03.30.67

Page 1

Two Monsignors Resign as Pastors . ,

1

Served Diocese Total of 103· Years Rt. Rev. Msgr. William H. Harrington, known

as the personification of charity, today tendered

i' 'If

J MS(m. W. H.HARRINGTON

his resignation as pastor of Holy Name, Church in Fall River which he has headed for the past Ii years. Msgr. Harrington will continue to serve as sup'ervisor of St. Patrick's Cemetery in Fall River. The veteran See City pastor, considered one of the best clerical administrators in the diocese, ,submitted his resignation, to the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River. Msgr. Harrington was instrumental in de­ veloping St. Thomas More parish ,in Somerset into one of the' area's fastest-growing Christian, communities. He subsequently was appointed to direct the Fall River, parish which each year ranks among the leaders in the annual Catholic Turn to Page Twenty

Rt. Rev. Emmanuel Souza de Mello, dear. of the diocesan clergy, has resigned as pastor of Our' Lady of Lourdes, in Taunton, a: parish he has successfully directed for' 'the past 34 years. Msgr. de Mello is one of the better known diocesan pastors, having served in several com­ munities during his 58 years as a priest. The kindly a~ld considerate pastor has been the confessor for four religious gr'oups in the Taunton ar'ea over the coui'se of many years. The devotion of Msgr. de Mello to the cause of Catholic education was evidenced in 1963 when Our Lady of Lourdes Parochial School was opened. 248 boys and girls in seven elemen­ tary grades have become the beneficiaries of the Monsigl)or's enthusiasm for the Catholic training for the younger members of his flock. ' Tur'n to Page Twenty

i

:MSGR. E. S. de MELLO

Bishop Connolly Announces

Transfer of Two Pastors,

Two New Administrators

The

ANCHOR

'_'~",Y.•.•,.' istrators th;r:;;~~~t~~n~W;f ~:~o~~~~~

were announced today

..ttl AtIOMr of tA, IN..... lIM 1'h-IJ'f. P...

by the Most Rev. James L. Con­ ;~_.. nolly, Bishop of Fall River. The ; new assignments are effective ~j April 12. They are: hRt. Rev. Msgr. Daniel F. Shal­ '100, pastor of St. Louis Church, Fall River, to Holy Name Church, Fall River, as pastor. Rev. William'R. Jordan, pas­ tor of St. Dominic's ChurCh, Swansea, to St. Louis Chu'rch, Fall River, as pastor. Rev. James A. McCarthY', as­ sistant at St. William Church, Fall River, to St. Dominic's Chl,lrch, Swansea, as adminis­ trator. ' Rev. Edward A. Oliveira, as­ sistant at Our Lally of Lourdes MSGR. D. :F. SHAI~LOO Church, Taunton, as 'administm- ' . ' To :Uoly Name---:.Fall River tor of same parish. MONSIGNOR SHALLOO Monsignor Shalloo was' born in Fall :River on Nov. 7, 1911, son of Mrs. -Katherine J. (Mara)

Shalloo and the late ))aniel F.

Shalloo. He was graduated from B.M.C. Dur~ee High School and from Boston College with an A.B. degree in 1932. He studied at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore and at the Sulpician Seminary and Catholic University in Wash­ ington. ; The' new Holy. Name pastor received his M.A. degree in ed­

ucation from C. U. in 1937 and was ordained by the late Most Rev. Bishop James E. Cassidy,

D.D. on May 22 the same year.

He served as assistant at Im­

maculate Conception, Fall River,

until May 4, 1942 and as assist­

ant at St. Joseph's, Fall River,

FR. JAMES A. McCARTHY until named administrator of St Louis in April, 1961.

Swansea Administrator Turn to Page Eighteen

.f

Fall River Mass., Thursday, Mar. 30, 1967 Yolo '11, No. 13

@

$4.00 ~ Yeor . PRICE tOe

1967 The Anchor

Papal Encyclical

Moral Bankruptcy' BOased on 'Ava,rice VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI has app.ealed fur "concrete action" to foster 'man's development and

the' development of all mankind to combat the' growing

ilXnb'alance between richer and pOOl'er nations. In an 18,000­ , ~ord encyclical made public l'uesday, March 28, the Pope has' ta,ken the' Cat hoI i e Ohurch's social thought an­

- Schedule CCD Renewed Talks April 26

ein

. The Evening of Christian Renewal sponsored by the Diocefo\an Confraternity of

@ThriRtian Doctrine, original­

l\v

scheduled for March 15 and because of a major ~owstorm, has been rescheduled ~ Wednesday, April 26 at 7:30 t.m" Rev. Joseph L. Powers, lDiocesan director, announces. .The Fall River meeting' will be Wd at Mount St. Mary Academy ~ith James Kelleher of Taunton 1M speaker. Mrs. Mary Fuller of Buzzards Bay will speak at the meeting lID. Bishop Stang lIigh School, .-orth Dartmouth.' At Bishop Cassidy High, ltcbool, Taimton, the speaker will Edward McDonagh of North ~leboro. , Thomas Flangheddy of :raun­ ....~ will address the meeting, ~t 1Nsb0p Feehan, lIigh SclJ,ooll.

~ostponed

e,e

~Ieboro.

The Cape area meeting, wi~l be ,-d at Holy Trinity, West ffar­ ..-eh, with M:iss, PatrIcia MaIda • apeakcl'. ,

other step forward. The encycli­ cal letter, Popu16rum Progressio (Development of Peoples), in its very title captures the Pope's

celHral concern since it deals precisely with 'the development of peoples and countries. The letter is addressed both

to Catholics' and to all men of

good will. In effect, it is an ap­

peal to the world's community of nations to meet the urgent social, cultural and economic:: problems d the day in the de­ veloping countries. The alterna­ tive, he warned, is th~ "grave

temptatiol)" to violence and

revolution.

Despite some press interpreta­ tions of the text of the lette~, the Pope did not seem to com­ mit himself on the subject 01. birth control or family limitation , any further than' th'e Second Vatican Council's, stand .. ta~en in its Constitution on, the Church in the Modern World. The Pope d~voted a lengthy pa,ragraph to tbe subject of demol~raphy but based it on the coundl's constitution., " The encyclical, the fifth to be, 'issued by the Pope, dOes n~ .. '

'

• • •'

,

'

, TurR to Paie Fourteell

o

'FR. WILLIAM R. JORDAN, To St. I~ouis-Fall River

EDWARD A. OUVEIRA

1'aunton Administrator

Save 7th and 8th Grades Fall, River Pupils to Attend SHA Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, which struction in art, music, and physical education 'earlier this month announced: the, closing' of its 'riOw available to the higher grades.

31 year, ol~ eleme~tary ,schQ()i .has, exp,anded,

, Registration for the new' Junior high depart­

ills high school to: include seventh' and eightb, ment will be held from 3 to 5 and 6 to 8 tomor­ gr;:tdes. row afternoon and evening at the academy on , The academy, notes Sister Jane Raymond, prin­ Prospect Street. Another registration session is cipal, thus follows the pattern 'becoming prev-' scheduled for 3 to 5 Sunday. afternoon, April 2. , alent throughout the co'untry of' considering Present students at' S;lcred Hearts eiementary

grades seven throu:gh 12 on the secondar'y level. s~hool wHl rece,ive preference. 18 .'addition to' present departmental work, The academy"wiU also continue its program 01. ge~enth, and eighth grade' stud~nts at, the high .accepting' students' in grade nine in aecordaneo achool will be able to shIue the i1pecialized in.. llritb Diocesan l·e~ulationa. ." .'"

/


FCllI-:,~:ivjer.'M~odcnolier

". Na:me~i ·1 Guatemala ,Re.gio~'~1 Superio,r " Rev.' John M. Breen,' M.M:, of' Fall Ri.ver has been named. the new regional superior of Mary'7 .knoll missioners working in Guatemala and EI Salvador, Maryknoll's Central American · mission region. Father Breen takes the reins -in an area where. much mis­ sion travel and parish visitation is still carried o~ by horseback · -from Father James P. Curtin, M.M., of San E'rancisco, Calif. · The regional superiorship has a five year term of office and gives: the incumbent the ex officio ',desIgnation of Very Rev. Father 'Breen, 43, was' serving in San'Salvador, the capital, of El Salvador at the time '6£' 'his new appointment. He h-ad.pre­ viously served for 15 years in several parishes in Guatermlla. Retui'ning 'now to Guatem~la'.'he will reside in Guatemala 'City, REV. 30EN M. BREEN from' there he will direct. the work of the 75 Maryknoll priests , and Brothers in the region,

true that the ability to spea~ Spanish in addition to the Indimm

languages is fairly cQII)mOfl: among the men who must deal! with the outside world, it is nca true of all men or of the majoJ'a ity of women and small childrm The . language problem Wal!l originally circumvented bY. training Indian men as cat&> chists. Today there are almost 2000 catechists the majority c« APPOINTMENTS whom volunteer their service!:\, "Over the years," said the formell' Rt. Rev. Emmanuel S. de Mello, Pastor of Our Lady of regional superior, Father CurtiDp Lourdes Church,. Taunton, becomes Pastor Emeritus. "the catechists have become thc& . bulwark of the parishstructuoo Rt. Rev. William H. Harrington, Pastor of Holy 'Name in the rural area." Church,Fall. River, becomes Pastor "Emeritus and co~tinu~s In more recen~ ye~rs ~ev~~a.\l as Supervisor of St. Patrick's Cemetery, Fall River. 'l\'laryknollers tramed In hngUJE=> , tics. have made analyses of some Resignations effective, Monday, April 10, 1967. ..Indian languages, and courseD may eV7n~uallYbe set up· £00> Rt. Rev. Daniel JF~ Shalloo, Pastor of St.Louis Church, othe~ mISSIoners to learn thc1llll, Fall River, to Holy Name Church, Fall River, as pastor. The Impor~ance of t~ese courses 18 emphasI~ed by ling,:,sts amll V~RY Rev. William R. Jordan, Pastor of St. Dominic Church, . anthrop~loglsts .who thll)k t?OO Swansea, to St. Louis Church, Fall River', as pastor. the. IndI:ms WIll be spea~mfi ~ ,\1],' /!, !J" na, "ll.,' • .,'. theIr natIve languages well Into Rev. Jaynes A. MeCarthy, assistant at St. William Church~ ~OfrntileSIl AUIl.(;)WfI'Il(!hle Maryknoll: work III Guate­ the riext century. . mala began In the' Department, Predominantly Indian Fall River, to St. Dominic Church, Swansea, as administrat~r. Attt~ebo6'o ,of. Huehu~tenango . in·No.~th-, .. Since 1959 Maryknoll .. hllilil western Guatemala m '194~: Be­ .' taken on new responllibiliti~Ii,.iln Rev. 'Edward A. Oliveiia,'assistan~a(Our Ll,ldy. of Lourdes , . Sister 'Mary' Eiida: ltS.M. of fore .Maryknoll' :ame;' there Guatemala. They began worko Church, :r,aunton, as administrator of ,t~e ,~ame. Jl,arish. Bishop' Feehan' High' School, were Just thr~e pnests to care . ~ng that year in 'several tOWDti ,Attleboro, was ,named' today as for 3,2 tq~nshiPs and som.~,20,o,- 'in the diocese of, Quezalt'er1.angoc .' Appointments efJiective, Wednesday; :Ap'Ti~ '12, '1967. a!1 alternate winDerin-'an :'Im- 000 mhaoitants--95 per cent of . like the diocese' of 'Huehueien­ pact Teacher" progl'am spon- them Catholic. . . 'ango this area is predomin'a~ily sored by the National Catholic Multiplicity of LaogUages.' ·Indian. Maryknoll has s~'bs~ Educational Association. Forty But more than statistics' bogged , quently taken 'parishes in' Sarita winners and 20 alternates were down' the early efforts.;., ,T'ne Ana, E1 Salvador; Guatemabl designated as a result of a na- people are principally Mayaalld City and San Salvador. .' tionwide- program in which Quiche' Indians and. speak ,six In all these areas Maryk'lollellll teachers in Catholic elementary different languages. While it is . work mainly with poor i1~iterate and secondary schools submitted

people and a principal aim 'of the their ideas on qualities possessed

,missioners' to .~tter their' eco­ by a superior teacher. nomic and educational outJook The winners were announced 11 l'f . at the NCEA convention in AtAPRllL 9 as we as c an ymg their spi.... .itual perspectives. lantic City, attended.. by some ltev.·EdwardF. Dowling,' 1965, 'This is the genesis of the n~ 20,000 educators. _ Pastor, Immaculate Conception, 'merous primary and secondal'J' . May Seminar Fall Rivet. . .schools, the agricultural school 61 . The 40 winners will particiRev,. Cornelius McSweeney, and the alphabetization clasSefJ pate in a seminar the first week 1919; Pastor, Immaculate Con.,. held in most parlshes, of the RIO DE JANEIRO (NC) - The Catholic Church in of May at Georgetown Univer- ception, Fall Rh-er.. credit uni9ns and cooperativee :Brazil is facing a severe crisis in several respects, chief of sity, Washington, D. C..Tliey will -APRIL 10 for marketing lime, coffee, pe&­ prepare a-profile of .an"Impast

J)uts, potatoes and wood ea.... . which 'is a lack of a "mature" faith according to a repc>rt Teacher" and will visit the U. S.Rev.' JohnP. Doyle, 1944, Pas­ iogs.' '" . ,which h~sbeen sub'mitted to the country's hierarchy. Tne . >€ ffice of Education and other tor; St:'William, Fall' Riv,~~~,. Father Breen who'superiiiSeII' .'report'· summarizes the eon­ ". historical. an d ,governmental '.e;' , . APRIL 11 '. i'.'

a' d directs this wide 'snd"val'ieCI · t 't ception ·of the visible sirueture points of interest. R' J h F D e . 4 'apostolate is' the' 'SOD of' th~ lak> elusions reac h e d a a mee ­ of the Church. . ' ,e~'.: .. 0 n . ow.ney, __}...1,. , Mr.' and Mrs. Miehii'el J.' Brees ing early this year of Church' LITURGY: The Word ef God Pastor-, Corpus Christi, Sapdwich.. 'of Fall River. ." ' officials from 13 ·regflOns. It . has not penetrated illt8, a large 'APRIL 1%" will- .best)ldied,t the. plenary section of the People. of God. ' · ' R e v . :JollhTobin,. f909,. .Asststan~ ! session. of the Brazilian 'Bishops I~iturgical refoTInsmayhave ,FRIDAY-,-Easter Friday. I Class. -. 'St. 'Patrick, Fall River. ,.J " . ' .' in 'May. The secretary general ,created a ·new.ritual but it. has , Whi~. Mass 'Proper; Glory; , ;, .: . ·· ... ··'ll" ef the Brazilian Bishops' Con­ ..I1,ot Yet, jnturn,. revivified faith. . Sequence; Creed;- Preface;. ·etc. .,' . "..' .. J'. ,.' ., R' •d ' ~ )' . :ferencehassignedthe.document. ECUM N . of Easter. Tomorro;w .is the HonoraryDe9ree'~ .. . E ISM: Ecumemsm has lirst Saturday of. the mOJ;1th, ., " ' " .. ,. ,:i . . . . . fOR, Y.OUNG WOMEN, " The report declares that in. ,not made iniportant.progress to SATURDAY-F;aster Saturday. I ' WORCESTER' (NC) -F ~h" '. ,.... ..... , view of the crisis,' there Jls every date because<so~called ecumen­ Class. WhI·te. .M·asll' Proo'per", . Richard'j McCarthy $'1' "pjlres~~ ", 196 ~hlpple St.; Fall. RiveII' need for the ,Church to face the ical action has been concerned Glory; Sequence; Creed; Pref­ 'dehtot' tUkIDa ti~i~e:~ity' in .... Con~u~ed ~Y "Frar1ciscdn problems in the light of mod­ ·more with ,.·proselytizlng and· ,. a~e; etc. of Easter.' Baghdad;' received .the' honorary MISSIonaries of Mary ern conditions. Covered are the conversion., " SUNDAY-Low Sunday and OC­ "degree of poctor of Lett~rs from ., IlOOMS ·MEALS C LERG nrincipal p'hases of the Church's . is a certain 'OVERNIGHT HOS""AlITY' /I' Y:' There ·tave Day of . Easter.' I' Class; th e C 0 11"ege 0 f th' e H 0 l' y "C"ross ' . life: clergy; laity, religioll!?, sem­ feeling of insecurity in some White. Mass Proper;, Glory; here Monday. Father Raymond Inquir. 673·7890 inarians and' church ol'ganiza­ .sectors and inadequate 'relations . Creed; 'Preface of Easter.' J. ::;~ords.. S.J., H~ly Cro:,;s presi­ tions. with the bishops, associates and MONDAY-=Annunciation of. the dent, presented the degree to' "Mature faith"' is . lacking the laity. Here' too there is a "Blessed Virgin 'Mary, I"Class. . Fath~r McCarthy, a 1933 gradu-.. among the faithful, the report 'crisis of faith 'and basic theology White.' Mass .Proper; Glory", ate ~ tpe college. , declares and the "crisis of faith" in the fact of the rapid changes . Creed; Preface' of Blessed '. : is linked to everyday problems that are going on ,in the, world. Virgin. Aluminum or ,Steel··' , of life concerning the family, The impact of such cllanges will . TUESDAY-,-St.· Isidore, Bishop, .·944 County Street . " birth, divorce, social justice. become greater in ·the years to Confessor, and ,Doctor of the NEW' BEDFORD, MASS. Also found w:as a deep miscon- come on all the clergy-old and Church. III Class. White. Mass WY 2-6618 young. Proper; Glory; no Creed; pref­ Est. '1897. RELIGIOUS:. The religious ace of Easter. who are so directly concerned WEDNESDAY-St. Vincent Fer­ with the. pastorate, ate experi­ rer, Confessor. III Class. White. 2343 Purchase Str:eet . encing difficulty because of the Mass Proper; Glory; no Creed; Apri: 2-5t. Peter, Dighton. excessive centralization of 9rders Preface of Easter. Madonna Manor, Nor t h New Bedford and congregations I which im­ THURSDAY-Mass of Previous Attleboro 996-5661 pedes them from drawing Sunday. IV Class. White. Mass St. Matthew, Fall River. closer to ·the work of the local Proper; Glory; no Creed; April 4-Sacred Hearts Con­ pastorate. Preface of Easter.. Votive vent, Fall River. LAITY: Many of the laity are Mass in honor of Jesus Christ, Convent of the. Sacred Dairy disillusioned by certain aspects the Eternal High· Priest, . per­ Hearts, Fairhaven. of the institutional 'Church and mitted.. Tomorrow.. is. the' first Mt. St. Mary Convent, ~'SPfCIAL MILK there thus exist tensions between Friday of ~e nwnth .. ]fall .River. From Our, Own April ~Our: Lady I)f the the laity "and the clergy and Immaculate hiet'archy. Tested ' H~rd'/ . '. \ ' . . ~~. ," ; i ,I :' Conception, Fall River., . SEMINARIES:' There is need­ , The new Catholic; Encyclope­ Acushnet, Mass: . 993-41r$57 St. Boniface, New Bed­ ed an immediate reform of semi­ .dia that has been in prepr!llltioD I) Special Milk'" . ford.' Da-ries is' needed -to meet the .biv distinguished scholars for • Homogenized Vito D problem of decr~ase'of'vocations seven years is now· complet~d. The 15 beautifully illustrated and a restructuring of parochial • Buttermilk, : .,' ' Sea St.~eets THE ANCHOR second Class Postage Paid at Fall' River, and diocesan' organizations: to volumes contain. '17;000 articles • T~o'picana 'Orange Juice Mass. Published every ThursdaV at 410 by' 4800 contributors )X;OlP all conform more closely with in­ • Coffee and Choc" Milk; Highland Avenue, . Fall River, Mass.. 02722 TeL, 49-8~ Hya~nis by the catholic press 01 the Diocnse of Fall creasing and rapid changes m over the world. It., treats. every ,II Eggs - Butter River. Subscription price by mal!. PllStpaid phase of the li1e.of,thec;hurch. modern society. $4,00 per year.

