he was Mrs. Pauline Dufour and Mrs. dancing. Chairman is Ronald
So, with this practical ap- sesame! for us and for the wood named to the board in August, Cecile Grobe, and Miss Vivian Dow, aided by Mrs. W.Barry
proach to household economics, nymphs who once played be- 1965; " Ouellette will be guest soloist. Hughes. neath' the old oak tree. To complaints that science' we concede, happily, that "mayApropos, the liead of the be for a few more night" a fire ' textbooks in some schools are ~1I1111111111"1I111""II"III1"II"III11I11I11I11I11I11"IIII11"III11"IIII11"III'IIIIt1I1I11II11I11"""III"III1""1II1II1111111"~ in the fireplace' is' in'dlc'at'ed. House has this little rhyme, his
Time enough, when that annual own table of weights andmeasO
horror of Spring cleaning takes ures, entitled, "Measurement of
, Human Happiness":' , over, to clean out Old Smokey Four feet in front of a 'fireplace, right down ,to bedrock, even fol low the dictates of women's Toasted from heel to toe,
household magazines and plunk Cozy in front of a fireplace,
a pot of greenery between the By warmth from logs aglow. Catholic school that is inferior." SERVES
To questions about certification § §
brass and irons, festoon vines Those feet in front of a fireplace around the sides. Are feeling mighty fine. of teachers, Vander Beke said § LATIN AMERICA §
an agency he heads withfn the' == ==
But for now. there is still that' How do we know this, for Milwaukee archdiocesan schOOl ' § §
diurnal tradition' as evcening j;'in? office is charged with certifying § . §
darkens into night and the B~ ,'ause they're yours and aroma of dinner spreads from mine! not only archdiocesan teachers, § '''"I II ~I § but all 10,000 Catholic teachers ~ .~ IJ II~ Ill_ ~ the kitchen: the Head of the John Jay Daly House kneeling to enkindle the in the state. S S
pyramid of logs. kindling, paper. Blames CoBleges - Teachers-
New Bedford Women He said he ·has mailed about S §
"Kneel always when you light a New Bedford District Coun
fire," he quotes as the ritual certificates, with 9,000 to , =-=:1" __ proceeds, the flame leaps, the cil of Catholic W omE~n will spon sor an evening of recollection erackle starts. Parents who iraveled from Here we go again! Often, alone Wednesday, April IS at Bishop :Butler and New Berlin to attend High School and University or with guests, it's dinner in Stang HighSchool, North Dart- the meeting told of the difficulty' §, == _- front of the, fire, sometimes ,mouth, :with Miss Marguerite vi~wing television news. Seldom, Goggi~ as chairman and Rev. Style Show though, does that box in the John Driscoll as sPE~aker. Alumnae of Dominican Aca eorner. consume much attention demy, Fall River, will present during the long, firelit hours. Marks Jubilee their' fourth annual children's' Books,conversation ,or just p}ain = Dentists' The completion (Jtf 25 years style show:'af 2:30Suhday after"
8S a Franciscan Missionary of Dooon, March 27 in the school
Crecfit Union' and, Cooperrative Organizers 'Mary is being marked 'this hall. Models' ~iil ·be pU'pils ·ilt
DistridFive Community ,Development Organizers , Cape and Islands District Five month by Sister Maria de Sao Do~il'lcican A-cadc~my and ,St.
Siliuio of St. Anthony's Con- Anne's schOOl and' ehildreri '01 fJf the Diocesan Council of Cath Engineers and Technicians _ ~=~ olic Women will :hold an open ,vent, Fall River. A native of alumnae. In charg~ of arr.ange meeting Sunday, March 27 at Espirito santo parish, Fall River, ments is Miss Juliette Desrosiers, Mechanics St. Margaret's ChurCh, Buzzards Sister Maria de Sao Simao is who, announces ,that proceeds Bay. Hostesses will be members the daughter of the' late John will benefit the alumnae scho larship ,fund. Business 'Administrators =1 of SS. Margaret-Mary Guild. A Tavares and ,Maria .Arru~a. Secretaries playlet will be presented by CYO memb'ers of Holy Trinity parish, West Harwich,· directed Communications Media 1?~' Sisters of Our Lady of Vic tory. " '
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Taunton Nurses , The Tauilto'ri' Guild of' Cat!lo :iic Nurses will sponsor a penny sale at 8 'Thursday night, Mardi 31 at Marian Manor. The public is invited and there 'will be ito admission charge. Proceeds from the sale will benefit the guild's , !Ch91arship ,fund. t.:.,
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Dwarf Dahlias Recommended For Blooms, Garden Color
THE ANCHORThurs., March 24, 1966
Educarors Study School Boards
By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick For those people who are now setting out seed, Unwin dwarf, dahlias are a must. These little dahlias offer a tre mendous number of blooms for cutting or adding much needed midsummer color to the garden. They are trouble free and may be grown from seed with a minimum of dif down to the farmers' market and chooses her family's supply of ficulty, either indoors in a fruits and vegetables at the peak window or outdoors in a cold of their freshness. With the
frame. I have always bought nearest farmers' market in Bos mixed seeds, for I have never ton, a daily stroll would be more seen individual types for sale like an excursion, so we settle 'In catalogs or seed stores, al for what we can get in our though I would 'prefer a single ,g,J;pcer's bins, wilted 'and dented variety over a mixture. These as they are after their long 'flowers :are particularly good journey from who knows where. . 'for' gardeners "'like' myself 'Who I However,' when our growing htive 'riot had 'suHici~nt time 'to ,season begins' We can compete bu.ild up a stock of perennials ,on more, "th~ equal footing and bushes to provide all-season 'With the Parisian housewife by, bloom.' ,strolling into" the garden for Dwarf dahlias are also offered our family's dinner.' At this in roadside stands' in flats lafer writing rhubarb is just starting in the Spring for: those gardElners to poke up out of the ground who prefer to buy plants, ~l and I can just about taste that ready started. An added ad rhubarb pie. Oh, I know that vantage in using these .little the stores do sell it during the dah'lias is t~lilt, tbey will d,e year but we prefer to do'without veloJ>, tubers, ,after their first it until we have it in abundance, year in the garden and, if' ~ft~d freshly picked :from our own before the first severe frost, ,they "garden. " may be, stored" for the Winter Even with, all the pleasant and set out, in 'the Spring.: I plans for our veglltable .garden ,have read th~t these dahlias ,it will still be quite a spell which are planted the secOl;ld until we can enjoy the fruits ,'~priI1g,may not f,low:er, true to of our labors and until that form, that ~ tnat tp.eiJ::,flowers time it would give our meals a may be colored differently from ,little lift if ,we could enjoy the the originals, but this has not vegetables already on the mar been my experience, ' ket. The following recipes add Dahlias require full sun. ,and a little ,variation to two old unfortunately cannot be moved favorites. without damage to the tubers Crunch-Top Potatoes once they begin growth. They 1f.I cup margarine or butter grow to approximately 18 inches (depending on how your food and as a result do not need budget is) staking. In order to keep the 3 or 4 large baking potatoes, plants producing flowers, they pared, and cut in lh inch cross should be picked often or at wise slices. least spent flowers should be % cup crushed corn flakes removed so that they will not Ilh cups s h l' e d d e d sharp !Ko to seed. ," ,' cheese If seeds are started now, the 2: teaspoons salt plants should start producing Ilh teaspoons paprika, flowers by mid-June and con 1) Melt the butter or mar tinue to do so until the end garine in a jellyroll pan or of October. I usually take mine cookie sheet with raised sides up before then and replace them in a 375 oven with mums. By the end of 2) Add .single layer of the October they do get seedy look potatoes, don't overlap, turned ing although they will contihue once in the shortening to push out bloom. We collected 3) Mix the remaining ingredi some seeds from the dahlias last ents and sprinkle over the po year and intend to start these tatoes as an experiment for the coming 4) Bake in the 375 oven lh season'., hour or until done and tops are Uuwin dwarfs come in a wide crispy. (Delicious) range of colors and any num The following carrot recipe ber of dahlia types including was given to me by Mrs. Wil the cactus-flower and pompom liam Kalif of Santo Christo types. My wife likes them very Parish, Fall River. As a work much because they provide an ing wife and mother .Mrs. Kalif unlimited supply of cut flowers finds that when she's short of lior her arrangements. time a drained jar of small whole cooked carrots may be In The Kitchen I used to read cookbooks in substituted for th~ fresh ones. Glazed Carrots !bed, but now I read seed cat Ilh bunches of carrots 'boiled alogs. They come in the mail in droves from February on and drained (or one jar of whole and believe it or not, I find carrots drained). 3 Tablespoons of' butter them fascinating reading. More 3 Tablespoons brown sugar or less.I leav,e the £;lower selec- .. 1 Tablespoon chopped parsley tions up 'to Joe, but I do the Salt to taste and dash of ehoosing of veg~tables" seeing that they fall under the control lemon or orange juice. 1) Melt the butter in the skil of the kitchen. Success in the growing line let and add the brown sugar, doesn't come too easily to me, parsley and carrots. Stir con so most of the vegetables we. stantly until the sugar is. dis do enjoy during the Summer Solved. 2) Season to taste with salt months have been planted by and simmer gently for a few ~oe and his father, but every Spring my failures fade into minutes. the background and I look upon 3) Add a dash of, the lemon the new growing season W:ith or orange juice and serve. fresh hope. Last year's most outstanding failure was a row of carrots: these turned out to be Honors france. miniatures although they were' Miss Nancy Davis, Fall River, not intended to fa,ll in,to ,that a French major at Salve Regina eategory. But Spring is on its College who is spending her way and the lure of fresh veg junior, year at the, University of etables in my own back yard Angers, Anjou, France, has re ill too tempting to resist. ,ceived honorable "mention in In France, as part of her daily midterm examinations recently
,
WASHINGTON (Ne) -'- The first nation'al meeting for cler ical and lay members of Catholic school boards will be held dur ing the 63rd annual convention of the National Catholic Educa tional Association next month. Under the auspices of the NCEA's department of school superintendents, an all-day pro gram will be held April 12, the second day of the conventi6n 'scheduled for Chicago April 11
to 14.
