('This Is the Day the Lord Has Made' \
WTLel
ANWOR
Ao ....... ".".,."-.4,,.._ _
I
\
'.'
.
-
.
-
, ..-a ., ,. •
,
JJ
"'?
a:r::we",
'~Let
Us. Be Glad and· Rejoice in it."
•
'..
#'
UP.
New Discussions
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Apr. 11, 196~
2
'j
At Holy Name
Catholic "ColTlference Asks Support For Commission Recommendations CHICAGO (NC)-Members of the executive committee of the National Catholic Social Action Conference, meeting here, called .upon "all church members, and especially Catholics" to support the recommendations of the National Commission on Civil Disorders report. In a telegram to nlinois' Gov. Otto Kerner, chairman of the commission, the conference urged a "massive commitment to national action now to make quick and .visible progress to close the gap between American dream and American .reality." The telegram continued: ,"We share the fear that if our coun try maintains its present course, the end result will be an Amer ican .'aparthied' and the destruc tion of democratic values throughout our society." From their Washington head quarters, officials of the National Council of Catholic Men and the National Council of Catholic Women issued reports citing the commission's findings as an au thentic summary of the nation's ills. Leaders of both groups pleaded for Catholic support for commission recommedations. The president of the National Council of Catholic .Men, N. A. Giambalvo, expressed optimism that the recommendations of the report will be carried out. and that the response of. the public be "equal to the evil, of the situation." . . .' '. .. Stating t1;1at the report ..."pre sents an appalling' picture of man's inhumanity to man," he said he believes. that "every thinking man an.d ,woman" is prepared "to make the. sacrifices required for this nation. to ~al
will
N'ame ·HeritQge " Award Winners ., WASHINGTON" (NC) ..L. A Methodist bishop, a' Protestant woman: church' leader ' and a Catholic industrialist willI re.. celve the top award's 'at the 18th annual . Religious Heritage' Of Ameri~a meeting June 6 her(l~ Lisle M. Ramsey of St. Louis,
RHA president, said the selec
tions are Methodist Bishop
Gerald H: Kennedy of Los An-'
geles; clergyman of the year;'
J.' Peter Gra~e,. New' YOrk,
president of W. R. Grace &
Co" a Catholic layman, church
map of the year; and Mrs. Stu
art S. Sinclair, Greenfield,
Masso, former president of
Church Women, United, churcb
woman of the year.
The awards ceremony will be 'held at the RHA annual ban quet at which Dr. Norman Vin cent Peale, clergyman and au thor, will be master of cere .mopies and Dr. Kenneth Mc- Farland, Topeka, Kan., educa tional consultant to. the Amer ican ';rrucking Association, will be the principal speaker.
FORTY HOURS
DEVOTION
April 21-St. Paul, Taunton. St. John the Baptist, Fall River. April 28-0ur Lady of Fati ma, New Bedford. St. Michael, Ocean Grove. Holy Ghost, Attleboro.
A second series of Christlml Living programs will begin .. <'. 8 Tuesday night, April 16 &It Holy Name school hall, FaD this livid bleeding wound of our River, and will be open to the society." . public. ApreV'ious series drew Giambalvo said he knows "the an attendance of hundreds from 'members of NCCM are prepared all parts of the Diocese. to join in a collaborative pro Sponsored by the 'parish gram with not only other Cath eouncil, the programs will deal olic agencies but with the gov- . with topics of current impo!' ernment, industry, and institl,1 tance and will take place GO' tions and organizations, in any three successive TUesday nights. intelligent program that . will heal not only the effects' of rac On April 16 a debate with re ism but racism itself." buttals and audience participa , tion will concern itself with the ~'We will. not only continue war in Viet Nam. Debaters will the work we've been doing in be ' Prof~ssor .Richard D~~y. this field of racial justice,'" he Providence College, and . Pro. concluded, ."but 'will put. our fessor Robert McCabe,' S·M"!1. mirtds and .hearts and pocket;. Moderator Will' be Dr; .. Paull books to work on new programs Fletcher, -Bristol County Com;;! equal to the task." . ' . . munity College. . ,,' The Council of Catholic, Women IFi"eedom, Censorship. said that the report has "syn thesized, capitalized and under On April 23 a XiIln, "The Co~ scored the human tragedy that stitution and Censorship," wiliTI has found its best-or its -worst be shown and group discussic:til .--example in the rampant racSOIREE, FRANCAISE: At a French CluQ sponsored will be led by Sister MaJ'8' ism in America today: man's· inprogram at Prevost High School, Fall River, Bernard G. . Consilii, R.S.M., Salve RegillltO College. She will be assistecll b humanity to man." Theroux, left, long active in area French organizations, an . In a statement issued by its examination of freedom D!1lil1l president, Mrs. John Shields,·o was inducted as an honorary member of the club. Others, censorship in communicatioollo the NCCW said: . . from left., ·Mrs. Sabine Didelot, representing the Freneh .media by Raymond Cheney 00 Retain Dignity Consulate in Boston;, Broth~r Victor Belanger, guest speaker, 'radio station WALE and Thom~ McCloskey of the Provid6;ill\lX) "Whether the 'crisis be house- -principal of La Mennais High School, St. Croix, Que. ; Wilfred .Iournal.. . hold domestic strife, .,expanding.· Micl:J.aud, French CI~b presi~ent; Brother Ovid For~ier, club Concluding the series,. a' pan~ military entanglements abroa~' moderator. discussion on April 30 will ~ or riots in the' street - some /)
entitled "Blessed IS the where, somehow, for !lome in inal: Points of View on Recen~ sanely selfish .purpose, someone. . .. :
. \, Supreme Court Decisions." M~ has: forgotten .tha.t in"each hu-.,'. erator 'Will be Atty. Frede'd~ man existence, whether'in West .,.\. , Torphy Jr.. and' panels wIll" iD; chester County or'in Watts or· elUde Atty~' Ja~~s B:eaney, ,A~: in . Hue, there is dignity,and William Long;' District Attornet that dignity must not be com "/(;';";1.'" 'Roger Sullivan 'and .Po'1Ice' . promised. ' . , ." "If we are to retain the dignity DETROIT (NC)-A' group of and to .. the leaderS of' eur . Walter White. that has been the United States; Negro priests wIll hold a spe Church." then we must not abort the dig cial pre-conference cau'cus ·here Father Porter said the Negro Necrol~. nity that is the American Negro. , this year prior to the' annual priests will probably make it And if,. finally, an impassioned meeting of' the Catholic Clergy statement of their position when APRIL 2G .plea ..from a presidential. com Rev. Edward F. Coyle, '88.. Conference on the·, Interracial they join the full meeting after mission . has .enough substance ·;Apostolate. their own caucuS. ' 1954, Sf.· Mary Seminary, to blast, white America out of He emphasized the black St., Baltimore. The conference is a national its lethal lethargy, ~et us.. pray organization' -" of" white' and .pri ests h~ve noin.~eJ;Won.,9"', o' ,-i\.PRIL !! .. . _that it is not too late for the hu .Rev. .Jamel.l .. l-. Smith, ~9J!!a maDity of all of u~." ,,, .' ..... 'Negro 'priests who work in f~~Iig '8, separatist orga~~za-lirbanghettos;·. This is the first tion:'i or '· disassociatiilg····'·tn'ebl-· Pastor; 'Sacred"'Rcart,' Taun~ The National ASSOci'aHon time 'in its 20-year historY" that selves from the. Catholic energy .... Rev.' Thomas' F. Fitzgertila,' Laymen~" headquartered iri:Min the" black priests· have' chosen .CQ~erenCe. ,01'1 the. lnteFr,aci~l, 1954"Pastorj' St.' Mary, ' INaJ1Ol. neapolis, called "on' the: 'Church, to, schedule· a private gathering Apostolate, but may form a .1uckel '.' ::' both' as .an institution' and ; of ·tbeir 'own in' addition to· the "ioose" association to work as a " people:, that comprise" it;' to full conference. ·Tbecaucus. will ·APRIL!5 "'. :.: /1 team hetweEm' the bi9~k launch an· ·immediate revolution meet on the morning of· April eOmmtiiiity and Church'leade..., Rev. John J., Wade,: 1940;· AS'! .. '.' '. ," '. in attitudes and in financialpri aistaDt, Sacred, Heart, Ji'~ 16 in Detroit and the over-all ",_ :1 :, oi-Hies" in response to the eom';' conference will begin there that ·Riv~r. . : ' . . "" .'~~: missi~n's repor,t. ' ,Rev. Fra~cis .I. Brad.ley, evening. • ·1 ,', , ... , ' •• \ 1955; Rector, .Cathedral,Fd Host and principal ·speaker FRIDAY~ Friday.I.c;Ja,ss. River. " . ' " ", for, the conference will be Arcb . Block and. Violet. Sol~mn ,LJ ., I"" turgicai .Services. . . bishop John F. Dearden of .De troit, .president of the National SATURDAY-Holy Saturday. l .Class. Violet and White. Mass Conference of Catholic Bishops. Proper; Blessing of Ne~ Fire, LOUISVILLE .(NC) - Priests Father Herman A. Porter, a in Louisville's West. End poverty Negro priest whi> is pastor of St. . Paschal Candle, Baptism8I Inc.
area have elected a fellow Ann's church, an all-white par Wat~r, and renewal of Pro~ priest to serve 'as a liaison in ish in Warren, IlL, said the idea "'_ ises. Mass of Easter Vigil.. ' FUNERAL SERVICE
their social work programs -and for the black caucus originated SUNDAY-Easter, The .Resur help develop new programs. rection of Our Lord. I Class. NEW BEDFORD, MASS~
wIth a group of white and Father Anthony Heitzman is Negro priests who met to plan White. Mass Proper; Glory;' ~49 COUNTY STREET expected to assume his new the annual meeting. Sequeilee; Creed; Preface' Of post in about two months. He " Easter (Easter Preface is .u~ed Na.tural Leadell'S is currently on leave to serve each' d:ay till the Ascens~on.· ·"There was 8 feeling ,that . except in' feasts with proPer wIth the Russell Area Counell ," Negro priests· as a group have prefaces.) . ",.. of the Comin:unity Action'Com been looked upon by the black MONDAY - Easter Monday. ''I mission. G. community' as alienated· from Class:' .White;· MaSs'" 'Proper; Father Heitzman' said ilPos tbe causes of civil rights and tolic work among the poor needs Glory; Sequence; Creed. human dignity," Father Porter TUESDAY - Easter Tuesd<lY.. I a new, missiol1ary approacb "visible, out making. 'personal stated. He said the purpo~e ·of. Cl~Ss: White. Mass .. Proper; the" biac'Ji: caucuS is to dispel contact, not sitting in the'rec Glory; Sequence, Creed. this illusion. tory waiting." WEDNESDAY-Easter Wednes "AS priests.. we are natural "The Church has responsibility day. I Class.. White, Mau leaders in these causes," he for leadership 'in the commu Proper; G 1 o.r Y; Seque,nce, . Creed. . " nity," he said. "If. a priest is 'not stated... "We wailt to make this a 'shepherd to his nock he is clear' to· our fellow black meR' THURSDAY-Easter Thursday. not functioning asa priest;" 1; . CI~. Wh!te. Mass Proper; Asked about the possibility of Glory; Sequence; Creep,., riots in Louisville this Summer, he said "the feeling is there." Attleboro area' Catholic Young However, he said he had been Adult Organization members . , told by Negro colleagues that will presertt . their . annual va TAUNTON, . MASS.' . "if there is a riot planned, .it's ri~ty show at 8 Saturday night, . '. "'. o:! aiready planned, and if so it's April 20 in Sacred Heart Church with outside influence." . ,. hall, North Attleboro. Theme ~. P~yant, I~c THE RANK ON. ,.l In a recent meeting 'with wIll be "Love Makes the 'World ·TAUNTON GREEN priests of the West End area, Go Round;" Tickets are aVail Archbishop Thomas J. McDon able from CYAO officers or 279 Barnstable Road' _' Member of Federal DepOsll ough urged new programs and Miss Eileen Nolan, High Street, .SP 5-0079 Insurance .Corporatio~ approaches to the problems fac North Attleboro, program di tecior. . . .,." ing the area.
crlJmi.,
Plan··Caucus
Negro Priests Schedlile,M~etin9.>~~~~J!::·:',::, To C1er:gy Conference' .
gy
Pac.
of
as.
limson
"\.:"
D.!!.?