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Urges' Study ofCatholi~

Education on All Levels

lHE ANCHORThurs., March 30, 1961

3

Ordinary Backs' Housing Law

ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-,-A detailed and comprehen­ swe study of Catholic education on all levels was called for by Bishop Ernest Primeau of Manchester, N.H., at the annual convention of the National Catholic Educational Association. Bishop Prim­ parental rights in education, the eau urged the NCEA Tues­ fact remains that there are many day to undertake such a places where parents are not re­ study to seek answers to the garded, and do not regard them­

In

To~edo

TOLEDO (NC)""":Suppon" ed by Bishop George J. Reh­

ring of Toledo and other re­

many questions facing Catholic selves, as partners in the educa­ ligious leaders, this city has education today and to "plan for tion of their children.", a new and stronger local ordi­ '8he innovations that our times Lay Administrators nance against discrimination in are demanding." Noting the trend of Catholic the sale and rental of housing. He assured the sOme 20,000 colleges and universities to give The ordinance, proposed by iilelegates at the convention here control to boards of-trustees with the Board of Community Rela­ ilhat such a study would "have a majority of lay members, he tions, received the unanimous @le full support of my fellow said that "this is Ii development vote of the nine councilmen and bishops." to be welcomed; it signals the becomes effective at once. "None of us--educators, bish­ maturity of American Catholic ops and concerned Catholics gen­ higher education." Immediately, opponents an­ erally--can afford an extended "We need more lay adminis­ nounced that an effort will be period of drift and indecision in trators at every level," Bishop made to submit it to a referen­ these matters," he stated. Primeau said, but he added that dum. Also, a taxpayer's suit on "We need a detailed re-exam­ the secularization. of 'Catholic the law's constitutionality is to Illation of all aspects and aD educational institutions is' "a far be filed. problems of Christian formation, different matter." Sale of all real estate is cov­ embracing not simply tlJ,e Cath­ He challenged the "contention ered by the law law, as well as olic school system but our entire that such a step is required of all rentals save for owner-occupied educl:\tional effort: Confraternity institutions because academic TV TRAINEES: Instructional TV has been or is about single or duplex units. .of Christian Doctrine, the .New­ freedom and the pursuit of truth Bishop Rehring's supporting to be established bya number of Oatholic education systems Dlan Apostolate, adult education, ue impossible in a church­ in cities coast to coast and hence training of these nuns in statement said: _d youth programs." related school." Correct Position San Francisco in television techniques is a preliminary step; Poses Questions Maintaining that "what Cath­ t~ey will actually be· administrators, and for that purpose , "According to soundprincipletl Olic edu~ation today needs more of morality there can be only must be familiar with the techniques. NC Photo. ~an anything else. is a philos;.

one correct position to take on ~hy, a rationale for its own,ex­ the question of housing and that istence," Bishop Primeau said

is-all men,'have equal rights in ,lJUch a philosophy can only ASHLAND (NC) - De Padua the matter of living quarters..•• emerge from "the answers to 'High School will graduate 51 "Whatever can and must be /Wme very basic questions." seniors at its 39th annual comdone through legislation to carry C@mmmttee Opposing Nuns T4~aching Among those he posed were: mencement here in Wiscopsin out the mind of God with regard "Why should the Church be '. on June 2-then will close. 'In Public Schools Disbands to the just and humane treat­ ~erating s~hools at all? . .• Bis~op George A. Hammes of ment of our fellowmen not only Does the goal of 'every Catholic Supenor disclosed. that increas­ .BOERNE (NC) - The flaming they need never have organ­ merits but requires our support. ~ild in a Catholic school' reing operation costs, plus prohib­ controversy over nuns teaching ized," she said. main a possible and desirable itively high estimates for reha­ "Insofar as the ordinance that in public schools set ablaze in' At that time" Mother Made­ one today? bilitating the present structure, this area of Texas six months ago leine recalled, she emphasized has been proposed . . . removes "Should we concentrate on one bt'ought ~bout the decision to has now been virtually reduced that Benedictil1E~ Sisters Theckla injustice and discrimination in level of education, or should we shut down the school. and Henrietta Marie, hired to housing on the grounds of race, to ashes. instead seek to provide education Maintenance of the school has teach English and mathematics color, religion or national origin, The principal opposition to the across the boarc! on all levels? been. carried on by .St.. Agnes's in junior and senior high schools it calls for the backing of every­ practice, the Boerne Committee "What are we as Catholic edu- parish. The school with more by the Boerne school district, one who believes in the brother­ ~tors doing-and what are we than 200 students is operated by Ifor Free Public Schools, has been would serve onl;( during a teach­ hood of man under God." disbanded. This action followed going to do-about the millions the Franciscan Sisters of Perpet­ er shortage emergency only Bishop Rehring said God, Of Catholics who are not in Cath- ual Adoration and has an excel- an announcement by Mother until lay teachers could be hired. wants "everyone to have ade­ Glic schools?" lent academic reputation in this Madeleine, O.S.B., superior of Better Relations quate opportunity to acquire and the Benedictine nuns here, that Questions Have Answers area. A small group of area resi­ to have a home in a decent eJl: Bishop . Primeau,' presi~;mt' The bishop held meetings with she will not furnish nuns to dents, spearheaded by members vironment." serve as public school teachers general of the NCEA, said he Parish officials, parents of' stu­ of the Church of Christ and a in the next school year. did' not propose such questi,ons 'dents and the Sisters. They re­ ,Baptist congregation, formed a But a court case born of the ·casually,nor vith the intention ee1ved estaimates that it would committee and' instituted the controversy still is pending in Of spreading further dismay and ooSt $500,000 to construct a new , court action. the Fourth Gourt of Civil Ap­ doubt.", 'school, $400,000 to remodel the Other r,esiderrts rallied to sup­ "On the contrary," be con-present plant. They decided the peals. Mother Madeleine has in­ port of the nuns. The Rev. Wil­ Gnued, "1 believe'firmly that my CoStS were too much for the structed Pat Maloney of San liam'De Wolfe, Unitarian minis­ 411tonio, counsel for the nuns, to. ter and president of the local questions do have answers and parish to assume. that the answers can be found by' Bishop Hammes has suggested proc~d in the case until a deci­ branch of .'the American Civil .-d~nary mortals employing the, ~arging facilities,81ld program sion. is reached. Liberties - Union, backed the CITIES SERVICE ~mary means .of intelligence iJl, the parish elementarY school Teacher Shortage nuns. , DISTR!BUTORS

_d goo,~ will. , " ill ,ooligious instructioJ!., especial­ Mother Madeleine said it was M (, the r Madeleine com­

"I belIeve, too, that, the llJlIro .. ~r C!'tholics attending public "interesting" that .the Boerne mented that thE! unfortunate af­

Gasoline llIWers, when they have heeD ~ and grade schools~ cmnmittee, opposed to nuns fair produced an "outpouring' of

"und, will not spell collapse or ' ' teaching in public school while warm and friendly friendships

Fuel and Range "'aos "for the Catholic - educa­ wearing religious garb, decided toward the Sisters from a major­ Consultors Election

tional system. to disband only ,after she issued ity of the Boerne community." : "Indeed, to engage for a mo­

a public statement that the nuns It led to better relations and un­ i~eaks TlI'adition ~ent in prophecy, I believe that would not be available for the derstanding between various re­ OIL BURNERS SEATTLE (NC) Archbishop CIle Catholic schools that emerge ligious groups, she said. Thomas A; Connolly has broken service in the next school term. from this present time of ques­ For Prompt Delivery "If the members of the com­ tioning will almost certainly be tradition in the Seattle archdio­ r ••••###• • ,#••• « & Day & Night Service better and stronger institutions, cese, paving the way for election mittee had read my Ifirst state­ ment, or believed it, when the of four of the'14-member archdi­ serving their students and the G. E. BOlLIER BURNER UNITS Sisters first began to teach in Church and the nation even ocesan board of consultors. Pre­ SHEET METAL more effectively than they have viously the board was appointed 'the public schools of Boerne, J. TESER, Prop. Rural Bottled Gas Service by the archbishop. done up to the present time." Diocesan priests already have RESIDENTIAL Practical Problems 61 COIHIANNE'IJ' ST. cast ballots in a primary election. Catholics, Disciples Bishop Primeau warned, how­ INDUSTRIAL TAUNTON ever, that Catholic educators The top five pastors and top five Of Chrrist to Meet COMMERCIAL Attleboro - No- Attleboro annot afford to wait until philo­ assistant pastors in the primary INDIANAPOLIS (NC) Ecu­ ~53 Cedar St.. , New Bedford

sophic questions are answered win be named on ballots in an­ menical leaders / of the Catholic

Taunton 99~ ..3222 before coming "to grips with the other election in the post-Easter C h u l' chand the Christian practical 'Problems that already season. The top four vote-getters Churches (Disciples of Christ) win be named by the archbishop _nfront us in abundance." have agreed here to hold a joint One of these, he said, is in the to the board. conference on the unity move­ .eeessity of clearly understand­ ment a~ong Christians. Appomnts Jesuit ing the role of the layman-as No date or place Ifor the meet­ WASHlNGTON (NC)-Father parent, teacher, and administra­ Leo C. Brown, S.J., was named ing Was set, but it will probably .... in Catholic education. take place next Fall. "Though the lay teacher in ..,. secretary of Labor W. Wil­ The Catholic and Disciple at .thoUc schools has made great lard Wirtz as a member of the lIkides toward full acceptance Industry Committees which will leaders, following two days of ao.d professional stature," he !'eC9mmend minimum wage rates informal talks at the Disciples' said, "there remain institutions iloIr employees, newly covered Christian Theological Seminary, decided to meet together "to ex­ where he or she is only grudg­ by the Fair Labor Standards plore the nature of the ecumen­ Am.endments of 1966. The com­ iDgly accepted as a poor substi­ mittees will hold public hearings ical movement in relation to the tute for a religious teacher. 115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. OlAnd though we have all paid in Puerto Rico in relation to fiove fullness of the unity which Christ desires. If auch lip service to the ideal of industries located ther9

CatholDc School

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 30,1967

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[i> O'@CQ)® O'tV 1i@~ ~TI®ITtruCQ)U'O@!J1" ST. PAUL (NC) - A bffi calling for -the taxation ClIf some church, school and hoS?­ pital property currently troi;..

VATICAN CITY (NC)-The first World Communica­ tions' Day, aimed not only at Catholics but- at the public at, large, will be celebrated by the Catholic Church on Sunday, May 7. The worldwide observance of a special day s~t aside to consider the power, use with the professional world han­ and future of the whole dling these instruments calls for range of modern social com­ new moves and motivations." To help organize the observ­ munications springs from a suggestion made by the Second Vatican Council. The initl al im­ plementation of the suggestion has been entrustcd to the Pon­ tifical Commission for Social Communications, headed by , Pennsylvania-born Archbishop l\~artin J. O'Connor. In a document by the commis­ sion, sent to national bishops' conferenccs to 'lssist them to or­ ganize thc observance both on the national and local diocesan Ie "els, three aims of World Com­ munications Day are outlined. The first is to awaken "in so­ ciety a sense of responsibility in 'the face of thc great prospects, as well as the perils, offered by the use" of social commimica­ tions. Secondly, it seeks to rel:all to Christian minds their duties, in accordance with the faith they profess, regarding these means 0:" communications.

Involve Catholics

Lastly, the observance aims at assuring "the Church's efQective support for thc individuals and the instiutions that use these im:tr: '1ents for the spr"ad of truth and charity among men." With these goals in miJ'd, the

document stated that the observ­

ance should scck' to reach "the

public at hll'ge, including non­

Cutholics," and should uppeal particularly "to the profe!)sional world of the press, the motion picture industry, and radio and television." "Catholics 'Ire lagging fur be­ hind in mceting the challenge of the present," the document stLlted, adding that "th'e urgently required co.nstrucl.ive dialogue

The IJ):arish Parade ~

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will spon­ a Scholorol,l on Monday nigh,t at 8 in the Shamrock Room of the Corky Row Club. It will be open to the public. Mrs. Patrick Murphy, presi­ dent and Miss Helen Goff will­ serve as co-chairnlen ~1 the affair.

. SOl'

ST. GEORGE. WESTPORT A whist party will be gpon­ sored by the Women's Guild at 8 Saturday night, April 1 at the school hall on Route 177. Pro­ ceeds will benefit the school fund. UOLY NAME, FALl, RIVER

A rummage sale sponsol'ed by the Women's Guild will be held

in the school from 6 to 8 tomor-:: row evening. This event was

postnoned from an- earlier date due to snow, and donations are still welcome. They may be brought to the school today or tomorrow. Girl Scout Troop 1043 will hold a cake sale. after thc 8:30, 10 and 11:15 I\'Iasses Sunday morning, April 2. Proceed!; will aid a two-day tri:J to New York for the Scouts. ST. JOSEPH. FALL mVER The Women's Guild will spon­ sor a Whist Party tonight at 8 in St. Joseph's School Hall. No. High Street. t1nuer the chairman­ ship of Mr~. John Steele.

exempt has been-introduced inle> the Minnesota House of Repre­ sentatives. The bill proposes an aryJend­ ment to the Minnesota constitu­ tion, to be referred to citizens OD. the 1968 general election ballot. The amendment would retain. ,for houses of worship, schools, hospitals, "institutions of purely public charity, and public prop.. ,erty used exclusively for any public purpose," ,but would strike from the constitution the current exemption for other church property. The effect of the bill would be that church property Rot used for worship, school property nOlI used for education, and hospital property not used for medical purposes, would be subject le> taxation. The bill also pr'ovides that ex­ emptions from taxation provided by the statute "and laws enacted under it shall be narrowly con­ strued by the courts," and that the legislat.ure "may impose .. service tax on exempt property to pay for police and fire protec­ tion for it."

ance the pontifical commission has drawn up a number of sug­ gestions for various activities that could be sponsored by the individual dioceses and 'parishes. Among these is the suggestion that '''inevery diocese the bishop could invite all those engaged_ in the work of the press, radio, television and motion pictures within his territory t~ meet hu · n. " The commission .aloohad sent out a specially prepared "Pray.er of the People" that can be in­ serted in the Mass 4)f Sunday, May 7, and a pamphlet contain­ ing three different types of talks NEW DISPENSARY IN VIETNAM: Dr. Nguyen Phuc on the role of communieations and the relationship the indivi­ Que, minister of refugees in the Vietnamese government, dual has with this field. meets village elders at the new medical dispensary for ref­ The types of talks vary accord­ ing to age groups and are offered , ugees recently opened in Trung Lap, Vietnam. N.C. Photo. only as an aid, which can be adapted for various local needs and particular conditions. One of the highlights con"­ nected with the -observance of De Pau~ UlI1nversity President Sees Need

World Communications' Day will New

be a 'special message broadcast Of Liberal Educ(!1Jtion

TrainiD'tl<;gl Cen'ters

by Pope Paul VI, addressed not only ,to Catholics but to all·men CHICAGO (NC)-A revision' education in the United States _ cmCAGO (NC)-Papal Veti­ of good will.

is becoming more and more spc­ in curriculum, designed to unteers for Latin America has broaden undergraduate liberal sialized and that there is a great closed its training facilities in need ror the true liberally edu­ Mexico City and ~nnounced that arts education in an age of nar­ Comp~aints rowing specialization, was an­ cated individual," Father Cort'Cl­ it will scnd new volunteers to you said. tW4> new training centers in the nounced here by De Paul Uni­ . Four Categories Caribbean and South' America. versity. "We ,concludled after e:x.amin­ SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-The A system of redesigned courses According to Father John :I. South Orange Village-Board of beginning this Fall will be aimed ing our own program that we Considine, M.M.,direetor of the were not turning out educated Latin America Bureau -of the Trustees has authorized .an in­ at helping each student under­ vestigation into romplaints of stand how knowledge is pursued persons--as opposed to 'Cducated U. S. Catholic Conference, which chemists, ·physicists, -or other slum housing conditions 'br~ught in fields other than his own. works closely with PAVLA, vol­ specialists." before the board by .a 'priest. ' The plan, six years in the mak­ unteers would still be permitted He explained that the ·new The charge of ()ilapidated and ing, was disclosed by Father tetrain at Cuernavaca. plan will :have 'four ·broad cate­ deteriorating housing was made John R. Cort.::lyou, C.M., univer­ Father Considine said a small gories--theology-philosophy; the number of the 100 PAVLA J'e­ by Father John J. Krozser of sity president, to the De Paul Our Lady of -Sorrows parish. It h:Jmanities; the· behaviorial, 'so­ board of associates. cmits train there each year. ''The took the board of this New Jer':' cial sciences; and natural science "We are concerned that higher local director is free to make hirJ and' mathematics. ' sey community by surprise. choice," he said, "and he will Each undergraduate will be South Orange has one -of the still be.free under .these changcs" highest per capita incomes of required to take courses in aU an~' village in the U, S. four categories, he said, and the But Father Krozser said that courses are being developed by people living in. aged housing teachers !lO· that the relationship Plans for the fifth annual near the tracks (If the Lacka­ of each- field to the other will be Paint and Wallpaper Diocesan CYO communion sup­ wa!1na-Erie Railroad, just off the shown. Dupont Paint per and the ninth annual Dioce­ business district, have to contend Forty per cent ,of each 'Stu­ san Youth Convention have been w:th no hot water, lack of ,suf­ dent's program will 'Il-oW be -de­ 'IJ cor. Acvsh. MiddleAve. St. announced by Brian Pontolilo, - ,' 422 ficient heating and light and voted to. ,general -education with chemicals st~red in their CYO president. through the 'program, F.ather 'c:.t.., New Bedford The supper, to ,be hosted by baseIDents./ \ Cortelyou. said. "PARKING Attleboro 3l'ea CYO members, He saic he tried to .arrange a Dr. MartinJ. Lowery, De PattI Rear of Store will follow 5 o'clock Mass SUr:J­ meeting with landlords last fall dean, said the progr.am repre­ da~T evening, April 16 in the inan effort to have repairs made sents a sharp break fr-om the tra­ and conditions rorrected,but gymnasium of St. John's School, ditional system of distributive ol)ly one, laoolord show1!d up. Attleboro. It will be served in education in which students 'con_ He said he had asked tel'iants to the school caf~teria and will centrate on .aspeciaUy and ha Ie as speaker Capt. Henry attend the board meeting with barely touch othe,:, subjects. 3 Savings Plans Ackerman, a recently returned him but they were afraid to for Home Financing fear of losing their apartments: Viet Nam Ghaplain, whose sub­ ject will be "Viet Nam Today," Village Trustee, Franklin C. Supper tickets are available Phi'fer was authorized to investi­ gate possible violations 0'£ the from area and parish CYO mod­ ONE STOP erators and should be obtained building code. •

SHOPPING CENTER. by Monday, April 10. CYO Convention • Television • Furniture

Mass for Workers The allIlual convention wiIl be

• Appliances • Grocery '261 Main St.. Wareham, Ma!ll!l. held at Diocesan CYO headquar­ In· Communications ters, 104 Allen St., New Bedford Telephone 295-2400 Cathedral Camp, East Free­ CHICAGO (NC) - A special town, Saturday and Sunday, May . . . . .' ....11 SenIce Ay.n.... 997-9354 Mass for representatives of the 27 and 28. Over 150 delegates communications industry has are expected from parish CYO been scheduled for Sunday in units. They will have as the Old St. Mary's chUl'ch here in theIDe of proceedings "Call to· conjunction with the annual Responsibiilty." Pre-registration convention of the National As­ blanks, said Mr. Pontolilo, will sociation of Broadcasters. be available shortly_from area Bishop John A. Donovan of CYO moderators, Toledo, episcopal chairman of the. National Catholic Office for Radio and 'J;'elevisi~n, will'offer

Award the Mass and preach the sermon.

ROCKVILLE CENTRE' (NC) Bishop Donovan, who has been -Bishop Walter P. Kellenberg auxiliary bishop of Detroit since of Rockville Centre will receive WYman 3-0911 . 699 Renville Aven... 1954, will be installed in 'Toledo the ~967 brotherhood award from on Tuesday, ~pril 18. He will the National Conference of , New Bedford continue to, serve with the na­ Christians and Jews' on Wednes­ \laoi', May 10. ' _tional radio and TV office.

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Michigan Pastor Explains Parish School Boa rd

New Bedford Residents Brighten lJay Of St. Disma,s for 'lail Inmates

ATLANTIC CITY (NC) trend toward parish boards Of education is growing throughout the

B)< Patricia Francis

~Although the

United States, some pastors and! oun-principals would rather fight than switch, a Catholic pastor said here. "The things we aren't up on, . we are usually down on," Father Aloysius F. Lacki'declared as he gave "a pastor's viewpoint on 1Il flehool board" in an address to the 64th annual convention of the National Catholic Educa­ tional Association here. He is pastor of St. Hedwig jp3rish, Bay City, Mich.. where a parish board of education has operated successfully for one ;pear. Father Lacki said that' the 3Chool principal, as a profes­ monal administrator, must take an active and important role within the board: preparing the agenda for meetings, supplying ~ctual data, serving as a pro­ l2essional guide "though never a <mairman of the board." Pastoral Veto Noting that a principal's atti­ tude toward the board and its in­ . dividual members must reflect "confident realism and true un­ derstanding," Father Lacki said an attitude of toleration, em­ ployment of subtle ridicule, or fundifferellce toward the board @Jr members could cause "disas­ fler." "The board will be inv.olved in llt\any decisions calling for on­ the-spot interpretive leadership. It must ... avoid the trap of be­ lOOming stagnant or purely de­ ~nsive.

"There is also on occasion a mistrust of the pastoral veto, re­ gardless of reassurance that its indiscriminate use will never 'li)Ccur. Here, I think, the experi­ ence of working together for a length' of time can resolve the oonflict," Father Lacki stated. Annual Budget The priest said that one of the most imPortant decisions any board can make involves its an­ llilual budget. He offered several recommendations for a sound budgeting and accounting sys­ tem, including: "As I 'consider the unanimous response by the parish commu­ mity to elect a school board, the somewhat joyful experience of sharing the, realization that the various problems are not all . mine to carry, the objective evaluation and calm but firm eriticisms developed at the meetings and the honest concern uor Catholic education, I am be­ eoming more convinced that pas­ tors, Religious and laity are eapable of taking seriously the words of Our Lord-Teed 'My llambs, feed my sheep,'" Father lLacki declared.

CSanadoon Journalist Convention Speaker NEW YORK (NC)-Canadian -journalist Douglas J. Roche will apeak at the keynote luncheon I/)f the 57th annual Catholic Press Association convention, May 17 lin Toronto, Onto The convention also will fea­ wre appearances by Catholic educators and writers, plus rep­ li"esentatives of leading general pubications. The CPA expects an attendance of 500 North Amer­ !lean Catholic newspaper and magazine personnel during the May 16 to 19 convention. "Douglas Roche is one of the ClOntinent's most progressive, dy­ IlWmic editors in practical appli­ cation of Vatican II principles to laewspaper publishing today," .aid James A. Doyle, CPA ROO­ _ ve dir~t~l'.

(HE ANCHOR-

. Thurs., March 30, 19,67

Catholic Schools Safeguard Faith

A «good thief" has brought unexpected pleasures to prisoners at :Bristol County House of Correction since Sheriff Edward - K. Dabrowski took over there in 1964. The thief's name was Dismaa and he died long ago at Oalvary on a cross next to that on which Christ died. Before his death, he asked forgiveness for his crimes. "This day, thoo shalt be with me in. paradise," Chrftst promised: Di-smas - a thief who re­ pented-now is patron saint of prisoners everywhere. Sheriff Dabrowski thought a­ bout St. Dismas for weeks after he assumed his duties at the HOlllSe of Correction. "I thought if we could help these men as­ sociate religion-lmy kind of re­ ligion-with somethipg pleasant, it might help them," he says. That first year the "some­ thing" was a break in normal House of Correction regulations during "St. Dismas Week." Ex­ tra visiting hours, and longer ones, went into effect. Special menus were planned that in­ cluded special treats like ice cream. Fifty cents from canteen profits was deposited in each man's canteen accounb so every man had cash of his own to spend. The atmosphere of tl).e prison brightened. The "St. Dismas" specials have continued e.lch year. This year, for the first time, people outside the walls were asked to help those confined inside on the <feast of S1. Dismas. The staff at the House of Cor­ rection inaugurated and con­ ducted its first annual "Inmates' Clothing Drive," which sought wearable clothing for men be­ ing discharged. The drive, for which New Bedford Jaycees vol­ unteered their services as "col­

lectors," since, a prison official revorted ruefully, "we couldn't releaSe our guards to do the collecting," was conducted from 9 a. m. to 5 p.m. 0111 the feast day. The results, Sheriff Dabrowski said, "were overwhelming." Radio Station WBSM in New Bedford gave considerable cov­ erage to the project. The Stan­ dard-Times ran its own story about the drive. There were a few unpleasant incidents. One woman called the radio station to ask why "decent" people were being asked to help men who had only themselves to blame for being in jail. On the whole, however, char­ ity and, goodwill keynoted the drive. Greater New Bedford resi­ dents scoured their attics and closets to find cO,ats and jackets and slacks, shirts, ties, shoes. They brought them to the jail. Jaycees picked up donations from homes, still others brought contributions to the radio station. All usable wearing apparel will be collected together in 1Il space within the walls to be known as the Country Store. There men who have finished serving their sentences will be able t@ pick up the things they

BELFAST (NC) - Catholic schools are the means of pro­ tecting the faith of the next generation, Bishop William Phil­ bin of Down and Connor told the Catholic Secondary Teachers' association here. Addressing the association's annual conference, ~ishop Phil­ bin said that without the pro­ tection of the Cathoilc schools "we shall be exposed to influ­ ences over which we shall have no control anel which may well be increasingly unsympathetic and hostile to the things we stand for." The bishop said Catholic schools "are an attempt to see the components of education in the perspective in which the Gospels see human life." He add­ ed that "the priority of religious to secular studies" in the Cath­ olic school is an attempt "to put into practice the proportion of value which Our Lord ac­ corded to sceular and spiritua' matters."