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ANNUAL ACIES: Diocesan Officers of the Legion of Mary gather outside St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, as the annual ceremony called the Acies is about to start. Mary Moni7., vice-president; Rev. Edward A. Oliveiz:a, spir itual director; Beatrice Capeto, secretary; Francis Lennon, president; Thomas F. Allen, treasurer.
Girl ,Takes Honors DAYTON (NC)-Make room at the top for the female theolo gian! An Alaskan girl at the Uni versity of Dayton has rolled up an academic record that elo quently bids for broader oppor tuities for lay women in a field once considered virtually closed to them. Sharon Jaeger, a 21-year-old theology student from Anchor age, will,graduate from the uni versity "summa-cum laude." She attained an amazing point aver age of 3.954 out of a possible 4 point level of perfection. She is no crusading feminist, but is convinced if there is a role ior the lay theologian in the Church, it is for the woman as well as the man. She may well reach that place some day, as among her ambitions is studying for a master's degree in sacred Ilcripture at St, Louis University. In the immediate future, how. ever, Miss Jaeger will be broad ening her academic background by pursuing study in two of her other fields of interest. Follow-
Fairhaven Alumnae Alumnae of Sacred Hearts Academy, ,Fairhaven, will spon sor their annual ham and bean supper from 5:30 to 8 Saturday night, April ~, at the acade~y.
(ORRE~A
& SONS
'ON!" STOP SHOPPING CENTER • Television • Furnitu're • A"ni,nnces • Grocery 104 Allen St., New Bedford WYman 1.9354
,Msgr. O'Neil C. D'Amour, su perintendent of schools in the 'Marquette; Mich., Diocese, and! chairman of the NCEA's com . mjttee on school boards, said the session, w;ill haVE! two' purposes. ', .. ~articiparit~ will dicuss dis tinctions between administration and policy-making in the morn ing and the lines of authority in Catholic school .systems in the afternoon. Msgr. D'Amour est i mat s 'there are at least 800 Catholic 'school boards in the nation, most functioning on a parish level. His own diocese, he said, has 11 board for every school, two thirds of 'them elected bY' parishioners.
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Sucordium Club
Alaskan Student, at Dayton University
Leads Class in Theology
ing graduation next month, she will remain at the University of Dayton during the Spring and early Summer to take several English courses. During the lat ter part of the Summer she will study German at the University of Salzburg in Austria.
The Sucordium Club of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, will hold its annual Sucola Tuesday, March 29 at the academy.
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Brother, , Sisters
Observe Jubilee
, THE ANCHOR...,. .
Tl:lurs., MarGh 24, 1966
Revised
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CINCINNATI (NC)-The Lat>-> in word laetare means rejoice. So on laetare Sunday foUlTi' members of a family observoo their golden jubilees in religio~
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WASHINGTON _ (NC)
. , anges m organization and
Ch structure, in objectives, in
spiritual program and in the
'life. Father Henry Post, C.PP.S.,
means of pursuing it are set
down down in the new General
Statutes proposed for the' 1.5
million sodalists in the United
States. '
The s~atutes, which it is em phasized are not being imposed or officially promulgated as PEACE CONFERENCE: Leaders of the National Inter-religious Conference on "rules,"but do release' the sodal- P~ace at a 'Vashington press conference, included, left to- right, R a b b i Maurice N. : , jsts fro~ a strict" legalistic ;ld- Elsendrath, preside.nt of the_ Union of American Hebrew Congregations;' Dr. Dana Mc . , herence to the supen;eded Com- Lean Greeley, presIdent of the Unitarian Universalist Association', Bishop JQhn Wesley " mon Rules Qf 1910, call for: Lo d B' h f th W h' t :,',', 'Local au~onol11Y for the, bljsic, r., IS Op o. e as mg on area of the Methodist Church, and Bishop John J. groups of sodalists (smaller. WrIght of Pittsburgh. NO Photo. ' ' Christian communities"), with
Priest, Warns on Abuse of Pacifism.
:::~?:.l and
international coopChanges in the traditional'
name "Sodalities of Our Lady."
But a new name has not yet been proposed. WASHINGTON, (NC) A Strong insistence on lay con-, troI. The lay president would, priest said here that movements have the responsibility for the I?f' war and peace are equally susceptible to abuse and called immediate' 'and direct govern on the nation's religious press ment of the individual group. . to' advocate the admission' of Red ..' Cha~ge in Name China to the United Nations. : Groups smaller in size, to pro "The cold war * '" '" can never Jnote more frequent meetings and be resolved so long as tl1ree ,more active individual partici fourths of a billion people are pation. , outside the pale of the UN," as , Establishment of a proper so serted Msgr. Salvatore Adamo, ,~ial order through involve1Uent of the temporal order is to be an executive editor of the Catholic 'objective of thl. individual unitS Star Herald, Camden,' N.J. dioc esan newspaper. and their members. The priest, speaking at the It was said that a change in lflame is suggested because the fir s t National Interr:eligious image of, sodalists has been Conference on Pea'ce here on "The Limitations and Possibili harmed in some places by the failure of members to interest ties for Peace," declared:' "War themselves personally in race may become a means of brutal relations, poverty in the inner conquest with tyranny,. not equity, as its outcome." eity, ecumenism andinterna On the other hand, "total paci- . tional life. Members are urged to "cry the fism is also susceptible to abuse," , Gospel in their lives," and to put he said. "It may lead to craven themselves "at the service of submission to the darksome equity of universal terror." all." Msgr. Adamo said, he was not Catholic Commission and never nad been a pacifist. He reminded that the Second Includes Ministers Vat i can Coundl proclaimed: "'Those who devote themselves SAGINAW (NC) - Catholic to military, service sh?uld regard and Protestant clergy, and lay men are included on ,the newly . reorganized ecumeniSin commis sion of the Catholic :Diocese, of Consecrate Coajut~r Saginaw in Michigan. ' For ,Maine IDn June 1 Seven rninistersare on the HARTFORD (NC)~Most Rev. ~ommission's 20-member com Peter L. Gerety will be conse mittee on clergy dialogue while crated Titular Bishop of Crepe six Protestant laymeiiare on the dula and coadjutor with right of committee 'on lay activity. succession' to Bishop Daniel J. Feeney of Portland at,10 Wed Guild CakEtSale nesday morning, June 1, in St. . The New Bedfor.d' Catholic Joseph Cathedral here in Con Guild for the Blind; will hold necticut. ~ annual cake sale the Star 'Archbishop Henry J.' O'Brien Store, Ncw Bedford'; on Satur of Hartford will be the consecra day. . tor. The co-consecrators will be , 'Anyone wishing: to donate Bishop Feeney and. Auxiliary homemade pastry is::, asked to Bishop John F. Hackett of Hart call Mrs. Lillian :lIiJghes at ford. Bishop 'Vincent J. Hines of 992-7368. Norwich will preach the, sermon.,
1fl6!' Carthagena, Ohio, offered ~ Mass of thanksgiving in St9. Mark's church here, observing his 50th anniversary in the So ciety of Precious Blood priest,... hood. Three of his sisters who joine~ the Precious Blood sisterhood Olil the same day 50 years ago as sisted at the Mass. They are Sister Mary Angela, principal oR St. Mark's School here; Mary Hortehsia, stationed in New Riegel, Ohio; and Mary Ed'eJl.. 'burga, stationed in Lafayette, 14 The four were born on a fara near St. Anthony in Merce!' Co'!mty, Ohio.,
Favors Admission of Red China to UN
:'at
The challenge
of
O:r:ancml
in' 1833:
themselves' as the agents of se curity and freedom'" * * they are making a genuine contribu tion to 'the esta'blishment of peace.' " He said there are many roads to peace. He called on .the reli-
Guatemala Mission
Is Sister-Parish
SPOKANE (NC)-Our Lady of Fatima parish here in the State of Washington has taken an Indian mission in Guatemala as its "sister-parish" to be the beneficiary of its spiritual and material assistance. Parishioners have established 'committees to map out programs in such areas of assistance as medical and dental aid" parish relations and education. Dr. Phil Lenoue, chairman of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Men, said several other local parishes are planning to organ ize similar programs to assist missions in the area of Guate mala served by missionary priests from the Spokane, dio ·cese.
gious press to encourage and support all those making the trip, despite the fact that tl)ey might be following 'different ~ti~s.
THREE WAYS TO SAVE... AlL Wit~
" 1 -% Inv,eslmen" Savings Onllllnls,emailli/lrat lmlOlle jtar In
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Fear of Communism "Our'. first move should be to create ~he precondition of peace while eradicating the precondi tion of war," h~ said. That means erasing an "oh sessive, pervasive fear of com munism, particularly in Red China," he detailed. Both these fears have political overtones, Msgr. Adamo said. "In Ameri,::a, * .:< * it has led to a policy of containment and brinkmanship in Berlin, Cuba and Vietnam. Apart from the merits or demerits of such diplo macy, it contravenes the Chris tian concept of the brotherhood of man," he said. "The idea that man constitutes a human family originated by Gog !TIust give rise to mutual trust and cooperation among na tions. If we wish to have peace, we must begin by settling the cold war," Msgr. Adamo stated.
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THE .LEGION OF MARY
WORLD~ WIDE
APOSTOLIC
LAYORGANIZATION
'P'URPOSE:
sanctification pf itsmembers'by prayer and activ~ work for souls.
ME"THOD:
seeking out and talking 'to every soul through
personal contact. '
MEANS:
weekly meeting and work assignment.
'"'Show us your, works H
:
I
The dedication ,of Vincentians 'is, that
of O%ana~livin'g the th,l)ught of'
Chri:st! !'W~ must. go:~ t~e poor!'
Fl,Irther Inform~'tion may be had. by writing to:
LEdlO'N OF MARY
. i·
49 FIRST '$T~EE~ - TAUNTON,MASS.
T_his spirit. continJes in, every .parish of the Diocese and throughout' >the ~orld where !heS.o~i~tx de Paul fs established• . "
of
St.. Vincent
Visit our booth (No. 26) at the Mission- Exhibit
;
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'w".