Mass Ordo
Choose', Poverty'.. Liaison Leader'
Michael C. Austin"
Complete .. .
BANKiNG~:~':~\;":' ., "''SERVICE ':-':'\ ' . '
-. for' Bres,tol COUlnty .'
"B'risto~
Variety Show'
Trust
Real Estate.
Rene
filE ANCHOR SecOftd Class Postage Paid at Fall RiVer, Mass. Published every Thursday 'at 410 Hlghlana Avenue,/. Fall River. Mass. 027~ oy ·the catholic I"ress of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscription price' IIr lllaif, postpalll $4.00 per year.
A-'
,
Hyannis"
.,'
•.
County. Company
THE ANCHOR-
Pontiff Honors
Diocesan Laity
Thurs., April 11, 1968
3
Approves
Senate'
Ideas
Pro Ecclesia et Ponti/ice Medal Will Be Awarded to Four
• Full Catholic Partidpataon in YMCA, YWCA
His Holiness Pope Paul-recognizing their efforts and endeavors over the years-has honored three more diocesan men and a woman. The Supreme Pontiff has awarded the four the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice medal, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of ·Fall River, ann 0 u n c e d today. For ten ye~rs she has been • principal coordintaor of the An They are: nual Bishop's Charity Ball Miss Margaret M. Lahey, 37 whose proceeds are devoted to rorest St., Fall River, St. the care of exceptional chil Mary's Cathedral Parish. dren. Francois Bouchard, 105 Daw , Mr. Bouchard, son of the late eon St., New Bedford, St. Jo Joseph and Mary Richardson seph's Parish, New Bedford. .lohn J. Burke, 344 Highland Bouchard, is the husband of Ave., Fall River, Holy Name Lillian Duval, and the father of six children. He and his wife Parish, Fall River. are both active in St. Joseph's Dr. David Costa, Jr., 325 Parish activities and Mrs. Bou Gardner St., New Bedford, Im chard is a CCD teacher. Super ~aculate Conception Parish, visor for a const.ruction' firm, ~ew Bedford. Mr. Bouchard is a trustee of St. Miss Lahey, daughter of the Joseph's Parish, served as par late Thomas E. and Ida Kelly ish chairIl\an for the Bishop Lahey, has been a teacher in S~ang High School Drive in the the Fall River Public School Parish, and is zealous in all System for 35 years and in the parish endeavors. Diocesan School system for five Mr. Burke is undoubtedly the years. Second president of the Diocesan Council of Catholic best-known of all diocesan em ployees. Maintenance man at :Women, she has been particu iBrly devoted in the field of the Bishop's home and Chan tile education of exceptiona'l eery, he has served both the late Bishop Cassidy and Bishop ehildren. For this zealous ac .vity she received the Diocesan Connolly long and well. Son of . .arian' Award in December, Turn to ,Page Seventeen
• Priests to Submit Names for New Bishops • Dioceses of Fall River and Provi dence Ex~h~nge Faculties
The,Most Reverend Bishop has informed the Executive Committee of the Senate of Priests that he has approved several suggestions sent to him by the Senate. Rev. John P. Driscoll, Presi dent of the Priests' Senate, has released the following items that have been discussed between the Senate and the Bishop and which REV. DR. MARTIN LUTHER K:INH, JR. have met with the Bishop's ap proval: ' In 'keeping with a discussiOll of the matter by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, On Wednesday, April 3, the less than two hours' later at St. Bishop Connolly has said that , Catholics may participate fully Hospital. night before his death, Rev. Dr. Joseph's Said Archbishop John Dear- in all programs of the YMCA Martin Luther King Jr. issued what, in the light of later events, den of Detroit, president of the and YWCA. Each year Ilhe Bishops of aft will· become' a most moving National Conference of Catho- area meet' after Easter to' send statement of his credo: lic Bishops, the next day: to Rome the names of those "1 don't know what will hap "Dr. King gave his life for,· 'priests . whom they feel should Attorney Edward B. Hanify, a member of the Boston pen 'now,'" he said, "We have others in the finest spirit of be taken into consideration to ~ firm of Roper and Gray,' will open'the 19'68 Catholic got difficult days ahead, .but Christian love." , be named, as bishops. Bishop Charities Appeal kick-off meeting at 2 Thursday afternoon, it, doesn't matter with me l>e-· . In Newark, some 25,000 partic- Connolly' asks that the priests of April 18, in the auditorium of 1ihe new Bishop Connolly cause I've been to the mountain ipated in a Palm Sunday inter the Diocese, acting individual1T top. Like anyone else I would faith and interracial "Walk for or through the Senate as a whole, High School. Atty Hanify . like to live' a .long life. But I'm was born in Fall River,· Oct. 'State Street Bimk and Trust not.·concerned with that. 1 just Understanding" through the send to him any names of priesta ghetto area where last Summer's whom they feel should be so 1. 1912. He is the son of the Co., and Boston. Edison Co. want to do God's will and He has , rioting took place. The long considered.; He is a trustee of the Provident allowed me to go up the'moun , IRte Superior· Oourt Judge Institution for Savings in Bos scheduled march was rededicatBishop Connolly and Bishop tain. IMward F. Hanify and Mary ton. McVinney of the Providence ed to Dr. King. •. (Brodkorb) Hanify. A gradAtty. Hanify is a member, Auxiliary Bishop John J. Doug Diocese baveexchangM the fa "I see the promised land. I herty of Newark, president of culties of the two Dioceses ute of Holy Cross College, National 'Advisory Council on Class of 1933 summa cum laude, Education of Disadvantaged may not get there with you, but Seton Hall University, was priests holding faculties (pel' and of the Harvard Law School, Children; life· trustee of Tufts I want you to know tonight that among the hundreds of religious m~ions) to hear Confessions LL.B., 1936, he married Jane Univoersi'ty; trustee, secretary, we as a people will get to the leaders in the march. Turn to Page Ten promised land. Dillon of Waterbury, Conn. in director, John Fitzgerald Ken He prayed that Dr. King's 1940. ~ey have three children: nedy Library; member of Exec "spirit ~ay rise to haunt the Edward B. Hanify, Jr., Jane A. utive Committee, National Cath hearts and minds of all Ameri "I am not worried about anyHanify and John Dillon Hanify. olic' Community Service and cans till we have the victory for The Hanify family resides in president of Family Counselling thing. I'm not fearing any man. which he gave his life." Mine eyes have seen the glory Belmont. The guest kick-off and Guidance Centers, Inc. From Chicago, where Dr. of the coming of the Lord." sPeaker served during World King's marches caused racial }Val' II as a Lieutenant USNR. The guest speaker served strife in 1965 and where his formerly as chairman, Board of Atty. Hanify is a director of Advisory Trustees, Holy Cross The next night, just before he death touched off one of the na ATLANTA (NC)-Arch the American Telephone and College; member, Board of Vis was ·to leave his motel for an tion's severest riots, John Cardi bishop Terence J. Cooke of Telegraph Co., John Hancock itors of United States Military engagement, Dr. King stepped nal Cody said he was "deeply New York and Bishop John ~utual Life Insurance Co., Academy, 1962.to 1965; chairman onto the balcony of his room and ~ismayed at the news of the of the 1950 Greater Boston bent to pick up something. He tragic passing . of Dr. Martin J. Wright of Pittsburgh headed the Catholic Church del Tum to Page Eighteen was shot in toe neck, and died Luther. King" egation at the funeral rites of slain Dr: Martin Luther King. Thousands and thousands at tended the ceremonies which had to be conducted out of doors after the religious service at the Page One explanation. ' Ebenezer Baptist Church for the on the stone coffins and al always white with a red former leader of the Southern The Risen' Saviour is fre Christian Leadership Conference. 80 • in the basilicas of Rome'· cross upon it, represents the quently represented as a The principal advocate of and Ravenna. "He was of Body of Christ. lamb. ' .The glory that sur "truth, love and justice" in his The drawing points out non-violence campaign for the rounds the figure indicates fered because of his own will ... ... ... He shall be led as a that Christ is the new way Negroes, Dr. King attained nat the triumphant Resurrection sheep to the slaughter, and leading into the holy place ional fame for his work. and the beginning of the Businesses, schools, courts, shall be dumb as' a lamb be through "A new and living banks and the New York Stock 'of glory which Christ's Re demption secured for all men fore his shearer....... "'" (lsa. way which He hath dedicated Exchange were closed on Tues for us through the veil, that day last when leaders from evef7 who beliveve and. make use liii 7). The Paschal Lamb is· rep is to say, His Flesh." (Heb. activity in the United States were of the means of Grace which x. 20). Of this Lamb the represented at the final exercises He extends to mankind. r~sented carrying a s t a f f honoring the Southern mlnistel' Church sings in the Preface: who procured his doctor of the The figure of the lamb is with cross and pennant. The "Christ our Pasch was sacri one of the many which, in staff represents the . cross, ology degree from Boston Uni versity. :' the fourth century, are found and the pennant, which is ficed." , ATTY. EDWARD B. BANIFY
Charities Appeal leaders· Jo Hear Atty. E. B. Hanify
***
***
* *' *
~This
Is the Day the Lord Has Made,'
life
Bishops Attend Funeral Rites Of Dr. King
4
THE ANCHOR,-Diocese'of Fall River.-Thurs. Ap,r.l1, 1968,
The Parish Pdlrade, J(OLY N,AME,
FALL RIVER
ContemJ)orary music will ae;. eompany the 11:15 Mass Easter Sunday morning. Altar boys will rehearse at 10 tomorrow and Saturday morn ings for Holy Week services. A Christian Living Series will begin' at 8 Tuesday night~, April 16 in the school hall and e<>ntinue fbr the two Tuesday evenings follovying. Subiects will include' Viet Nam, the problem of censorship and points of view on recent Su preme. Court decisions. The meetings will be open. to the' public. New' officers of the 'Women's Guild are Mrs. Frank Kingsley, president (re-elected); Mrs. Lawrence Graffam, vice-presi dent; Mrs, Dennis Cook, seere- . tary; Mrs. Richatd Wordell. treasuller; Mrs: Milton Bednarz, financial secretary. The guild viewed a film depicting the life of Christ at its April meeting. HOLX NA'l\1E, NEW BElIJFORD 'The Women's Guild and the Holy Name Society will sponsor a' penny sale on Wednesday evening, April 17 in' the Holy Name' FraU, corner of' County and Studley St!reets. The proceeds will benefit the school fund. ST. KILIAN, NE\\\ BEDFORD. 'l:he Women:s, Guild. will con,. duct a' whist pavty at 7:30, Wed nesday evening,. ApJ;iL 17 in the schooL on Ear-Ie street. M.vSi HeIJVe)\ € a non,. chahlmanj . has announced that in addition to, the regular plJizes there will also) be "special attendance aw,ards,
Senior Atb fete.
Stude,nli Award
StonehiU College basketball eo-captain Rick Pariseau has been named: the Outstanding Student Athlete in the senior class: The New B'edfol'd' resident' re" ceived' the" award' at the annual· Honors' ~ssembly' from college' president' Rev. .fohn, T. Corr;
OUR. LADY OF' OSTEItVnmE
A:SS-lJ~'lPTION.
The public is invited~ to the Annual Penny. Safe' sponsored: by' the Parish Guiloi at: 8 on' Friday evening, Apnil. 19, in tile' Osterville Elementary. SchooL Auditorium;. Mrs: Lawrence' Jones- and, Mrs. Peten Fermino; co-chair,men; are. being. assisted by a lar.ge com:.. mittae'. OUR LAlI)'Y ,OF ANGlElI:'...,}, FALL lRnmm
The Holy' Name Socie~ will sponsor a, baseball' trip Sunday, .Tuly 21. Tickets- ane now avail able from Joe Theodore and Tony. Michaels-. Adoration will take place from 8 to' midnight t<Jnight and from 6:30 tomorrow morn ing to' 4: in the afternoon. 'lJhe Solemn Liturgy will' be' cele brated at 4 o'clock. and: stations of the' cross will fbllow at 7. Easter Vigil services' will take place at 8 Saturday night. The COuncil-orCatnolla Women. announces. a chamarJta:' and; dance from a: to' midnighti Sat;:..., urday night. Apl1il 27\. witH the Silvelr Moon~ Qrcne1}t!:a; supply ing the' music;. 'Ilhe' councWs annuall U:ommuni'ol1" olJeakf;<lsti will be.' heler following. 8 o'clock. Mass· Simday, morning; ~ray 5. Holy Rosary, Sodality' will hold its corporate Communion aitd breakfast following 8 o'clock Mass· Sunday movning, Aprif 28. .