,

Protestants Plelln PossaM~ M~rg~r

NEW JACKET FOR NEW LIFE: Sheriff Edward K. Dabrowski is as happy looking as inmate at Bristol County House of Correction must be as he displays jacket donated to Inmates Clothing Drive held on Feast of St. Dismas, the "good thief." need as they step back into the world. "By law," John W. Thompson, education" officer at the House of Correction, explains, "we can only give the men $10 when they are discharged." Some of the inmates, serving six to eight months sentences, were confined during the hot summer months. "They arrived wearing chinos and shirts,'" he says. "They are discharged in the winter and have nothing else to wear." Others are sentenced during

[?@lW~d~tn@1i'il @[j'@Ii'il!f [f@!r

Nohe /Q)@m®

NOTRE DAME (NC)-Notre Dame University's Medieval In­ stitute here has received a Na­ tional Science Foundation grant of $106,800 to support microfilm­

ing of the manuscrip~'and archi­ val collection of the world­ famous Ambrosiana Library in Milan, Italy. The microfilming project, be­ gun in 1960, now includes some 9,000 manuscripts, as well as

5,200 photographs and 2,000 col­ ored slides of the library's illu­

BOSTON (NC)-Priests of the minated manuscripts and draw­ archdiocese of Boston have been ings by 15th, 16th, and 17th cen­ authorized by Richard Cardinal tury artists. .

Cushing to say Mass, preach and

Some of the material is more hear confessions in the adjoining than 1,500 years old, ranging in

dioceses of Worcester and Man­ age from the fourth to the 16th

chester, N. H.. without formal centuries. The library contains

permission. more than 30,000 classical; medi­

Under agreement with Bishop eval, Renaissance and early mod­

Bernard Flanagan of Worcester ern manuscripts of Latin, Greek, and Bishop Ernest Primeau of Italian, Hebrew, French, Span­ Manchester the new regulation ish, Provencal and German ori­

will apply ~ pJrlests from anyone gin. Anbic, Coptic, Syriac, Ar­

ctf fltte three diocese. vUiUDc menian and Persian manuscripts

.~ <Ii tbe MilOa' . . eoDlplete tbe collection.

Authoruze p'riests 1"0 Use facilities

5

the winter and are discharged in the heat of summer. "That's why we will take any kind of clothing, winter or sum­ mer, as long as it is wearable," Mr. Thompson says. The Inmates Clothing Drive struck a responsive chord in the hearts of many Greater, New Bedford residents, who perhaps felt that but for the grace of God, they might be on the other side of the House of Correction wall. It happened on St. Dismas' feast day. It was so successful, the institution Staff now is plan­ ning an annual clothing drive with the hope it will give men who have repented a better chance at a new life.

LONDON (NC)-The "begifJooo ning of the breaking point of the ecumenical log jam" was hailed here in the proposal for a union of the English and Wales Congregational and Presbyterian Churches into the one Reformed Church in 1970. The proposal will be distrib­ uted to the concerned churches in May. If approved, this would be the first major union of two ChFistian churches in England in modern times.

The Congregational Church of England and Wales has some 200,000 members, 2,500 churches and 1,254 ministers. The Pres­ byterian Cht,lrch of England has some 70,000 members, 330 churches and 290 ministers.

Honor Monsignor TOLEDO (NC)-Msgr. MichaeD J. Doyle, director of Catholic Charities in the Toledo diocese, was honored with a gold medal for "unselfish devotion to com­ munity harmony and good will," by Temple B'nai Israel at its centenary convocation here. I

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-:Thurs. Mar. 30! 1967 .:

li/and

".\

in Glove

What About Celibacy?

,:Urges, Eclucatoll

Look to Future, Make Changes DALLAS (NO) - A . . tional Oatholie education aIo ficial ,sa~d here that tod~ schools educate, with an e,e

It is just about impossible to pick up a newspaper or· magazine and not find an article about celibacy and the priesthood. Almost all of these articles call for are-study of the matter, and that is all to the good, for the Church "­ should constantly rethink all that she is and has and does. In that way, reasons stay clear and motives remain pure.

on the future, Dot the preseDfl or the past. Father George :a;. Moreau. O.M.I., said schools should take a Some of the articles wish to see celibacy removed' and hint from induStry in providinc " continuing training and upgradoo , priests allowed to marry. A variety of reasons is brought ing of their personnel. "Creattv- ' to bear in this regard. ' ity in teaching bas not been eD­ couraged,'; he charged. Many times the articles say that the right to marry Father Moreau is consu~ - i:or guidance services with 1hil is a natural right. Quite so. The adult - not a' boy - the ,National Catholic Educational adult who became a priest knew all about this at the time Ass~ci.ation,· Washington, ,D._ of his ordination. Sometimes the article speaks of fulfiil­ He spoke at the 13th ann'" ment' in' marriage. As if fulfillment in any other state meeting of the National Catholie were impossible. . Guidance Con£erence, of whiCh he is ;:l past president. Criticizing lack of incentive ill But the maddening part of most of these articles is some s~hools, the priest said2 that the real reason for celibacy' in the p:desthood is rarely "Some principals are appointed mentioned. It is the ascetic rea'son. not because of wbat they knoW' but, whom they know. Some teachers remain on the staff for The late Cardinal Suhard of Paris probably expressed ­ years because of tenure; not pep., it as well as the concept will ever be e~pressed when he formance: The criteria for ac­ "N,(~ \ said: "To be a witness does not mean to spread propaganda, quiring and retaining the job are >'A~T'" "', or eve!} to create an impression, but to create a mystery. not as stringent as they are in It means living in such a way that one's life would be inex'induStry. ~[?D®~U'~ @lm~ ~o~@gree Open to llnnovation , plicable if God did not. exist." "Worse yet, many t~ache~ , ~®~D@D@[j'j/~ ~@~® $chOC~$ who show promise are nevel'f That is at the heart of the whole idea of priestly celi­ 'given the opportunity to develOJjj ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-The' those of no persu.asion," Father' bacy..A priest is a witness to Jesus Christ. He must role of religion in the public Keating suggestea. their potential C C C Perhaps thilJ preach Christ by his words and by his works, by his life. schools evoked opposing opinions. Rabbi Schecter cautioned that is why so many of' our young , And he must mean' it.. And the fact of his celibacy tells 'from two priests and a rabbi at "the use of prayer in our public people have never realized their and why so many everyone every day that this man, this priest, means so a seminar of the American Asl'!o- schools threatens our religious 'potential teachers drift from one institu­ much what he is saying and living that he makes a daily c~ation 'of School Administrators, freedom in our country and the tion to another." , her~ for their 99th anintegrity of our public school, sacrifice of what all men usually consider precious and meetine Urging educators to be mON nual convention. system," he commented. open to change and innovation, dear-a, wife, children, a family. This man, this priest, , Father Charles J Keating, di'Precious Heritage' is a celibate because he wishes to live for God's family rector of religious educ,ation of "There is no such thing as a Father Moreau predicted that elementary school of 1980 alone. And the fact of his celibacy underscores this com­ the Cam'den diocese, and Father non-denominational prayer or the will be a place that aims to Paul F. McHugh, director of the voluntary prayer in the public mitment in a way that could be no more forcefui. Does he New England Catholic Education school system," he commented "create closer' relationships be- ' mean what he says ?'I'his is the proof. Center, Boston, both felt that He emphasized that "prayer tween teacher and pupil." Among the innovations that "no private school system can without devotion is like a body A priest may be a scholar or not, a good, preacher or alone fill the need for religious ,,:ithout a soul. It has no mean­ will be incorporated into ele­ mentary education, he said, aN education," but each had a dif- ing." quite the contrary, a holy man or far short of that. But· ferent solution to the problem. Rabbi Schecter described the learning laboratories, t e &<til in his celibacy he stands before the world as a man who Rabbi Philip· E. Schecter of separation of church and, state teaching, flexible and imagina­ has made a sacrifice to point up his commitment to God Congregation Beth Israel, Atlan- as having been jealously guarded tive scheduling, Summer· pro-. and the children of God. He has put himself on the line tic City, urged that under no cir- .in America because it has made grams, and evening sessions. Family Counselors for what he professes. He commits himself to a total ab­ 'cumstances should prayer be the nation unique. brought 'back into the public "In the United States, with its ,He also predicted that the ele­ sorption in and commitment to God alone and 'to the' ser­ schools. ' people of many cultures and reli- mentary school staff of the f1!­ vice of the familN of God'. Curriculum !Endeavor gions, living and worshipping in ture will include such personnel

Father McHugh declared that freedom, we consider the sep-, as family counselors and specild­

This is an age that talks much of commitment. It religion could be taught on an aration of church and state, ists in work with "atypical'"

values commitment. The priest has anticipated the age ,experimental basis in schools which has allowed this develop­ children - slow learners and

within the legal framework of ment of' American democratic, those who are gifted. in the commitment he has made. That is what celibacy is. .the present 'nterpretation of the society, ,a very precious, heri- , He urged a fresh look at the It is a commitment to witnessing for Christ in a way Con~titution. tage," he said. traditional parent-teacher con­ , that would be inexplicable if God did not exist. Without ference and said it must become "You should look at religion God, celibacy is foolish; is useless, is madness. Accept the as a curriculum endeavor," he an instrument for establishing "a II II whole 'system of communicatiOD fact of -God, and while it may 'still remain a mystery in advised. "I urgli! administrators tfor greater understanding." the eyes of many, it is a cOmmitment for a reason and the to pilot new programs around the whole area of religion as "Parent conferences cannot be greatest reasons, for God. Viewed, by all residents of their BOSTON (NC)-Priests of the effected iIi the school corridor communit~-," archdiocese of Boston may retire while a dozen or more parents 'The truths that a priest preaches are often ,hard.. , He added that "my experimen­ at age 65 and must retire by are waiting to see the same Those who listen to him want to know if ,he himself be- tal program is based on the fact the time they are 75, Richard teacher for the traditional 60­ lieves in these, if he values them, and to what' a degree. that,there are may common ele­ Cardinal Cushing has announCed second conference," he said. He Th e f ac t 0 f h'IS cel'b h ments 'in all religions'" '" '" the here following approval of a " added that useful conferences I'e­ I ac,y shows t em that he values them- ideals' of justice and lovE'. for series of recommendations sub- quire preparation, creativity and to this extent, believes in them to this degree. Is this not instance." . , mitted to him by the Archdioc- time.

a forceful argument? A proof 'of, his belief? An underFather Keating - stated that , esan .Priests' Senate.

scoring of his commitment to what he preaches? "the objective teaching of .reli­ The new ruling, effective Jan. Plan Sex Education gion in all schoolfl can only be 1, 1968, was voted by the senate a distortion of the very naturp. and ratified by Cardinal Cushing. In Diocesan Schools of religion. It specifies 75 as "the automatic ROCHESTER (NC)-The R0­ age for retirement with no' ex­ Forms Child man Catholic diocese of Roch~ ceptions." "Religion not only imparts in": ter will introduce a program ~ The cardinal also approved sex education in diocesan IdA­ formation, it a~so seeks tr form the child and mold him to a the following recommendations: dergarten and elementm;v particular view of reality," he Establishment of a retirement schools starting next Fall. ­ said. board which would personally Bishop Fulton J. Sheen au­ "The teaching of comparative interview each priest on the tho~ized the program, which has )FFIOAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALl RIVER religion, the presentation of in­ threshold of retirement to de­ been iI. preparation for a yeai'., formation about religion by an termine his future service. The at a meeting 'held recently • "blished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River uncommitted te:lcher, is not what board would also receive reports the chancery. 410 Highland Avenue is traditionr.lly meant by reli­ "from clergy or laity indicating Dr. Gerard T. Guerinot, Fall Rivet', Mass. 02722 675~7151 gious ducation. In such a guise, disability (canonical) on the Rochester obstetrician, wae '/f any religion becomes a curiosity, part of the pastor," would eval­ chairman of a committee CliIl' PUBLISHER

no different from ancient Ronian uate such reports and would rec­ laymen, 'priests and nuns whicti Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD.

mythology." ommend disability retirement to set up the plan, the first of 118 the Ordinary in cases 'when it kind ;n any diocesan school sys-. ''The school cu:-riculum must GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENE~L MANA9ER accept committed teachers of the was deemed necessary. tem in the nation. In addition to. Rt. Rev. Daniel F, Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll various religions and· offer, Release of five priests for the physical aspects of sex, the courses in religion to students of ' Summer study leading to ~' social and spiritual aspects are MANAGING EDITOR

each religious persuasion. Other' Master's degree in ReligioWi also to be included in the three-­ Hugh J; Golder:>

. ' .. phase instruction proaram. courses would be available to Education

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.. Educator Urges

Scholan Pool;· , ·To· Aid City',

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New Pay Scale For Baltimore Lay Teachers

DETROIT (NC)- A "pool fJf scholars" to deal with rommunity problems was proposed here by Father I.

l\IIalcolm Carron, S.J., University of Detroit president. He told a luncheon meeting of the Federal Bar Association that eOlleges and universities should "'ueate and place at the disposal of our urban governments an or­ ganized 'pool of scholars' to as­ !list in the development and lm­ , .; plementation of solutions to com­ munity problems." ' Father Carron said "the struc­ . tures 'of urban governments are I . • presently not equal to the mag­ .. , , nitude of the tasks thrust upon , .them.. Local governments should Dot be expected to work ~r­ 'scles;· "If our universities are, in­ dEed, 'seats of wisdom,' then why 'llhould they keep the wisdom 11 secret?" He said the "pool of scholars" llhould include representatives of "every discipline useful to the oommunity's social progress pro­ PRESENT FOR MAMA: Frank Carballo, 6, presents a tulip plant to his mother, gram" - economists, architects, sociologists and others.. Mrs. Maria Carballo, who just arrived from Cuba, while his father, Frank Carballo, his sis­ Obligation to Respond . tel'S, Rasia, left, and Amapola and his brother Eddie watch the "presentation." They should serve for specific periods and should form inter­ disciplinary teams meeting with government bodies to advise and assist. Father Carron said that he be­ lieved the "community has a right to tap this source, and the By Patricia Francis universities an obligation to u-e-- ' "POnd." Four years ago, a group of young Cuban refugees arrived at St.. Mary's Home in "We are beginning an era in New Bedford. Among them was Eddie Carballo, 14, who had traveled alone from Havana this country, where man is going E to catch up with his technology," to Miami and then with others to Green Airport in Providence. ddie, young as he was, be said. , had corne to the United States with mission: To gain admitta~ce here for his parents,

Holy Family Junior Successful in Freeing H~ Family from Cuban Oppre.ssion

"He is going to catch up in racial justice, in housing, in con­ trol of air and water pollution, in health services, in the whole quality of urban life, and espe­ dally, in education. Poor Attitudes "In none of these areas can, eur POOi' resources be traced to lack of adequate technology. It can be traced to poor attitudes which have prevailed too long." F a ther C arron sa id urba n un i­ versities "once thought of as' 8treetcar campuses for students who couldn't get out of town," , are now "the heart of American education, and in the middle of this 'gathering stonn of social ehange.''' "Tod h lf f th t ay one a 0 e s u­ dents in degree-granting institu­ tions attend urban colleges and IlDiversities," he said. "'Although more money will

TftE ANCHORThurs., March 30, 1961

Mr. and Mrs. Frank C~rballo, his sisters, Rasia and Ama­ pola, and his young brother,

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"If it were not for my grand­ Before Mr. Carballo and the mother' and aunt, my father's three younger children left, "A mother, and. sister, she would bus would come to take them to F k have nothing," Eddie explains. school and' Instead they would ran. "She could not work, because take them to fields to pick to­ . it was a difficult task for a she had requested a visa and so matoes and other crops," Eddie Y9Uni; teen-agel' and it was at she was an enemy of the regime.'" . '~es a heartbreaking one. The Russians,' some 225,000 to sayscToreign" priests and nuns, Eddie, now 18 and a junior at 250,000 of them, Mr. Carballo many of them who had spent Holy Family High School, lived, estimates, '~'many of them tech­ years in Cuba, were deported. ~ the home and began the long nicians and others who get ready The native clergy are allowed process of unraveling the red for. the army," live in special to conduct religious services and tape that was snarled when Cuba communities which Cubans may administer to their flocks "but and the United States broke dip­ lomatic relations. . not enter. there are so few they have to "They get the food and other say six or seven Masses on Sun­ For three years he kept trying things they need. They tell the days to take care of people. to obtain visas through the Swiss Cuban comrades what to do." "The Catholic faith, though ls Embassy that serves as neutral "We tried to send food and stronger than ever. About 80 per­ clearing ground for Cubans wish­ other things to my mother," Ed­ cent af Cubnns are Catholics in ing to leave tllleir native island die says, "but the post office will name, but it is being practiced which Russian - not Cuban only take medicines for Cuba." mare now. When the chips are Communists now dominate, ac­ Mr. Carballo and Eddie con­ down, everybody prays." cording to Mr. and Mrs. Carballo; tinued to write letters asking Food has become scarcer in Last year, his efforts were sanctuary for Mrs. Carballo. the last year, "maybe a little partially successful, His father They wrote to the department rice,"· Mrs. Carballo says, and it and. his sisters and brothers were of State and the Cuban Emer-. ls practically impossible to buy have to be spent in alleviating. !P'an t e·dvisas. ' H'IS mo the I'-a gency Center in Miami, to Im­ cl0 thO109 "because t h ere 'IS none. " ...b an problems, money alone b f th P rt f '1 of ' .migration '11 t be h . . mem er 0 e 0 0 amI y .officials, to the Cath­ The 'Carballos WI no enoug . The urban· .,;, b "11 C . ts d . . , owned five ·t' . 1 ·b·l·t .. " 'C,U a, a ommums an olic Welfare Bureau. "We even houses and "much land" in a . ll'c t " d ' d d 't UDlversl y s specla responsl 1 1 Y lies in training those who will" ,a . as 1'0,. was eme a ml -, wrote to' the Supreme Court and small beach· commurtity about provide leadership to solve those' ,tance to th[s country.

to President Johnson," Mr. Car­ six miles fl'om Havana, Eddie problems," he declared. "She never was a Communist," ~ ballo recalls, sitting in the living explains. . Eddie says. "But that was her room of the small red cottage he "It was all, confiscated." '" ~ame and her name was on a is buying. When Mn;. Carballo left the University to Work., li~,t.". All the time Eddie was at St. ;'Country, she was allowed to W· Ih P C · , Things were getting so desper­ Mary's Home,' and since his bring "just ~~5 pounds of clothes mt._ eace orps ,. ate' in Cuba, Mr. Carballo, a father and sisters and brother and no good. coat or anything." PONCE (NC)-The Catholic maintenance 'engineer for Stan­ rejoined him in. New Bedford, However, none of the Carbal­ University of Puerto Rico has dard Oil 'of New Jersey in Father John Hogan and the New los is complaining. been chosen to be the academic' Havana, finally decided that tfor Bedford Ciltholic Welfare Bu­ Mr. Carballo now is working BUPport for the Arecibo Peace the sake of his children he would reau continuously served as as a machinists helper at the Corps training center, it was an- have to leave his wife behind. guide and friends. to the Cuban Aerovox Corporation. Eddie will Bounced here by Msgr. Theodore For the last year, letters have refugees. The Bureau aided the graduate from Holy Family next McCJrrick, university president. been attempting to- get Mrs. Car­ family in getting a place to stay, year and Rasia will enter New Msgr. McCarrick said "we are ballo's status straightened out work, and in establishing a new Bedford High in September. Am­ happy to support the Peace so that she could rejoin her beginning in this country. apola and Frank both go to the Corps in their training program family in New Bedford: "Always Last week, the efforts paid Hathaway School. for Spanish Latin America, and the answer was 'No.," Mr. Car­ off. Mrs. Carballo arrived in Mrs. Carballo, in the midst are looking forward enthusias­ ballo recalls. Providence to be met by the of housecleaning "A house tically to cooperating with their Mrs. Carballo, estranged from happy tears of her two daughters needs a mother, you know," Ra­ training center in Arecibo." her own family 22 years ago and her son, Frank, now 6. sia says-reports being here is "The Catholic University of when she married her husband, "My father and big brother like "comin~: to heaven." Puerto Rice." Msgr. McCarrick had a difficult time as she wait­ were working," Rasia, 15, ex­ Mr. Carballo, starting a new ~ld, "was a natural choice for ed. plains. "We need the money you life at 47, says quietly he will this partnership because of our "Food is scarce," she says. know. A friend drove us there "never pine to go back." /allny years of training religious "That is why Castro lets so many and everybody cried." A new American family is Jlersonnel and la,. people for people leave, there ia nothine to "It is very bad in Cuba," Mrs. born. It began four years ago at wwk no Latin America.- f e e « tlIiI.em.." Carba!Ioa aays. st. Mary's I:I:ome.