SAFELY INSURED BY '81. S. GOVT. AGENCY
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 1966
11
Stresses IParents' Right to Choose Re!igious Education of CIl151dren
VOCATION CONFERENCE: Girls attend panel discussion of life of Sister at St.' "'Anne's Hospital, F'aH ·River. ·From left, Siste'r Rita Marie, Sister Thomas More, modera , 'tor; Sister Michael 'Jose'ph, Sister Angela Francis. Other Sisters discllssed various as pects of religious life.
Vocation Month Points up Desire 01 Youth ,To Seek Worthwhile Goal in Lile March, the time of Spririg, is also a time when the future beckons to young men and w~men. As 'trees green, snows disappear and new life is set on its, course, there comes the desire to orient one's own aspirations. in keeping with sllch hopes and wishes, March is designated as Voc~tion Month. Diocesan observance of the ann u a 1 event is highlighted this year by Christian Panorama,...a mam order devoted to nursing, teach work at St. Anne's in '1906 and ing, care for the aged and mis 1907 are still active, said Sister moth vocation and mission sion activities, this readiness to Thomas More. exhibit starting tomorrow at do Christ's will meant, in the Today'sSister is unlikely to
Bishop Cassidy IJigh School, Taunton. Individual religious communi ties within the Diocese are also holding programs designed to acquaint youth with their Ulinque contributions to the life <l)f the Church. At St. Anne's One such program was held at S1. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, where the Dominican Sisters of Charity of the Presentation ex plained their way of life to an audience of high school girls. "Vocation is a real, deep love : affair with God, deeper than onc , could have with any man," said I Sister Thomas Morc, program , moderator, in introducing three Sister speakers. "Never is a woman more womanly than ; , ; when she gives her virginity to' : God." ,; She did not downplay the rig . ors of rcligious life, however. . "The road of vocation is 'dura et aspera,' hard and difficult," she stressed. 'Sister Rita Marie, a graduate of New Bedford's Holy Family High School, now in charge of St. Anne's operating room, ex plaincd the formation of a Sister to the audience, discussing thc successive steps of postulancy, , noviti'ate, and vowed religious. Sister Angela Francis, a Taun ; ton native, took for her topic " "The Sister in 'the Cliurch." :. "Some people make God their . ,,: profession, all others do law or ... medicine," she said. "Life lived , forever in the Lord-this is the life of the Sister." Explaining "The Sister as a Woman" was Sister Michael Jo seph, a graduate of Dominican Academy, now studying at Salve Regina College. "A woman should be wife and mother," she said. "The children of a re ligious are the souls with whom she comes in contact. She loves and worries over them and dis eussesthem with her divinc , spouse, Christ, just as a natural , mother does her children." Ready for Anythin: Summing up the feeling of the panel, Sister Thomas More said, "Vocation implies a readiness to do whatevcr Christ asks of us." Translated into practical terms for the Sisters at St. Anne's, who are a part of a worldwide
early days of this century, stok ing furnaccs, scrubbing floors on hands and knees, engaging in all othcr work involved in the care of a hospital and its patients. Some of thc Sisters who did this
stoke a furnace, but the spirit of dedication remains, at St. Anne's and everywhere in the Fall River Diocese, not only during this Vocation Month of March, but 12 months a year.
UNITED NATIONS (NC) Catholic concern for the right of parents to choose the religious education of their children was stressed in a statement to the UN Human Rights Commission by a spokesman for three inter national Catholic organizations. Father Philippe de la Chapelle of Paris, a representative, of the Catholic International Education Office, made the presentation on behalf of his own organization, the World Union of Catholic Women's Organizations and the Union of Racial :Brothcrhood. The UN commission has been discussing a Draft Convention on the Elimination of Religious Intolerance. The article being debated deals with the right of parents or legal guardians to rear children in the religion of their choice. The debate revealed a clear line of difference betwecn com munist nations-which consider the state to have prior right in 'practically all matters ""'7 and other countries which defend the prior right of parents to choose the religion in which their chil dren will be raised. "The right of parents," Father de la Chapelle told the commis sion, "should be guaranteed and not merely 'respected' '" .! * The state must contract to protect
this right and not merely to CO}1c> sent to it. To clarify the inteno tions of the state, a more precise text is desirable. "Article IV is designed to pro<> teet the individual from chi/do hood against all intolerance in religious matters," the Catholic spokesman continued. "Mcntiolill of the right of parents is de signed to ensure that protectiofl "* ¢ "To separate the right o.fi parents from that of the child is an absurdity. To consider the right of parents as the imposi~ tion of a kind of authoritariaJFo ism over the chiid is to misu.... derstand the nature of the right and of the child. The right' (;d£ parents is exercised in the !HIm{) of the child and not apart from him." , When the state is given priOib ity in these matters, Father tkl ]0 Chapelle asserted, the res\tlt c is a "spiritual regimentation tld: ' youth like that carried out tw nazi or fascist regimes Q ¢ '"
Set Exampk NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The C I a rio n Herald, archdiocesan newspaper, has turned $9,060 over to Catholic Relicf Services for establishment of an orphan age in Vietnam. '
SISTERS OF
5T. DOROTHY
The Dorotheans devote themselves to
all activities concerning youth: Cate
chetical wOrk; domestic duties, educa
tion and mission work, in the United
States, Europe, Africa, South Amey·
ica and Asia.
Would you like to serve God as' a
Dorothean? Write or visit our NOli;'
tiate House at
VILLA FATIMA 90 County St. Taunton, Mass.
FATHERS and BROTHERS
of the
SA,CRED HEARTS of J'ESUS and MARY
(55. CC.)
Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary ,
AMERICAN 'PROVINCE
Priests
Brothers
Perpetual, Adorers Foreign Missionaries Teachers Parish Priests Preachers - Missions, Retreats, Enthronements ChaplQins
Perpetual Adorers Foreign Missionaries Cooks - Carpenters Builders - Gardners Printers Clerical Assistants
Diocesan Schools Bishop Amat High, laPuente, Calif. Pomona Catholic Boys' High, Calif. Japanese Mission Stations in: ' Ibaraki Prefecture Yamagata Prefecture
British West Indies Marsh Harbour Abaco, Bahamas
As a member :of this Congregation you will waik in the footsteps of the modern day apostles FATHER DAMIEN, ss. CC., of Molokai, and FATHER MATEO; ss. cc., founder of .he Enthronement of the Sacred Heart Crusade. Provincial· Houses of Study Queen of Peace Mission Seminary, Jaffrey Cen'ter, New' Hampshire Write to: Director
of
Sacred Hearts Novitiate, Wareham, Mass. Father Damien Semin'ary, Winona, Minn. Sacred' Hearts Seminary, Washington, D.C. Vocations, 1 Main Street, Fairhaven, Ma~.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 1966 I,'
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•... : .
,:
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We Are Trustees
God Love You
Priest GlrGphically I)epicts Korea 8 s Horrible Poverty By Rt. lRev.
John S. Kennedy As discomfiting and even abrasive a book as you Msgr.