Tickets for the parish gala and dinner-dance must be purchased by Eastel3 Sunday. Sev:enth graders in the paro cllial' school' will' conduct a' paper drive' saturday; .t¥pril 20; Con.. tributions will be' pieked'up' at homes: Dbnors' may: maKe ar rangements; b)'l calling' JosepH Keefe .atl 67,2:..5331'.,
To
Irish Jesuit Hea:ds; Un,~ersity
Bag&dadl Iraq
Sfresses Confidence in Future
S'IJ. JOS,EBB, FALL RIVER
LegianJ ol
TR.?AiJNs: fRlAIQU S<.l?UDENTS: Father R'obert R Ca'mpbell~S.J." 'of ChelmsfOl:d,. Ma,sS"~. chats:. witl1.J L11aqi studenta at .Nr-Hikmw l'Jhiversfty; Baghdad~ Iraq, where' m'e New ID~ gland! pllO\\jnae> J:es-uitJ is' head of the department· of' socaI sCiences, training' young leadera' . to make theil; contributions to the' development of their country. NC Photo.
MQr~
Honolt' Soin.t:'
The New Bedford. Curia. oll the Legion of' Mary will com memOl'ate the Feast of; St. Jo "(;::S1€: . seph- the WorRer on, 'Wednesday, "The' a,war:dl goes to, vile' senior evening, May 1:, at St'. Many's athlete with high scholastic. Home, New Bedford. av.erage and outstanding. qual Mass wilf be offered' at. 7 by; ities, off chal1aeter' and: leader" Rev. Albert' F: Shovelton, spiT:" ship," noted Father Corr. inial director' of' the New' Bed~ The' award' is the highest. hon" ford Curia', and a· social' and' re or an athl'ete can receive at freshment' peviodi will fbUbw; StonehilL College. Paniseau, was 'Ilfte ev.eniilg, open' toi only co-captaiil' of' the basketball activ.e' .members of. the' Legion teaml for tile' past two, seasom oft Mary, is· being> ar-ranged) by This y.ear coach George Blaney lir.ene Mar-tin, cllairman,. Marian ,used the 6'3 Par'iseau, as. his top Hutclliilson;. Maureen Kennedy; defensive' specialist. Rick's as.. Margaret Downey and Margallet :signment each game' was· to 'stop Roche: ·the' opposition's. leading scorer. Paniseau;. a, graduate' of' Holy FamiJl;Y. High\. averaged. 7.7. points per game this season: p!a,y.ing .fi:ww:ardl He' was tile second CONAKRY (NC)-The short leading. rebounden on. the Chief:' age of priests caused by the ex tain. teaml . "ltd! like' to: ha\le. been a lot· pulsion of European mission aries from. Guinea last y,eaJ: has more' the athlete and' a lob less prompted ,the bistiops of' the the' scholar.,:' kiddedl Pariseau count'ry to issue' a pastoral' lef when' he' reaei \led his· medaL. ter urgently appealing' for vo The r:uggedl basketball player cations· to' the prieshood: and shines· in. the· .classroom\. Here' at religious, life; StonehLll he is, a dcanis list stu>. 'lJhe letter was issued an the dent magoning. in, chemistry.' end of a meeting of the oistiops' Ru,tgcrsl' DelawaJ'e' ancV the conference' here. ArclHjishop Uni,\lersLty' of. New Hampshire Raymond~Marie Tc IllildiF mlb'o have' oLfcned, Pal;iseau, g)'aduate € . SiSpl,.· oli COnakll')l; F a\t h'e'r schooL soholal1ships, Raphael! Teal apostolic adminis" Padseau pian&' to oontinue' his studies in. envil10nmental chem tJ;ator. of the diocese of N"Zere~ istry after,' completion; ot his Rore; and Father Louis' Barry; apostolic' administrator' off the tw.o yean military obligation. apostolic pJ;efecture of Kankan. His' special, interest is, conserva attended the .Jjl1eeting. tion.
Bishops of Guinea Seek. Voc.a'fuons
NEW:' YiQRK (NG)'-Tha.t1s something fOI3 an I.rishman,. isnit' it?" chuckIed. Father. Richard J .. McCanlh'M,. S.J., president. of AI-Hikma. Univer.siiy. in. Bagh~ dadi Iraq .. He. w,as referring. to a. v.olume of which he is the author.-"A Book of,. Arabic Ser. mons." Brother Alfr.ed,. a fOI:mer fac ulty member at Al.-Hikma; . nodded. and said" "If that seems strange, .you should have heard the eulogy he preached i'n' Ara bic at. President Kennedy.'s memorial' Mass." The conv.ersation. took place in New York where the two friends' Had' a' reunion preceding Father' McCartny.'s 'tour of tne l!Tn,itedl St:ates, 1'0. talk about: Al Ifikma's< accompliMiments- and its goals for the future. _ The Jesuit, soholan, a member of the New. England Province, took a doctorate in Arabic at Oxford'. Ire tias worked in, BagHdad' for' 30' years 'and pub-' . lished' tflree' volumes in IslamiC theology. .t¥l-Hikma University was, foundedl in, 1956. by· the .Ix.aq,American, Educational As sociation,
cooperation, particularly in. the and. gJ:ants whiCh, were 'ct testa.. context of the modern world," mony of the donors' confidence Father McCarthy stated. iI~ the; future of Iraq and in the He' was enthusiastic about contrioutioil' whicn the Jesuits plans fOr foundation of the Ori could make to it. ental Institute of' AI-Hikma. A gift from the Iraq govern ment' of 170' acres: of' rand'was' "We would like. it to be a mod ern Bait. Al..hikma where soholl supplemented, by grants from ars ancL students from the East the' Ford' Foundation, the Cal ouste Gulbenkian Foundation,. and' tlie West will meet on hup and otlier ag'encies: ' man; intellectual and culturai' levelS; for' ilieir mutuaL enrich.. Oriental Institute ment and profi1!;" he said.. Al'-HiKma is the. Arabic word ~111111l1ll1l1l1ll1l1ll11ll1ll1ll1l1l1ll1l1l1ll1l1l1ll1l1ll11lll~ signifying w.isdom,:" Father Mo § DItY' CLEANJNG ~ Carth~ noted. "It. is an appro priate name for a uni\;ersity in Baghdad. The institution known §' FUR' STOR:.\GE ~ as Bait. Al-hikma ·was one of iii the glories of' medie\laL BalWp dad•. Tliere· Iraqi, scholars trans lated. futo Arabic. the wisdom = and, science of tJie Greek-s-, wliiCh had' III profoul1lL .influence _ Col\cnmet Street' on, the' thought. and~ culture of· §': TauntOn •. 8-22~ fBI § medie.val and modem.· Europe." . 1II111111111111111UIIUlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUllIIIIIIIIIIIE "It. is. almost im Pos9ible' to over.emphasize' the' impoI'tanoe of. the promotionol" interoultu ral understanding,. es-teem and
and'
!
DERMODY
=':
C.t.EAN.ERS,
J4l,.M~
ORTINS;
Phom Su.pply
Answcr.s· Req.uests.
This- association, approved; by .Ixaq's. minis-tr.y· oli the inter.ioIl; is made up principally of Jes uits from 'New England and Iraq. 1m 1932 it fo.unded Bagn;.. dbd" U:!lJl'ege~. now. a, flouvislling: secondary school for boys, in Sulailrh l . a. nor.thern suburb of the city. The. esteeml enjoy.ed: by. Bagh" dad College led. to numerous re quests by Iraqis of' different faiths' andJ all wall!:&' of' life· fur em-ablishment. of' an. lnsti:tution on, the' unLv.ersity, level! "AL-Hikma was and! is our answer to' those j·equest's...• Father' Mc<!:t1l'thy' stated: "n is also the concrete' ex,pres9ion' :)f our long felt desire to make' a ,gneaten aontJributionl to· the rapidly developing,' countr.y of modern I'raq:" 'Ilhe' priest' said, the establisll.. menti ou the uni;versify was made, possible by. several g~fl$
~
245 MAIN STREET FALMo.UT:H-$48"...f91a . ARMAND ORTINS, Prop.
i,
ON CAPE: COIlJ:
JURI HIN(KIEY' Il' SOl CO. StJ;tlDtN& .MiA.TER~AIlS
S''ring 5;.&700
4·9 YARMOUTH R01\D·
H¥ANN·IS
AMPLE. PARKlNG:
~
I I
Protesa-
In
,[JAN ANTONIO (NO) Rwttfication ()f D, proposed eonstitution by every Chris
~HEhcps
IPaf~fi1:!lm~rd'
BARCELONA (NC)-Leadefll
oi 30 lay apostolate groups in
tian denomination i'11 the fibte may result in a new Texas tnter-ehurch cooperation agen ey, according to the executive
director of the Texas Catholic Conlel'ence, organization of the &ite's Catholic bishops. CaHan Graham made the pre diction here shortly after a ma tDritv of delegates to the 15th annual general assembly of the 're![(t3 Council of Churches wted to join with the 10Cath tiic dioceses in Texas to form 'the nation's first state-level ebureh body uniting Protestant, ,Boman Catholic and Orthodox ~hllrenes.
The'1»"oposed constitution for :che Texas 'Conference 1)1' Churehes, as the united body is tID be known, is now sUbject 'i\o i"(:ltification by the 11 Protes :~t member organizations Bnd fihe Orthodox who comprise the !!:'arras 'Council of Churches. It in :llso subject to approval by f:he 10 Catholic dioceses in Te:':3B.
5
THE ANCHORThurs., April 11, 1968
Expect Approval Of Inter-Church Agency i~ l'~~as
VISITING THE SliCK: When Pope Paul recently vjsited the working-class Prenestino
Barcelona have petit,ioned two high-ranking Spanish prelates to resign their government-ap pointed posts in the nation'~ parliament, the Cortes. "We believe the Second Vat ican CouncU's directives are "very clear on this point," the petitioners pointed out to Arch bishop Casimil'o iVloI'Cill 0 of Madrid, vice-president of. the Spanish Bishops' Conference, and Auxiliary Bishop Jose Guerra Campos of Madrid. A spokesman at the i\.ladrid chancery office reported that an o\'erage of 40 letters a day ·are received on the subject, some in favor, some against the bishops' presence on a govern ment political body. The Barcelona document pointed out that "this is a mat ter that deeply affects th~ Church in our country." "If, furthermllre, we take into account the fael that great num bers, particularly among the workers, have left the Church because of Ets liaison with the state, there is no possible reason to continue the symbol of such a union," the document empha sized, A m on g the organizations making the request were the Workers' Catholic Actfon, the sodalities, .the Catholic Student Youth Organization, the Inde pendent Youth Association the Spiritual League 01 Our of Monserrat, the Pax Christi Movement. and the Catholic Rural Youth Organization.