BALTIMORE (NC) A new pay scale for teachers in secondary schools and a revision in the Iqethod of determining salaries for experi­ enced lay teachers in elementary schools was announced here by the Baltimore archdiocesan de­ partment of education. The changes, effective at the beginning oJ; the 1967-68 school year, will mean salary increases for an estimated 450 lay teachers. Salaries of the more than 1,000 nuris teaching in elementary and secondary schools will also be increased from the present $1,000 ~r school year to $1,200. At the high school level, start­ ing salaries will be increased from $4,800 to $5,200 for, lay teachers with a bachelor's degree and a minimum of 18 college credits in a particular teaching' area. A high school teacher who also holds a State of Maryland teacher's certificate will be ofI Ifered $5,400 to start. This marks the first time a distinction has been made between certified and non-certified teachers in de-­ termining salaries. There will be comparable increases in start­ ing salaries offered high school teachers with master's or doc­ toral degrees. Equal City Scale The increases mean that start~ log 'salaries for lay teachers in archdiocesan secondary schools will be equal to those offered by the Baltimore city school system. and salaries of laymen already teaching hi C<jtholic high schools will parallel those of teachers in the city's public secondary schools. 'Although salaries for teachers in the archdiocese's elementary schools will continue to be de­ termined on the scale established last year, a new plan which al­ lows full credit for past teaching experience will go into effect next September.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese o{Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 30. 1967

New Bedfordite ~ocial April· 3

It's" Important for Children To Write Thank You Letters

. \ "Fantasy in Cards"is the novel name of an event planned for . Monday, April 3 at 8:00 P.M. at White's Restaurant in Westport by the Ways and Means Com­ By. Mary. Tinley Daly mittee of the New Bedford Catholic·· Women's Club to " "Dear Mrs. Daly: Do'you think it is necessary for chil­ benefit the . club's treas.uJ'3l~ dren to write thank you letters for presents received from Men and· women are .welcoine ­ relatives? This may seem unimportant but it has become says Mrs. Richard. iI. Parsons, a sor~ spot 'at. oljr house:· Isn't a pers~>nal thank-you general Chairman, heading 8 enough? Chief to-do is be- . . committee numbering 51. Goodness knows that wasn't tween my mother-in-law and Mrs. Parsons and :her co-chai'l'­ ltensored! . man, Mrs. William A. Horan ad­ our only child, a boy of 10. Let children write as they will vises that there will be table His grandmother gave ·him a to their rel~tives;. adults under- . prizes· which are being made by bicycle for· his .birthday and he stand and it makes for a far . Mrs. Casimire Bartkieiwicz. . thanked her nicely. Now" my more endearing camaraderie. ch:·';rm?11 of table prizes. husband thinks Most children dislike letter "A mysterious "goodie bag" Bobby should writing, but as one of the refine­ will be given each guest-as, she also write her a ments of civilization, it is .some­ . INDUCTION AT JF AIRHAVEN: Lorraine Ferro, center, arrives which she may enjoy letter (it is a ra- thing ·to which they shoul<I be president of the Senior Honor Society, Sacred Hearts Ac'ad­ during the evening or take home. ther for mal introduced gradually until it befamily. Because comes as natural} as an oral emy, Fairhaven, receives Rossalind Bosse, right, into the Mrs. Thomas J. Long is Chair­ man of the mysterious attend­ his father in"Thank you." National Honor Society, with the assistance of Laura Ferro ance gift. sisted, Bobby Promptness, brevity and con- l e f t . ' " . ,. A color T.V. set will be award­ started a letter . venience are key directives for ed as grand prize. but when I read· the mother who would train her A style show will be presented it, there were children in the gracious gesture tf"'======~=====~=""""~====~ with Spring and Summer fash­ 80 many misof written thank-yous. ions for ladies featured, Mrs. takes, I told While the toy retains its nov­ Henrique Rogers, Chairman has him to re-write 'it and Bobby elty, when the dress or suit has announced. tore it up. Now everybody is been tried on, this is the time Tickets can be obtained from mad at me. when the giver is most' closely Mrs. Raymond A. Robichaud of "What do. you think? associated with the gift in a So. Dartmouth. Mrs. F. X. o'e." . child's mind. Certainly not at Refreshments will be a BUJ'­ Every time anyone mentions first innovations· in ·this wide This reminds we of a facetious the end of an exciting, exhaust­ prise dessert and coffee.· remark once made by the late . ing birthday party need notes a revolution in men's clothing,open field: more tapering in the

Senator Fred T. Dubois of Idaho: be penned. 'Twould be a- real my thoughts turn back to a. trousers and longer jackets;

Interfaith M.eeting. "Write no letters, dictate no let- chore. But next day,-whim pres­ . pal'ty I attended over 10 years These changes do not seem too LOS ANGELES (NC) - The ters - and destroy all carbon ents ar~being put away, this is ago when I ·was a very naive earthshaking but from what we copies!" . . aurely ·an appropriate time. ~ollege junior..The host of the read of this skyroc:keting new , Los Angeles arc~diocese and the . ·design ·field, this is only the be- CQuncil of Churches in Southem . In the light of present day disAs to brevity, a printed or ,evenirig, a prom:" California will sponsor the third··': ginning, boys. ;. Thank inent doc tor, e}osures in the press, this might .scrawled "Dear .Traditionally in this country Pacific Southwest Faith' and:' be· good, though hardly practical, you" is sufficient, with whatever Ire ted his clothes have .been thought of as Order Confere~ce, April 3-6,· ill. .. advice to political:(igui'es but is else the child may· care, on his guests wearing "8 bright· red woman's, domain. We have put St. Paul's Episcopal cathedral lCarcely. conducive to smooth- own impulse, to add. " dinner jacket, a up with the changing fads, jump- . here. nmning personal relationships. Making lit Easy ing from ankle sweeping skirts Easy Does It! In the realm Of convenience, I ace' trimmed in the· late 40's to the above the Rather than make a cause it is perhaps too much to ask that shirt and black knee chillers of today,.while the eelebre out of the case, every- a child look up pen, pencil, paper patent "leather shoes with bow American male has concerned body-with a little diplomatic envelopes, stamps, before start­ himself more with comfort. handling-might simmer down. ing his task. But if these are trim. To· say I was awed For most males over 30 this For instance, after Bobby has ready, attractive small (this is 8 attitude probably will not be had a particul~rly good time on psychological factor) notepaper, . would be put- changed by any of the new style . his new bike, Mrs. O'C. could lined or unlined, he may at first ting it mildly, as nothing in plain grey flan- trends. What· the designers are suggest he write "a short note to complain but before long be­ GI:imdma and thank her again." comes intrigued with the project. nel background had ever pre- counting on is the youth market, Paper, pen and envelope would If he asks help In spelling,give . "pared me· for a male wearing the young American boy whose t?ste has not become set. Men be lliid out and no hint of cen- it to him; if not, O.K. . such grand plumage. Today, however, a host wear-.· like my. husband, who feel that sorship given. Just, "When you :'At the in·evitable, "Now finish, ride your bike to the mail what'll I say?" inference is that ing such attire would hardly clothing is· simply something box', slip it in and Grandma will at least he has said "thank you" cause a ripple of comment among with which to cover themselves be so glad to get it in the JIlorn- and the response might be, "Just even the most provincial circles .. are sure to cling to their conser~ ing." say love and sign your name, as the' clothes-conscious male vative ways. For such men,· even getting Grandma will be glad to get _unless you want to say some'-· comes into "his own. Perhaps it was the Beatles, them to buy necessities is an ac­ that note, now matter how short, thing about school or the prize maybe it was Carnaby Street, or complishment for their wives, so no matter how many words are you 'won . . ." misspelled, no matter how Show him how to address the even just this age of affluence there is little hope that they will smudgy the paper. Those are the envelope, most children like· that has caused the rising tide of be in the least bit fashionable. notes grandmas cherish-have a that, or do it for him. But, by all interest in men's wear. But This is a bit difficult for the whole box of them ourselves. means, let him lick the stamp" whatever the cause, the effect woman ,;rho loves clothes to un­ Incidentally, gQing through an and drop his creation· into the has. been more startling than derstand, but a fact of life that old truck, I found one written by mailbox.

. - anything seen in the male"ward- she will have to accept. l'obe line since the late 1800's. One last. word on the subject: myself as 8 ·child to an aunt . "Will I get a letter back?'" . going abroad: "Hope you lililve All too often, I'm ~fraid, we of· Color. is what" seems to be the the. male. fashion market' is lood time in Y Q)1rUp. Mama the older generation neglect this " most startling change, more color booming so ·greatly that one of·· lays she wishes spe could· go 10 "letter ~ack"· busineSljl, steep~ ill .' and ·wilder shades, iIi everything the· country's .leading women's· :Your Up; Love, Mary Louise.;' the sophistication that "thank" from sports· jackets to Bermuda fashion magazines is" going to· you for a thank you" is liuper-­ shorts.· California taste·has sud-· publish a. monthly male issue· fluous... : .. . .... . denly spread cross country and beginning in April. . Hillel Foundation Moreover, we sometimes take the pink shirt that .once was the .only color allowed with the grey School Ch,ildren Help 8 child's gift-at least this grand':' At Georgetown flannel suit has paled by com­ inother Qoes-with only an oral WASHINGTON (NC)-Jewish Combat Vandalism parison with today's modes. "Thank you." , Itudents . at Jesuit-run George­ The wondrous miracle fabrics . BOSTON (NC) - Hundreds of We're never too old, never too lown· University here met to or­ such as Dacron and OrIon are re­ Catholic school children in this ganize a chapter of the Hillel . young, for the gracious "note. sponsible for 'designers' freedom area are cooperating with the It's a two-way street. , roundation, the national organ­ from worry when using even the Massachusetts Bay' Transporta­ ization for" Jewish collegians. most ~tartling shades, for they . tion Authority in an effort to Georgetown is reportedly the Cathoi ic-SponsoreQ know that the goods will wash as halt vandalism on the metropoli-. lecond Catholic institution to well as they wear. Certainly a tan transit system. give support to a Jewish student Housing Gets loan selling enticement for the :Msgr. Albert· W. Lowe, arch­ organization. The other is Jesuit­ woman who has the job of keep­ MIAMI (NC)-The U. S. De­ diocesan superintendent of run Boston College. Hillel Foun­ partment of Housing and Urban ing these new lighter colors ilation has 270 chaptets at U. S. Development has approved a looking fresh and clean, is the schools, and Msgr. John P. Car­ roll, archdiocesan Catholic Youth colleges and universities. fact of their ease..,of care. $1.88" million loan for the con­ Organization director, have in­ A pair of slacks may look augurated an "educational cam­ struction of an apartment devel­ wonderful on the head of the paign designed to eliminate

opment for senior citizens spon­ . Hospital Addition house in the salesroom but these $156,000 yearly damage to trains sored by the Miami diocese. LAKE CHARLES (NC) - A The development,. St. Elizabeth same smartly tailored pants may and transit property. The Cath­ ~5,000,000 addition to 60-JTear­ cause ironing day blues as they Gardens "near Pompano Beach old St. Patrick's Hospital here will provide 152 apartments fo; refuse to part with their olic program bolsters .one al­ ready un.derway in public in Louisiana' was dedicated by persons 62 and older at rentals wrinkles. schools. Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of starting at $77 a month: . . Designs for Men School authorities have issued Lafayette.· The hospital is con-_ Almost 600 applications ·have Such well known women's leaflets about dangers and penal­ ducted by the Sisters of Charity been made for the apartments wear designers as John Weitz, tf the Incarnate Word, who this and the diocese is planning tw~ Pierre Cardin, and Hardy Amies ties of destructive acts, which are being distributed in the 54 year are observing the centen­ more similar. developments. St. are leaving the female behind nial of their arrival in the . Elizabeth Gardens is due to open and concentrating on what they high schools and 118 elementary schools in the Boston archdiUnited States. in the FalL· " . . . • feel is untried territory.· Their

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Pesticides One Exa~mple Of,How Man"Alters Nature

THE ANCHORThurs., March 30, 1967

9

Plan Girls Tow~ In Nebf'lOska

By Joe and Marilyn Roderick The controversy over whether or not to spray haa lost lIOme of its steam and fewer and fewer articles now ap­ pear in the shelter magazines concerning its pros and cons. However, I am. constantly meeting people, most of them lion-gardeners, who look at soften my hard heart and I'm oft 'me aghast when I suggest· on a party planning spree again. Over the past eight years, that that they might control the pests in their gardens by is, ever· since we've been cel­

OMAHA (NC)-In the same spirit which prompted the late Father Edward Flanagan to build! Boys Town, the Sisters of th.<t Good Shepherd have revealed m program which will lead to the building of a Girls Town on the Elkhorn River, near here. Girls Town will be a home fOf girls of every race and creed without distinction. Mother Mary William, R.G.S.. superior of the Home of the Good Shepherd here, said at l'J news conference that a 215-acre tract of land was purchased two years ago at a cost of $160,000. Transition from the present site-in the city of Omaha-"wiU -hopefully be completed in three years," she said. Target date for the opening ~ Girls Town is the spring of 1970. Mother Mary William said.

ebrating children's birthdays in our house, I've tried to make the cake itself an Individual thing. ~n.t~mplate. In fad, I think the thing I most I suppose visions of the bal­ litnce of nature being upset come enjoy about these annual cel­ l))efore them and they anticipate ebrations)s the planning and preparing ·of the <:ake. (be final elimination of all ani­ Meryl's first cake was Dutch mal life from the face of the earth if we persist in our present chocolate, a three-layer confec-' tion piled high with lush rich course. All this is absurd. There is no filling, not awfully appropriate QlJuestion that the uncontrolled for a one year older, but the tllse of poisonous sprays may do baking of it appealed to me and lllrreparable harm, but this can I heal'd no words of complaint alIso be snid for the misuse of from my toddler as she dug in l}enicillin or sleeping tablets or with glee. Assemblies Consider As the children have grown i1luoride or anything else which older,' the cakes have become a Reform Proposals l'l3 mount to make man's life on bit more complicated. Now they ~rth more healthful and com­ ST. LOUIS (NC) - Djstri~ have to look like something, a rortable. deanery assemblies in the St­ bunny, a boat, or even a merry­ Upset Banance Louis archdiocese have consid­ Man's history has been the go-round complete with animal ered proposals for an archdi­ cracker horses. slow painful process of attempt­ ocesan board of lay consultom Lost In Decorations ling to control his physical en­ and other forms of increased lall This year Melissa had seen a vironmcl)t to do just this; to responsibility. make the earth a better place on pictore of a castle <:ake that she Delegates to the 12 district kept talking about, so I decided which to live. assemblies will vote and com­ tQ sUl'prise her with it. It really Very' few people object to , " BREAU FOR ALL: Marie Louise carries her bread ment on the parish recommenda­ fteU'ainycin because it upsets the was quite n production and 'when . as though it were precious. To thell1il1ions' of souls in the tions. which include greater re­ lltalailce of nature, although it· t finished constructing it I felt world whose diet.is inadequate, bread, is inde~ precious. sponsibility for assistant pastofll" more like a builder than a baker. <toes kill the bacteri~ which nat­ administrators for each par­ Better distribution-in reality, sharing in ]ove-of. food lay The only think I dislike about ..rally inhabit the human body. ish and establishment of lar' of the earth is one of the Holy Father's recommendations finance and advisory boards. N a one lIeems to object to . these ornamental cakes is that »aint, although it limits the the cake itself sort of gets lost in his latest encyclical. NC Photo. These would free the priestll , Ilabitat tJl the termite. Again. in the decorations. from a number of responsibiU­ Even though I do enjoy deco­ ther-e is ve17 little opposition to ties and allow them "to perfona i'ating a cake, I don't think I the sanitlU7' elimination of re­ their spiritual functions more ..se, although it does eliminate would have. the patience and fully," one proposal noted. a major seuree of food for squil'­ finesse really to excel in the artistic work of eake decorating !leIs, birda and rats. Says Schools Comply

taught in many adult educatiOB Protestant Organizations in New York City All these things upset the bal­ _ce of aature; but they are so programs. Many women do enjoy With Civil Rights

favor Cooperation in Welfare Activities iIOmmonplace that we accept these courses immensely and the BATON ROUGE (Ne) - The results of their labors are quite them readily. Man's every action bishop of Baton Rouge said tt. professional. i;I in a sense a selfish one meant NEW YORK (NC)-Tbis city's Agencies, the New York Cft7 diocesan school system is now­ I confess, however, to reading leading Protestant organizations Mission Board, the Queens Fed­ ~ promote his well-being. Think, and fully expects to remain-ill .. the harm done by automobiles every article I come across on have revealed a plan to invite eration of Churches and Metro­ really creative food decorating, cooperation in social welfare ac­ . politan Urban Service Training, compliance with the Civil Rights IIInd factories and mass excava­ taon of land for buildings and for I believe that food should tivities by Catholic agencies. an interfaith organization Act and the guidelines of the U. S. Department of Health, Edu­ formed three years ago to pre­ ,-ou begin to' see the extent of look as good lilS i.t tastes and And two, 'the influential Prot­ realizing that this is not one of estant Council of the City of pare ministers for inner-city cation and Welfare. tile havoc we play with nature. Bishop Robert E. Tracy com­ my strong points, I'm always New Y()rk and the Queens Fed­ ministries. Tul: of War, mented on reports that the Baton Sees Approval What harm, then, really comes looking for professional advice. eration of Churches, also an­ The experts seem to agree nounced that they will drop the Together, they would form an Rouge Catholic schools, althouah from the correct use of pesti-. ddes? I think very little. Judge that a decent job of decorating "Protestant" and invite Catholic Association for Christian Mission at present in compliance with the can be done with a minimum of and Orthodox membership into a in Nev: York 'City which would Civil Rights Act, might soon be trom the fact that the life ex­ coordinate social welfare work declared no longer in compli­ pectancy of pesticides is very equipment-lazy susan can sub­ new unified organization. Ibort. Where is DDT today! it stitute for a turntable to hold The proposals, drafted by II of the sponsoring agencies and ance, with the result that chil­ .. pretty much relegated to the your cake whtJe you're embel­ TO-member interdenominational any other group which wished ·to dren enrolled in the schoola lishing it, paper cones can committee have been announced join. would be judged ineligible fOIl: history books. be used in place of a pastry bag, by Rt. Rev. J. Stuart Wetmore, Federal assistance. While the plan must be ap­ At first it was extremely effec­ and a small assortment of metal Suffragen Bishop of the Epis­ "This is 'news' indeed," ttWl ave and then the insects it de­ proved by each of the agencies. Bishop Wetmore said he had "DO Louisiana prelate said 01. the lItroyed so successfully became pastry tUbes, especially the plain copal Diocese of New York. !'eSBOn to doubt" approvaL bmune and its eUectiveness and star ones, are really all that Iitory. Future Matter

is needed to set' you up in busi­ 'lFanished. So too with other won­ ness as a Picasso of the cake Father ·William J. Tobin, one

!ler pesticides. of 10 Catholic observers at the The balance of nature is not department. This recipe produced the fluf­ meeting, .said that he was "ex­ II delicate affair which tips this tremely pleased" by the pro-­ way and that with each pressure. fiest white frosting imaginable and was given to me' by my. posals .for unified social welfare II; is more like a tug of war with work. But, he said, full mem­ Illllan (,Il one end of a rope pulling mother-in-law, Mrs. Joseph Rod­ bership in the newly named with all his might to survive, to erick of St: Anthony of Padua Council of Churches of New make his life more healthful and· parish, Fall River. Perfect for birthday cakes. York is "a matter for t.he future." ~ protect the little ground which !lie has managed to control. FLUFFY FROSTING The Protestant Council has In the Kitchen clashed sharply with Catholic % cup shortening 8 •• spokesmen in the past and most Fehruary, March and April. lh cup milk recently criticized the state'll Ibring a rash of birthdays in our lh cup sugar TIfft brfHItl modem Amern Catholic Bishops for their oppo­ family and it seems that I'm 2 tablespoons flour sition to abortion reform laws ifill slways preparing for a party or . 1 teaspoon vanilla tile state legislature. eieaning up after one. Every pinch salt The organizations involved are f'ear I try to wheedle my way 1) Using an electric mixer the Protestant Council, the Fed­ out of all these children's fes­ blend together, well, the shorten­ tivities, but the disappointed ing :lind the sugar minus twc eration of. Protestant Welfare llooks on DlJ:' daughters' faces tablespoons. Beat for 4 minutes. 2) Make a paste using the flour, the remaining two table­ Marriage Cases spoons of sugar and a little milk. VATICAN CITY (NC) - One Stir this into the lh cup of milk (0., in a saucepan and cook slowly, llwndred and twenty-nine mar­ Reg. Master Plumber 2930 !Ii ages were annulled by the stirring constantly until the mix­ Sacred Roma Rota in Rome dur­ ture thickens. Set aside to cool. GEORGE M. MONTLE 3) When cool, blend the liquid aog its 1965-66 judicial year. The Over 35 Years

ltOurt upheld the validity of 72 into the creamed shortening and of Satisfied Service

m.arriages. About 40% oil the sugar an" beat 4 more minutes. 806 NO. MAIN STRUt

.'C-¥\I.Oooor.l'tIoo_oI 0_"'--'._.. t:Ndo" Rota's cases were handled !lre@ While beating this time, add the !Fan River 675-749'1

.. at reduce!i charges. w&1iUa and pinch of salt IIPraying. D Js as if I am sug­ gesting .something too horrible to

Catholic Ties

··Those on the go

g0 Sunbeam for

Montie Plumbing &

Heating Inc.


10

.Urges University

THE / ANCHOR'­

Thurs., March 30, '1967

Give Instruction

hll Catholicism

S'oard Approves Closing School ,For Negroes

CLEVELAND (NG) ­ A priest has recommend~ that Western ;Reserve U" versity, a private institutioJu

ATLANTA (NO)-Drexel (Q'atholic High School,. which has 156 Negro pupilH, ',will be closed in June because of

here, begin regular mstructioJl!! in Catholicism. ' , Father. Eugene C, Best, dire&­ tor of the Newman Apostolatlli for the Cleveland diocese, in the first of a lecture series on mQti.:. ern theology at the universit~ said: "Looking through the c~ alog one could not know that·ao;.; man Catholicism or any otheR form of Catholicism ever e»o isted." The catalog' talks abo ~ Christianity. There are' coursetil in .Judaism and Hinduism andi contemporary Protestant think­ erS. But Catholicism is quietly' ignored," he added. ': Scholarly Teaching

low

enrollment and: financial difficulties. . · The decision to close the six­ year':'old school was 'announced by Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan in letters to parents of children

. attending thc Georgia" school.

The closing of the school was ap­

proved by· the archdiocesan

board of education upon ):'ecom­

mendation of Father' Daniel J.

O'Connor, archdiocesan secre­

tary for C<~tholic education. The school was founded by a $350,000 grant from the l~askob Foundation to provide a Catholic\. high school education for Negro children. "Since segregated ad­ mittance policies have been en­ tirely eliminated in the :;chools of the 'archdioceSe, the original purpose of Drexel is, therefore, no longer relevant," Archbishop Hallinan stated. ,Gives Guidelines "Our first coneenl," the arch~'

:~~~~I?~~:~~~~I~~;~us:n~~l}~dtJ~e/:~~. schoo~. He said :t.h'e·frllo:\v'ing guidelines will be obsei·vll(J:.:·'· <:W,

WORLD DAY OF PRAYER FOR VOCATIONS: Pope Paul VI, announcing April 9' as World Day of Prayer for Vocations, asks parents and pastors whether they are watchful for signs of a religious vocation among those entrusted to their care. Here the shepherd talks with some of .his worldwide flock, forwhose future he is always concerned. NO

RO.;I-les Ch h P f' V ­ .' urc fro rayers' or ocatlons .