are likely to encounter in a year's reading is Father Al oysius Schwartz's The Starved and the Silent (Doubleday, New York. $4.50), an eyewitness account of the destitution and despondency prevailing the millions of ordi rice constituted the sale daily among fare of the family. nary citizens of Kore~. We Michael wa.- a bright young require this kind of dlscom ster, and ambitious, a high . fiting and abrasion, for we are school graduate who, after a only too complacent /about our year's employment as a house own easy con boy in an American Army com dition and un pound, could find· no steady concerned about' work. His natural high spirits the desperately gradually gave way to despair. nee d y multi And he plunged to the depths tudes through with the discovery that he had out the world. tuberculosis. Although Father Father Schwartz Schwartz secured a sma 11 is an American, amount of money to make pos born in the city sible some treatment for the <, of Washington, youngman, Michael ,sank down who wanted tl)
tc death~ " , , A ,sad, story; ,but in, a way, be a missionary,
but not a mem Michael . ~hi w'as better off than bel' of a :nissionary order. He .. , many, of hisc<>mp'atriots.\At least learned of the Society of the he had a family, some sort of Auxiliaries of the Missions, "'shelter; a bit' of food 'daily, 'and' fowlded in 1927 to train Euro- the interest of someone like pean secular priests for the' dio- Father Schwartz.' , ,', ceses of native';bom bishops in 'Ph 1 tt t lIs th t th Africa and Asia. He was aceept-' ",..,••e ~ er, e -: us a" ' ere are countless y(lung Koreans, ed at the S.A.M. headquarters childrep and hardly, more,' than in Louvain, Belgium, and spent chi'ldren, who are complEi'tely on five years there. Following ordi their own, sleeping on the natiQn he was assigned to the streets, lacking any regular sus diocese of Pusan, Korea. tenance, and provided with no In Dead Ear,nest, ',.' . assistance whatsoElver. Father Schwartz', ..is ,':stingy with dates, but ope gathers that Want and Woe his work in Pusan, began in the And' Michael's suffering was middle 1950's,,'He telis us of' -that, cut short, whereas that' of niil- work in the first' part of his lions of his countrymen contin book. In the second- part, 'he pre ues through a' normal life span sents some _c,onsideratJolls,' On and even into old age. Father Christian poverty· and the obli Schwartz introduces us to rep gations of Chl'lstian charity.' resentatives 01 the various age He is a man in dead earnest, groups,' and the story of each is unversed iIi, diplomacy. He one of terrible want and woe. speaks his mind 'bluntly, 'and 'in He has critical ,remarks to his indictmerit, of the American make 'tbout Korean hospitals, Church for extreme, and sense 'about relief serviceB, about even less luxury he' takes no pains 'to the Korean Church's aspirations' make carefui,:~ distinctions or to to grandiosit~; and the trappings disguise soni¢' of his specific ot 'power. Perhaps his most targets.,. / laudatory words arEl directed to It will be, said that in his pre the Legion of Mary', introduced occupation, if not obsession; with into Korea only a decade ago I WI NNE R S: Three full poverty, he is less than sensible and responsible for a third of the s c hoI a r s hip's hlwe beim and just in some.' of 'his pro conversions, in that period. nouncements. But' we' probably He also desc'ribes his ow~ ef~ awarded to Dominican Aca will be more benefited than hurt forts to improve things for the demY"top to ,bottom; ,Vir by a harsh reminder of a virtue people in his charge. One of ginia M., Collins, St. 'Made and a duty which we very read these is the organization of a leine's Parish, No. Tiverton; ily forget. 'religious community which will , Revoluting Reality provide family-unit orphanages; Elaine Lapointe, St. Anne's, Father Schwartz is not ,the Another is "Operation Hanky," Fall River ; Jeannine M. most graceful of writers, but he a fund-raising project which, Dore, St. John the Baptist Parish, Fall River. ' •. is certainly not lacking in force along with each appeal for con fulness. When he describes the tributions, sends a handkerchief sights, the sounds, the smells hand-embroidered by a Korean . . which characterize the environ woman. Stresses Edlo{/'<ClroaU ment of the Korean masses, he Following his graphic depic ~ ..JI ie ' . , brings powerfully home to us t:on of the widespread and real rll'eelQl€ n n a;;>tglJll'eSS8@!fll' ; the revolting reality of genuine ly horrible destitution in Korea ATLANTA (NC)-Readers of misery. come his reflections on the Gos the Georgia Bulletin, newspaper He is probably at his most ef pel demand for voluntary. pov of the Archdiocese ,?f ,Atlanta, fective when he concentrates on erty and the basic Christian re' 'have discovered something new il,dividuaIs. The stories 0 f a quirement of giving :liberally ,on l'ts masthead t'h1',"" week. " number of these are relaj:ed and habitually to the needy. Many' Catholic newspapers either in capsule form or at These touch the heart and stir ' 'note that· the opinions expressed the conscience.t· The combination ed't . 11 . some length. f 18 k d " 1 orla yare " a "Ca th0 l'1C opm I • , 0 S l' repor mg an searching 'ion not' . '1' "th" C th An example of the latter is the meditation provides a book un , '. . ~eces~an y e a .extended' chapter given to, the usual and probably uitforget-:' olic o.p'lnIOn. ~~t the GeorgIa short, agonizel~ life of, Michael table. ~ullet.m ~as thIS sentence above Rhi. Michael ·was in his early , 'Its ed1tonals: twenties when Father Schwartz "The opinions contained' in first met him, the only Catholic Cardinal Dedicates these editorial columns 'are the in his family. His widowed free expressions of free editors' mother tries to keep a home for ~l1lera ate in Ro.me in a free Catholic press." ' her children in Tent City. ROME (NC)-The new gener,,: This "city," with a, population, alate and international house of of 4,000, was an agglomeration: studies of the Brothers of: Chris M~~t~e 'PhBm~inw"'~, of primitiVe huts thrown up on tian Instruction of Ploermel was land made by dumping dirt, dedicated here by Gregorio mile@J~,i~g '(@';u garbage, trash, and refuse on the Cardinal Agagianian. edge of th~ Bay of Pusan. The Founded in Ploel'mel, France; Reg. M'aste"'-PlumDe':-~930' Rhi's hut, fashioned of canvas, in 1817, the congregation of "La GEORGE 'M. ~>MONTlE ' . tar l,Japer, and bits of lumber. Mennais Brothers" staff institu Over 35 Yea~s' ' was 12 feet long, 10 feet wide, tions in the archdiocese of De of Satisfied Service and housed seven people. One troit and the dioceses of Fall 806 NO. MAIN STJllEEl son, plainly a mental case, lived River, Ogdensburg, e"Portland, Fall River OS 5-7497 . , in a cardboard kennel. A little Me.. and Youngstown. e
G
I
IwCo
By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.O. One day, when out for a walk in the country, I saw a little frog beginning to cross a road where there was considerable traffic. I took a stick and turned him around in the other direction towards the woods and a, pond. There seemed to be an innei' resistance against my attempt to save him from death. I am sure if that little frog grew up to be a writer, he would have written a work entitled "Man is Dead"-dead because of his "cruelty," his unwillingness to allow a lesser creature to do whatever he pleased even though it meant a crushing death under the wheels of a Cadillac. ,Man is in somewhat the same position under God Who in His Providence prevents us from doing those things which we would like to do on the highway of life. Some men do grow up and write books against God, en titled "God is Dead" or "God is cruel." I know of one man who had very little when he married. He went to a gambling casino and won large soms (all over $200) every night foil' 38 nights. Every morning his wife would give $50 to the Little Sisters of the Poor in gratitude. Because God had been so good to him for 38 nights, the man decided on the 39th night to in vest all the money that he IlIad made and even borrowed some for the "great kill." On the 39th night he lost every thing. God sometimes uses a big stick to keep us from placl:1>,and circumstances' ,I which' might"ri!ean' our 'ruM: 'd';d '~ ma~esus .~!l,e ~verrthinlf ~~«r~ ,~we ..,get: greed)' because Be .. good: ",' ",.. ,. ", , ,'" . , ': .Jj
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..;l\l.i~:··-·r,.··
In this affluent civilization may we regard ourselves _ "trustees',' of, ,our w.ealth'andi :blessings.' 'Get into the habit of sharing with the poor the bounties that God puts in your hands. Each month: set 'aside: a 'little, fOl' :the', peor of the world and, as regards your whole life, take out an Annuity with the Holy Father's SQc~ety for the Propagation of the Faith. Remember the poor- in your Will. Think twice before you give to institu tions 'and groups 'Which already have millions. Remember that Christ is in the p09r', and on the last day He' Win not say "You gave' me 'five million to- add to my 25 million".' No-He will say, "I: was sick, I: was hungry and you gave' to help Me." God Lovl3 'You!" , " , ,,' GOD lLOVlE' ¥OlU . to S.V. of Chicago for his consistent fidelity in sacrificing for the poor of the world ••• to a .!Farm ingdale; Long Hsland' Catno!ic' for 2. very "special" gold piece " •. to Mrs. C.IE.M. $40 "'ll'hank you so very mucbi'or MlISSnON magazine, something ,stirred within me lilt lo~g, last ant'll the poor became my brethr~n." ' The GOD LOVE YOU medal, a' lovely cameo of,the :Madonna of the World, is one you would be proud to give or delighted, to receive. Designed 'by the world-renowned jeweler H a'r l' y Winston and blessed by, Bishop Sheen, it is available in a classic Florentine gold finish or sterling silver. Send your request and c,?rresponding,offering to The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York. N.Y. 10001. $2 sman sterling silver; $3 small 10k gold filled; $5 large sterling silver; $10 large 10k gold filled. ,
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Cutont this column, phi your'sacr,ific0 to It and man It to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National' Director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York. N.Y. 10001, or to your Diocesan Director. Rt. Rev. MslO'. Raymond T. Considine, 368 North Main Street,. Fall River, Massachuall_
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lHE ANCHOR-Diocese off(l!t Ri\f@r-lhuf5.:, Mg~~ •
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 24,1966 14 ,'r '",;, :"" . "',:
Two 'New Publicatic)ns Help J.ewish-ChristianRelations By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) The Vatican Council's Declaration on Christian-Jewish Relations stresses the spiritual patrimony common to Christians and Jews. Since this patrimony' is so great, the, council, by means of the declaration, "wants to foster and recommend that mutual un studies as well as at the derstanding and respect logical level of civic and social matters: which is the fruit, above all, She is persuaded that Jews of biblical and theological will become better Jews and
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studies as well as of fraternal dialogues." From time to time in times past, there have' been Christian - Jew ish dialogues in this country on social and cul tural issues of mutual interest, but rarely, if ever, until very . r e c e n t I y did
Christians and
•Jews get to gether at any level to talk abo u t biblical and theological matters. They are likely to do so much more frequently, however, in the future, for there is a growing awareness on the part of both groUl~s that if each is to be fully itself, Judaism and Christianity must meet on the plane of theo logical encounter. 'Torah and Gospel' One of the first fruits of this growing awareness - w h i 0 h antedated the council-.is a new book, "Torah and Gospel: Jewish and Catholic Theology in Dia logue," edited by Philip Scharp er and published by Sheed and Ward (64 University PI1lce, New York, $6). This book grew out of a sym posium of' Catholic and Jewish scholars held in January, 1965, at St. Vincent's Archabbey, La trobe, Pa. The papers delivered at that historic meeting are re-, printed in "Torah and Gospel," with an introduction by Mr. Scharper. Mr. Scharper has also at tempted "to convey to the read er '" '" '" something of the warmth as well as the wisdom" of the Latrobe symposium by reprint ing Bishop William G. Connare's welcome to the participants and the remarks with which Rabbi Arthur Gilbert brought the meeting to a close. Each stresses "the importance of the climate of comradeship which made this symposium not merely an academic exercise but a shared religious experience." 'Star and Cross' The appea'Cance of "Torah, and Gospel" so soon after the pro mulgation of the council's Dec laration on Christian-Jewish Re lations is a publishing event of, great importance. We owe' Mr. Scharper and his assocsiates at Sheed and Ward a vote of sin cere thanks for their initiative in moving ahead so rapidly to im plement both the letter and the spirit of the declaration. More power to them. We are also deeply indebted to the Bruce Publishing Com pany for the timely publication of an equally important book, "The Star and the Cross: Essays on Jewish-Christian Relations," edited by Mother Katherine Hargrove, R.S.C.J., associate professor of religion at Manhat tan ville College, Purchase, N. y~ (Bruce Publishing Co., 400 N.' Broadway, Milwaukee, $6.75). Mother Hargrove, like the Fathers of the council and the participants'in the Latrobe sym posium, is convinced that the time has come for Christians and Jews to begin the dialogue at the level of biblical and theu
Christians will be stronger in 'their own faith if each makes a genuine effort to understand the religious' beliefs of the other. Essays Stress Bonds With this end in view, she has brought together a series of es says written -, by prominent Christian and Jewish authors, including some of the contrib tors to the new Sheed and Ward volume, "Torah and Gospel.'" In the book's first part (Unity), the essays st.r;ess the bonds that link Jews and Chris tians' together especially in the pluralistic socidy that is Amer ica. These essays serve as an introdtiction to the second part (Tension), where the gloves are taken off and SOJ;lle extremely frank comments are made on issues which d.ivide Jews and Christians and which cause ani mosity and hostility between the two groups. Among the topics discussed a r'e: antisemitism; Christian teachings that instill contempt for the Jews and vice versa; the apathy of Christians during the Nazi persecution; and the touchy subjects brought to light in Vatican II during the debate on the declaration. ' ,Here, too, Mother Hargrove 'skillfully includes eSsays prob ing intermarriage between Gen tiles and Jews, religious author ity, secularism and Jewry. Off to Go-od Start The book's final part (Toward a Deeper Unity), offers several perceptive essays stressing bet ter relations between Christians and Jews. Highlighting this sec tion is a deeply moving essay by Mother Hargrove that will impress 'the reader· with its depth of knowledge resulting from months of research by its author. The simultaneous publication ot' these two very important book~"Torah and Gospel" and "The Star and the Cross,"-gets us off to a running start, so to speak, in the implementation of the, council's 'Declaration 9n Christian-Jewish Relations and would seem to suggest, if I may, say so, that the pessimism of those who fear that American Catholicism is going to lag be hind Europe in carrying out the aggiornamento is not very well 'founded. ' lFllelp lFiII Gap In this connection, I might add that, to the best of my knowledge, the United States is doing far more than any other country in the world to imple ment the declaration. We are not doing enough, of course, but, in .any event, we have made a good beginning. Our problem up till now has not been a.J.ack of good will, so much as a dearth of scholarly publica tions which could 'be used as background material in Chris tian-Jewish conferences or dia logues. , The two books referred to above will help to fill this gap. Once again, our sincere thanks to Philip Scharper and Mother Hargrove and to Sheed and Ward and Bruce Publishing Company fo!' making them available just when we needed them most.