Bishops to JI}acide, district of Rome, he took time to visit bed-ridden 83-year-old Teodoro Tarquini. The Holy '!lbe boal'd of directors of the 'l'e2tQ3 Catholic Conference has Father offered Mass in Italian at the parish church of .St. Leo. NC Photo. ld.ready .approved the' proposed dlle'W constitution in principle, Graham said, but it must still 'be oonsidered 'by each individ ,.a! bishop for ,his own diocese. .Graham said the Texas Cath .nc ConIerence itself :wUl be «)R\e G membtu' of the new, 01' ment that s~(!lte aid in supplying WASHlNGTON (NC) -For aid to benefit :a religious group. pnil!:ation, but wm also .contin But the "wall of separation is ·textbooks .in secular sUl>iects ,to midable forces :from :Chur.eh .~ f;o funotion ::autonomously. children in nonpublic schoob lie .traced :.the proposed ,01'-' state ranks forged a defense of between Church and state, not "between ,the child and the is 4 dir:eetaid to religion .is .mi<:ation 10 ,.the Mat'Ch, 1966. the 1966 New ;y'ork state '.text .mooting of frhe Texas COUDcll book law's validity 'fox the i~ 'State," .the educational groups "Irivolous:" brief reminded. Since the Su fII. Churches general asSembly, 'pending showQownbefore the 'The ,attorneys general brief preme Court decided the Ever when an invitation was issued United States Supreme .Court. contends .a state may extend A pt'iest jQined :tbe ,-gentlral 30n case in 1947, ::l "different publicly 'financed aid such .as to ~tholics ,to join :theCQuncil. ONE STOP
tack" has b~en pursued by the 4CAs G .result 'this information counsel of the U.S.·Catholic'Con police. fire protection, public court i'n considering state aid safety and transportation to SHOPPING CENTER
,was trnnsmitted to the bislu)P$:' .ference in filing an. ecumenical b'pe brief nn behalf o;fnational directly to students, .whether school 9tudents., whether in ~ham recalled. "The bishQP3 • Television • Grocery decided .we didn't know enough Catholic, Protestant and .:Jewish they attend public or private public or private schools. The • Appliances • Furniture tlbout the counoil,andbo.tb educational organizations, urging schools the bl'ieI underscored. brief contends that the textbook sides began ;) study more than the nation's highes tribunal to Tee brief states that 85 per law falls within .the category .0£ 104 Allen 51., New Bedford • Jl'ear-and~a-half ago.
uphold the 'law. -cent of grammar and highscool sunh £lid since it benefits the 997·9354 The attorneys general of students in the nation attend New OODfititllltnOD
student. no.t the school. ~t of these discussions both three stat~s in another briet public schools, either because ,.td~ tried to take a iresh look joined in supporting. the conten their parents prefer that type ·1IIt the existing constitution" ol ,tion of New Yo-rkAtty, .Gen. of education oi'because the &be council, he continued. "1n Louis J. Lefkowitz" that the choice is dictated by economic *ad of talking about joining, ."only beneficiaries 'ot this law necessity. The other 15 per cent • lllew proposed constitution foi' 'Ire students and their parenUi," are in nonpublic schools and :!IeOrganization was submittedt!> not schools, andconsequen.tly more than 90 per cent 1)f them ,tile Catholic bishops." the law is constitutional. GlTe in church~related schpo13, The proposed new constitu The friends 02 .th1l court the .brief adell. ,Goo, GI'aham explained, is "de 'Frivolous' Argument (amici curiae) briefs were filed .gned to bringabou,t better ~ in preparation for the hIgh. The educational :~ups do ~ration affiOl}g 'all alw~he.s. court's consideration ;ot ,the law not not contend 'the state must mm office llQ$ already cbeen !Which provides .that ;the state supply ,assistance to ,nonpublie ,-..operating." . fUl'llishIree textbPokg insecu.. f1Chool children, but if it ex Before the (council -invited WI" subjects to students :0£ ,pal'O ·tends secular educational 'bene eatholic membership, Catholic (lhi·ai and ,other nonpubUe ~its 00 .all school children, :thea pr~e.sts ,and laymen had attend schools. The court ,has .yet ,to it is within ·the state':! eonstitu lid meetings of'the Texas Coun .schedule·8 date for :argumeni:ll ·tional discretion to supply such , !»f Churches for' two ,year.. in the ease. oaid,nomatter ,whatschoolsth~ . . official observers. One' bl'ief w.as ·filed in ,behalf child ran .attend. of the National Catholic Edue;a.. The brief contends the ar~tioruJlI 'AsSociation, .theLutheran ;Keynoter Education Association, '·the Na Hal'mon;y .in ,tioll!lll Union !Of Cht'istiaa ,.A1Convention BONN (N:C) -There is ,com- I Schools and tl1le ',National. ':Con CINCINNATI (NC)-Keynote 'ierence of Yeshiv:! Principals. plete harmony .in the Catholic Church in t!ungaIY .among ,the _~~er attne golden Jubilee Father Charles M. .Whelan. bishops, priests ,and lay,men, a<> Cltholic Students' MissionCrn May we rejoice forever in tfu~ ,-.decon.vention Aug. 22 to 25 5.1., of Fordham 'University law cording to .ll report ,.in Magyar joined William R. Conse tloryof ·theResurrection ! Kurir, the Hungarian Church's « .the University -(jf Notre school. official . news agency, WOhicb :Dame will be Bishop .Jphn :J. dine, usec general counsel" in filing the briel. Han:n.on Burm Wright of Pittsburgh. noted tha.t the .Hungarian of the. NCEA, Francis X. Gallag Church seems to be free of tile :.\bo highlighting the 50th her of a.altimo,e .and ,Alfred ~. dissension lthat exists in :the .-.niversary df the mJ1liOlll B£t man,. Westem ,member youth 'organization wiU Scanl-an of Washington, served ,E:hui'Cb as consultants in preparing ,tb.e oountries. 'be the presen~ ,-of Father Cllf . tom .J.King, S.V.D., Divine brieC. The other brief -was J'iled by ~ OFFI(:I:RS, TRUSTEES, CORPORATORS AND STAFF ':'Worn missionary who 'founded At~y:s. Gen. James 'L. Oakes ,of ''Cbe CSMC. ·The crusade headquarter.a Vermont, William ,C. Sennett 'here said a pageant -depicting ofPenllsylvania, -Dod Herbert both the mission history of :F. DiSimone of Bll,ode ,Island. Over 35 Years Amel'ica and the career of the The educational group:! cm ~l\1C will be staged in the !!>hasized they "do not want !» of Satisfied Service
OO~ O'Laughlin auditorium Qf see the ,wall ';f separation be lBANK.& Reg. Mas~er Plumber ·7023
m. Mary's College, adjacent to tween Church and state!leilliei' JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.
1\ Notre Dame. Student grouP!! disnuintled or displaced," would DOWNTOWN fALL IRIVIE~ 106 iNOl. MAIN STREa'
~;;;n 16 areas' of the U. S. wlM oppose the znoot "paltr;Y'" FaiR River fiJ5a7491 ~e Alart. wnouut of direct governmentllil
Defend
Textbo~kLaw cinShowdown
'Case
JE-dllCltlJion Organi:%otiollS File ·Ecumenical 'Brief
Lady
(ORREIA & SONS
"I arose,
and . . still with yoa"
_I
,Prela,te
,Church
JOYOUS GREETINGS
'MontlePJumbing & HeafiD1gCo.
';~ itizens SAVINGS
THE. ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River':""Thurs: Apr.
6
1l,19~8
Rx for. Renewal
Priests' Senate Votes Support
J
Accomplishi1lJg . the' Dream.
Of OrdinarY '
The senseless and savage and tragic death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is not the end Of his nonviolence' " erusade.· But it should bring a deepening realization of what nonviolence entails. The Ghandian Way of nonviolence is not simpiy a tech
nique of sittiIig on sidewalks and not moving, a matter of
being passive and silent in the face of attack~ verbal or
physical. It embraces moi'e than that.
It is, basically-and Dr. King ·knew this-a spiritual.
force. As a former Governor General of India has remarked:
"The renunciation of· external violence is not enough, but
must be accompanied by. asepsis of the heart for the suc
cessful surgery of nonviolence. How can One .love where
there is so much cause for hatred? The answer lies in every
one's heart and can be appealed to through love; and then
and then Only will the man be changed." '
Nonviolence means bringing to bear, against the forces
of hatred and prejudice and ignorance the still more pow
erful force of intelligence and education and love of God
and neighbor. Nonviolence means ~eeting overcoming evil
by the sheer power of courage and work and love,.
This, Dr. King understood. This alone will accomplish
his dream. .
Sniritual Leaders? r
BUFFALO (NC) ThirteeJl of 21 members of the Buffal!o Senate of Priests have voted· to support Bishop James & McNulty in a controversy S\IDol rounding the transfer of a pries!i from a Negro ghetto .parislli. Eight members of the senato abstained from voting. The controversy began when Father William G. Warthling was transferred from St. Niclt olas parish in Buffalo to O~ Lady Help of' Christians parisJl in the suburb of Cheektowaga. Father Warthling and some members of St. Nicholas parislli charged that Bishop McNuIQ transferred the priest becau.se he encouraged the Holy Name ~iety to seek membership _ BUILD, a militant social actiC'!\ group formed under the leade~ ship of Saul Alinsky, contJic:> versial ooinrnunity' organizei'. Members of the .parish and ci1 BUILD staged a protest demo~ stration in front of Bishop ~ Nulty's residence. Msgr. Bernard J. McLaughiiC5., diocesan chancellor" said th::l transfer of Father Warthlin(] . was "routine," _but said the die- cese frowns on the methocilo which BUILD uses ·to better tho' lot of the Negro communit~ 'Sufficient Reasons' At the height of the contro versy, the Buffalo Senate of Priests met to hear a report of the Priests Advisory Board OIl f Father Warth li~e ,trTahnsfebor 0rd ng. e. a reported there :were~good and sufficient" . . .
Lay people' are being urged to get more and more in . volved in. the work of religion. When they do, they many
. th h f t b. times make more sense t h an ose w 0 pro ess 0 e
" '
teachers.. ·of religion. Last week, for example, a professor at the' Harvard
Divinity School and the Episcopal TheologiCal School said
that sex between unmarried persons could be mor,ally good
t,.:,'., h,i,',; or bad depending upon the situation. And during the same
week the chief of the Psychiatric Service, Harvard Uni versity Health Services, took colleges and parents to task
for,condoning free sex behavior in youth and f9r not bol " 1<,.. stering young people' in maintaining high moral standards.
He ;'counselled chuicli leaders not· to abandon, Ii. 'spiritual ap.
. ,', ,Rev. Johnf'. Moore. St. Joseph's, Taunton' , 'peal-toyoutll puttomaintainlheif' ttaditional religious Ap.. ~.' ·I:A., 'lilA, Ini·o~hi~:'~::t~~~~bers~ proach .to reinforce high moral standards. , 'Voted support for BishOp·:at.. So here"is·the picture-a religious lea,~~r.seeing':l1ot~ The .Tragedy' of Memp'·h·s .:N~1.tY. on the,transfer" isBoIl.' "ing wrong' in 'sex between the unmarried; and . a ~ymaJl' .. ' .,' _' ' " .:'. . I, EigJjt.pries~ abs.tainedfroin' i.e , .. . . . ' .' . vote on the grounds that, . . teeing everything wrong ,In, I t ,', ,:. .' , - : .. : ~:.., apite, the board's explanaiiclli. , In the ,light ,of' the Gospels,. the. theologian" is ._'Wrong the issue was still not' clear . ".' ' G., '~ However, each of, the ei.... ,and the layman is right. ' . ' ,',. , .",... " , 'And this, is why religious leaders' 'are,:'in :,many -in .. ,priests who abstained from " . 'lltailces, losing: whatever credentials tliey' Duiy possess. 1;0 , The senseless murder ,of Dr. ,;Marti,n, Luther X.ng Jr. ing said they ,deplored' ·charg. 'th a .mea:s~re. " .. . 0 f' good" " . a'gal'n', brl·.,ngs l'n' focus the' v,• l'o'lence ,tha't I·S· ours. Yes, 0''u'rs. --Nulty,' '6f racism againstto Bishop' M0 .1ea. eop l e ' are end owed WI· _sens~. according Msgr. .lolie d' P ,They have some ideas abo.ut the, main thrust· of the. Gospels•. -Too often we have relegated the dark pages of our natio~ Neylon, senate president. ' . They expect to' hear religious leaders speak in those tenns. history to ,one local or to. a certain segment ofour8OCh~ty.,'rhe race issue was'- injecte41 And, when they hear deviations, then they write off the We seem to fool that the . ' , . In the controversy by a BUILD spokesman who said BishOJl religious leader and listen to him no mor,e. Of course, those events which took place in fortable '. christianity. . I' I ' Even m our own locale, 1he McNulty's removal of Fathel' who are looking for justification for some type of action ~emph.ls ha~e Itt ~ connec- people who could have done,so Warthling reflected. ",patN>" that the religious leader approves will be glad to welcometlOn WIth thIS area of the much reillly have contributed izing attitude toward black him to the bandwagon. And then the responsible Jaymen- nation. so very little. The str.uctured people and a general. lack ef the physicians and psychiatrists and civic leaders and those A certain emotional sympathy class system that has, been our understanding of ghetto prob who are concerned abou.t the moral and famil:y health of the is created by the vivid -reality inheritance from our early New lems. Msgr. Neylon said all · of the television. For the most England ancestors has been senate members rejected .... community:--must move into the scene and try to repair part, it is just another drama,' only. insulated and protected by charge. that will pass in time and the' progress of an affluent All 21 members of the senatlrl the damage done. Perhaps this can be the message of Easter'-:"'instead of thingS will go on and a~l.will aociety. . 'VOted for a motion to appoint. When a man "makes good" he committee to make public the talking about the resurrection in glow.ing and lyrical terms, be. well. This indeed is the tragedy ,of Memphis. .tends to leave the memories of works and programs which the instead of speaking about glory and joy, the -r.eaJ message Natio~al . problems cannot be his afflicted, past in the void.of diocese has developed amo~ of Easter is one of love of God for 'men and love of men .con!!idered to be isola~ed events. a twilight z(;me; The blood minority groups and in the ... .for God. And Christ gave the standard of Love-:."If any When. ~ national mQvement, ·sweat. and tears, poverty ~ ner city. man love me' he will keep my commaridme.nts'~Iid the·· .party or,persc,>n, cOncerns him- ~n forgotten in the land ol ' Father and I,will love him and we will come to hIm and self wi~h the basic principles 01. gracious living. '. " . ";,TemporarY ..,Heaci . . . _ .. , , '.. human existence,. all humanity Even, more removed fJoa ../tl.TLANTA (NC) -'A.·u.xilia.'~ will make· our abode with him." is invo.lved. Such is . 'the ease ,memo~. are: the' people. wh.-., Bishop JOseph-· L:Berilllrcii;
Theoiogians mayor may not understand the 'full im . with Civil, ,Rights, such is the . ,:-re still III the depths of 8Uffer-· Will serve' 'as' adminiStratOr iii
plication of these· words. For the most part,the people do;; ease . and the. movement pre-~. Thu~, when ~ new. genera- tbe Atlanta Archdiocese' linti
eve'n if their 'actions at times do n'qt 'measure' up~ T~ey' serited to the nation by Dr. ti9G ,recel,ves th~ mherIta~ elf .' a .successor is named for' ....