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He said Catholics at the_ um­ versity should be able to leaJ1li' about other religions and al8C:l about their own, and that non­ Catholics should have the oppcw­ tunity to learn about the mealP jng of Vatican Council II. "The objective, s c hoI a r JIll' teaching of religion can be done without, proselytizing" And such teaching alone will allow ecu­ menism to become a reali ty iIIil' the religious life of.the majority of Western Reserve students III Father Best said. •

· Students . no~ .~iu·plll~cl~ Drexel will be absorbedilito:th~: : \~ATicAN' Crr.Y'(NC)-:"'Pope' . Vocations are the hope of the network of professional pl'opa­ stucIe);t populations'at:St: ;J';~iC'ph;" . J:>?UIY~ has~i!?sued: af,erve 1"lt ~~~' Church, 'the Holy FatheI1 Said.' gandists.". The' Church sends ll!gh'School ;i1d St~ ri~s'Jfiijl~b,>. ho~ta!io,n).~,..Ut~e t:r:tire:, ~ru.r(jh~~. " ''':rhe' Ctrur~h, such as ' Cjlrist forth v!,>lunteers, liesa~d, '~'men ..' or I no ,to' tte nell School. ,.'.. ,,, i .. '/~;:"~ ,t9 ...ol;)sel:ve, S~nday, 'April 9,.-a~ .. wanted it to be; . does'not live Who are :free,". and men ".who ,CHl'CA~O (NC)~, Boston'.i· All s.tti~enfs·i~'·~the ·lll'e~q.nt-.. World Da~ of PraYer' !for voc'a- ,'w,itliounr1iilis'ters," he remiilded. surely are not paid' for what' is Richard Cardinal' GUSning, bQ8.. 'lIth :g·radew.m kie;:gua~ant\~:ed .'tio~s::' '.' .. . ., . :"'- .. '~Evangclizati;m' requires them; requ.ired·by their work in terms' . J)~ti.fied'.the Norlh,Americwn 'admithince, .to·· a,'Cath6}f(: ·,l{fik';":.liJ. a letter ~o th.e fllithul, tl}e ~he Gospel' will be spl·ead· ~n l?f lab,or, risk and mel'it." , '~ederati6n of, ~he Third Qr(ler: .cllooi-:n~:"'t;'),ea'r;..:":·".·.· : :' "~'><,<'Porl,tiff ·s3.id: "We' as~ \!ll; ~Yos,., proporti~n to the number,act~:v- . : .. Spea)is' to Youth . Of St ;F.r'ancis heaqqUarters :heFe. 'E,'ci'y ·(!ffort· ,\vHi l~lade' :tQ:,'a:W ~t. y,ou m.ep.bel~·'ot the::holy' 'ity arid sanctity: of tile 'n'iinisters;" :'·.The ··0ill.ir~h :.~erid~ ·~"orth, '101-' ~na.t he P,Ia':!s ,~o, a~end' the"1~ , acc.epta'nY· stu'qe'I~t' ~O'w' iri"1n~~ :·:;~~,\ll~¢h. of: G9d,. ·to :~~tc~J)'le 6~.t: ~. called' and" 'consecrated' to the,· 19w.crs' of .€ h rlst "Who ·gl ve theh'. ~ui!,g'uennial congress in' Pha;.;: . 5th 'and jOth '·gd\des'~hQ'Wisi1e:iF~·::j!lYH!lJion.aJ:ld,t~· ~o ~t le,a'st one. ,most si.t/llime;themost indispen-all ~o: lihii,'; he:c-o~tlnlled'. '7he': ~Mlp)jia 'from June' 22 ,to Xi,' I .to colitiillJ.e his or hel'educatiO'~;,Ytl,lirig: ,'do'What' ·Chl:Hl~'Hifl!'se~f.. ~sable'seryicc~that,of.salvati'l:m."· Chu'rch ·sendsfor.tIlYourig ~en' . 'l,:h¢ cardi,nali/l·.episcopaladvis.' )n .a' Catho~ic b,igh $~hoo( .:-;. ,~:·".~O!l'irn;aila~d~'.~!,ril~ ~ !'~ ~~e·I;:.o~d "" Pope p~ur sa!d "1;hc:!-"Qhurc h filled with 'ardent ·.!fer'vor and of the f~de~ation. ' . ,-' . . ", .' ..~. '.,' .. '.. ,.' /~~tl.\C~·h-'l.ry.~S~t.4at.H~ s~n.4.for,th :. dQ~~ not ~Gnd' forth paid mercen- . imagination, .. wh'o' have' had ;:~n'

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org?nize t: thIS move not as. a &Ingle;";whilethcn~ "are' sfiU",voeatiOi'ls in: . ' . . ., ".' divine lo've."· . . ' .: . .. stc:~, b'ut'r~ther as"thC,: fi~';i(jiN;ii;:::.:·th~: Churc~:ill,: q4(;ce'r\.1;\l~,Y:. his.' "But wh~re are 'tti~sechoseh Benes 'of· steps that· .",iIl ·eveti~u-:r·:heatt..still,,~ ~s'!1ot :free' from'. " . '... '" " .... ones?" . the 'Hoiy Father asked. ~~Iy enlarge imd" stl'~)lgtlH~::,.O~f.,:;~n~iety., '''f~e~e >re, tob~'lTIa~y: "Where are the 'ones who a'l'e' l!lgh school progIam, . Archblsh,..,' .",:empty . places ,m', the frall;1cyvork: called? Which are 'they and li'ow' ," . . . . . Clp HaHil1ClIl'told thc·pal·cnts.'.:·•. ;··o.f:the'·:services iharthe,..Ci1tirch~ .: ATLf'-NTA (~C):-Two schools many are they?"" . . . WYman · "As I the .fin~l~ial cO;1CiWoh6i:·has nee'd 'of;'?,Kcobselved;' .' , ... : 1I1. the, .. arChtdi~eese' of Atlanta Speaking "t.o youths, :l~ong 3-6592 d rop 'I ,.,' ' t · · ." .' . , '. . , , .' WI 1I heIr, ·seventh and th c. arc l\llOc.ese pernoU,S'; e.yer y : ' . Discover Signs' ._. . 'ghth '.. d t th d' f th all the rest," Pope Pali! said'. el gl a es a ff ·t; ,'11 J ..,.., ' . .." ... ,". . e en 0 e e 01 Vd .?c m~(~cto .I)I~vld~a., 'The Pope said. he :wisheg 'to' present school"year. i , "Do you know 'that Christ CHARLES F. VARGAS good, sound re1Jglou~ educa,~lon: reach the dcior.way~ of Christian, '. The decision involves St. Joneeds you? ,Do you know that 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE for an of our Catholic youth..... families: and ask: ."Do yoU' have' seph's, in Athens and Sacred His call is for the strong;· that it ~.The enrollment of Drexel,de-· any vocati'ons among your. chil-' Heart in Griffin.· Both requests is, for those who rebel against • NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Signed .for 300. student::, ,has dren?'" . " were approved by the archdiocmediocrity and the cowardice of , -fJ never nsen above 156. "Th~reHe said he wished. he could esan board of education and it comfortable and insignificant does not. appear to he ailY fac-' ask every pastor, every spiritual'. Archbishop Hallinan. life; that it is for those who tor that· ~ill cause. the '~!1rcill-. teacher' if they: ~'are w'atchful to ,In both parishes, the public maintain an understanding ~f ment to l'lse appreCIably within discove'r ·the, sIgns· of a divine high schools· begin their prothe Gospel and feel the duty to ~.e. next :few years,". the arch:-' calling among the. persons' en':'. grams, at the junior high school regenerate the ecclesiastical IHe bIshop saId.' . trusted, to yo'ur: care?'" level, aild, therefore, many par- with their own personal contri­ "Because the student body is Noting that the word "voca­ ents in both parishes have re- bution 'and by bearing' the so ·small the faculty is .conse·tion" actually applies to all hu­ moved their' children .from the cross?" quently small and the curricu· manity "called to Christian sal­ ~atholic elementary school after lum is less comprehellsiv(~ than vation," he said' It acquires its the six'th grade: . • Both elementarY schools de­ the curriculum of ~ modern hig1.­ full significance in the "doubly BEFORE YOU school." . special vocation," wherc one eided that they could make bet­ BUY -TRY gives his "life "to the 'one' and t~r use of their personneUf they. highest lov~, to :the lqv.e.of GO!;!." restricted the' enrollment to Dioceses Equalizes He said the Church carmot be kindergarten through grade' six. indifferent or negl,igent where ., Mass Stipends . the matter of vocations is con­ Providence Diocese PEORIA (NC) - Bishop John cerned, and recalied the admoni­ OLDSMOBilE B. Franz approved a recommen­ Oldsm~bile-Peugot-Renault tion of the Second Vatican Coun­ Host to Cardinal dation by the Peoria diocese's' cil to bishops in this' respect. 67 Middle Street. Fairhaven PROVIDENCE (NC) - Gio­ priests' senate fixing stipends ,for . Church's Hope vanni Cardinal Colombo of, }<lW Masses at $5, the same as for "Each vocation toward God's Milan will come here as a guest a high Mass. worship and toward service of of the Providence diocese to take To allow a reasonable length the Church deserves the most part in an "Italian Festival" to of time for amending wilm, the lively attention on the part of be held during the months' of $5 norm will apply to bequests those who cultivate or who only after .July 1 of this year. watch over, the garden of souls," . April and May. He will, be in Rt. : 6-Between Fall Riv"er and New Bedford Providence during the early part

The cli;:ective also stipulated that he declal'ed. of May.

One of the Finest Facilities in Southern New England all low Mass stipends already A member of the pontifical Cln hand and accepted for a $2 Available for: for the revision of

stipend must be honoi"ed. Ratify Constitution commission the Code of Canon Law, Cardinal

BANQUETS • TESTIMONIALS The. change' primarily is in­ SAN FRANCISCO (NC) ­ Colombo also se'l'ves on the Con­

tended to augment the income of Priests of the archdiocese of San FASHION SHOWS.' and SPEciAL PARTIES gregation - for the Discipline of

pastors in smaller parishes Francisco have ratified provi­ the Sacraments and the Congre­ FOR COMPLETE INFORMATION CONTACT: where lack of an organist makes sions of the newly formed gation of "Seminaries and' Uni­ 999-6984 ·or 636-2744 the singing of high Masses im­ priests' senate by an overwhelm­ versities. He has served as ·per­ possible. ing majority. sonal theologian to Pope Paul VI,. ~p.on

Atlanta' Schools To Dro'p Grades

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Brother Pred icts Catholic Schoo'is Cost' to Rise

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Mol'. 30, 1967

'St. Louis Board Scores Educator

ST. LOUIS (NO) - The St. Louis archdiocesan school board bas sent a letter to all priests here disputing the conclusions of Dr. James M.. Lee about Cath­ olic elementary education. Dr. Lee, head of the depart­ ment of education at the Univer­ sity of Notre' Dame, said that Catholic elementary schools are generally mismanaged, .u n d e r elerical control, and have little effect on the c)lildren attending

WASHINGTON (NO) The average Catholic has yet 1;0 :realize fully the broader and Inore expensive aspects of Catholic education in the future. The observation was made by Brother Patrick Ellis, F.S.C., di-' rector of the honors program lor advanced students at La Salle College, Philadelphia, who em,:, phasized that "quality must be the keynote, of·. ,Catholic ed.uca­ tion in the future." "Catholics must· realize that their schools are involved .in a · professional apostolate, not a ·.mere extension of the padsh ,program," Brother Patrick told t)le annual Communion break­ fast of the Men of St. John's here. "Generosity is always present but it won't last forever," he continued. "The day of sixth, seventh and eighth graders sell­ ing chance books to help keep the school going is a thing of the past-and the sooner Catholics fnce this, the better." Brother Patrick punched home the contentions that to attain the qua lit y objective, Catholic· schools must have competent teachers with proper college de­ grees, and there must be smaller classes. 'Tremendous Dilemma' "AU this is' going to· eost money, lots of money, especially jf we are going toco'me close to that old target of every' Catholic .. child in a Clo1.tholic' schooi~ . In sbort, it" is ·a tremendous dilem,':'. . . ma," he told some '~',~OO students; .parents and benefactel's. at· ~t. John's High SChQol;· ~arg'est J!lil-' ·it.·uyhigh school in the' country;'

which is ~ondticted: "~y ,; the'

: ~hris'tian Brothers; . '.' .' .' .

,. .. , .' Already. Catholic schooi . ad:: .. I)liilist-rators are f~cing· problems , ,with 'hiring com'petent .l!1y teach­ · ~r~ at' prevailing. wage.s, Brother , Patrick .said: The lay· teacher no : Jp;lg' is 'using'·· 1M .. 'Catholic · school to gainexperieilce whiie • completil)g' educ~tional qualifi­ : cations as. a s:tepping stone to better paying positions 'in the ; public school systel~s, he said. "And not only that," he c'on" tinued, "but the religious orders are being heard from. The supe­ riors have been telling the bish­ ops and pastors they no longer will furnish their members as grade school teachers until their members have the proper de­ grees to teach. They are making salary demands, too."

1~

them. He suggested the Church discontinue present elementary education in favor of nursery and pre-schools.. The school board's letter also criticized an NC News Service' story on Dr. Lee and its handlin'g by the St. Louis Review, archdi­ ocesan newspaper. "The Catholic school board' would want yoUl to, know that it quest.ions not only the content of the news s~ory but also the

exaggerated importance it re­ ceived in the St. Louis Review," the letter said. The school board letter said it did not believe that Dr. Lee's views should appear without verification. It criticized the Re­ view for publishing the NC news story: "There is no evidence in the story to indicate that the criticisms were unfounded or not," the letter said.

NAMED: Bishop-Elect Ed­ win JB. Broderick, rector of St. Joseph's Seminary, Dun­ woodie, .Yonkers, N.Y., has been named auxiliary to Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York by Pope Paul VI. NC Photo.

Teachers Rebuff Arbitration Offerr At St. JolJ1n's NEW· YORK (NC)-The United Federation of College 'reachers, which has been engaged in a running battle

with St. John's University for .nearly two years, has rebuffed the uniVersity's offer tp submit one part of the battle-the firing of 29 teachers in 1965-to bind­ ing arbitration. . The union said it would weI,.. c.omearbitration, but only if "all of . the outstanding issiJ:cs;', not Just the. one issue. which 'St. John's has selected" are' consid­ ereel. . .' : . But the'union declined to spe­ cify wh'at '~al1 the outstanding. issue~" were:, I '.' . " : ..... .' St. Jo.hn's made its offer t~ submit the firings to.bjridingar-' bitration. March' 'I. The. univer':' sity, said it would hand over the matter to the American Arbitra­ tion Association and abide by "'hatever decision and remedies the association arrived at. Long. Dispute "The university wants this matter resolved once and for all," said Father Joseph CahilJ., C.M., the university president. The dispute, which had been smoldering, for nearly a year before, flared into the open just before Christmas, 1965, when the university notified 31 teach­ ers-most of them members of the UFCT~that their contracts .......

would not be renewed and that they were not needed for the rest' of that school year. Two MILWAUKEE (NC)-A min­ were later reinstated. ister and social worker sug­ The action led to a teachers' gested in a speech at Marquette strike, student demonstrations, Ulli versity here that Marquette ioss of a number of faculty students should try to convince members sympathetic with the the school administration to re­ fired teachers, and censure by cruit about 500 Negto students. educational associations. The Re\(. Lucius Walker said Major Issue the university' should "enroll Last December, the Middle them (Negroes) without worry­ States Association of Colleges ing about their high school and Secondary Schools gave St. credits and without concern for John's a year t9 show cause why for the usual eligibility require­ its accreditation should not be ments." revoked. "Begin with them where they While the major issue has are * "" and, if necessary, take . been the firings, both the union 10 years for a four-year educa­ and the campus chapter of the tion," he said, He added that fed­ American Association of Univer­ eral agencies would probably sity Professors have charged belp support such a program. that the university lacks ade­ His talk on the "Myth and Re­ quate academic freedom, does ality of the Negro Ghetto" was not give the faculty enough of a role in policy matters, and sponsored by the Marquette Fac­ ulty Association for Interracial that it underpays its teachers. Justice. The association, com­ But none of these issues were posed of more than 70 Marquette specified in the UFCT's latest re­ faculty members, is active in buff. Nor were they mentioned civil rights activities in Mil­ Itl Father Cahill's subsequent waukee. ;repJ.1v.

Asks University Recriut Negroes

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'-J

t2

Cenacle Units Set Regional Meeting'

THE ANCHOR-Diocese Of fan River-Thurs. Mar. 30, 1967

Commends Charles F'lood's

'Mo,re Lives Than One'

Members 01. the MIssionary Cenacle Apostolate in the Fall River Diocese will be among delegates to the organization'lI annual regional meeting, 10 be held Sunday, April 2 at NewtOlll College of the Sacred Heart, Newton. The program will begin with a nOon Mass and corporate Com­ munion, followed by a luncbeom and speakers. Theme of the meeting win be the problems and possibilities of the Cenacle , Apostolate in the New England. 'region. A question period' will, ollow the speeches and Benedic­ tion will close the· afternoon. The public is invited to attend , and reservations may be' mad~ with William J. Flanagan, 36' Oakland Avenue, Attleboro, or with any convent of the Mission­ aryServants of the Most Blessed Trinity.

\

By Rt. Rev.

Msgr~

John S. Kennedy

,-Charles Bracelen 'j4"lood is riot a prolific writer. With lllim, it isa long time between novels. But his work is always worth waiting for. This is particularly- true of his latest book, ,More Lives Than One (Houghton Mifflin. $4.95; 2 Park Street, Boston, Mass. will be 'reported killed in action: (2107), which is his fRnest, This proves to be the case. and one of the finest puhlish­ 'Hideous Ordeal ed in recent months. Thisre­ There begins for Harry a long viewer thoroughly enjoyed it in march-:,54 days~north in a gang ­ the reading, admires it the more of prisoners. This hideous ordeal as he reflects on is only, the beginning of suffer­ M,' and heartily ings which are to go on for recommends it. more than two years. llt is a war - He spends time in three camps, novel, yet a war • escapes briefly and is recaptured, novel with a undergoes Communist indoctri­ difference. For nation, is the object of particular <cme thing, it hatred and abuse from one camp eonveys the an­ officiai, is always on the verge guish, the gritti­ of starvation, is tormented "by llless, the waste extremes of heat and cold. ef war without When, finally, the prisoners are allowed to receive a little any resort to sensationalism. mail from home, there is none Mr. Flood is an artist, with re­ for Harry. This is originally be­ markable control of his mate­ ,cause the hostile camp official rials' ' remarkable skill in g~~tting does not allow that error to be just'the effect he aims at, re­ corr,ected. ,Eventually it is cor­ mark:tble economy. reeted.He does not have to pile ,up Unbearable Suspense details or to prolong epi/lodes. The news that Harry' is alive He makes his point surely and brings both joy and agony to swiftly, 'those at home. For, in the long For another thing, :there- is a, months,' stretching ,into years, constant shifting of focus from "when Harry was believed dead, ' the 'war theater ,to AmE'rican Anne and Bill had been brought lICene: ,and this is 'done without,' closer in t,heir common grief, any, blurring of either: ',The two even'tUlllly, married, and now must be kept in view so that the are expecting' their first child. gtory',can be properly told, and Word of this marriage must be it is no mean feat on Mr. Fuood', kept from Harry until hostilities part that this has been brought 8nd and he can be told <Jf it in elf in masterly fashion. eircumstances. Ie s s punishing Recalled te Servlee

than those of prison camp. - The protangonist is Harry Pur­ The suspen~e which has been <lick, 23 years old in 1950. He exquisitely built up to ,this point, kad been an enlisted man in the DOW becomes unbearable. It is U. S. Army at the end of World ' of two kinds. One pertains to War II, during which his father, what will happen; the reader is IS professor at, Columbia, had intensely curious and concerned been killed. as to the perfection of the 3U­ Because of his Army service; thor's invention and taste; the Harry is now behind his younger reader, increasingly impressed brother Bill in college. He is with this, bec9mes apprehensive engaged to Anne Wiley, daughter that there may be soine lapse, \H a prosperous New York law­ some resort to the arbitrary or 7er, Clarence Wiley. The Pur­ the sentimental in the denoue­ dicks and the Wileys had become , ment. friends while occupying adjacent No need to worry. Mr. Flood lJummer cottages in Maine, and does not slip. The ending is at ate two Purdiek boys and Anne least' as powerful as all that has Wiley had, as youngsters, been gone before. , ' , Harry Purdick's growth from an ,inseparable trio. Suddenly, with the outhreak boy to man is fascinating to eM: war in Korea, Harry is called follow. The setting of this oock into service, presumably process, and its agents, are' riot because he had had training with what, given his situation in life, 0Ounter-mortar radar finders. he or anyone else would have ,'. The summons disrupts his plans expected". for fint'shing college and mar­ Some of the principal agents lI'ying Anne. ' are people who, under normal Taken Prisoner conditions, would never have CIaJence Wiley wants to use come in contact with,'him-sol­ llUs in~luence in Washington to diers like Quinn and Interlicchio have liarry's call cancelled,-but and Martinez, a Chi,pese doctor, Harry: demurs. He feels that a a few Turkish prisoners of war. mistake has been made which And the setting involves pain he himself can get corrected. of various sorts, the like of which Besides, everyone says that the he would not have, encountered affair in Korea is a dUilt"up had his life at home gone un­ which will be settled in a few disturbed. ' ' weeks. Admirable Novel Harry is inducted, finds there , If Harry is well realized as '. fa no way of getting out, is character, the others are less so ' ~ickly shipped to Korea, and . ,o~ly to the degree that they are - learns that he is to serve as an lesser figures, infantryman. His specialty is~f The novel is admirable not DO use in the Korean terrain. only for the creative 'gifts and But it does seem that the war the craftman's care which have will be brief. as the American gone into the depiction of gen­ SInd South Korean forces roll uine human beings and the tell­ Borth toward the Yalu Riv-er. ing of their story, but-also for Then, however, comes . the in­ 'the vivid rendering of many tervention of the Chinese. In and contrasting backgrounds and tileir massive offensive, Harry milieus for the glints of wisdom As taken prisoner. His dog tags on many subjects. are removed and flung down As one who found himself ab­ next to the corpse of a young sorbed and moved by this superb soldier who, Harry remembers, novel, the reviewer pays homage was not wearing his' own dog' to its author, an artist of excep­ tags. Harry foresees what is ti~nal strength and techniCol!J. lIikely to happen: that he himse.lf mastery.

ViteQ'UillWmeSte De~etce RefeH'~lnJc:e tG

God

SAIGON (NC)-The Vietnam­ ese Constitutional, Assembly has removed its only reference to RELATIVE SEEKING KNFORMATION: Marg~ret God (the "Most High" in Viet­ Howard, a 21-year-old Dunbarton College senior working namese) from its draft constitu­ chiefly at the demand of Part-time at the Nationa,l Catholic Educational Association" ation, Buddhist bonze (monk)'Washington, and' Father C. Albert Koob, exec,utive secreEarlier, by a vote of 62 to 18' ,tary of theasso'ciation, ,ex'amine NCEA archives for infor­ delegates present, the group had mation about Margaret's great-uncle, Rev.'Francis W. How~ included reference to God in the ard, the' founder of NCEA, who' later' became Bishop of preamble to the constitution. On " , . Mar~~ 18" a, majority vote re"" Covington, Ky. NC Photo. 've~ed itself and eliminated the words "Sup~eme Being" froJ;D the

'~andling

Children

'Grateful for DiscipSine You Impose,' Prelate Tells Women ' LONDON (NC) - John Cardi­ ael Heenan of Westminster gave

1,000 women some old-fashioned aclyice on bow to handle childrea lit an Inter-Church Women's Da,. service in bis cathedral. "The greatest temptation 81. those in authority is to play the coward for iear of losing popu­ larity," be -said. "Parents who let their. growing SOIlS and daughters do what they like may enjoy brief popularity but ODe day these same children will! turn on them and hold them guilty * * * "It is easy to be misled by the physical maturity which now comes so soon to the young. YOGI. have to'-remember that the well­ developed adolescents still have the hearts of children. "In the pack they may show­ arrogance but alone they aN pitifully inadequate. The , anarchy of youth is almost al­ ways cloak for insecurity. , "When "the young aretaughlt tr- beli,eve that tl.e eternal kutU

often

a

are fairy stories and when they see' that to guide them in build­ ing a better world the only alter­ native to religious truth ill the wisdom of statesmen, no wondel' they are -bewildered. "When you wer4~ young, the ultimate horror was dynamite. Today all young people know that a political miscalculation "could mean the destruction of an lite on earth. "Your children need you most at the very moment when the,. are rebelling againllt all author­ ity. They do DOt expect you to accept the standards with whieh they pretend to be content. The magazines they reud, the plays the)' see and even tIl1e songs the,. hear urge them to abandon the old morality. '"They complain when you won't let tbemstay out all night keep undesirable company, but deep in" their hearts the,. love' and respect you and are grateful for the discipline 7°U impose." , ,

or

prea~ble.

One of, the ,political leaders claimed: "We do not want to create' relig10\18 di visions. We have been :under pressure from no one. We received many other letters as well as the One from Thich Tam ' C~au (Buddhist monk). The change was made legally according to tbe assem­ bly's procedure. The monli; has sided with ex­ tremist political Buddhists on important points though today he ill regarded as more moderate. His political potential is still un­ certain. But politicians appar­ ently prefer to play safe and curry favor with him.