ATLANTA AUXILIARY: Msgr. Joseph L. Bernardin of Charleston, S.C. has been appointed by Pope Paul to be Auxiliary Bishop to Arch bishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta. NC Photo. '
BOGOTA (NC)-The Episco-' pal bishop of Colombia and Ecuador has told his flock that the best way they can serve Christ is to encourage the mil lions of lapsed Catholics in Latin America to return to the Cath olic Church. In a pastoral letter on ecu menism sent to the Episcopalian churches Bishop David Benson Reed said helping the Catholic Church to care for its flock is the way they can best help Colombia. He acknowledged that this was a "new -and different concept" for Anglicans and Protestants who first came to Latin America to seek converts among the many non-practicing Catholics. "We always believed our first apostolate must be to invite those people to our church," he said. "But, sincerely, the biggest possible contribution we can
1L@/h;sft~1J' Boats
make to this country is to help the growth', of the 'dominant church. Best Service "Of course some people will never come back to the Roman Catholic Church for their own personal reasons," he added, "and we must welcome these people spiritually, bringing them to the Lord, to His world and to the sacraments'" '" '" "But there is no reason to believe that we can overcome this country's Church. The best service we can do for Jesus Christ is to help our friends, the Roman Catholics, find spiritual and sacramental grace in their own Church in these times of change. There are many people in this country who can find their way back to the Roman Catholic Church in these new times with the help of a Chris tian friend."
(JJre
fCIOWilOflD?jq' hlfing;n~
LARGE, LIVE. ""
GlUlo~d fr@ M~et Fall River Catholic Guild for the Blind will meet in St. Jo seph's School hall Sunday after noon, following ltosary and Ben ediction in the church at 2:15.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFall River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 1966
Panorama Continued :l!rom Page One be held in the school cafeteria on Saturday evening from 8:00 to 9.30 P.M. with several groups having seminarians taking part. Rev. Maurice Jeffrey stated that a number of religious communi ties of women will also take part in this event which is geared especially for High School stu dents. Admission is by ticket only. Michael Couto of New Bedford will be master of cere monies. The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine and the school princi pais are completing arrange ments for attendance by pupils of the parochial schools and CCD classes. Area Directors and members of the Confraternity Boards in each parish are active in this phase of the work. CYO Directors and laymen in each parish are completing their arrangements for transportation to the exhibit area. CYO mem bers from Taunton will help in setting up the display area. Students at Bishop Cassidy High will serve as guides aided by CYO members from various sections of the Diocese on ,Sat urday and Sunday. Students from Coyle High School will take charge of parking facilities at the school. Members of each district of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women are in charge of lunch eons Friday through Sunday and members of the Catholic Young Adult Organization in the Attle boro, Fall River and New Bed ford will serve the evening meals to exhibitors. Couples from Diocese will serve as hosts welcoming Visi tors and exhIbitors and helping generally with the many facets of the three day exhibit. Joseph Lenny of' North Easton is in charge of coordination of general aspects of the display. Arthur Lorden of Attleboro has charge of signs for the display.
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THF. !
~!r:HOR-Diocese
Pre~ate
of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 1966 ./
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S~@W - [L@~~ (J)~ M@frM[fD~W Joseph T. McGloin, S. JI. You will recall that we have printed letters here from one, "arch" toone "klinker," both of" them unidentifiable. Today, we have unscrambled another such letter-a job which has turned out to be no less difficult than the translating of the Dead Sea teens is a sometimes massive Scrolls. mood of self-pity. And this, Dear Klinker, Klinker, is a most excellent When you were assigned weapon for you to make use of. ]By
to work with teen-;agers, I had presumed that you would be the one for the job, since your mentality seemed just Jright. At the time, I meant that you seemed to have their wave - lengths, but now I won der if it isn't just that you have a rusty in tellect. How you can manage to miss oppor tunity after opportunity with these young people I do IWt know. Nor can I understand why II have to remind' you of every thing. I Up and Down But to g~t to the point. With any experience at all with young people, you should know right away that there is one fa,cet of ,their personalities which is very much to our advantage and which we should be using con .stantly for our own purposes. It seems almost silly to have to tell you what it is, since it seems so obvious; but then * * * [ am referring, as you would know if you were not a complete klinker, to the teen-agei"s vari ous and varying moods. Not even you could fail to Illotice the existence' of, such moods in these young people. Watch the ordinary teenager for about a week or a month or' So, and you"ll see his moods going up and down with apparent un predictability. Come on Unexpectedly You'll see him riding on a ; . eloud one day and then, the : , next day--or the next month for that matter-he may be com pletely down in the dumps. And this usually happens either for some very slight reason (slight t{) us and to adults, but not to him) or for no apparent reason at all. This is, in fact, what stumps him or her~the fact that these moods come on so unex pectedly. Teen-agers 'are depressed one day, and exhili rated the next: They get lonely-for no reason at all-even in the middle of, lots of company. They become ~ad. They get angry, and then the next moment, nothing on His ~arth ~ould stir them to anger, as all of a sudden they love every body and are willing to fight to prove it. ' Natural Feeling ! Often enough, you'll find them really bothered by what psy chologists like to call an "inferi ority complex". Now this' may not be a ,"complex". It may be only a natural and truthful feel ing of inferiority. Amateur psy chologists at least don't always understand that someone must sometime honestly feel infel'iar. The important thing, as fal' as you are concerned, is to keep teen-agers from noting that one must conquer, not necessarily his objective inferiority, but the pride which throws him intQ a spin because others are in some respects better than he is. And, of course, the more YQU ean exaggerate this feeling (un til it does become a real "com plex," if possible), the better. Going with this feeling of ·in leriority often indulged in ,·by
Adults "too, are often beset with self-pity, of course, but most of the time, not nearly to the distracting extent of teen agers. Young people are still new at getting rid of the mood, and so they stew about it until the mood deepens and is much harder to shake. . If there is one mood of the teen-agel' we can use to our own advantage more than others, it is that of discouragement. He gets CAPPING CEREMONY: ·Barbara Pickup, Fall River, discouraged about almost every kisses Bishop Connolly's ring, as her pa~tner, Virginia thing-from the fact that he can't reach the moon by his own Silvia, Bristol, waits. efforts, all the way down to the seeming fact that he can't even emulate his companions with any degree of success or consistently please his parents. Self-Consciousness Forty-six Freshmen at Fall River Hospital
He gets discouraged when he falls into sin, and then seeming Complete Probationary Period
ly, with a perfectly good pur Most Rev. James L. Connolly, naven, and Rosanna Ventura, pose of amendment, proceeds to fall again. Actually,- while we Bishop of the Diocese, capped 46 No, Fairhaven. Dartmouth can be very happy that he does members of the freshman class Bernice Leblanc, Diane Le fall into sin, in a sense we can 'at St. Anne's Hospital School of blanc, Mary McMahon and Nursing, Fall River, at cere be even happier that he gets dis monies in the hospital chapel on Mara Stebenne from No. Dart- \ couraged by it because final im mouth, and Diane Monjeau, So. penitence means discouragement Saturday. to the point 01' dying in a state In a sermon addressed to the Dartmouth. Also, Diane Ouellette and Rita of sin. capped students, parents, rela Pelletier, Somerset. Gail Camp Try tLen, Klinker, to make tives, sisters of: the hospital, fac good use of these moods. There ulty members and priests of the bell, Whitman; Joanne Conway, is a natural self-consciousness in Diocese, the Bishop stressed the Hanson; Karen Lopes, Plymouth, Lydia Rose, Marion; Kathy most young people which will teachings of the Vatican Coun Ryan, Cumaquid; Anne Sorelle, help you get them to turn in on cil's decree on the laity. Acushnet, Tamara Trotta, Pem themselves and stay there. Make He called on all 46 to be a good use of this and all their witness 'to Christ and added, broke. Rhode Island other moods tc get them in the "you student n~rses represent a' Veronica Bento, Newport; Pa right groove-the one that leads definite departure from the tricia Dias, No. Tiverton; Helen to us. world's materialistic idea of suc'" This is the big thing, of course ceSs. You are' not looking for Flyrin, Middletown; Patricia Ma lone, Tiverton; Virginia Silvia, -that you make sure they con comfort, giamour, notoriety or , centrate solely on themselves. publicity, but seeking to become 'Bristol. In this way, you can keep them messengers of Christ".· from looking where they should The following students were - to Him --- and you can keep capped: them, you might say,' perpetu . Fall Rliver ally selfish and self-centered. . Maureen Barreira, Monique This will give them no time for living, and their whoie B 0 u 1 a y, "Madeleine ,Brodeur, ,Bzdula, Jeanne Du "lives" will be only a slow or not Madeleine pont. ~'. sv slow process of dying. It will Also, Camille Faria, Doris give them no time to pay any real attention to Him because Ferreira, Michaelene Lea I' y" they will be entirely taken up Rosemary M a rt in, Barbara Pickup.· . with themselves. Margaret Potvin, Jeanne Ri Don't let these young people see the connection between vard, Mary Rodreigues, and Su moods and maturity, Klinker, or zanne St. Amand. they will become spiritually and New Bedford emotionally mature long before Susan Cafferty, Patricia Han it is good for us. Our greatest non, Jacqueline Hebert, Diane hope, as you know. lies in their Kappral, Patricia Simoes. continuing immaturity. TauntOlIl But you must try to do a little Beverly Bzdula, Suzanne May thinking for yourself now - I nard, Therese Stankiewick, Pa can't do everything for you. Our tricia Tonry, 'and Donna Vir situation here is the same as ginis. ever. It's still hot as hell. Fairhaven Sincerely, Sister Maureen, O. Carm., and Arch. Patricia ,~nczek, from, Fair.f
Capping at St. Anne's
Favors
Cfhloirs
B'IRMINGHAM (NC) - Th~ president of the British hier archy's liturgical commission has stated that the Church has no desire to eliminate church cholrs or tQ drop Latin from liturgical music. "Liturgical aut h 0 r i tie s in Rome are disturbed that some seem to think there is no lQnger any place for choirs," said Arch bishop George Dwyer of Bir mingham. The archbishop s aid the church choir "has an important role to play in leading the peo ple to sing. "Moreover, it is not the inten tion that the treasury of church music which we have shQuld be abandoned," hE' continued. "Even at vernacular Masses there is a place for motets to be sung by the choir, and it is quite suitable that these should be in Latin."