" " .' . Martin Lutl1er ~ing.. . . poverty,' the prospe~\IS ~ .. '13te Archbishop' Paul 'j. Ham..·· , , understand - amJ: th~y. expect' the~r ~pj.ritual advisors1;q, '." Yet the majority of' Ameri- .U;l~', first to deny. that they' ue nan' \lnderstand and to preach these Gospel words, all Gospel· cans have, for mimygenera-· his. heirs: This' is true of most • words. tions, considered ~e plight of men ,regardless of the color ttl ---------~....,:;",-- 'the urban, ghetto from' the com- ' 1heir skiil. This is what we ,:Memphis. fortable . ~rm-c:hair of a com-. ,must kUly overco~. If we wish to contin':1e . . "NonViolent" doctrine of :0. King it is now' up to us. 'IIIe time for dQlay has passed. . Now IS,Time for Ci!iI Rights Concern \ Either we commit ourse"' The words of Dr. King cer tude . and ,the smug self to the' principles that were to. tainly were not understood by righteousness of our bourgeois tered and dramatized by :0. .....King or we perish in the flaJJ* the senseless mobs ,that took mentality. to the' streets of our cities after all for of anarchy and civil discord. To claim that we are "'P!~~"" I, f\n:V,I·":r":'\!'E~ OF T~E DIOCESE OF FI\Ll P'VER
his death. Nor were they under the civil rights movement and The assassin's bullet again . . Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River stood by the majority of white then to deny a home to a man . forced America to make a ded middle-class Americans. because he is negro loots the sion. In a country, in an area, 410 Highland Avenue
The apathy and lack of gen ·mind and arsons the spirit of where the majority claim to be Fall River, Mass. 02722, 675-7151
uine concern for the civil rights our scciety even to a greater Christian we better start liviDa PUBLISHER
movement among this group is degree than a street mob. It is the Christian ethic· and tile Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. galling. the spirit of our society, the Christian message of "love _ GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER It is these factors that aHow spirit of our country that is at another as I have loved yo.. Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. iohn P. Driscoll mad men to assassinate. We stake. If we refuse to accept this mee MANAGING EDITOR . ·mus,\; condemn the lack of' un:" sage we fail not only <\~.l;l natiOlll Any hope of postponing a 00 Hugh J. Golden ·aerstanding, the disdainful. atti-· cision em this matter died. at but also as a Christian pe~
'€
mo,on I n(j
A pa t..h_'y '. n d'.. I n'd"i ff' .,_e.,rene,,'e· to'
a
we
@rheANCHOR
.
·Mrs.···Stewart Fails to Tell 'Casey' Story Convincingly
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., April 11, 1968
Catholics Defend Fair Bus Law
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. IKelIDedy
Ramona Stewart's Casey (Little" Brown, 34 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 02106. $6.95) is a.novel which promises more than it delivers. Its· action begins in 1860, concludes in 1886, and HI laid in New York City. The focus is on Tom Casey, aged 20 at the start. A native of Ireland, he never marry. 1m her avidity for remembers the horrors of possessions and, eventually, po County Cork in the years of mUon, sine keeps driving Casey,
TRENTON (NC)-Spokesmen for Catholic schools defended the state's year old fair bus law at a public hearing held here to consider its possible reviSion. In ml!lny respecfs it was a re peat of the public hearings a year ago which resulted in the bill being amended before passage. But at that time the thrust was for passage of some rort of measure !)utting private school students on equal foot ing with public school students. Now legislative sentiment ap pearc ro incline toward a cut back, although outright repeal seeDlll unliksly.
Qle great famine. His family Bed their home, went to Liver POOl.- suffered muough a five
taunting him with his inconse quence and urging him 1;0 bold steps. He becomes an alderman, gew to . know 30ss Tweed, head of weeks' voyage Tammany and notorious plun IlrJ. a sailing lib i p , f i n a l l y d e r e r @Il the city's resources, ee.ttled in New even moves b:riefly on the "". , York. For them, ·ftin,ges of the gaudy nouveau , " , . I A m e 'I' i e a' . ,richeset typified by Jim Fisk. " 008 not turned But-'· when his boss Maguire , .' <lmt to be the breaks with the big boss, Tweed, CasEiy'S ascent ill re j'ijlromised land. . versed. Tweed, however, is ex Like thousands tillld thousands
posed . and undone, and pious ef the Irish
John Kelly takes over as head . t th New York of Tammlllny ~. , d 10 <B!"OW d e 0 e casey rel!llizes tiliJilt' it; is 'op dums, they are abysmally portune for him to 'repudiate
~~'eir
homes are decrepit, , verminous tenements. Their jabs are menial. ill paid, and d!.ancy. They are despiSed by the natives, both for their na &nai origin and for their reli fIion. They meet violence at the lhands of brutal nativists. No opportunity opens up for them, lJDd they are without hope. Elab$mte Setting'
7
One relllSon foi' the dll;lnge in outlook b the compleJdon of ihe legislature. Lest year it was in DeInoeratic hands and fair busing bllld the support of Gov. Richard JJ. Hughes. Now Repub licans hold control by a 2-1 margin and party leaders see Ii mandate to cW'tail some of tine programs enacted a year
Maguire and strike out on his own. 'I.'his he does, to the imm~ diate signal improvement of his lot, but lllt the price of Maguire's bUter enmity.
,
~o.·
A half-dozen bills to repeal or revise the busing law are now before the legislature. The
AdvaI:ltageMJS Marrul1ge
hearings here were held by the Casey now marries one EileeZl education committees of both Callahan, liI doctor's daughter, the State Senate and Assembly, a chilly lace curtain Irish sort. whiclll hnve not yet released! It is 'not a happy marriage, but any bills from committea. it iJiI respectable and advanta Principal spokesmen for . geous. Casey is appointed citY, Catholic education were John n is plain thet Miss Stewa.Ii ~coroner, at'tl ~to;salary with Per'; 1. Rafferty, counsel ful.' the ., . 'lhas done thorough rese'~rch cl>1l1 . qUlsites. '.:. . .' , New Jersey Catholic Confer the period. Bet. pages are .But. there i~t y,et aJ.1oth~r re ence. and Msgr. John 3. Clark, paCked with d.etall.· She has·· 'versal' til store for' him.' On Camden diocesan superintendent mounted a viVid mid elaborate election day, 1~74,.~ he goes of scbools and president or the ooIJting for nero story.' But the about to see that his forces are state ruperiIllten~ento' ~cia ~. (ftory' does not" live or· inove. It performing p'roperly (which tion., abounds in incident, it has com- means 'improJ,>erly), he is'draWn .. "plications' galore,but it lacks into an altercation with. Ma- . ~tality .arid 'never' generates guire. power. Why this should be, it is, "Casey,. taking, a. physIcal BERLIN (NC)-E:ast Gennan at first, hard to tell.' beating from the bigger Ma o ~ Tom Casey sne. ~as a ~g- . guire, draws a pistol and shoots. ~lEl\][ORIAL MASS: Patti.·ck Pardinal O',Boy!e. of Wash . eommunist authorities Ulave ex propriated the Catholic parish . • 'who should be mterest1Og. Htt hits t M gu'r b t ' f . . . ':I:."·",Toiil. is inteUigenl' ·and,'rug~. ·';'tlie latte~ miihioris~T:e~~h:cJl" ~~tQ~,. speak~ .at a mem,O,rI~ M~:s f0t: ~r...1lIIartm Luther. 01 St.. Francis Xavier. in East Berlin without compensating " ,,,,,: ~t .he left school at· 13. He n():;vi" Is,mortal.' CaseY'- is1ndicted £01'(' ..l{~ng,.!r., hel~ ~und~y:. at t~e. :Na,?~~~l Shnne of th~ Immac the Cbureh. Redevellop~nt ia realizes th~t. be can~et '~"" ,~urd~r,' tried, l~t, out on bail". \ll,a~ Co.me~pbQn in. .the natI~n~s C?Pl~aI.NC J?ho1Jo. given as the expropriation rea ,!.here, never break ~l1t 01 ~~" ,~heI1, a hung jury evenWates., . . ." son. ; .:, ,iitifling, .meager, wretched woHd imd 1JnaeeouJmtabi ultdmately gOeSRefree.' . . . '1:·: ·W'··. 11 of his k1Od. IDs one .asset seellW . .. " Co be brawn Which counts for e . .eo'l!'ery.,. :. lJOmething' the br'aw~g:'k ,', ·He w no~ disgraced, in de,bt,' ;" \, 'Which his Arsenal Gimg 'in-' ,witbout £I Job,· probably .perma Pll'ob~<em
dulges and in the work of 'tblii" nently estranged from' his wife. Pacifid .Company of volunteer' One might suppose that·.,this was firemen to which he belongs." , the .end of t~e story. But no, 1m As he looks about; he recog;,,; . Cl ·final s~ctwn d~ted 12 years CHICAGO (NC) -A. leader ereatiID.g is new notionall wW ftizes that the way to some ad:'" later, he is the chIef deputy and m Catholic interracial justice " for notional actioo. ~cement and aggrandizement· !lUre .. successor of' ag~ng, ailing work ~id here white rlllcis~' ·",We believe that creation of . f:l through politics. He observ~ ·&ss Kelly. He is almost at the called essentially responsible the national will' is probably John Maguire, who, at 37, io top, and it all mean.s nothing.· for .the :violence in cities by the the greatest. spiritus! problem olderman, saloonkeeper, a'D ell ?ne of the flaws 10 :t~e novel ·national riot commission "is a confronting religiollJS institu mstrict leader of the Twenty {s Illustrated by the diSJuncture moral problem and must be at- tiona in Amerlcm." Ahmann de ~t ward. ·between Casey's fall because oil ,~cked by the white churches." clared in calling on NCCIJ's 1~ A i r ' PI!' ti tille· murder case and his unae-· .Mathew. Ahmann, executive lliffiliated Catholic interrracillll
• cq1lll es es ge. ". ,.countable recovery. The'recov- . director 4)f .the National Catho- councllsand human relationo
MagUire is, of course, a T;wt- ,,,.~ ·:is .. never explained. We lie Conference for Interracial 'ComiImissions' to' Set ~ tRileo.ir ef
May the ;'8711 of ~g [ltm1 .' ,.,' ~ny m~. He dresses well. don't know. how" it 'was done. Justice, asserted: "The commis- lo-rts for social jUstice;
. . wears dlamon~. ,studs, ha!i. ·IJ, We', are, simply.. pr.esented with·.. ···sion said the problem of· realiz" .. , . 'Long-Range Pll'Ogn-ams .' ;::':,:',go~d-headed cane..Casey cop~ $t. and asItedl.·to take. it ,On faith:. -log .. tqe recommendations it. In cooperation, with 22 other . .. mine' tlP~D JOU, and' ~aJ ,., ..' ~ude~ that .~e must g¢t ~n ~~l." ··ll'I\Wl, at .the. end; tberebe- " made on, treating !lhe, ghe~to .:~orgahizations, NCCI.1 bas ~ .. , the afOlY of His ReslITa'eI} 1.,;-,", ~agulre. . - , '. ",~ .. ·,·\OOm.es glaring something whichi .problem". was the problem .,(If., published and distributed a' spe ,