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. THE ANCHOR­

'Operation Chigger Sees Stang Juniors,

Thurs., March 30, 1967

13

Fasten Emblems On Synagogue

Mary Kathryn Golden has re­ ceived an $800 scholarship from UMass. Other Mount accept­ ances: Elizabeth Czerwonka, SIC and SMTI; Marsha Dean, Jean Benoit, Linda Rodrigues, SMTI; Joyce Oliveira, Marcia Nasser, ~rdinal Cushing. '., . Announce Honors Laurels to Carol Brito of Bish­ op Stang, first runner-up in the Peter Francisco Essay Contest sponsored by the Portuguese Civil Assn. of New Bedford; also to Paul Smola, Alan Ros­

zkiewicz and 'Paul Murphy of

Stang, high scorers for their school in the National Math

Exam.

And a~ Mt. St. Mary, Elizabeth

Czerwonka and Ann Suneson were top scorers in a United Na­ tions test taken by history and government classes earlier this month. Mountie Mary Harring­ ton placed first in the academy in a math contest sponsored by the Mass..Assn. of Actuaries. Meanwhile Dominican Acad­ emy cheerleaders are preparing to represent the Diocese in the New England CYO cheerleading . tournament in Manchester, N.H. STUDENT COUNCIL: Stuqent council officers at Saturday, April 30. The DA las­ Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River, are, seated from left, sies came in first in Diocesan Pauline Dumas, president; Elaine Dufault, treasurer; stand­ competition this month, with Bishop Stang placing second and ing, Colette Forcier, secretary; Theresa St. Pierre, vice­ Bishop Feehan third. Judy Fur­ president. tado is captain of the DA team. Upcoming Proms Dominican Academy mothers Honor Society-sponsored Career Prevost's senior prom is set· and daughters will meet on the Day, featuring a movie on choos­ for Monday, June 5 at Kirkbrae. basketball court Wednesday, ing a career and addresses by Theme will be "Tonight." A April 5 in an Athletic Associa­ college admissions directors, a dance tomorrow night, another tion sponsored game. May the college student and 10 profes­ sional men. in. April and a whist party, also best Mom win! And DA and Prevost American Also at Prevost, students are in April, are among fundraising sending good wishes to Normand projects Prevostites are counting history students will meet Fri­ on to help finance the big event. day, April 7 in a panel discussion Berger, who left the Fall River school after his junior year to Mount Girls did choose The on the Vietnam war. On the Jesus-Mary calendar become a postulant in the Broth­ Endless Summer for their -junior prom tlieme. Right now, it seems . is an induction ceremony for ers of Christian Instruotion. The as if we're in the midst of an new National Honor Society school's tennis team will begin endless Winter, so it's doubtless members, to be held Tuesday, Southeastern M: ass. Tennis good psychology. Jane Teves is April . 25 in connection with a Leae;ue play Tuesday, April 25. And the Prevost freshman in charge of arrangements, aided PTA meeting. NHS members will also visit public schools and par- class has as officers Donald by a large committee. A father-daughter dance with . ticipate in classes Wednesday Boucher, president; and Jean

and Thursday, May 3 and 4. Forcier, vice-presid,ent. refreshments provided by moth­ ers (just to get the whole family Holy Family

Friday, April 7 is a day for into the act) was a recent head­ pop' music lovers to circle. The Monsignor McKeon De­

liner at Jesus-Mar~' Academy. A There'll be a battle of the bands bate Society at New Bedford's highlight of the evening was a that night at JMA auditorium, Holy Family Hi/th School won sing-along of tunes popular featuring the New Breed, the the New England Catholic Boys' when dear old Dad was a teen­ Prophets and the Fugitives. Ac­ Debate Tourney at Notre Dame ager, and there were also skits tion wilil continue from 7 to 11. High School, Fitchburg. Michael by student councillor!; and a Prevost Mothers' Club will Kramer and Karl Fryzel won a bamboo dance performed by ·meet Thursday, April IS, and permanent and rotating trophy sophomore class members. will make plans for a dinner for' their outstanding perform­ Brother Roger Millette, Pre­ dance to raise money for a schol­ ance., Also Holy lramily debaters vost principal, was among prin­ arship fund.

cipals' and guidance counsellors , And Prevost isn't the only

participating in a trip tc) . the school preparing for a double.

USAF Academy, Denver, this :concert program. Mt. St. Mary'l!

month. Purpose was to familiar­ orchestra will perform with St.

ize the educators with the ad­ .Xavier's Academy,Providence,

vantages offered by the service giving the program twice, once

academy. .at each school. That'll be in

Mount French Club members April, and in May there'll be a

plan a trip to Bost.on tomorrow. double performance with Lz

They'll visit the capitol, an art Salle Academy, also in Provi­

museum and a French restau­ dence.

rant: Meanwhile government

Dominican Academy reports class members are preparing to that its volleyball team has met attend a UN mocel session Sat­ Fairhaven, Somerset and Mount ­ urday at Salve RE!gina. Prevost St. Mary's with respective scores boys will also be among those @f 21-19, 13-31 and 30-8. DA

in attendance. Also in the news girls presented an original voca­

in connection with Salve is Sis­ tion play this week, while Pre­

ter Mary Augustine, director of vost students had a National

the college's school of nursing,

who'lL address Mounties next .~ ~.E1 week. II •

Mother-Daughter Game

French Club members at

Prevost aren't idle either.

Excavatill1lg They're hatching plans for a

French night to be held Sunday, _

ContractG)lI's

April 9 at JMA. At the event they'll honor Rev. Mother 9 CROSS ST., FAIRHAVEN • Athanase of the Jesus-Mary I

WYman 2-4862 •

Sisters with an honorary mem­ bership.

s

JACKSON (NC)-In a displa1 of interfaith cooperation, bishop!! of the Catholic and Episcopal iaiths affixed Jewish religious symbols to a new synagogue here in Mississippi at its dedication. Catholic Bishop Joseph B. Brunini of Natchez-Jackson, and Bishop John M. Allin, leader 0If the state's Episcopalians, fasten­ ed small silver mezuzahs con­ taining passages of Scripture to the walls of the new synagogue of the Beth Israel congregation. Bishop Brunini said that he gave his mezuzah "in a spirit of atonement for any injuries Christian people may have in­ flicted" on the Jews. Bishop Richard O. Gerow, re­ tired Ordinary of Natchez-Jack­ son, also attended the dedication finished tied for third place m. a Debate Tournament at Stone­ hill College. Matching the success of the Debate Club is Holy Family'f) undefeated basketball team. Holy Family, New England Catholic Tourney and Tech tourney champs, beat Chicopee in the state quarterfinals by a score of 77-48. Steve Lawless, Holy Fam­ ily's center, broke a Garden., record with his 52 points. Many Holy Family studentIJ are participating in SINGOUT, inspired by Mr. James Walmsley, who recently narrated a movie about this group. They will soon ,. hold a concert at Keith Junior High School. Holy Family hM established a Drama Club. They are now working on the stage effects for a play. Michael Pois­ son is president of the new group. Bishop Stang recently sent [) delegation of students to Holy Family to wish the HF basket­ ball team good luck. Stang stu­ dents held out a sign with sig­ natures of the entire studena body on it. The sign was said to be c~ose to 150 feet long!

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~HE ANCHOR-Oiocese!of.~a.n\ ~ir~-Th~~~. 36, ~.~ • : I.~ ; I l :; ) .,' .•: '~; ': ... ." ;1 :.'. ." ~"

.;

New P,apal \EJi,cyclical"

,','

.. , ,

I

Continued from Page One the organization of labor and of proclaim any startling new ideas. industry to. what development Rather it collects and organizes has accomplished." lnio a single document a num- . : Private Property . bel' o~ idea.s of C~ristian, and' "The Pope repeated the ,C~thohc SOCIal te~~hlOg an~ ap- Church's teaching that the rights pl~es them spe~lflca.llY to the Of' private property ,and free .present world sItuatIon. ·trade are to be subordinated to It builds' on ~he social enc~- ''the ,fundamental right which wcals already Issued by prevI- . each man has to fbid what is . ous ·Popes, e~pe.~iallY Pope Jo~,,' n'ecessary for himself'" . -:X~!I1 an~. hIS ~~ter ,et ~,~gIS-' . .' Moreover, he acknowledged tra and ~acem lo . Ter~s. .'. ·tlle possibility of the' expropria­ T~e ~ope·s encyclIcal. IS ,prl., , 'tion 'or property m:certain cases: m?nl y mtended. to . rE'mm~h:~~. ' ,I'll ,cer.t~in landed ,estates' impede, .' ,'- .' flilthful of the blOdlOg tea g ,: (teneral prosperity· because they '", "of .the. Va.t.ican ,?ounCil's p'asto{:~::.':,::are,ie~t~nsive,bri~g. ~Eirdship to . .," ~onstItutIon C~urch In .. ats~ ,·.. p~pIes or are detr1m!ffital ~ the,. , I ." Modern· ,World. It repe "; ;lqlel'es~ of the country,.the com- , ·,.,,·therefore,. what has been alreadY," ~~n g(lQd sonieti~es:,demands ,: .;"taught ,by, the C~urcbl t~rough, the expropriation." .. :, . ." ,Popes and· CouncIl but, It .adds ' . ' ... . '8 note of extreme urgency i~ ,.i.,.·.:, ' .. :lPopulatl!'n I"~ob'em finding solutions for the urgent ''<:':..'''If' it is true that'too'frequent-: problems of today's world. . . Iy. an accelerated. demographic I Materialist Warning' .,mcrease adds its own difficulties , . " to the problems of development: ,Warn.mg agalOs~ .an. overly •the size of the population in­ eml?haslzed matenalIst~c pr~~. creases more rapidly than avail­ penty, the Pope outllOed able resources and things are dangers: "Less ~~ll-off peopl~s,'found to have and thin s are can neyer be suffICIently on th.elr . found to have reached ap­ .guard against (the) temptatIon .parent impasse: From that mo­ tha~ .come~ to them from wealthy ment the temptation 'is 'great to nations. . "F th t · · 11 too often c h eck th e d emographi c Increase. or ese na Ions a by means of radical measures. set an example of success in a "I" . hi hI'. t chnical 'and culturally ~ .IS certall~ that pUblIC. a,;,-­ g J e ... . thontIes can mtervene, Within developed. clvlbzatlOn. The y the limit of their competence by also prOVIde the model for a . .. . ' f t· th t . . 'pally favorlOg the avaIlabIlIty of ap­ ~ 0 ac mg a IS prIncl. propriate information and by 8lmed at.t the conquest of material a d op t·109 SUI·ta bl e measures, pro­ pr~en 'Y,' • t I vided that these be in conformity with the mora1awan 1 ' d th a t they • . ExceSSIve1 economIC, . IT soc a , , lind. cultura lOequa I ~es among.. respect the rightful freedom of peoples arouse tensIOns and' '. d coup1es. • ell to marne confltcts and are a anger "Wh t h ' li' b l ' ht peace'" '" '" To wage walI' on mis~re e ma ena e. rIg. ery and to struggle against in- to I?arnage and p~oc~eatIon IS .. justice is to promote, along lacklOg, hu~an. dl~t!' : has with improved conditions the ceased to eXIst. Fmally, It IS for. human and spiritual progr~ss of. the' parents to decide, with full all men and therefore the com"; knowledge of the matter on the mon gO~d of humanity . number of their childreI1-t taking "Peace cannot be li~ited to a .. i?to account their responsibili­ mere absence of war, the result tihi~l' toward God, the~selves, the cof an ever precarious balance of , .c dren. they have already forces. No peace is something.' brought .mto the. world and the that is built day after day in the.. commuDl.ty to which they belong.. ,pursuit of an order intended' In all thIS they must follow the by which God implies a more "demands .of their own, c?nsci~ perfect form of justice among ences enlightened by God s law men." . 'auth~nticallY in.terpreted ·and . "Increased possession is not .sustained by confIdence m Him... the ultimate goal of nations nor Urgency Sb'essed ~f'individual~ '" ~ •.Both for na"The world.is sick," the Pope ti~ns ?nd for mdIVI~ual man av- ,declared, "less in the unproduc­ arlce IS the most eVident form 9f tive monopolization of resources moral underdevelopment • • • by a number of men than The passag~ from miser;y. tow~rd in the lack of brotherhood among the posseSSIOn of neceSSItIes, VlC- individuals and peoples * • • tory over social scour:ges, the urgent reforms should be under­ growth of knowledge and the taken without delay." acquisition of cu~t~re· 0 • "these . To accomplish this there is are human condItIons. needed a broad international EconOJDic Systems . series of programs, said the Pope, The Pope regretted the fact· through which one can. build that industrialization is sometimes "a ·world where every man,' no tied to a system "which consid- matter what his race, religion' 'eft> profit as the key motive f@r and nati~nality, can live a fuI- . /!Conomic 'progress, competition ly human life, freed from ser-' as the supreme .law of economics vitude imposed on him by other" aDd private ownership of. the lllen?r by natural forces over means of production all an ab...';:Yihich he has not .sufficient., .solute right that has no' limits ·:'cotitrol. '" .• ." " and carries .no corresponding' aocial obligation." . .' , While lamenting complete lib,-.:St. LOIIJ8S SemOnall'J eral capitalism, the Pope added IEIl\'lU'oDDmell'llt /Oedi,Ui]es tha't "it would also be wroqg to attribute to industrialization it-: .ST. LOUIS (NC)-A drop of self evils that belong to the woe- • about 75 students from current ful system which accompanied it. enrollment at all seminaries in On the contrary, one must rec- the St. Louis archdiocese is pro­ ognize in all justice the irre- jected for next Fall by the arch­ placeable contribution made by d,iocesan vocation office. Father James C. Kern, archlli­ ocesan vocation director, said the Honor NeWSll'iJUJln expected decrease would mark VILLANOVA (NC) -- Donald the second year of a significant Barnhouse, Philadelphia tele­ drop in seminary enrollment. TWs year's total enrollment vision news commentator has been chosen for the 1967 St. was 23 less than 1965-66, with Augustine Award of Villanova larger middle classes at prepar­ University. The award lis named. atory high schools and Cardinal for St. Augustine, patron. saint Glennon College . preventing a· greater drop. The archdiocese af printers and the father 9f the bas two minor seminaries, a col­ Order of St. Augustin~ which lege and a theology schooL -.mducts Villanova.

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American Field Service Student • EtUtham Thurs., March 30, 1967 15 • Discusses Church, Youth Status tn Brazil Urge Governor

Bishop Wright Cites Paradox Of Just War

THE ANCHOR-

,

PITTSBURGH (NO) Pittsburg's Bishop John J.. Wright, in a dual-point ser mon at a peace Mass in St. Q

Paul's cathedral here, questioned the present-day applicability of the traditio~al "just war" theory, but pointed out that individuals caught up in a war that does not itself meet the norms of justice personally can be "acting moral­ ly and with great virtue." The bishop labeled this situa­ tion "a paradox"-"heartbreak­ ing In its moral complexity and a common cause of confusion in people's minds, since not all those involved in an unjust war or other evil situation are them­ selves guilty." In fact, said Bishop Wright, those so involved "may individ­ ually and personally be virtuous to the point of heroism; they may even be saints despite the evil political or military mess in which they find themselves." The bishop spoke at a Mass for peace and for men and women serving in the armed forces, sponsored by the diocesan Holy Name Society. Open to iQuestion In dealing with the "just war" theory, Bishop Wright reviewed the four standard norms: 1) it must be declared by competent authority; 2) it must be waged for morally just purposes; 3) there must be a proportion be­ tween the evil caused and the good pursued; 4) it must be the last and only possible solution to an evil situation, the resolu­ tion of which is demanded by the common good. He stated that "in our day it is more and more difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile modem war with the principles of a just war, though the theoretical pos­ sibility of doing so remains such that the (Second) Vatican Coun­ cil did not totally exclude re­ course to war in last-ditch de­ fense against actual aggression." Bishop Wright made no direct allusion to the justness or un­ justness of the war in Vietnam, but his point seemed clear-the morality of all modern war is in­ creasingly open to grave ques­ tion, both in view of the norms for "just war" and because of modern failure or inability to distinguish between combatants and noncombatants in technolog­ ical warfare. '

\

,Aid Migrants

By Eva Marie Dane Energetic, enthusiastic, with an active social conscience borne ~~t by ~ great ~­ pathy for people, that is Wilma Guedes dos Santos, a young BrazIlIan FIeld ServICe Exchange student at Nauset Regional High School. Wilma is one of five AFS excha~ges now studying on Cape Cod. The program- initiated during World War I by the Umted States to. aid. with Ambu­ the Pontifical Unive{sity ~t Rio "In our poor-rlch nation, rich lance ServICes In France has de Janeiro on her return to in mineral and land wealth, expanded over the years into Brazil in the Fall plans to en­ those who have educational op­ a broad school exchange roll in law and journalism portunities are ready to chip in

LANSING (NC)-The MicJll,., gan Catholic Conference has urged Governor Romney to give serious attention to the problems of migrant workers in this state. The conference, which is com­ prised of Michigan's five Cath­ olic bishops and three laymen, reviewed the status of migrant workers in Michigan during a meeting.

to get the rest of the nation program among nations on all courses. , ' continents. She also hopes to publish a ahead," Wilma told me. The many different dialects During her seven months 'on ~agazine about lawy~r.s, their In a letter to Gov. Romne]J" Cape Cod Wilma has become lives, work, personalItIes, to­ in this vast nation where Indi­ the bishops said they have been ans, Negroes and white men part of.' two North American gether with another student. gratified with the gains made families. She spent the first Already sh~ h~~ brought" out have always lived in harmony in the last few years 'for mi­ half of her stay with the'William a ~ews magazll~e, Reflexos, re­ are the, greatest hurdle in the grants in the areas of housing, Lorraines of Orleans and is com­ latmg events m her state, for educational field, according to health, and in the extension of pleting her sojourn with the Rob­ which she w~ able to gain gov­ Wilma. workmen's compensation to agria A national lottery contributes cultural workers. ert Burrills of Eastham.' ernment SUbSIdy. , . In each home she had several In her efforts to supply the substantially to schools, ~spi­ "It is important that all of sisters to take the place of her needs of her community, Wllma tals, prisons, roads, bridges and own Verlucia back in Mimoso and three fellow students also similar public works, The ma­ these social benefits be given Ul de Sud, a smali town of 5000 peo­ ~orked at a radio station as di~k jority of the population plays every person in Michigan on an pIe in the state of Espiritu Santo Jockeys and newscasters. TheIr the $2 tickets each month. Wilma equal basis and we believe yOlll Brazil. ' dedication and. efficiency in .this considers it under two aspects: share this principle," the bishops Life on Cape Cod is not much voluntary serVIce was recognIzed entertaining for those who hope said. different from that in' her home after a year when the merchants to win, patriotic for those who "It was disturbing for us t@ town, she says. Here as at home of the town and the Gov~rnor.of are glad to contribute in this learn that several of these gains she enjoys horseback riding, the state extended fmanclal way to the national welfare are threatened by legislative rather than spending the money proposals which would deny, dances, walks in the country, support. on purely frivolous relaxations. for example, an injured migrant getting to know people. Organizes ILiibll':!'Il'Y Many Missiol1lall'ies workmen's compensation,", they There is more accent in ex­ As her' town had no public trovert activities in South Amer­ library, Wilma decided to apply There are record hops and added. ica, perhaps. People join more some self-help in that direction, similar functions as in the Noting that migrant leaders freely in work and recreation, too. , United States to raise funds for had chosen Holy Week to draa with neighbors and friends, says Soliciting one or two new the Church. Dress at Mass is matize publicly the needS anlli Wilma. books from as many families and more formal than here, espe­ problems of migrant workem And there is no heavy demar­ business enterprises as she and cially in the Summer, notes the by marching from Saginaw tc cation line between youth­ her friends could reach, they young Visitor. Michigan's Capitol in Lansing, teenager groups, as they are came up with what she calls "not There are many festivals and the bishops' letter concluded: termed 'here-aJ?d the rest of many books, but enough for processions in the streets. The "We want you to know that we the population. everyone to read," approximate­ last week in Lent people carry join these migrant ~orkers in "We can discuss our problems ly 700 volumes at the time she lighted candles in remembrance asking you and the people ,01 with our elders on a basis of in­ left for the United States. of the Saviour's Passion. Michigan to respond to thell' tellectual equality," she ex­ The Governor was so im­ , Many missionaries work in needs which we believe are plained. pressed he authorized one hall Brazil. In her state of Espiritu legitimate and deserving of yoUI' Youthllul Marriages in the new municipal building Santo, they are mainly of Dutch serious attention." "What problem is youth con­ of Mimos? d~ Sud to be equipped origin. Asked about a lack of vocations, Wilma was able to fronted with in Brazil," I in­ as a publIc lIbrary. shake her head. At least in the quired. Of.. 8 SYSTEMAnC circle of her acquaintances, sev­ "Too many marry too young. Interfaith Program • '/() year SAVINGS eral had chosen the religious In my country one can marry at 96 monthly deposits required life. A cousin of hers teaches at 15. At that age you are not At Catholic College a private Catholic school that ready." OJ a INVESTMENT UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS (NC) doubles as a junior college dur­ "Because of economic or social ' • /0 year SAVINGS -Dr. Jaroslav J. Pelikan, pro­ ing the evenings. factors," I wanted to know. 90 day notice for withdrawal' fessorof ecclesiastical history at" Liturgical changes of the Vat..: "It is simply that at 15 you F::: In @t 8 llEGULAR are not prepared on what you Yale Divinity School, will con­ ' ican Council at first caused much • ..1 VI / ()J year SAVINGS duct the first interfaith educa-' disappointment, but now that the, want to do in life," she replied. tion program under auspices of people are able to participate Wilma at 18, about to enter the Walter and Mary Tuohy more in the Mass and hear it ~~Sj)$ chair of ecumenical 'studies at in their own language everyone Bishop John Carroll University here in' is very happy about this reform, Ohio May 1 to 3. said Wilma. laank By Mail Of Minnesota Board The program is the first in a She has brought with her We lOay The Postage ST. PAUL (NC) - Auxiliary series of presentations which many slides about her country Bishop Ja.Qles P. Shannon of St. , will bring Protestant, Jewish and is an undaunted public • SOUTH YAIlMOUTH • HYANNIS Patil-~inneapolis is the new and Catholic theologians to the speaker. A forum with the AFS president of the Minnesota State John Carroll campus for dia­ students on Cape Cod this year • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA Junior,College Board. logue with students, faculty, reli­ was held in Falmouth recently • OENNIS PORT • OSTERVILLE The 46-year-old Minneapolis gious leaders and the general and is to be repeated soon in pastor is one of the original public. An ordained Lutheran Orleans. BONN (NC)-Archbishop An­ members of the board created in minister, Dr. - Pelikan is the ' toni Baraniak of Poznan, Poland, 1963 to supervise the operation author of 10' books. John Carroll University an­ and his clergy are now being of the state's junior colleges with harassed by local communist au­ an annual operating budget of nounced establishment of a chair in ecumenical studies"named in thorities because the archbishop more than $6 million. Bishop Shannon, who holds a' honor of the late Walter Tuohy has resisted government efforts to 'interfere with the religious doctorate in history from Yale' ' and his wife, Mary, at the time University, was president of the' of Tuohy's death a year ago. He celebrations of the Polish mil­ College of St. Thomas More here was 'vice chairman of tlie Chesa­ lennium of Chrisianity. until last June, He succeeds Gen. peake and Ohio railroad and an Under the leadership of the archbishop the religious observ­ Edwin Rawlings, president of, active member of the National ances of the millennium in the General Mills, in the junior col-' Conference of Christians and Jews. Poznan archdiocese were an out­ lege post. standing success, despite efforts by the local government to com­ bat them with rival ceremonies. RESIDENTIAL The archbishop was urged by the authorities to cancel Catholic SCHOOLS. CHURCHES ceremonies ill favor of civil ob­ servances. The archbishop re­ INDUSTRIAIL • BUNKER fused, and in a pastoral letter urged his people to support the Plumper, rounder, D ADSON OIL BUJRN!E~S archdiocesar program. fuller muffins! «:ompie~e Heating i~si<tIJ~~<tIJiitl)i'is , In recent months, the local au­ 24 Hour lOil Burner $ell'vice thorities have used various pre­ texts to annoy the archbishop. Among other things, officials have visited priests on the grounds of seeking "foreign cur­ rency" and contributions 'from the' faithful "hidden by the 640 Pierasant Street Vel. 996-0271 Baked by your Sunbeam BaJ~u:U' priests" to avoid state taxation..