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HEATING OIL'
The
HAWTHORNE DOMINICANS
CHRIST NEEDS YOU! ,St. Joseph Needs YOUI !lITTLE ONES THIRST FOR TRUTH
You too can win souls by teaching with the" Sisters of St.
Joseph in the Fall River Diocese, and even as far as South
ern Louisiana among the colored and white population.
Will You Come?
127 Howland Street, Fall River
REV. MOTHER PROVINCIAL, SISTERS OF S1'. J()SEPH
their A.POSTOLATE: to offer the solace of phy sical' comfort and spiritual strength in their free Homes as-THE SERVANTS OF RELIEF FOR INCURABLE CANCER. In !Fan. River:
ROSE ,HAWTHORNE LATHROP HOME 1600 Bay Street
established in 1932 ~ memory of their venerable . ~nd'reSs, Rose Hciwri10rne Lothrop (Mother M. Alphonso)
THE ANCNOR
first Dual Award! Atty. a!l1d Mrs. Pah0ck Cfow~ey Cllf lI~ilJ1ois
Are Co-Winners of 1966 Laetare Medal
NOTRE DAME (NC) - The founders of the worldwide Chris tian Family Movement will be honored by Notre pame Univer sity as recipients of the Laetare Medal for 1966. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Crowley of Wilmette, m., are the winners of the award which has been presented annually by Notre Name since 1883 to an outstand ing American Catholic layman or laywoman. The Crowleys are the first couple to share the award. Active in CFM Crowley, Chicago attorney, and his wife have been secre taries of the National Coordi nating Committee of the CFM since its founding in 1949. The CFM today has more than 100,009 couples as members throughout the United states and in 45 other countries. The Crowleys are the parents of a son and three daughters, one of them a nun, and through the years have also provided a home for many foster children and
Missionaries Take Top Speech Prizes SEOUL (NC) -Three of the first four winners in a speech contest for foreigners using the Korean language were Religious who trained at the new Francis can Myongdo Missionary Train ing Institute. The contest was sponsored by the Seoul English language daily, the Korean Herald. A Belgian Salesian, Brother Lue Van Looy, took top honors.
Ita~yBs
Gets Church Honor ROME (NC) - President Giuseppe Saragat, who be-.' f-ore becoming chief of state was secretary g e n era 1 of Italy's Socialist Labor party, has been invested with the Holy See's highest lay honor, the Su- preme Order of Christ. The decoration, which is granted by the popes tradition ally only to Catholic heads 011 state, was conferred prior to Pope Paul's scheduled state visit to the Quirinal Palace, ItaJ,Y'lJ White House. The decoration was presented to the president by the papal nuncio to ltalJ;tp Archbishop Carlo Grano. The Order of Christ was eS'o> tablished by Pope John XXII m 1319. Pope St. Pius X gave the ordelI' its pre-eminent dignity when he reorganized pap a 1 decorations LAETARE MEDALISTS: The award of 1966 was and orders early in this centu-rY. awarded to Mr. and Mrs. Patrick R. Crowley, Wilmette, Other living holders of the Order of Christ include formerr Ill., founders of the worldwide Christian Family Move I tal ian Presidents Giovann:1 ment, by the University of Notre Dame. The award, pre Gronchi and Antonio Segnj, sented annually by Notre Dame since 1883, and given this Spain's Genel'alissimo Franciscc year for the .first time to a couple, honors outstanding Franco, President Charles De Gaulle: of France and former American Catholics. NC Photo. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer o! Germany. ,. The insignia of the order con sists of a white Latin cross im ROME (NC)-About 2,500 lay Plans for the meeting were pased on a red enamel croSD, persons from all parts of the outlined here by lay leaders at topped by a small white croWEl world are expEcted to attend the tending a meeting of the Perma- hanging from a gold collar made International Congress of the nent Committee of International of alternate l~nks of the order'l!J Lay Apostolate in Rome sched Congresses of the Lay Apostol cross and the coat of arms of tile uled for October, 1967. ate. ' - reigning pope.
Prelates Dedicate Mie1Jor Semin«mry JACKSON (NC) -- B ish 0 p Richard O. Gerow and Auxiliary Bishop Joseph B. Brunini of Natchez-Jackson officiated at the dedication of the diocese's new preparatory seminary here in Mississippi which has been in operation since September. Following the dedication rites, Bishops Gerow and Brunini con celebrated Mass in the seminary chapel with a group of eight bishops and five abbots who came here for th'e dedication. The sermon was preached by Bishop Robert E. Tracy of Baton Rouge, La. Construction of the seminary was begun in 1965. The two story structure has accommoda tions for more than 50 students. Msgr. Paul V. Canonici is the rector.
2,500 to Attend Laity Cong,ress
,. .44~~~""""""Ml
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I
THE MISSIONARY SOCIETY OF S1 JAMES
THE APOSTLE
lI.
I i·
A SOCIETY OF DIOCESAN· PRIESTS WHO -HAVE VOLUNTEERED TO WORK IN
Ii•
Founded by Richard Cardinal Cushing ,1958
.'
Rev. James E. Murphy, sC\n of Mr. and Mrs. John
• •••• •• :• :•• .,•••• •• I •••• • •e .'•.•. •• • ••• •• •c• •e., •r•
SOUTH AMERICA
Murphy, of St.
.'
Lawr~nce
\:
Parish, New Bedford,
who, since ordination in 1963, has served as an assistant at St. Patrick's Church, Fall River, become the first priest from the Diocese of Fall River to join the Society of St. James, a priests organization
.' t-
~@(dalist
Presid~nf?
foreign students. They have shared several awards for their work in CFM and other religious and civic organizations. The Pro Ecclesia Medal was bestowed on them by the late Pope ,Pius XII. They also have been honored by the Chicago Commission on Human Relations, the Roundtable of Christians and Jews, and the 'Notre Dame Club of Chicago. Currently traveling abroad on a seven-week visitation of CFM groups in Europe, Africa and Australia, the couple also serves on the commission appointed by Pope Paul VI to advise him on birth control and other marriage problems.
:
17.
Thurs., March 24, 1966
serving Latin America.
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FATHER MUKPHY
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'The
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ft. JOHN BAPTllS'lr. NEW BEDFOlRJr The Ladies' Guild will sponsor a rummage sal' from 9 to 5 to morrow and from 9 to noon Sat urday in the church hall, under . direction of Mrs. Mary Rose. flSlTATION GUJILD, NORTH EASTHAM Guild members will receive II 0 1 y Communion Sunday, -March 27. April activities will include a social Friday, April 1 at the home of Mrs. Arthur Ces .taro, Surrey Drive, Eastham. At this time a draWing for a.ham "dinner will be held. A meeting 'will be held Thursday, April 14 ,.'at the home of Mrs. Edmund He ·"bert, Eastham; and u clothes ~'closet sale is scheduled for Sat ,'urday, April 23 at the church hall. Communion Sunday· will be April 24. 'OUR LADY OF ANGELS. FALL RIVER Junior CYO members. are sponsoring a sale to benefit .their activities fund. Winners ::will be announced 'I.'hursday, ,April 14.
>
Laymen in Effort
THE ANCHOR--:"'Oiocese of Fan River-Thurs. Mar. 24, 1966
ST. ANNE, 'FALL RIVER '; Members of the Holy Name :'Society are organizing their an nual whist to benefit the parish. The event will be held Saturday, April 2 in the parish school rec reational hall. Tickets are avail ;llble from Holy Name men. '·'ST. JOSEPH, . 'FALL RIVER Future events include a penny sale under auspices of the Women's Guild and a trip to New York for CYO seniors. SACRED HEART, FALL RIVER The Men's Clu\) and Women's Guild will present their fifth annual musical revue Sunday and , M~nday, April 17 and 18. : ST. JEAN BAPTiSTE, . FALL RIVER ; A pilgrimage to La Salette : Shrine, Attleboro, will be spon'sored by the Council of Catholic I Women at 1 Sunday afternoon, , April 3. Members will receive 'corporate Communion at 8 ! o'clock Mass that morning. The , day's events are under chair.,., ; manship of Mrs. Thomas Tache. , ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, : FALL RIVER Venus de Milo restaurant will be the scene of a Spring festival planned for 7:30 Saturday night, May 7 by the Council of Catholic r-.71 :Women. Mrs. Evelyn MaJ1in is chairman.