. :; ..... Bf~ does, through ~s p'rov.:~_ ,,' .all , :.alongi· has: nagged., at 'tne .. ' .. ' cial 32~page ..pamphlet, s·~ary.", .tiOD bless J01l Ydtb·
>11,.1 lID 19hting, But.. h~ progre~·.lY, ... "rreader:.nanaely~the s~dd&n leaps . ory,.·" of th R rt f h N . al Yery slow. True, he ge,.ta,. 11 Cl .... ~ .. to. l,til.e _.,..,.,. le·aps.'. acr~-" ... . , '. ' . e. epo () t e !I¥on .. I.l..1o "..,.... R·'··.. . Commission '00' CiVil ,'pe~ jOle : .!. :' 'AdvisorY DisOrders'. I j 1 '- .. ':. .,.,.. which involves 'Db dU~I~ .improbable nnd. unexplored , ehl'ement, ge. at all but allows him to sp'~nd".,zhasms.;. . ., . 'SAN ANTONIO (NC) -The Ahmann eaned fur NCCIJ aU hiS time wardheeUng for .Timelilness iD Novel San AntoniQ' archdiocesan affiliates to stress the need for . Maguire.. He, acquires B li'ttle A more serious· flaw' is thA p'rl·e·sts'· seina'~ has recommended long-range ....··c....l·on- TI pro prestige, even a little' P o w e r . . '" vc cu'"..... <U But h is till tty an failu·re lIll development of char 75 as the compulsory retirement grams for aD ~rts cd bhe potatoe~. G pre 1m ~r: ~is is most notice~ble age for priests in the arcbdio Catholic community to elimi But then suddenly. Maguire'; ou tOO mstance of Casey hlm cese, and 65 as an "accepted" nate white racism. incmding ebief henchman die;, 'and Ma self,. wile rem~~. a na!De and a retiremen~ age. .. programs for human relations guire himself in hi gn' f _ type.. never nngmg true as a Tbe' recommeridation, which . training" fM lay leadership, , .s e , per. complex person. The same is has' been sent to ArChbishop clergy, teacherS, and required 'The . petrates an egregIOUS act of true of the borde of others whO Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio, elementary a nd secondary folly. Casey is at hand .to help, pour through tIl1e book. Be they came in the fonn of a motion, school courses in humanrela lIDd succeeds in concealing Ma '. . ' . . . . pire's drunken blunder, onl,. major Gr mInor,. h.lStOriC~ or passed unanimously by the 12 .nons and Negro Illistory. to become involved with .n gid ~onlh" ~y are WIthout mner member - senate at a meeting , He also urged affiliated 01' Maguire hIllS B8S lted. llife. . here. ganizati()ns to bank as well as Fail River Savings BaRk ' Mrs. Stewart hit upon • sub . u The senate also recommended purchase goods and services in Ascent Reversed feet wJith great possibilities and establisbment of "some sort of the black communi~y. On the FAll IUVEI She is Claire 'Scofield whO genuine contemporary signifi 'tenure of office" for pastors and legislative front, :ne urged elm. . give the appearance' of ·eanee. But she haS' not' known assistants. They urged a maxi support of the similar goals of . ~Jadylike innocence but is act~ :how to render it convincingly' mum limit of 10 years in the the riot commission, the Urban SOMERSET • , rally a vix~ She and Case,. and illu~tingl)" in terms of same parisb for pastors, and a Coalition, and Dr. Martin Luther . ,,...'.'. ;·I:,.me to ailal'range~ent !lui, ,:'fidWL . '.'. liDlit, ~ five yearn fol' ,assistants. Ki.B4fil Poor ~'s Campai.gn~
. ,Expropriate' Pm';sh
/IN.. at.•-.on::a':
-hi
Q
,-1'1
Ahmann Says Wf:lit•. Racism For White. Churches
Favo'rs Compuls. 'A"
.
a,nd
Old Red Bank
8
.;New Pay Scale
THE ANCHO~=Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Apr. 11, 1968
For Teachers
Enjoy Family Cele'bration Of First Communion Day
FORT WAYNE (NC)-'ftle Fori Wayne-South Bend dioce san board of education bas ap proved a new salary scale for lay teachers in elementallY ancll secondary schools. The board approved tl recom mendation that "for every :fuD.. time degreed ~acher employed with a current valid Indiana teaching license, a parish Will be reimburse<\ at the rate Oil! $2,000 each for the school ~ 1968-1969." The salary schedule for 196& 1969 provides, on the bachelon degree level, for a minimum Oil! . $5,200 and a maximum of $6,200 . at the 10th year, with an incre mentof $100; a minimum Qf $6,000 and a maximum oil $8,700 at the 15th year, with a $180 increment for the bacheloi' degree teacher' with a state license; and a minimum of $6,30@ .and a maximum of '$10,000 as the 18th year, with an increo ment of $200, for the mastero degree teachers.
By Mary Tinley Daly Changes in the Church, that perennial topic of COlll versation since Vatican Council II, come in for a lot of pro and con discussion on the part of the laity. With each ehange the dissident~ speak up, head-shakers moan, ·"Well, fthey didn't do it. that way in my day!" But as each in... forms" of any kind with their novation is inaugurated, inevitable rivalry. Each little and boy was in mufti then incorporated into pres girl tastefuUy and com£o11tably
ent practice, we realize these ehanges are made not simply for the sake of clJ.ange but, as Pope John XXIII put it, to keep lr<P with "the !rhythm of the times." To quote from ·'The Church ·in Our Day," collective pastoral of the American hier mchy recently published, "Our present eHort at restructuring procedures in the Church with In the national and Diocesan eommunities depend in great measure on the seriousness With which study is undertaken and the disposition. to implement )&.
a the part of the laity." New Prooedure I One change, nO doubt fsmil Jar to families in many Dioceses, came to our attention forcibly and impressively in practice last week. I speak here of the new cus tom (new to us, at least) of having children receive First Holy Communion not as a class but each receiving' the Sacra ment for the first time with parents and relatives. Long gone in many areas is the custom of turning over one of the Sunday Masses to the First Communion class - girls in white dresses and veils on one side of ·the aisle, boys in white suits on the other, back of the church reserved, often times with standing room only, for parents. With the growth of parishes there often came transfer all First Communion day to Satur day, a sensible step, but stiR tmly for First Communicants and their parents. Because of 8Pace limitations, grandparents, 8Odparents, brothers 'and sisters, lIilcles and aunts were invited out for this precious occasion. 'JIbey eouId line the·.sidewalks 4Ntside, take pictures, perhaps p to breakfast with their par ticular First Communicant, bu& that waS that. .
Kate's Day So It was with surprise we weeeived a telephone invitation from eight-year-old Kate to at tend the 11 o'clock Mass with her last Saturday. On arrival at church we wondered if we had the right time and place. No more white dresses and veils on one side of the ~sle, )\"hite suits on the other; no "uni
Parish Hires Full-Time Layman Theologian BALTIMORE (NC)-St. Mat thew's Church has become the .. first parish in the Baltimore archdiocese to 'employ a pro fesionally trained ley theolo gian as a full-time member 'af the parish staff. Joseph Hargadon, a fonner member of St. Clare's parish, E6sex, who ~ii; now studying at the Institute of Lay Theology in San Francisco, will be c0 ordinator of St. Matthew's Con fraternity of Christian Doctrine program, Msgr. Clare J. 0'-. Dwyer, pastor, said. He begina working in the parish Aug. ~
garbed. . Each family had its own pew: parents and First Communicant in aisle seats; sisters, brotI1ers, grand-and godparents filling up the rest of the pew. We be longed to Kate on Her Day. "What a small class," whis- ' A][D FOR V:n:CT.n:MS: Food'for victim~ of the Washi~g pered the Head.of the House as the names were read out at the ton civil disturbance following the death of Dr. Martin beginning of Mass. That, we Luther ¥ing, Jr., in Memphis, was distributed at churches thought, was the ~ason we had been included. Not so. Each of all denominations in the capital. Here Sister Joanette of child in the First Communion Catholic University, gives bread. to burned..out families at Class could designate ahead III St. Mamn's Church, N. Capi·tol and T Streets. NC Photo. Department of Justice time which. of the parish Masses ' : $ ~ ~ ' " Approves 'Shared,-Time to attend, thus .splitting the number into more intimate HARRISBURG (NC) - Tk;) family Jroups. Pennsylvania Department d Justice has ruled that there &J\iil Those who eboBe to J'eeetve lIS ~~~~ By MARILYN BODERICK ~ no legal bars to shared-~. • class were allowed to do IlO. education of private ~ The altar rail had beet1 opeIil pupils iii public schools. eCl wide with lmeelers tor thl'ee 'Deputy . Atty. John 1)" iD the center. .At CommUDion , time 8 smiling priest weleomed New clothes at Easter have tiful example of creativity and McCord, who issued the opinioa : each little First Communieant become a eustom that we an craftsmanship was an ensemble at the request of state Supe~' modeled by nine year old Robin intendent of Public InstructiOll . flanked .by father and mother, find hard to break. It came David H. Kurtzman, said the. Cambra, daughter of Mr. and followed by other members of down to us from the days when only requirements which muSt . Mrs. James' Cambra of Our the family. If there was only one the newly baptized Christians be met are the consent of the Catholic parent,. another family. wore white garments made of' Lady of Grace parish in West local public, school board and member received,with the child, .Dew linen. This became' such );)Ort. others of the family following. a tradition among the faithful Robin's stunning Easter coat the payment of tuition "at the It was all so natural, warm that to appear in new clothes on and dress were made by her regularly established rate." McCord cited a 1949 law and' dignified on ,this, t:be Big Easter Sunday mother in yellow lightweight which states that "No pupil Day, rectlling the words d symbolized the wool. The A-line coa.t had a Pope St. Leo, "Recognize, 0 diagonal self button closing and shall be refused admission to , 'n e w Ii fe' , Christian, your dignity!" through Christ. a tiny mandarin collar. When the courses in these additional schools or departments by rea The Irish have dark-hired and vivacious Robin l!Imvi~ Pmstoll' an ancient say- removed her coat, the slim son of the fact that his elemen tary or academic education :I:s Mter Mass, with aplomb only ing that goes dress underneath was seen to being or has been recei ved in a an eight-year-old could muster, "For Christmas, have a yellow; blue, apd tan school other than a public Kate betook herself to the sane . food and drink; plaid bodice with the plain
tuary to invite our new pastor, for Easter n,ew yellow wool of the coat carried , school'" '" ."