5 50

5 00

4

Shannon Head

River SgVODi)gs Bank

Red Authorities Harass Prelate

'I

FUEL

OIL

!

Sunbeam English Mfjjjfffins


16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 30,1967

Look to 'History Msgr. Eillis Stresses Past Has Lessons

To Teach Us

Free Enterprise Is Mixed B.lessing in. Latin America

SOtIT-H ORANGE (NC)-It is , the job of the historian to dis­ t. guish., between what is true and what is not true, one of the' American Church's mast noted historiaris said here. But that work isn't always easy, Msgr. John Tracy Ellis of the University: of San Francisco told an·. audierwe at Seton Hall University. Sometimes history is inaccu­ rate, Msgr. Ellis noted, using as' an . example the many varied stories still being told about the assassination of President Ken­ nedy. "Even pe.ople who were at the scene - honest people - do not seem to recall the same things." Th~ Church historian faces

From "Social Revolution in the New Latin America" Edited by John J. Considine, M.M.

Writing in Labor, the magazine of the International -'ederation of Christian Trade Unions, N. Leynse takes note Of the charge that CLASC (the Confe~eration of Latin American Christian Trade Unionists) unions are often anti-U.S.A. and explains it idly taken: the CLASC is pro­ this way: CLASC is as anti­ communist. We- remember here USA as the averag~ Latin the fil'st reactions against the American is. The members Christian tradeunion in Latin of the CLASC belong to the

..

weaker and poorer part. of the . Americas. 'nley, ~lIlulJ feel a JIll 0 a r 1 y JlBnevitable reserve towards tile richer part, an the more in &hat they can ascertain every day the ascend-' ancy of the

richer part as well in the in­ ter - American mstitutions as in their respec­ tive countries. The· power of the USA invest­ ments in Latin Affierica, their frequent supremacy over the nati.onal capital, their as fre­ quent alliance with the repre­ sentatives of the Latin American feudal structures, all that cre­ ates a nearly inevitable reaction of antipathy in the average man. Oppose Free Enterpll'ise . In contrast to the strong sup­ port most North American un. lonists give to free enterprise, CLASC unionists are known for tileir . contrary stand. Leynse !leeks to explain this: CLASC is accused oil: being against free enterprise. But the CLASC· has to be against free enterprise as it thrives every­ ,where, in Latin America for the 1IIl0ment. This free enterprise does not give the workers their rightful abare of better living conditions. It is all too often in the bands of those who want io, maintain the present feudal in­ GJtitutions. CLASC warits the enter­ prises to be intent upon the wel­ far.e of the population lmd not upon support of the already privileged groups. That kind of free enterprise that keeps the Latin American countries in a state olf semi­ colonialism cannot in the long run be accepted by the citizens of Latin America. . lInter-American System Leynse notes that CLASC is said to be against thE' inter­ American system. "But in the present form of this Hystem." he asserts, "there is on one side II number Qf relatively power-, less Latin American countries' and on the other side the mighty USA. ,"The CLASC wants most of all that a certain balance be realized in regard to the USA through a strong Latin Ameri­ can unity. The USA themselves are a confederation, they are the United States." Then there is ~he charge that CLASC favors a violent revolu­ tion. Says Leynse: CLASC has always pro­ nounced itself in favor of revO­ lutionary structural reforms in Latin America. With this it finds itself in the, company of the late President Kennedy and of Arturo Mascoso. . To assert that the CLASC systematically calls for violence is an obvious lie. The 'revolu­ tion in freedom' President Fret promised to the Chileans corre~ sponds completely to the con­ ceptions of the CLASC. "And sO the last and easiest Mp-against the CLASC ia rap-

America. "Those who want to kill off every dynamic movement against exploitation,' repression and so­ cial injustice with the clincher of communism playa. game as dangerous as criminal. What -will they say when one day the people will believe them and 'consider the communists as the only hard fighters for social justice? ­ "The CLASC wants to give a new hope to the Latin American proletariat with the revolution­ ary contents of this Christianity of ours with its fierce demands fOI' ju·stice. . This hope implies: real free­ dom, justice, participation in responsi bili ty and .in welfare, elimination of privilege and of feudal laws of property and authority, We can only be thank­ ful that at last a group of ~hris­ tians fights as grimly for these true values as the communists fight for' their .delusions. The slander that the CLASC is pro­ communist can fall on good ground only among the' most backward and reactionary groups 'of Latin America." Union HandicapS "A mere bread and butter trade union has ,no futlire in Latin America or in any devel- . oping area of the globe. The Latin American farm and indus­ trial workers need a large syndical' action that 'pursues basic structural, reforms on the social and economic level as an essential condition to a rapid and lasting development of. the standards of living and the spir­ Hual and cultural 'liberation of the workers. "It is evident that the trade union must use all the possibil- ' ities and advantages tha't collec­ tive labor agreements can offer. But we put two positive ques­ tions in this context: 1) In how many" countries of Latin America is the free and independent trade union - in­ cluding the Christian union­ really recognized and accepted 'by employers and authorities as a full partner and representative of the workers? 2) In what measure is the trade union independent of em­ ployees and authorities to the point that it has the possibility to negotiate? "The CLASC is not opposed to free enterprise in .Jhe modern sense, but it is opposed to liberal' capihilism, that uses the .princi­ pIe of free enterprise to keep the workers poor and to make the rich even richer. That is the reality in many Latin American­ countries." Great Misunderstanding It seems to us that enough ­ time has' been wasted in sterile quarrels. We think that an open and honest recognition of CLASC in Latin America is necessary, as the CLASC is one of the . wings of a truly free trade un­ ionism in Latin America.. "With a minimum ·of go'od faith and goodwill, cooperation between all the various free democratic forces and those of the USA should be possible. "Here lies the' future of the whole continent if one wants to' safeguard it against commu­ aism."

8;;;@

the same problems, he said. Further, it is complicated be­ cause some people- have takeD.

stories out of context to suit

their own purposes.

Cites Pope Job

Msgr. Ellis, in a wide-ranging talk, touched on a variety of subjects as he explored his maiD. theme: that the past has lessons to teach uS, and that the _world would be a better place in which to live if its leaders familiarized themselves with history. Discussing the vision of Pope John XXIII, Msgr. Ellis said that "it was the Pope's knowledge of the past and of history that en­ abled him to say" that the world is on the·threshold of new birth in answerj.ng "the prophets of dooin."

pg4,g g

DOGS.

HORSES.

AND

"PEO-PLE IHE HOLY fATHER'S MISSIDN AID 'lJ'1Cl THIE IaIIUIENTAL CHURCH

last November an Allentown, Pa" store sold split-level indQor dog houses made of solid cherry and lined with Persian lamb. The price: $119.••• New York City's mounted patrolmen INSIDE complain their horses deserve better than the U.S.A.: 'firetrap' stables now housing them. The rent for one stable is $11,400 a year•••• Mean· while, three out of four children overseas go to bed hungry. We wonder what God thinks.

.MEMORIAL: Father Fran- . cis bqffy, the New York priest who was· cha.plain of the 69th Regiment in World' War I, is memorialized in this stained glass window in the National Shrine of the' Immaculate Con c e pt ion, Washington; D.C. NC Photo. Mr. Ramon Venegas, the emi­ nent Chilean architect, Secre­ tary General of the Center for Economic Development of Latin America (DESAL), made a thoughtful observation at the CICOP conference in Chicago: I would like to observe just one thing. I don't want to speak about cLASC or similar.matters. I don't think 'that these repre­ sent the problem. The problem is that you, the North Americans, are in a soci­ ety absolutely different from our society. We need revolution; you don't need revolution. It is im­ possible that yo.u,here in this society, should compherend what we need. Everyone of our movements, -in our opinon, needs a doctrine that is very clear, very explicit to act by. We need political par­ ties with ideological positions. We rieed trade unions with very clear doctrinal· positions. I am not speaking of confessionalism, of a Catholic or !"rotestant stand for a trade union or a coopera­ tive. . I speak of' a social philosophy to fight injustice with justice, to replace mLery with well be­ ing. In the'se things we cannoo be neutral. This is the great miSe understading between us.

Higher

!Edll1.Il(Gti~n

SAN, JUAN (NC) -Scholai'o ships, tax exemption, deductio~ and housing for private univer­ sity teachers are some of the recommendati(>DS made by a spe­ cial Puerto Rican, Senate com." mittee which studied gove...... ment help 110_ private conee­ aere..

'

HOW TO HELP CHILDREN

o

33l!

a day (one pack of cigarettes) provides

food, clothing. shelter and the ABCs for an abandoned child overseas. Why not 'adopt' one? FOR We'll send .ygu his photo and his name on PENNIES receipt of your first month's payment ($10). 41¢ a day pays in full for the training of a A DAY native Sister who will give her whole life to children. She will write to you, you may write to her. Make payments to suit your own con­ .venience ($12.50 a month, $150 a year, $3.90 for her entire two·year training). Write to u~

o

THE TOOLS W1E NEElD

o

WH~I'Irc:

fA OOIULAR

IS WOml{] 'llW~

$10,000 will build a parish "plant" comple'ro (church, school, rectory, convent) Iii India. Name It for your favorite saint, In your'JovE1cl ,ones' memory. A church can be built for $3,800, a school for $3,200. The Bishop in charge will write to you. How can one missionary do the work of ten?

Put him on wheels. A small car costs $2,255.

Give part of it at leastl

Th,el Holy Father uses stringless gifts In lIny

amouni ($5,000, $1,500, $500, $100, $50.

$25, $10, $5, $2) where ~El3f'ro needed most,

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ti;o poor caw haw what you do not need,

A tell your Hawyer our 1.1 tlue ill the CAntGUe

WlW NEAll EAsr WELFAItI! A8soc:IAnoIL

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NEAR EAST

MISSIDNS·

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FRAffCIS CARDINAL SPEUMAN, PreSident MSGR.JOHN G. NOUN, National Secretatr *me: CAntOUO NIAR lAw WI!LMRI! Assoc. ISO 1IadI_ AvaIwe·New Volt. ...1. lOOU

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1l'HE

ANCHO~-Diocese

~

of Fail River-Thurs. Mar. 30, '!lW

AMERICA NEEDS TEACHERS

To Instruct Its Future Leaders

Let us pay tribute to the thousands of teachers today who are serving as inspiration ~o

the additional thousands of future teachers now in training for an academic career

ahead. We recognize the valuable role of the teacher in this world and the'

par~

that

they play in moulding tomorrow's citizens and leaders. May we encourage more to in­ vestigate teaching • • • a most satisfying career.

This Message 5pol'llso,ed by The Following Individuals and Business Conce,ns '" The Diocese 01 Fall Rive,

Fan

River

ca.

BRADY ELECTRIC SUPPlY CASCADE DRUG CO. EDGAR'S fAll RIVER - BROCKTON· . GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO.

INTERNAnONAl LADIES GARMENT WORKERS UNION LOUIS HAND, INC. MacKENZIE AND WINSLOW, INC. MASON FURNITURE SHOWROOMS GERALD E McNALLY, CONTRACTOR GILBIERT C.OLlVEIRA 1N5~RANCE AGENCY

R. A. McWHIRR COMPANY SOBILOFF BROTHERS STERLING BEVERAGES,. INC. SULLIVAN'S TEXTILE WORKERS UNION OF AMERICA AFl-CDO

. North Attleboro JEWELED CROSS COMPANY,

INC.

Taunton MOONEY AND COMPANY,. INC.


IHE . ., ANCHOR-'Dioces.e \ . ..' .i, ; Of Fan ~

Bishop Continued from

River~Thurs.

A~nounces P~ge

One

.Pope Paul VI raised him to the ll'ank of Domestic Prelate in March, 1964. Monsignor Shalloo was instruc­ ior of religion and ethicfl at the College of the Sacred Hearts, formerly the Sacred Hearts . School of Education, i,n Fall Iliver from 1937 until 1913!. He has served as chaplain of fue Fall River Serra Club since its formation in 1952, chaplain ef the Fall River Physicians Guild, and as Promoter J'ustitiae ll.n the Matrimonial Tribunal. He was also first spiritual director fOr the Legion of Mary in the Diocese and the Pharmacists'

$uild. Monsignor Shalloo was' also moderator of the tund,-raising campaign for the Bishop Con-, · Dolly Hfgh School in 1963. , In 1957, when Bishop Connol­ ly expressed his intention of founding a Diocesan weekly newspaper, .he chose Monsignor

Shalloo to draw up plans for the

paper and to launch the project.

Be was named general manager .~ The Anchor, a post which he

eontinues to fill.

FATHER JORDAN Father Jordan, son of the late William S. and. the late Mrs. · Mary L. Dufficy Jordan, was born Nov. 4, 1908 in New Bed­ ford. A Holy Family High grad­ uate he attended St. Charles Coll~ge, CatoJlvilie, Md. He stud­ ied· philosophy at St. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, N,Y. and theology at st. Mary's Baltimore. Be was ordained in St. Mary's ·Cathedral on June 10, 1933 by the late Most Rev. Bishop James .1:. Cassidy, D.D. He served as assistant at Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs; Our. Lady of the Assumption. Oster­ ville; Immaculate Conception and Holy Ros~rY, Fall River, and .St. Mary's, Mansfield. He became administrator of St. John the Baptist, ,Central Village in 1957 and served until being named pastor of st. Dom­ ,lnie's four years later. FATHER McCARTHY Father McCarthy, the son of' the late Ti'mothy J. and the late' 'Mrs. Mabel Smith McGarl;hy, was "bOrn in Taunton on Oct. 21, 1918; A graduat.e of ~t. Mary'v pai-ish ~8Chool. and Monsignor Coyle jligh School, he .continued education at Holy Cross College, . Worcester; and St. Michlilel Col';' . . lege, Winooski, Vt. The new,administratoll' of St; Dominic's studied philosophy at the University of Ottawa· and theology at St. Mary's Semin~ry, ·B~timore. He. was ordaiiIied by the late Bishop Cassidy on Feb. ::14, 1945 in St. Mary's CathedraL · ,Father McCarthy has served · as an assistant at St. James, New .Bedford; Oui' Lady of the Isie, 'Nantucket; Holy Family, East 'Taunton, and Holy Name, Fall 'River. He has been assistant at ·St. William for the past seven ;veal's.

Approve Catholic Housing Propect

Mar. :.•30, 1967

Transfers

eOLUMBUS (NC) - Nazareth ·Apartments-$2.5 million project sponsored by Columbus' inner­ city Catholic parishes - has moved another step closer to reality. Sen. Stephen Young (Ohio) announced in Washington that the Federal Housing Administra­ tration (FHA) had approved a $173,316 rent supplement grant for the project to house the city's elderly 'poor. The FHA grant will enable · tenants to· pay only $30-40 per month for housing. The applica­ tion for a low-interest loan and the rent supplement grant was made last September by Inner­ City. Catholic Parishes, Inc. The organization's board In­ · cludes five priests, a Brother and five lay. persons. Msgr: Hugh Murphy, pastor of St. Joseph ca­ thedral, said final approval is expected to come with the sign­ ing of papers in Columbus with­ in the next several weeks. Nazareth Apartments will be interdenominational- any low­ income citizen may live there, providing he meets at least one of five other requirements.

His Diocesan appointments in­ clude spiritual director for the Deaf; advocate, Diocesan Tribu­ nal; rp.oderator of the Black­ friars and defender of the bond, 'Diocesan Tribunal. , . lFA'll'lHIIER OUVlEnRA

Father Oliveira, son of Mrs. Clara Afonso Oliveira and the late Francisco Oliveira was born 0ct. 14, 1923 in Fall River. He was graduated from B.M.C. Dur­ fee High School in June, 1941 and attended Providence College for two years before making his philosophical and theological stud~es at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore.

Ordained in St. Mary's Cathe­ dral by the late Most Rev. Bishop J;ames E .Cassidy, D.D., on May 31, 1947, he has served contiIi­ uously as assistant at Our Lady of Lourdes.. ~ather Oliveira was named Diocesan Director of the Legion of Mary by Bishop Connolly, on Dec. 3, 1955.. . .

Church Council ·Opposes. Bills EAST ORANGE (NC)-As the New Jersey state Senate's educa- . tion committee began consider­ ation 00: an Assembly-passed bill which would provide publicly· financed· transportation for pri­ vate school pupils, the general board of the New Jersey Council of Churches issued a policy state­ ment opposing the bill and calt­ ing for public hearings on the measure. . The assembly voted on the · bill without hearings, which were opposed by Goy. Richard J • Hughes and Democratic' leaders. The church council statement also asked for hearings on a bill introduced, but not acted on in two straight legislature sessions · -which would provide for the loan of textbooks to private .school students. But there is no · indication that the legislature ·intends to act on that measure now.· . The state;ment, to be circulated to. member churches, sees a "glaring, inconsistency" in school b 1 . . , tIS egislation because it·would U8e tax money to'asSist students attendingsehools where prayer is permitted 'even though'the U. S. Supreme Court has barred such p~~yer in public schOOls.

his .

French -.Pastors Barred ·in· Rites

. fAIUS <N:CBrench

Protes-·

·tact leaden ha¥e decided to bar ~i:s . fro~ taking part in

Fr. Mulligan Heads ·St. James Society PHYSiCAL AND SPIRITUAL CARE: A Missionary in Tanzania is not only a. pastor but often has to be a dentist too, for ~he nearest professionally trained man may be hundreds of miles away. NC Photo.

Diocese Buys Stock .Clevel·aond See P~lans 'Substantial' Purchase· Of,New Mid-West Bank Corporatruon Shares·

CLEVELAND _(NC) - The ments. Cleveland Diocese will have a The bank will be the first financial interest in the Midwest chartered by the state since 1931. Bank & Trust Co. when it opens here with a state banking char- . It is believed that. Msgr. ter, probably in April. . Se:w~rd may be the'first priest in Msgr. Edward. J .. Seward,di- the U. S. to .hold ·a position on ocesan finaneialsecretary, said a bank's board of directora the dioce~ will purchase a "substantial" amount of the bank's $? million capitalization stocks. ON STAGE -IN PERSON Msgr. Seward.will ,represent the I dioces~ on the bank's board of FALL mYER APRil 6 ~,8:00 p~M. directors. . A . group of Clevelanders headed by Raymond E. Rossman, as president, has applied for the CHANTEURS DE PARIS charter froin the Ohio division . Of ban'~ing. The application has been approved and the group is: DOW in. the process of meeting necessary corporation require-

DrJB,FE

VAREL & BAILLY COMPANY

Meeti~9 mixed marriage ceremonies pe'l'­ foimed iD.· Roman Catholic Churches. The monthly meeting of Fall · The decision, ~nounced by Frerich Reformed Church leader, River Particular Council, So­ ,eiety of St. Vincent de Paul, will · Pastor H~bert Rioux, is a re­ sponse to the· Vatican decree of be held next Tuesday night fol­ March. 18, 1966, that permitted­ lowing Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament at 7:45 in St. · Pr~testant clergymen to offer a · prayer and blessing at .IDlxed Thomas More Church, Somerset. Plans will be made for attend­ marriages in Catholic churches. Pastor Rioux said that Prot­ ance at the Second Northeastern estant clergymen will still be .. Regional meeting to be held permitted to hold a prayer serv­ June 2, 3 and 4 in Springfield. . ice in the home after the wed­

ding and present .the traditionai

ST. LOUIS (~C):-All assistant family Bible 10. the married pastors in the archdiocese of St. . couple. The French ·Pr:otestants, Louis have received ·the new title he said, insist that there be no See Us, . of· "associate pastor," to· signify repetition of marriage vows be­ About c their association with pastor and cause Protestants recogIiize. the I . ~ eatholic Church wedding as with people in iheir parishes. valid. The change was made without The step is meant to emphasize formal- announcement in the list of new appointments announced. the lack of reciprocity between I J Catholic and Protestant under­ recently by Joseph Cardinal Rit­ standing on mixed' marriages. ter. A chancery spokesman said· the new title signified the role "We recognize the validity of .Wareham Falmouth of the priest who is not a pastor. their marriages,. but they cIo not recognize ours," Pastor Rioux It does not increase or decrease r.,v 5-3800 KI 8-3000 the duties _of the priests, he said. explained.

Assistant Pastors­ Have New Title

BO~TON (NC)-Father Paul Francis Mulligan, 35, has been ,elected superior general of the Society of St. James the Apostle. The nine-year-old missionary society, ·composed of diocesan 'priests, was founded by Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston to serve priestless areas of Latin America. The new superior general is a veteran of six years with the society. He is a native of Med­ ford. Father Mulligan's election was announced by Cardil}al Cushing, who reported on the vote taken recently at the society's mission stations in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador. Father Mulligan was the - "unanimous choice" of the society membership, the. cardinal said.

Vincential1l At St. Thcull'1Ias More

~la·;·-Y;i~·ild?li

loweost Financing

WAREHAM SAVINGS BANK!