,To Halt Closing Of High School
Parade
ST. STANISLAUS, FALL RIVER Mrs. Sophie Pinkowski, chair man, and Katherine Ozug, co chairman, have annoupced that the Holy Rosary Sodality will sponsor a Polish food sale on March 24, 25 and 26 in the school hall for the benefit of the school building fund.
UNION CITY (NC)-Lay men here in New Jersey are searching for ways to keep St..Michael's High School
ST. JOHN' OF OOD,
SOMIERSET Rev. John Foley, C.S.C., will preach the mission for the men of the parish opening on Sunday, March 27. All high school students are reminded to be present in front of the Church on S'aturday night at 6 in order that all might leave at once for Cassidy High School and the Vocation Pano rama. ST. ROCH. FALL RIVER A whist is announced· by the Council of Catholic Women for Wednesday, April 13. SACRED HEARTS, _
NORTH FAIRHAVEN The school improvement fund will beneft from a chicken sup per to bE! served in the parish ,hall from 6 to 7 Sunday night, March 27. A limited number of tickets are available at the rec
tory.
CFM PREPARES FOR VISITORS: Seated: 'Mr. and Mrs.' Samuel Pino. Standing: Rev. Rene Levesque, assistant 'at St. Joseph's, Attleboro; Mrs., Ernest DesYergne~, llnd William Crowley, Diocesan ci>-president of the CF.M. .
,.CFM. Piroject Attleboro Area Members Now Organizing . For Jui y Vi~it ofTen Brazilians
'tivities, the. South Ameri~ans Ladies of St. Anne will re The Christian Family. Move ceive corporate Communion at . ment, in cooperation with The will 'learn about. American life 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning ,Experiment in International .. arid share their own' ~ay of life ·and will hold their monthly Living, Putney, Vt., is now pre- with their American hoSts and . meeting at 7:30 Monday night, . paring for the July arrival of,10' friends. March 28 in the school cafeteria. Brazilians who WIll stay one Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Pino, An attendance prize will be month in the Attleboro. area 621 North Main Street, 'Attle 'awarded and refreshments will prior to visiting other areas and boro, are servinga~ Community be served. assuming their studies in the Chairmen for the project and are
Fall at various American univer now appealing to families to
share in this program. ' sities. .The Experiment is in its 33rd This is a project in interna year and will host 2300 Experi tional understanding through Liturgy family living, Each "Experi menters in the United States WASHINGTON (N C) _ A menter" will li ve for four weeks while the same number of our booklet containing complete and as a member of an Attleboro area citizens will go to Europe, Latin up-to-date texts for the mar family. America, Asia and Africa. in riage liturgy has been published Through family and group ac- homestay .and study programs. here by the Family Life Bureau of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. The booklet contains the com plete nuptial. Mass, with the translation of the Mass texts ap proved for use· as of March 27; a Prayer of the Faithful with e~cerpts from statemepts by .' Vatican Council IIpertaiIiing to' marriage and the' family; texts for the marriage rite; and direc tions for receiving Communion under both species. . A spokesman said the booklet would be useful to diocesan li turgical commissions and priests and is suitable for distribution to wedding guests.
Publish M,arriage Booklete
open following an announcement than no freshmen would be ad mitted starting in September. An emergency meeting called by the Michaelian Guild was at tended by 500 persons. Among proposals made by parents was one that laymen buy the high school, raise money to maintain it and lease it to the Passionist F;1thers and the Sisters of Char ity who staff it. Two reasons were given py Father Alfred Weaver, C.P., pas ..tor, in announcing 'that r a fresh ·. m'an class would not be accepted. · He said the school, which now draws most of its students from olltside the parish, operated at a $66,000 deficit last year and that the major classroom build ing erected in 1896, needs major renovations. Union City residents fear the · freshmen shut-off pre I u d'e s eventual closing of, the school, which. has an enrollment .of ,436, down from a high ·of ,769 a .little more than a decade ago. At the meeting, a six-:member committee was named to ask Archbishop Thomas A. Boland
.of Newark to suspend the' cut
off plan ",at least for another
ye,ar." In aS,king for l;luspension.
~h,ey estimate ,that 300' young sters made St. Michael's their first choice in., the recent ·arch diocesan high school entrance exam. There are only 79 students in the present freshman class.
More Guests BARDSTOWN (NC) - The Catholic clergy of this central Kentucky town has enlarged its dinner guest list this year to in clude the entire membership of the Bardstown Ministerial Asso ciation.
THE REDEMPTORIST FATHERS AND BROTHERS need ,young Americans with a spirit of sacrifice and the
win to dedicate themselves to the ~alvation of the "most
CF.
(The Chfo$fian Family Movement)
As a married cOlUJpie YOU have the op portunity, right now" 11'0 fake part in a moderr.av vigorous lay aposto~ic ogaD1ization and 'to make your married ~ove for each .other an s<trument of God's ~OV.DIl1l9 Oldiol11l in the world!
abandoned souls!" The Redemptorists work in the U.S.A.-in, the West .
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Undies - In Brazil - in Paraguay. If you are anxious to know more about the Redemptorists - write to or visitIiIEY. MICIHAIEIl. 11.. IDILLON-Vocation Director-REV. JOHN R. FORREST, It.SS.R.
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'li'1HI1E ~lEi:j)ItMPY()~OS'U'
rriUlHlIERSThe
IBlCllsoOim of OU8' II.ClIdy olF oDel'petuCliO HelD»
!for information on C.IF.M. iill1l Illhe !FaUO River Diocese write to: CFAA COORIIDONA'Ii'OING COMMOnlElE, ~
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Nichol Avenue,
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Nc. 2, Affielbo8'c, Massachusetts Phone 222-] MU'
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R'edempt«)ri~t
Fathers
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·1l0XlaJllltV'.. MAS§.
New YOll'k 21 6 New York
Durfee in Stote Hoop Finol:
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IPlay BallI Cry Two Weeks Away for Narry Loop Clubs
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CardDITtJ@1 Conway
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Gets $®~ortld Mat
By Fred Bartek The eyes and attention of all scholastic basketball fans hereabout will be focused at, 9 :30 tomorrow night on the Boston Garden where Coach Tom Karam's brilliant Durfee High aggregation of Fall River makes its second bid, in as many years, for not so in baseball. Splinter the all-State championship. groups crop up and battle each The Hilltoppers will be other for officiating control in. meeting Coach Bill Kearns' many schools and that's why you Weymouth High combine for the hear the cry of "homer" at some second time in as many weeks. games, a term which suggests that the umpire is favoring the The Bristol County League school from the area in which winners dis he resides, and, also, which hires , posed of West him directly. Conversely, these boro High, schools have no say over the Central Mass. grid and court officials. Umpiring 'Headache' titlists, in easy 'fashion in the Principals and coaches dis cussed the umpiring problem at semi - finals of the State elimi their annual Spring conference nation competi last week. They 'batted-around' several other perplexing prob tion last Satur day night, tri lems, too. . umphing 74-59. The Narry League snatched Weymouth turned back Drury the lead in trying to overcome High of North Adams, Western the umpiring headache when it Mass. champions, 62-56, to' gain contracted for the services of a another crack at the Mass. Tech small group of men to umpire tourney victor!: by whom they all league games. This is the were humiliated 59-45, in the first time this has ever been Eastern Mass final two weeks done. It puts the league in the ago.
position of eliminating incompe tents from the small, select staff. Season's Best Effort
The BCL on the other hand; The favored Karammen, re has picked Fred Kelley of New mf(mbering their fate in the all Bedford, well~known and high State tournament against Cath ,olic Memorial last year, will be ly respected, to coine up with out to give a repeat performance an answer to its umpiring prob .' of their work against Westboro. lem. A rotating football schedule, Durfee clobbereci the Central Mass. champs. The final score is designed to eliminate conflicts, not indicative of the ease with has been ruled oui: by the' BCL which the Fall Riverites jaunted gridiron coaches because of the difficulty such a plan would to the title round. create in lining up non-league Trailing by seven points with in the first few minutes of play, encounters to fill out the sched the Hilltoppers turned right ules. Meanwhile, BCL hoop men around to march to a 25-point advantage which dwindled in tors considered the wisdom of the closing minutes of play when 'creating two league divisions, similar to a Tri-County Confer the Fall River mentor substi tuted freely. Durfee never played ence plan which primarily is better this year than it did carried out to give' incentive to those clubs who, understand against Westboro which was un able to capitalize on its decided ably, are relegated to the lower bracket of the standing each height advantage. The Tech tourney champs year. Durfee, Attleboro and squezeed by with a two-point Coy!e of Taunton have ruled 'the edge over Springfield Cathedral roost' in basketball for the past in the quarter-finals last Friday decade. No definite action has night. They showed a complete been taken on the division pro reversal of form the following posal. The annual BeL track meet night in walloping Westboro. Weymouth's attitude entering this year will be held at 2 Wed tomorrow night's fin a 1 is nesday afternoon, May 25, at summed up in the old saying, Attleboro High. The meet in the "fool us once and it's your fault, past has been held on Memorial fool us twice and it's ours." The Day but the State runing cham Kearnsmen would like nothing pionships are listed on Memorial better than to reverse the tables Day this year, hence the change on the Red and Black club that to a weekday. suppressed them in .the Tech Seekonk Makes Debut final two weeks ago. Coach Roger Hill and his See The all-State championship konk High baseballers will be. affair will be the last game of making their Narry circuit de the schoolboy basketball season buts when the smaller-school as most schools have already season opens two weeks hence. Seekonk will tackle their neigh turned to baseball and track. Five contests will "kick-off" bors, Dighton-Rehoboth, in their the Narry national pastime loop opener. Maurice LeVasseur will be at the coaching helm at D-R. , two weeks from today, April 7. He succeeds Eo Texeira who di But, while coaches - and play ers are getting ready for the rected the Falcons to a 14-2 reC ord last Spring. diamond campaign, School au Brennan Takes Over thorities are greatly: concerned Coach Jack McCarthy piloted with a "headache" caused by some umpires. The Narry circuit Case to the second best Narry has made the first effort to cor club record last season, 11-5, rect a situation which is chaotic while Coach Ray Carvalho's in many instances. The same Prevost Maple Leafs closed with problem does not arise in either a 9-7 mark. Coach Jack Hart's football or basketball.