He added, however, tnKIt Father Louis Quinn, to bei' clothes." Most over info the skirt. shared-time arrangements mud house for brunch, writing otni people in the The finishing touch to this "of necessity be subject to the for him her address. Diocese will fol-. stunning outfit was the tiny hat guidelines promulgated by' the Goodness knoWll how ID8DY low this custom that sat atop Robin's curls, for Department of Public Instruc similar invi-tationa Fat her by dressing their ebildreh iul it too was her mother's creation Quinn must have receivedl; their" new Spring finery 0111 and j¢ ·featured alternating tion." plenty, we'd ~, becauSe he .Easter Sunday. panels of the 'pale yellow and IIimply sipped 11\ cup of eoffee In the pre-school ret, blondE!' the plaid .wool. at Katie's house. B1lIt be did and darling Sheila Whalen. In the same show Norma come, chatted with an· Gf 1Il!, daughter of lIT. and Mrs. Wil- Comeau of SS.. Peter and 'Paul . ble2sed the house 8!Dd ~ate'B liam Whalen «Ii St. Thomas new gift statue, then went _. More ehurch in Somerset, will parish in Fall River was 8 vi be decked out in polished' blue sion of green and white. Norma to visit other parish 'Twas all a happy experience . eotton. Her very special Easter wore a green wool coat, a
Sunday dress bas a long torso matching. green and white
for Kate and her extensive fam Per An. . . ·· ily, appropriate to this, the Year topped. by a short sash, tile dress and a white straw topper . Ask abOut . of Faith. . II1eeveless zrmholes are edged that had a sweetheart shape..
iD crocheted lace and the bodice Green, ill all shades, is one of INVESTMENT JiB .embroidered' with tiny flowthe most popular colors on the SAVINGS Mmnesota Parishioners ers in shades of pink, white, and agenda' for children"ls Spring . fashions. Beth Cook~ daught~r' CERTIFICATES blue. Vote Closing' of Schoo~ .Also represen~ng .1bepre- oJ. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cook PIERZ (NC) - Members of primary ·setJn the Easter parade of Immaculate Conception par SAFETY - Savings insured safe br Ii four parishes in the Pierz area. will be Lisa Marie Texeira, ish in Fall 'Riv~r, has a lime of Minnesota voted 835 to" ioo daughter of Mr.· and Mrs. Frank" green Easter'· dress ' trimmed" agency of the U. S. Government requIred.' for the closing of the Father Te::eira of Immaculate Concep- with with' a white cowl collar' AVAILABILITY - No notice Pierz Memorial High SChool 1lm tion parish in Fall River. Lisa and white cuHs on the short Your funds available when needed. June. ' is .a delicate-featured little sleeves: Beth chose .this dress SAVE. by MAIL - We process prompIIJ The Pierz district has decided beauty whose dark tresses will . herself because she Ifell in love and .pay postage both ways. to build a public' senior high' be'set off by a "once upon-awith the white vinyl flowers school, which will be' large time" dress in pink' and navy scattered over the skirt and Assets over $41,000,IlOO enough to accommodate all high blue. The high necked dress, bodice of this charming Spring school students in the district. made of sheer .cotton. has. a and Summer linen. Therefore m u e h discussion GlOwl collar, long full sleeves, Of course the pre-teen set about the most practical use of and a romantic floating skirt. wants something new for Easter Savings and loan AssociatloD the Catholic high school facili Tiny tucks are featured on the and Miss Joan Leslie Steen, ties' bas taken place in the last _pink bodice and the waist- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .John few months. circling cummerbund, but the Steen of Taunton and my god:" Tbe vole--()pen to all parish really eye-catching feature oil child, will attend Easter Mass iOllers over 21 ill the four af ibis outfit ill the skirt of navy at St. Paul's church wearing first Federal $awIOIS • LeaD a... ~ blue cotton with pink polk'a' outfit as yellow as a daffodil #~-'~'~""-'------_.~ ~cted pari"hes-was taken III ~ 1 .ortb ~1Il st., Fan lIiwer. llaa. ~ . response to a suggestion of~e . dots. Certainly. a dOll-like outfit Joan's yellow coat has gold but. 02722 . . I'lIlIIIa 174-4881 ~ st. Cloud diocesan school board. for a dainty Miss. tons' and '8 slanted back belt, ## ZIp: ~ke application by phOlle ·It JOll' . . . . j The Catholic high school . Mothers Sew - her yellow Irish linen sheath. # . ~ building will probably be.used While commentating 8. ehil- dress' is sleeveleSs and has white # n iridlvldua' Account B joint AccaII& iii" ~ Prease. DJN:n a savings account. EIIcIGslMJ I. as an elementary school in the dren's fashion show for the Do- emb~idery trim on the hemline #~~OO . ~ future. Father Patrick Thomp minican Academy alumnnae ill and bodice'. This yellow-haired. # '. " ~ son, principal of Father· Pierz Fall River I was awed by the brown-eyed beauty has even # Address . . Memorial High School, said th~ ntimber of mothers W'hohad chosen JOllqtiil . yellow' patent. : .. acheck III tbe amount' 111 , several possibilities are being sewed their children's Easter accessories to· complete her # j studied. outfits. Probably the most beau- look. ~""""~""""~,~~
I
WORLD OF FASHION. J .EASTER CLOTHES
Gfin.
Higher Earnings
ON YOUR SAVINGS
homes.
%
FIRST FEDERAL tf FALL RIVER
an
·1i
'\
THE ANCHORThurs., April 11, 1968
B,e'st to Delay Rose Pruning Unti,1 Late'rin Spring ,',
By
Jo~ph
Says Young Seek Moral Values
and Marilyn Roderick
With 'the break in the w~ther we've experienced lately, \here has been ample opportunity to get outside and begin the Spring chores that have tQ be done before the garden is ready for Summer. I have noticed quite a few weekend prdeners busy with the urrection is really felt as the odds and ends that await the priest changes the bread and prdener after a quiet WiD- wine into the body and blood ter. But I have also witness- of our Lord and the faithful go ed quite a few, I suppose out of anxiety over the rough Winter we experieneed and out of impatience. 1i!> get started, doing jobs that could just as well wait until later m. the month @r Wltil !Way. Pruning roses is a good exmnple of a job that is best held off, especially this year when Ctere has been so much top-kilL l!t might be well to wait until !:atent buds begin to show themselves em what look like ~ad stems until the' job of !!)rUning is tackled. It has been my experience that dead-Iookmg wood has n way of coming ~ life in time, so go easy with &e pruning shears until, you IJlre certain there is no life in «he, stem you plan to amputate. " How to Prune Pruning roses 'seems to pre-' gardeners and,: ~ it is a Simple task. I try, 00., prune lTlyroses so that they graduaily asSUme an urn shape, tftliit" 'is;', so that they have an eD1l?tY,' cen'ier. rh,is can easily' .. be begun by prumng each stem aiat,.r.o'ti want to retain so tha~· ihe cut is made just above an _tward pointing bud. If the bud is pointing out, the «rowth' which ensues from the bud will be outward and there:lor growth will be away from the center of the rose. Next, I try, to make my cuts so that the appermost portions of each litem are approximately the lIaDle height from the groun6, again to' give the bush some 8Diformity ,of appearance. The height of the bush makes :attle difference as far as I am eoncerned, so I usually make my cuts' at whatever height I ean get uniformity. This year, for inStllnce, there has been a peat deal of top-kill on my J:Oses so I may have to make cuts fairly close to the ground, but I find little difference in the quality of the roses regard less ~ of :how much I remove in' pruning. A third consideration in ~ing is the removal of 014 wood to make place for new trrowth'. Thb becomes a pr0b lem. when your roses start to -ee considerably. I try not to be drastic in this regard by cutting' GUt one old stem a year, thereby IIl8king ,room for new growth without 'particularly affecting • e plant. , One other point about prun Ing. Many of the old ramble1'll and climbing roses should be pruned after they bloom and DlJt before. I notice a great IIl8ny people pruning their dlmbers before they bloom, which does nothing for the elimber but remove scOl'elI of blossoms. In the Kitchen Baster Sunday is a day of great toy and excitement. The special Kaster moming breads (IDJ' 8aOther:-in-Iaw always ~ Individual sweetbreads for the ebildren with a hardboiled egg !let in the crust), the excitement elf new clothes, the Easter egg bunts, the. tIradJltional famIJ, llIlnner but Elbow: all the beauty IlDd, quiet ~ 01 Easter S\ID.~
(leDt" ,P,~ob'J.~JiuJ to
Mass., , '!'be joy of this great l"east ,01. the Resurrecti_ of our SaviCNl' .. evident JI1 .n the custo~ sur r 0 11 n d 1lhis feast; IIut the full 1mpaot of the Bell-
tbat
up to the altar to receive Com munion. Then the seven weeks of sacrifice leading to this day take on 'deeper meaning and the Light of the World truly shines. AIl can truly sing Alleluia. For the young of the household the Easter eggs are another great joy. They come in many sizes and materials. Some are <eonfections of spun sugar and dreams. This type generally has an opening through which the child may view a wonderland of painted landscapes and min iature figures. I always adored these fantasy eggs when I was a little girl and it was a rare and special event to receive one. My own young sters, however, deJive more en jOfment, from the decorating and dyeing oil the hardboiled eggs. A few years ago I made an Easter egg centerpiece by dec orating, (with glitter, beads, sequins and white' glue) egg shells that had their conten.ts blown out· and hanging them on' a' giided branch that had been placed ill a plant pot. This makes a verY lovely display and the eggs can even be used as Christmas tree ornaments the following ,December, but this delicate work is not for tiny hands. Symoo)s oil Life The Easter egg and the Easter bunny have always been sym boys of Spring and new life. Ancient people in many lands exchanged eggs at .their Spring festi vals. They dyed eggs yellow for the returning sun, and red for joy and life. In England the children enjoy III custom called Pace egging. The Pace eggers go from house to house chant ing this rhyme'. Please'Mr, Whiteleg Please 'to give us an Easter 'egg If ,you' wontt give us an Easter
{)JJRDINATION: The first Melkite Rite ordin2ttion of priests to be held at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D.C't was ,conducted by Bishop Justin A. Najmy. NC Photo.
,,', - .. Extend "P'r.ogram" I'
Interfqith Organization to' Conti~~e , Aiding, ,~prr.nE!r Jol:i,CQrp's'"""eh ,
WASHINGTON' (NC)-:-A 'nation-wide volunteer prog~l!Jn to . help Job' Corps trainees find a place in 'the workaday world' has been extended for another year, William P. Kelly, Job Corps director, announced here. Joint Action in Community Service (JACS). a private, nonprofit corporation, was organized by leaders of national Catholic and Protestant social action agencies. It includes on Us board of governors representatives of. business, labor and civic organizations.
reftary' of' the 'National Confer-" ence of Catholic" Charities, has said: "JACShas 'tapped the iTe mendo'us force of volunteers al ready available in this l.'ountry, and they are hard at work as sisting young. !llen who have proved by volunteering for the Job Corps that they want to help themselves. ,"The young men coming out of Job Corps are severely han dicapped by backgrounds of poverty, poor education and un stable family life. As a result, they have more than their share of problems as they at tempt to make it on their own.
JACS has organized a net work of 5,000 volnteers in 500 "JACS volunteers are giving communities in the U. S., rethem the helping hand they eruited from churches, service need," he added. clubs and, ,community agencies, who are ,DOW" assisting ,some 1,000 returned corpsmen each., egg,"":" month. ' Your hens wiD all' lay addled' Msgr. Lawrence J" CorcoraJlO eggs,' And, your, cocks' lln lay stones. ,.lACS ~Il'd ,chairDl3lll and ~ The . Ca~,olic"Wom.en's Club In this" country of lIpoiled 0If New" ~(ord "will hold its darlings our children would be See E~tablishes New 'annual Bishop'll Night OIl disappointed ,H the Easter '!bunday evening, April 18 at the Harbor Beach Club, in Mat bunny did, not leave chocolate Education Office eggs, .candy chickens and other GREENSBURG (NC)-Bishop tapeisett. Supper Will 'be served expensive, goodies. However, William G. Connare of Greens at 6:30. even with all the commercial burg has announced the estab Guest of Honor will be Most trappings that go' with the day. lishment of a new diocesan of :Rev. James L. Connolly. Bishop It still manages to retain It. fice of education whicb win Gerrard, moderlltor for the New great. joy. coordinate the work of several Bedford organization, will also T1uis liuoo, roast is perfectly existing, departments. be a guest. delicious: I've bad tt for Easter All area pastors have heeD The new office, which wm dinner oth~r years and plan to invited to attend. 'serve it, again this year. It's open JolT 1, will join and ex~ Mrs. Paul L. LaForest, first tend the programs of the pres quite worthy of II repeat per ent diocesan schools office and vice-president, will serve as fonnance. ' the Confraternity Off Christian chairman ojf arrangements. Cumberland L9mb Boast Doctrine office and win be :re Reservations will be accepted 1 leg of lamb about I to , sponsible :for the total educa by Mrs. Jamell M. Anderson, pounds tional effort of the diocese.' Mrs. Maurice Hurley, Mrs. Paul 1 teaspoon salt LaForest and Mrs. Daniel F. 1 teaspoon dry mustard A newly organized depart ~ teaspoo1l ground ginger , ment of religious education will Dwyer. Reservations close sat urday, April 13. 5 thin lemon sIkes aid in planning religious edu % cup currant jelly eation programs fOr the parisb 1 Tablespoon lemon juice and. diocesan schools, the CCD 1) Trim oJ!! escemJ fat lroa and other groups, both at the lamb. Rub went with a mixture adult and youth le~ls. fJIl the salt, mustard, and ginger. Place roundoo silde up, OIl a ... Break up jelly with a fork rack, in roasti.DjJ pan. Do Dllt oover pan. .. a cup; stir in the lemoD juice !) Roast -.bl Ii a10W (331-) and Spread ovell' ,tbelamb. Re-,' 'for :& 1tOun. tum flo OV~ aDcl cOntinue' roasting ~ to t hOur longer, If 3) Remove roa:Jt from 0ftIl and eut 4 cd tbe lemon dices yoU're using a meat .th~rrn.ODl~ In half; arrange' U!e' a half sliceS eter 'it should register 170' for South • Sea Streets petal fashion OIl sid<e of JOaSt a pink look' or 1~" for wen holding in place v.ith dampened done. Pull out wooden picks Tel. ' 49-81 Hyannis wOoden ~icIW; place the wbole bom lemon garn./sh before carvmg roast. .. . , alice .in center.