I

A Festival of· Musical Merrimeni in French and English nCKETS~

$4.50, $3.50, $2.40 - Phone 677-9357

Sponso.·edby St. Jean Baptiste Parish . Special Attention to School Groups


Majol' ,L.eagues Interested

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., March 30; 1967

'n C,OY'f/S. Joe GrigGs

.Exhibit~~l11 Game~ For Charity

County Baseball Loop Race Appears Wide-Open Affair By PETER BARTEK

Norton High Coach

With a Utile bit of luck and a goodly amount of sun­ Ghine most area baseball diamonds will be playable by April 10, when the Bristol County and Capeway Confer­ ence teams play their inaugurals. Narragansett League members have an addition~l Brian Bicknell has not been week to prepare for theIr blessed with an abundance of tal­ openers on April 18. Weather ent to take into the fray in his conditions are playing havoc premiere season but he does have

WASHINGTON (NC) - The upsurging Washington RedskinlJ will go on the pro football war­ path six times during the exhi­ bition season in the cause of charitable and civic organiza­ tions. The 'Skins have signed to do battle with the Baltimore Colts in D. C. Stadium here Aug. 3t for the benefit of Children's Hos­ pital and the Catholic Youth Organization. The Washington club will meet the Chicago Bears on the same battleground Aug. 9 to benefit the Masonic Almas Temple Shrine charities. In other games the Redskins ,will oppose the New YOl'k Giants 'on Aug. 19 at North Carolina State's new stadium in Raleigh

to help build a zoo in that city;

will face the Boston Patriuts on

, Aug. 26 in Boston for thc bt'ne- •

fit of the Richard Cardinal

Cushing Fund; will play the

Pittsburgh Steelers Sept. 9 jn Norfolk, Va., to aid, boys dubs; ,and will battle the Philadelpliia .Eagles in a rookie squad at Carlisle, Pa., July 29 to bl:'ne­ fit Dickinson College there, tb€1 Redskins training base.

not only with the playing fields the nucleus for a representative but also with the prospective ball club. First sacker Gary De­ opening d 8 Y Nardo is an all-around baseball lin ill - Ull P s , player capable of breaking open as coaches at_ any game. He will lead the tempt to fill va-, '.' Rocketeers to their share of vic­ cancies <caused tories. by graduation. Joyce Has Problems ~nlY o~~ week Steve Stack and Gary Rus­ o IPraf ~ceB' ~- tino will give the Bicknellmen rna ns or rlS- . . C t I g • a solId one-two pitch punch and t oun y :a ue the hitting of DeNardo, Wes f "e ~ m s h ett~ Widden and Jim Higgenbottom , ~O:SYth~:Ugh-' Peter w~ll present opposing hurlers .l .\ out the circuit Bartek Wlt~ more than a few problems. and, as yet, many coaches have If Blck~ell can mould the~e vet­ been unable to conduct full scale erans with some l~ss expenenced workouts on the ballfield. players, No~th Will have to be Nonetheless, all coaches have reckoned with b)' al~ oppone',lts. ENCYCLICAL'S SUBJECT: Jose' Mendoza, born' in been diligently working their reAt Attleboro HIgh, Spring spective squads, pitchers and track seems to have sup~rceded 1962, will ,be 38 in the year 2,000. What will his world"b~{? catchers primarily, in the gym baseball. The Jeweler-mne has Pope Paul' deals with complex proQlem:s of economic~ ',apd Tomovl'ow waiting for the chance to get not been as strong the p~st f~w sociology in his latest encyclical, but t.he Holy Father is GLEN ELLYN (NC)-A ria­ outside. , ?ea~o~s, although there JS fme insistent that our aim be peace, which he makes the ob­ ~onal seminariari student lead­ Th general consensus is that mdlvldual talent on the team. jett of a "solemn appeal for concrete actiOn toward man's ers' three-day conference will b«l the ~am with the top mound Coach Dick Joyce is faced with held starting tomorrow at Mary­ rps will have II definite ad- the difficult problem of assem­ complete development and the development of mankind knoll College here in Illinois. ' ~~ntage in the early season bl~ng a s~ooth. working. unit. If as a whole." NC Photo. Representatives from 50' Cath­ games because most clubs will thiS year s uP~t does Jell. the olic seminaries in the 'Ul;lited not have had the opportunity to Jewelers may r~se to. the heIghts States and parts of Canada wjlll work on their hitting prior to the o.f .past champIOnshIp aggrega­ attend the conference, the thl:'mG first few games. tions... of which will be "The Student'!). As many times IS the case, Role in Seminary Policy Mak­ Predict Close Finish . in a short season, a. boy can WASHINGTON (NC) - The our proper.ty, and our privacy.ing." Pre-season forecasts indicate experience early season difficul­ problem of crime in the nation Pane,ls and seminars here have This conference will be the that Durfee High of Fall River, ty at the plate and never recover. discussed, crime, particularly in first of its kind. There have been defending champion; Bishop Fee- This was the situation tor Steve has come in for renewed atten­ the Capi~al" and opinions· ,and meetings in the past amoll~ sem­ han of Attleboro and Msgr. Coyle Mendes last year when he got tion here in recent days. Serious crime in the United suggestiol'ls have been alm.QSt, as inary rectors and administJ'atonJ High of Taunton are co-favorites off to a 'slow start and suffered States increased 11 per cent 'in numerous and varied a.s,. the ,but no meeting of such national to win the crown with Attleboro through a' dismal campaign. 1966 ·over 1965, lheFedetal Bu­ spea~e~, " ,,' , lllCOpe on the student level. . High and Bishop Stang of Dart- Mendes, undoubtedl)' the b~st .,./ reau of Investigation 'has now re­ , F~Ldir~ptor J. Edgar H;OQ~~r 'mouth given an outside chance to. catcher and 'oni'i' of the leading ported. President' Johnson has FO d' 'J b run-off with the tflag. hitters in the: county, 'is ready pledged a drive against' crime, said 'crimes of violence wer~,up ll"per"c;ell~, ,wi~h, Jllurde): I~P 9 In 5 0 $ In the northern section of the to redeem himself and prove saying: "Every American knows ,];)ell' . ,cent;, llgg~avated..1l!,S<jUJt• .)0 CHICAGO (NC)-8ome' country, Bishop Feehan has a he Is worthy of opposing coaches' fear: 'We fear for our 'person, per .~e,1?'t; .f,~Fcible, .l,'ape... l<J, ,})ell' unemployed andunderemploye4!l . . . veteran club returning whicb. praise. If "'feildes :.does.. have a eel]t; ~o~b.\!,r~" 14 per. cell~, .• ' I"lttn and women have found.pei'­ may, with a few breaks, prove good' year. ;ind"SOphomore Jim H~Yer, p1aced emphas.is, Uf?()n' manent fulltime.,jobs since.Sep­ according to his coach, if 'he to be the best, unit Coach Chet Soper pitches· ~,'!W~ll as he did 'the ,tlri~i.ri~)~at, w~Iile, ~ns::.re~es . te~ber, 1966, tlln)Ugh the scv.eB Hanewlch hall assembled in his in the Junior High league last . contin'ues to piay'the way he'has iii crimes we.l,'e reporte.Q. ,by 8)1 .. neighborhood ceJ:lters here of t.lle in the past and continues to five-year tenure at the diocesan' year, Coach Joycecollld experi­ prove he may v~ry, ~el~ ~.afe city~groups the sharpest change .. ,Ttj-F~ith Emplo~ent Project. school. Hustle 'and desire are ence a season of pleasant 8ur­ ill vOl~pie~·a.sjn thecfti;e~':Y"~th .,The .project is 'Il-.free job-fil~l;ij~g the big time., .. , always characteristics of Hane- prises. lesidhan 10,000 population. Their ...ser.vlce sponsored by the Cblc~o .' jilt;l'Reidwill aB~lJme. the. r.e­ wich-coached teams and this Bums Lik~ Grigas eeivlng duties, for' tpe ~~rriors rate of increase was 14 per cent. . Conference on Religion and. Race year's aggregation could very Last year's Se~ond-pl~~~ Taun­ •. tl)~s year with. Bill M;cGo~an, This chips, away' at, the theory in c09peration with the .Chicng4) well :'hust~e" its way to the ton combine has lost almost its Gary Kingsbury, Don Cote,. ~nd that crime is a big city problem Committee on Urban Opportualone. nity. championship . ' entire team tbroug\1 IIraduation. Henry ~vesq~e rounding out Pr.esident Johnson. made his . . Dave Kirby, who ran track. Coach Mike George is faced with the infield. Joining Grigas in last season, is being groomed for. the unenviable task of complete­ the Coyle outfield will be Brian ph<~e 'anile ceremony' of swear- ~·,s:· SSSS:S'hiSS:,.,.'':S'$" the first base job this season in ly rebuilding. Filling the shoes O'Malley and possibly Chris ing in Ramsey Clark, the 'nll,tion's ' 65th "} tt~rfley Genera~.and,. at .39 an attempt to strengthen Feeof ace hurler Art Koska will be Reid. Building.Contractor. years of a'ge, one of,the yo,J,lnge~t.

han's veterans infield. It is an almost' impossible chore for Durfee and Stang , .,. SupportS· Decisions' ."

Hanewich's contention that Kir- George. Thus, Taunton's fortunes Masonry ,Bishop Stang and Durfee both The President departed, from

by could be the key to a sturdy appear somber. have been numbered among Ule his prepared text to voict;! strong

defe?se an~ that ~~s leadership Cross-town rival, Msgr. Coyle support' of recent U. S. Sup,reme

qualIties "'(Ill pO~ltivelY be an has also been hurt by graduation. top teams in the league, in the asset to the team s overall per- Nonetheless, Coach Jim' Bul'JUl past and this season should not Court 'deCisions which protect

be any different. Both clubs have crimiriai suspects fromu'nreil­

formance. appears to be grooming another lost top flight pitchers and key somible search and confessions

Bricknell at Belm potential champion. The ami- infield performers. Coach Joe that are coerced. Observers were

Infield returnees at Feehan able veteran men tor, who Lewis feels he needs a catcher quick to notice that these court

'1 JEANETTE STREET include Captain Dick MacAdams, doubles as a Taunton radio sta'­ decisions were being rOUl1dly

badly. The Hilltoppers' fortunes Ty Brennan, and Pat Blake. The tJon sportcaster, will rely pri­ FAIRHAVEN WY 4-7321 in some Senate

<criticized may rest on his ability to fill catching duties for the fourth marily on the 'pitching of south­ speeches at the time. this position. consecutive season will be hanpaw Bob Henton and Matt Cham­ In Dartmouth, Coach Jerry dIed by 'senior Pete Phipps. berlain. TranSfer student Alex Hickey is bemoaning the fact ~= 11I11I111I1111111111111I11111111I11I11I111I111111111I111111I11I11I"11I1111I111111111I111I111I11111I1111111111111I11111I11I1111111I11I1'=­ Hanewich bas six boys com- ,Rich of ~ort~n could also help that he has lost three leading i>eting .for three outfield slots the Warriors Ill. the mound de­ pitchers, He is anticipating a re­ and is still pondering the start_part~entif he continues to show' versal of form this year. Where­ E ·s ing trio. The sextet includes Ron the I~porvemen~ that,has ma~k­ as, Stang has relied on pitching ~ of Fish ~ Dubuc Paul Sullivan Jim Park-. ed hiS play in recent, practice previously this year hitting will ~ in. ~ er, Ed'Sousa, John Monast, aJid sessions. spell the difference between vic­ Dave Downarowicz. Most of the When a coach is fortunate tory and defeat. ·The Sp,artans' ""Family D;~~",' pitching responsibility will fall enough to have a boy who: "loves mentor optimistically hopes that

on the capable shoulders of John to play" 'and has the ability to ' Chuck Sousa, Gerry 'Rhondeau,

Shea who was F.eehan's ace last cap the de~ire, he can never say Charlie' Champlain and Craig

year as a sophomore. Ready to enough about the boy. This is William will take up the slack

take over for Shea, if need be, exactly how Coach, Burns feels caused by the loss of ,his mounds­

are John Manderville, Phil Dris- about outfielder Joe Grigas of men. If they do, the Spartans

UNI?'" WHARF, FA'I1H~VEN' . 'ret 997_a~SB.'.~

eoll and George Ronhock. Brockton. Grlgas is 'being scout- will be in the thick of the league North Attleboro's rookie coaell ed by many; major dubs and, lf2ce again this sei:lson: 'nllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIlIIIIJIIIIIIII\lIII.Uliillllllmmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'llIlllUIillF.

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Seminary Students To Meet

Hoover Says Prompt Prosecution, Punishment Crime Deterrents

3:500

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20· , THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil

Two· Monsignors Resign

River-Thurs. Mor. 30, 1967-

SY'no,da~ Commissions

COntinued from Page One

Continued from Page <>ute

MONSIGNOR de MELLO /

MONSIGNOR HARRINGTON

Monsignor de Mello, born in Charities Appeal. Msgr. Harri·~g­ Mattapoisett on Aug. 16,,1878, is ton, too, is known for his Qut­ the son of the late Domingo S. standing accomplishments as di­ and the late Mrs. Mary T, de rector of the Fall River Diocesan. Mello. . Welfare Bureau, especially when He attended Petit· Seminaire, .the country was in the throes' The Most Reverend Bishop today completed the eight St. Laurent, and made his ·phil­ of its worst ec~momic depression. missions that wiUl prevare material for the forthcoming Monsignor Harrington, son of osop.hical and theoiogical studies diocesan synods. Pri~l;s,· religiolls and laymen will staff at the "Sem1riary of Angra,Azores.. the'late jolin' and the late Mrs. the advisory board, S'tudy,possible changes in diocesan reg­ ,He was ordained .by the· late Bridget' '(Sullivan) Harrin'gion. Most Rev. Bishop Daniel F. Fee­ : was born in 'Fall River on Jan. ulations and submit their 21, 1889. He was g~aduated from han, P.D. on Aug. 15, 1908. Members: Rev. Clarence E. suggestions to the Bishop. As an assistant, he served at Boston College and was ordain­ d'Entrement, Our Lady's Haven, The presence of many clergy Mount Carmel Churc~, ·New Bed-' ed on May 26, 1923, following Rev. Peter N. Gra.zi­ and lay consultants' will Fairhaven; ford, and Holy Family, Taunton. theological studies at St. Ber-· ano, Holy Name Parish, Fall make the work of seeking and River. _ On Oct. 31, 191:-1 he was appoint­ nard's Seminary, Rochester, N.Y. obtaining information, sugges­ His I first assignment was at ed first pastor of St. Joseph's, Consultant: Atty. James W. tions and advice the easiei', and Killoran, 68 Washington St.,. North ·Dighton. He was· named Sacred Heart Parish, Oak Bluffs, will insure participation by a Somerset. AUXILIARY: Msgr. Jos­ pastor of St. Elizabeth, Fall where he served· as assistant until .oomplete cross-section of the eph V. Sullivan, chancellor River, three years later. In N~­ ~transferred to' St. Louis, Fall. diocese in the preparation of CATHOLIC ACTION vemoer, 1933 he was assigned to River" in December,1924. ' of the Kansas City-St. Jos­ Our the synod. He was then. named director Lady of Lourdes. Chairman: Very Rev., William eph diocese, has been named Pope John XXIII named him of St. Vincent's Home, Fall River, The synodal commiiJsions' in­ D. Thomson, St. Francis Xavier, by Pope Paul to be auxiliary Domestic Prelate with the title and in July, 1930 he was appoint­ 0iude: Hyannis. to Bishop Charles H. Helm­ of Right Reverend Monsignor on ed Superisvor of Diocesan Char­ Secretary: Rev. Ronald A. CLERGY ities, remaining in these posi­ Tosti, Our Lady of the Assump­ sing of Kansas City-St. Jos­ October. 31, 1961.· Monsignor de Mello has served tions until Dec. 1, 1949 when he Chairman: Rev.· Gerard J. ti-on, Osterville. eph. NC Photo. also as confessor at St. Jacques became first resident pastor oil ·Boisvert, St. Anthony of Padua, lUembers: Rt. Rev. 'Daniel F. Convent, extraordinary confessor St. Thomas More Parish, Somer­ New'Bedford. Shalloo, . st. Louis Parish, Fall to the Franciscan Missionaries of set. Secretary: Rev. George W. River; Rev; Patrick J. O'Neill, Governor to Press .Mary, confessor at Sacred Heart <E::oleman, St. Kilian's,New Bed­ Six years later, on Oct. 2, 1955 Bishop Stang High School, No. Bus Rides Issue he was assigned as pastor of Holy Dartmouth; Rev. Joseph L. Pow­ Iiord. TRENTON' (NC) - Governor Convent and extraordin~ry con­ Members: Rt. Rev. John J. ers, Bishop Feehan High School,· Richard .J. Hughes said at a press fessor at Villa Fatima, Taunton. Name, Fall River. Hayes, HOly Name, New Bed­ The late Pope John XXIII Attlcboro; Rev. Edward A. Oli­ conference here that he' would He is a member of Diocesall ilord; Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis. St. veira, Our Lady of Lourdes" like to avoid public hearings on Council of Vigilance. raised him to the rank of Do­ A parish celebration marked . mestic Prelate with the title oil Louis de France, Swansea; Rev. Taunton; .Rev. Walter' A. Sulli- his request to the legislatme Manuel P. Ferreira, St. John the .. van, Cathedral, Fall River, Rev. that the state provide free bus the obsel~vance of the golden ju­ . Right Reverend Monsignor on' Oct. 31, 1961. Baptist, New Bedford. transportation fot:· private and bilee of his ordination in 1958.' Raymond W. McCarthy, St. Pat­ . Monsignor Harrington founded! parochial school' students in rick's Parish, Fall River. RELIGIOUS .the Holy Name parochial schooi Consultants: -Mr. H: Frank . New Jersey. Lardner to Receive and supervised the erection of He noted: "An important Chairman: Rev. John J. Bren­ Reilly, 357 Grove Street, Fall the new building which opened aan, ·SS.CC., St. Joseph's, Faic­ River; Mr. Edward McDonagh, bridge has already been crossed Journal'isln Award '. in the American mind with re­ 5 Huntington Ave., No. Attle­ ha'ven. MiLWAUKEE (NC) -George in September, 1960. He is a member of the Board Secretary: Rev. Fulgence Gor­ boro; Mrs. John Mullaney, .51 gard to. this questiol;, public E. Lardner· Jr., a reporter 'and of Parish Priests Consultors and ezyca, O,F.M..Conv., Our Lady of Tanager Road, Attleboro; Miss hearings would be a rehearsal former columnist with the Wash­ Perpetual Help ,New Bedford. Eleanor Ottaviani, lVIain Street, of the very ancient, ·and in some ington (D.C.) Post, has been Supervisor of St. Patrick's Cem­ etery, Fall River.' cases, very ugly, arguments." named to receive the 1967 By­ Memllers: Rev. Leo T. Sulli­ Mansfield. Presently, parochial and pri­ Line Award of, the Marquette van, SL Ann's; Raynham; Very TEMPORALITIES vate school students in the state University College of Journal­ Rev. Raymond Charland, O.p.. Named' Papal Count Chairman: Rev. James F. Ken­ may ride free on public school ism. St. Anne's Priory, FaIn River. buses if they live on established. ST. PAUL (NC) - Ignatius A. The By-Line' Award is ,pre­ Consultailts:M 0 the:r ' Anne' ney, Our' Lady· of the Assump­ public school routes. The change sented to Marquette journalism O'Shaughnessy, St. Paul philan­ Thomas, S.U.S.C., 492 Rock tion, Osterville. Secretary:. Rev. John J Smith. , would mean that transportation school alumni who have distin­ thropist, has been given ,the per­ Street, Fall River; Sister Julia would be provided without ex­ sonal title of papal count by guished themselves in' the vari­ Maris, O.P., 37 Park Street, Fall St, Patrick's,· Wareham. Members: Rev. Arthur G. Con­ clusive reference to the location ous communication field.s. Lard­ Pope Paul. VI, Archbishop Leo River; Mother Ascension, O.P" of p\lblic school routes or public ner received' his Master's degree Binz of St. Paul-Minneapolis hu at. Anne's· Hospital, Irall River; sidii1E~, .st. Mary's, So. Dart­ mouth; Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, schools. from the school in 1962. \announced. ' Bister IVlary Mercy, RS.M,,'Bish­ St. Theresa's, So. Attleboro; Rev. ~ Fechan High, Attleboro. :Luiz G. Mendonca, St. Michael's. • . LAITY'; ," Fall. River;'~ev." .Arman(io A .

. Chairman:. Very Rev; Robed An'nunziato,', St; .Mary's, 'NOl'th

'Attieborb.: ,,' ,,': : , ': .. ' Jr.. Stanton, Cathedral, Fall River. . Secieta~y:' Rev. ,Bento R; ':. Consultants: R!l~. Ra:Y~Qnd M. _ Fraga,. St. John of ,God, Somcl'- ,Drouin, O.P~, - St., .·Anne's. Fall set. ' R i v e r ; Rev. Joseph F.H:jima, Members: Rev.' Edmond L .. ,· C.S:C.,· Stonehill College, No. Dickil;son', . St.' Mathiel,i; .Fan Easton; Rev. Paul 1. Price, iHoly Chatham; Atty; '.Ray­ . . - River;. ,Rev. James F. McCarthy. Redeemer; r St. Jolin's, Attleboro; Rev. John mond V.' Pettine, 8 Mohill' Ave., Swansea; Mr. Robert McGowan, : V. Magnani, St. Mary, So. Dad- Raymond Hall Drive, No. AttIe'­ . , . . , , mouth. Consulta.nts: Miss Margaret M. . boro; Mr. Joseph Mozzone, "137 . , !Lahey, 725' Second Street,'. Fall Hal't Street, Taunton. River; Mrs. Aristidcs A. An-, ECUMENISM ,~-" drade, 165 School Street, TaunChairman: 'Iit.Rev.·Henri A. ton; Edward F. Camedoll, Sun- Hamel, St. Jean Baptist, Fall set Drive, Raynham. River.· Secretary: Rev. Edward J. U'['lUlRGJ{ Mitchell, J.C.D., Holy Name, Fall

Chairman: Rev. John P. Dris­ River.

coll, SSt Peter and Paul, Fall Members: Rev. Albert F. Shov­

River. elton, St. Mary's Home, New'

·Secretary: Rev. Edward J. Bedford; Rev. Robert S. Kaszyn­

Burns, St. Louis Parish, Fall ski, St. Stanislaus, Fall River;

River. Rev. Arthur T. DeMello, Our

Member: Rev. John R FoIster, Lady of Health, Fall River.

Sacred Heart, Fall River. Consultants: Sis tel' Mary

Consultants: Sister Teresita, Thomas More, O.P., St. Anne's

S.U.S.C., Bishop Cassidy High. Hospital; Fall River; Sister Ther­ Taunton; Sister Louis Bertrand, esa Ann!!, S.U.S.C., 492 Rock 9.P., 37 Park Street, Fall Rivel'; Street, Fall River; Sister Mary · Normand A. Gingras,' 258 South Denisita, RS.M., Mt. St. Mary's, Main Street, Fall River; Mrs. Fall River; Mrs. Cornelius J. Owen P. McGowan, 47 Under­ Murphy, 402 North Main Street, 'New flameles; electric clothes dryers have special se"ings 'for permanent wood Street, Fall River; Dr. B. Attleboro; Mr. Anthony J. John, or durable press clothes to get them hot enough to remove unwanted creases, !Phillip Lozinski, 1504 Drift Rd., 110 Lexington A\ie~, No. Dart­ Westport. ., . produce on air flow thot puffs the garments up ~thejr origin'ol permanent mouth,· Mass.; ·Mr. ,Thomas M.

Set. to Study, Advise

<10m

SACR:A~ENTS

Co-Chairman: Rt. Rev. Alfred 6. Gendreau,St. James Parish. · Taunton;, Very' Rev.. William A~ GalViri, OUf. Lady .of F~timi,l, Swansea. ' .. . Secretary: Rev: Rolaiid Bous-' quet,'!?t: )oseph Plfrllin, New" · Bedford' .... -,.:

McCI~skey,.1393 R~beson ~treet,

pressed shape, ond' a. cool;down· that prevents . any' new heat-set wrinkles.',

Fall River; Rev. Brother Theo­ dore Letendre, F.I.C., Prevost 'H i g h School; 'Rev. Brother . Thomas, Mulryan, C.S.C. Coyle HighSchool; Taunton:; Rev. Reg­ inald·Theriault,O.P., 818 Middle

Street; .Fall River; Rev. Robert

E. Kruse, 'C.S.C:, Stonehill .Col­

lege;' North Easton .."

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FALL 'RIVER ,ELECTRIC.LIGHT·COMPANY'


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