Diman nine divided 16 games as Avoiding Favoritism
did Coach Ed Bibeau's Westport Each school hereabouts makes outfit. Coach Jim Sullivan's its own arrangements for base Somerset club was 7-9 last ball umpires, some of whom are season. unqualified. A commissioner as A second coaching change this signs gridiron officials and bas season will see Jack Brennan ketball referees, but, the schools taking the mentor's reins from Jack Nobrega who led the New take care of this chore them selves in baseball. Bedford Holy Family Parochials to a 6-10 effort last year. Coach Football and basketball offi daIs must pass a national board Pete Abraham hopes his Lake examination to qualify for schOoo ville boys can improve theilr 1-1~ lastic assignments. But. this iil Mowing of Aast season.
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THE ANCHORThu.:s., March 24, 1966
At Spccc~ Ceril~er CAPE KENNEDY (NC} -William Cardinal Conway~ Primate of All Ireland, re ceived his second red hat
IRELAND'S PRiMATE: Gemini 8 was in final stages of preparation on launch complex 19 when William Cardinal Conway, Archbishop of Armfl,gh and. Primate o~' All'rre land, inspected the White Room at Cape, Kennedy. Photo by NASA. NC Photo.
~ay
on a visit to the U. S. space launch complex here. To set beside his red hat as ~ cardinal he was presented with the red steel helmet worn by personnel around this space ceJ)oo , ter. The cardinal spent four-and-a half hours visiting the Cape Kennedy spac" flight center, iJlso eluding launch complex 19 from which astronauts Neil A. Arm strong and David R. Scott we'" scheduled to take off on a three day flight 'four days later. Cardinal Conway was guest aa a luncheon given by Dr. Kurt Debus, director of the Nationa\.. Aeronautics and Space Admin-o istration Kennedy Space Cente1t" Debus gave him a photograph
. autographed by' astronaut' E&a
'ward H. White 'during his' his
toric walk in space last Aug::'~ during the Gemini V flight. Cardinal Conway was in F:iQ!I'" , id~ to rededicate ,the newly rEm stored cathedral, of St. AuguBm .tine, Fla. . . .:'
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For Reconciliat";on
State Session
Regional Directors for Latin America Papal Volunteers Meet Next Month in Worcester CHICAGO (NC)-A series of five regional meetings across the nation has been launched by the Papal Volunteers for Latin America to review and strength en its program. Father Raymond A. Kevane, national director of the volun teer program, will meet with 120 local directors and members of their lay advisory boards. The first meeting was held last Monday in Seattle. The sec ond was in Omaha yesterday. Others will be Detroit, April 19; Washington, D. C., April 21; and Worcester, Mass., April 25. "Discussion will center on the progress made in the past year and the coordination of activi ties between the U. S. and Latin American dioceses in order to
best serve Latin America," Father Kevane lIaid.
Receives JWV HeCid VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has received in audience the national commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States, Milton A. Waldor, . and Mrs. Waldor, of Newark, N.J.
BONN (NC)-A national pub<> lic opinion poll has revealec!l that 69 per cent of the citizentl of West Germany favor a spirit of reconciliation between Ge..... many and Poland as expressed by the bishops of the two cOUBoo tries.
DOMINICAN SISTERS
OF CHARITY
Presentation of the Blessed Virgin ,. STAFFING
St. Anne~s Hospital- Fall River Marian Manor - Taunton
and
Madonna Manor, Attleboro
Nun at Work Servtce to the Church through an apostolate of Mercy characterized by simplicity, joy and charity
Further information may be obtai,!ed by contading
MOTHER VICE-PROVINCIAL
St. Anne's Hospital Tel. OS 4-5741 Fall River
Mother of Novices-Presentation Novitiate
Elm Street, Dighton, Mass.
Some graduates who could succeed ot anything will enter
MARYKNOLL to serve Christ and others as missioners overseos.
Will YOU? /FOR INFORMATION, WRITE TO:
VOCATION DIRECTOR MARYKNOLL FATHERS' MARYKNOLL, N.Y. 10545
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College Dedicates Three Buildings
THE ANCHORThurs., March 24, 1966
DU:BUQUE (NC) --':"Three new b'uildings at Clarke College were dedicated Saturday by' Arch bishop James J. Byrne of Du buque. The dedication address was given by Howard H. Bowen, president of the University of Iowa. The women's college is con
English B!l1 Mass
Continued from Page One mitted, these prayers are to b~ said in that vernacular from an approved translation. The only prayer that the faith ful are to answer is the response to the Dialogue (Orate, Fratres) if they have finished the offer tory psalm or hymn.' Celebrant and acolytes only participate in the Prayers at the foot of the altar. The other prayers al'e the priestly prayers said only'by the celebrant.
CRITICAL WORK MAY NOT GET DONE UNLESS 'PEOPLE LIKE YOU VOLUNTEER ·TO'· •••
Use fedJend Funds
To Hire Sisters MINNEAPOLIS (NC) - Lim ited use of federal aid-to-educa tion funds to hire nuns as teach ers has 'been approved in, an opinion issued by Minnesota Atty. Gen. Robert W. Mattson. The question arose when state Commissioner of Education Du ane J. Matthers sought approval of a plan to have nuns from St. Catherine's college conduct a Summer institute for public school teachers in depri ved areas. ,Objections have been raised in' the past, in Minnesota and other states, to hiring of Religious by public school boards, but Matt son said the previous opinions ,",relating to teachers in public' : schools wearing distinctive garb while teaching, pupils have rio,/ application". because" the Sisters, .' would not be teaching pupils' , but other teachers.
Pool Table Needed For Retired MelJ1 Recreation is an essential in the lives of retired people. To aid tl1.ese men in their leisure hours, an appeal is being made for a pool table. Anyone in the Dioce!le wish ing to sell such a recreational item is asked to drop )'note to The Anchor, P. O. Box 7, Fall River.
FAIRHAVEN OPEN HOUSE: Rev. John Brennan, SS. CC., pastor of St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven, explains the chalice to two of the many from all faiths who at tended the affair Sunday afternoon. Left to right: Father Brennan, :pro Louise Townsend, and Leonard E. Pierce.
• Provide practical help in inner-city areas • Teach and counsel. migrant workers
the' HOLY CROSS 'FAtlnERS :
invite &
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• Work among American' Indians • Teach in bqdly 'understaffed schools
,.,eleom-e
• Help.' relieve tension and cultural povert,Y in suburban areas
alert, apostolic young men to . share the community's family-life in 'Christ. This prepares 'and sus: tains them for the community's world wide works for the People ,of God - 'as ..'Onege &: high school teachers, preachers of parish missions and closed retreats, producerSOf,the'Famiiy'ROsary' & Famiiy Theater apostolates, shapers of an artiCUlate laity. finally as helpers overseas in Peru, Uganda &: Pakistan......."'** Ooadjutor Brothers work. side by side with the priests 01 Holy Cross, share the same community life. • ... High school seniors, college men &: servicemen, visit our Semina"'Y any weekend. Set your o\vn date. Indicate your age and your main iJiterest (priesthood or Brotherhood). Write: '
Father Frank' G; Gartland,
• Go ~mong th'e popr in Appalachia • Nurse' where there are no nurses
WRITE: EXTENSION
VOLUNTEERS
Diocesan Office 368 No. Main Street
esc.
Fall River, 'M'assachusetts
Holy Cross Fathers Seminary
North !Easton;. Massachusetts
Carmelite Sisters of the 'Aged and Infirm
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ducted by the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The buildings include a $2.3 million science-classroom build~ ing, a $1.5 million residence hal[ for 217 students and 10 faculty members and a $500,000 main tenance-service center.
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The Carmelite Sisters operate homes for the aged located throughout the - United States--;and recently in Irela.nd and Scotland-in which they are constant ly developing new programs to enrich the lives of the aging men and women they serve. so devotedly. '
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Carmelite' Homes are happy homes where residents and Sisters alike find spiritual strength and comfort in the beautiful chapel which is the center of every Carmelite Home; where a variety of' recreational and occupational activities are' available under the guidance of qualified directors; where the latest techniques in physical rehabilitation are employed by experienced ,therapists and where full recognition is given to the productivity value and dighity of the aged persons to whose care the Sisters are especially dedicated.
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Sisters ,are trained as nurses, X-ray technicians, occupational and recrea , tional therapists, pharmacists, dietitians, social service workers and in every other occupation and profession needed in serving the aged and in maintaining the homes. ' The Services rendered by the Carmelite Sisters lire ~otivated by their religious dedication and strengthened by 'skills and abiliiies acquired through professional training. tit this work, noble and generous souls can find complete devotion to God in ministering to the aged under the patronage of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.
Visit the Carmelite Sisters' of ,the, Aged and Infirm in the Diocese of' Fall River
The Catholic Memorial Home 2446 Highland Avenue Fall River,: Massachusetts
Our, Ladys
,H~yen
71 ,Center Street ' Fairhaven, Ma~sachusetts
Applicants who have a high school education cr its @qufvalent may apply' for further information to:
,Rev.' Mother M. ~~geline TeresCII, 0., Carm•.
St. Teresa's Motherhouse
Avila-on-Hudson
Germantown, New Vork
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