Women 'to Hpnor BisJ:lop ':Apri I 1,8
ATWOOD
OIL COMPANY
...,en
9
SHELL HEATING OILS
SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The so-called sexual revolution is !l turning away from hypocrisy, at a turning toward promiscuity ays an expert in sex education. Or. Mary C. Calderone, execu tive director of the Sex Informa !tion and Educational Council of the United States, believes to day's young people are highly moral despite the example set for them by their elders. Speaking at the 22nd a.nnual meeting of the Texas Council on Family Relations, Dr. Calderone stressed: "Promiscuity has not increased on American's college campuses. We know our young people are behaving far better today than we're willing to credit them with. Young people are looking for moral values based on fact ra ther than mythology." Dr. Calderone condemned ex ploitation of sex by commercial advertising and called for sex education which would streSD the importance of human rela tionships and not merely the mechanics of reprOduction. "Your kids ought to know you can't save a bad marriage with good 'sex,"'she asserted.
Sisters of Pro~ide'r1ce ,.
Vote to lRe~ise R'ules
SPRINGFIELD (NC) .,...... The Sisters of Providence, of Hol yoke, community, of nuns spe cializing in care of the sick. aged and underprivileged, have voted to revise their rules and customs to permit greater flex ibility and freedom in the reli gious and personal lives of theIr members. At a general chapter at the c.ommunity·s Holyoke mother house, the 39 chapter -delegates voted to permit experimenta tion hi. religous garb; give members the option of using either 'their baptismal and fam ily name or their religiou!! name; pennit members to travel outside their convent!! wilhout a nun-companion. Also to limit participation hi common prayer to Mass and to two portions of the Divine Of fice; Lauds and Vespers; allow community members to develop a, schedule of private prayer; require every member of the community .to be addressed WI "Sister" instead ,of, "Mother.~ and allow part of the nuns' free time to be given to variolU fOnDS of the apostolate, to civic activities and civil rights pro grams "in a way befitting theIr state in life and according to their individual consciences."
w.
H. RILEY & SON; Inc. CITIES SERVICE
DISTRIBUTORS
Gasoline
Fuel and Range
OILS
Oil BURNERS For Prompt Delivery & Day & Night Service
G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS Rural Bottled Gas Service
61 COHANNET ST.
TAUNTON
Attleboro - NO' AtflebolO
Taunton
"Choose Ameri,cH :' Superior General
THE ANCHOR..,.. ,Thurs'., April 1.1, 19,68
MoUNT KISCO (NC)-Fqr
Project .Eq'uality Issues Guides For BMyers
the first time in the 160-yellW history of, the Relig.ous of tim
an
Cenacle; American has b~ elected superior 'general. Mother Rita F'Oy was electetl to the post at the general chap.
CHICAGO (NC) - The first national directory of 3,931 business firms com mitted to equal opportunity
ter of the Cenacle in Rome, ac cording to the order's interpro- vincial public relations offiC() here in New York. The general chapter, whielli is still in session, is evaluatinti a series of recommendations fOli' a general decentralization, o£l authority, the launching of eJJ;o> 'perimental programs by too Cenacle" and the restructurinfi of Community life. The Religious of the Cenaclo is a worldwide congregation 03 Sisters committeed to the wom of retreats and religious in-> struction. There afe three American provinces.
in all aspects of employment has been published here by Project Equality. It will be used by more than '7,000 churches, synagogues and religious institutions participat: ing in the interfaith fair em: ployment 'drive that urges giv ing' preference to the listed firms in all purchases of goods and services. Project Equality offices in " FLYING DOCTOR: Dr. Leo Brown and his wife, Isabel, a registered nurse, are shown Jlive cities are publishing re-' gional buyers' guides as well. with 'their children, Rebecca, 1Q,and Joel, 8, with the C-essna plane they use for their They are in Columbus, for Ohio;' : Flying Doctor Service in the diocese of Gwelo, Rhodesia. NC Photo., Detroit, for Michig~n; Hartford, Mother Rita Foy was born 1'rI ,for Connecticut; Omaha, for New York City and was gradlD> Nebraska; and, San Antonio, for ated from Hunter College. Sill;j so'uth Texas. ' entered the Cenacle in 19~1i." The national guide is a com completing her studies in Romo, pilation of 976 national and She was assigned to the Mi<lli:> l l 2,955 local, or regional firms do-, western' province of the Celil> ing business with religious in acle' with headquarters in CtJi,., the Gwelo diocese, covers some must' drive over lO miles of 'DRIEFONTEIN (NC)-In the stitutions. They include 40 of cago and has held a number am dirt bush road, seven miles of 14,000 aCres. it includes a 300 the top 500 U. S. corporations grasslands here on· a 5,OOO-foot bed tuberculosis sanitorium; a, relatively good road-and' watch assignments as superior of va. high plateau, the Cat hoi i c and range down to small neigh rious Cenaeles in the Unite&! 100-bed hospital; a farm; an out for wild animals all along mission of Driefontein main borhood, businesses. States and Canada. th'e way. elementary school, and trade' Listing in the Quy'ers' guide 1ains-of all things-a hangar schools for carpentery, tailor She will now reside in RoJJl(), Thus far, they have encoun means a firm has signed Ii , for: a Cessna' 182 Skylane air tered only, baboons, monkeys, ing and homecraft. .,plane. pledge to hire and promote The mission staff 'totals some deer, mongoose, lizards and FrQm this point, the mission's ' lleslYJits to Perform without discrimination, has filed 1,200 people, 35 of whom are birds. 'a report form with Project 'doctor can cover nine out-sta Witch Doctors City Symphony Equality detailing the number tions, spread over an aerial . non-Afrfcans. The mission and hospitals are operated by Afri , The Biblical quotation, ''The BAL'rIMORE (NC) -Fathe1' of its nii'nority-group employees 'distance equivalent to that be Bruno Markaitis, S.J." provin: -broken: 'down by jop classifi:" tween' San Francisco and Los cans, and by Swiss Bethlehem harvest is indeed great, but the priests and 'Brothers, German laborers are few," describes the cial of Lithuanian Jesuits in the eation-and has pledged to take Angeles. The plane was pro vided by the Mission Doctors ,Domincian nuns, African nuns, , scope of medical work in Africa, free world, will guest conduct further' affirmative actions. Association of Los Angeles, three laywomen-two American according to the Browns. In the Baltimore Symphony in twc Pledge C()()peraiion nurses and a, German teacher Calif., as part of its Flying Doc these rura~ regions there is II of his own piano compositioDll ratio of about one doctor to in Ii concert sponsored by LC>Ji'"o Cooperating businesses also tor Service, begun ,here four and the Browns. every 33,000 persons, Mrs. ola College here Sunday. The Brown children attend a have agreed to undergo 'periodic years ago. At that time, Dr. James Carey, small, two-classroom. school in Brown' said. Africail medicine eompliance reviews to assure At the keyboard as soloi. continued affirmative employ now a Santa Barbara, Calif., Umvuma, a town 17 miles away. and witch doctors are "still very wiiI be two other Jesuit pries~ much in evidence," she added. Fathers Leslie J. Schnierer -and ment ac~ions, according to, surgeon; arrived at Driefontein The journey to and from school "It is heartbreaking to see a Benito Rivera, students at thIl Thomas Gibbons, Jr., national to begin his three-year mission is looked upon as "quite an ad venture" by the family, as they child with measles have to go Peabody Conservatory of Music. hitch. He decided quickly that, director of Project Equality. though, life blind because the In addition to the firms listed with a plane, one, doctor could The concert will, mark 'the do the wbrk of five. ' ndanga (witchdoctor) put mull in the guide, more than 12,000 50th anniversary of the restora Pittsburgh Diocese (medicine) in the child's eyes," With 'the help of the Swiss other businesses have filled out tion of independence to Litho she said. "But in ot,her areas aniai commitment forms pledging co Bethlehem Brothers, Dr. Carey Tithing' for Poor like TB, the African is rel'Jlark operation with the program but began surveying and 'laying out 'PITTSBU:~GH (NC)-Bishop have not yet supplied the nec landing'strips near isolated and John J: Wright has announced ably sophisticated, medicaHy." Education Office essary statistical employment doctorless clinics and hospitals. the Pittsburgh Diocese will u'n "Kariangwe, Berejena, Kana; reports,' which are similar ,10, The Brothers also built the dertake a' new "tithing" plan to Serema, 'Matibi, are all 'far NEW, ORLEANS (NC) - Ale those ~equired by' the federal' hangar at priefontein and Dr. help finance housing and other away-sounding' places; but the 'office of religious education bllll government. Carey arranged for one Brother projects for the pOOr. people suffer as you and I been established here by Arch , The na/lles of firms listed in to be trained as a pilot. suffer from sickness. They bishop 'PhilIp M.; Hannan. a , 'The_dioces~ will give 10 per mourn when their children have the buyers' guides are available will supervise the teaching oct Meanwhile, ,in Los Angeles, cent of the contributions and only to: religious, groups parti to be sick, and often die," she religion ,in parochial schoolB Dr. Leo Brown, a former Navy bequests it receives and the cipating in the program. and in Confraternity of Chris surgeon with 11 years of ser same percentage of collections continued. tian Doctrine classes. PIroject Equality, sponsored vice, and, his wife, Isabel, a. taken up for directly diocesan "Perhaps some of their dis by the National Catholic Con registel'ed nurse, were volun strange-sounding purposes to finance' poverty eases have ference' for Interracial Justice, teering for MD~'s three-year programs. nawes, but all come under the operates six other local offices hitch in Africa. He was just title of God's sick. These are, CONRAD SEGUIN The money will be used with touching seven more states. Ad 'home from Vietnam where he the names of clinics that are other religious groups for inter BODY COMPANY ditional offices will be opened served with the Marines. visited by the Flying Doctor;' faith housing programs and in major cities this: year, ac she said. Staff of 1200 Aluminum or Steel other join't dforts for the poor. cording to a, spokesman. Dr. Brown and his wi'fe are 944 County Street Parishes will not be required licensed 'pilOts. So, last Sum NEW BEDFORD. MASS. Chief Speaker mer, when they and their two to tithe ,but are invited to con WY 2-6618 tribute voluntarily.. I NEW XORK (NC) ,~ Msgr.
f children-Rebecco, 10, and, Joel,' John J. Egan, director of the
8~arrived here, MDA sent the 'Continued from Page Three Chicago Archdiocesan office of Cessna 182 along with t.hein.. Start With 45 and to preach in the one Dio tirbanaffairs, will be the chief
. 'The Driefontein mission, in GREENSBORO (NC)-Forty eese have them in the pther. speaker at the May 16 banquet
five priests of' the Raleigh dio of the 1968 Catholic Press A!?so
While the 24 diocesan priests Abortion Bill Passes cese have, formed the North 'ciation convention in Columbus, Senators are elected, the two Carolina " 'priests' association., Ohio. membel:s of the Priests' Senate In Maryhind 'Ho~se Seventeen others have indicated who are members of religious, they wish to' become members.
,commullities are, appointed by ANAPOLIS (NC)-A ~m to the Bishop. These will be rorelax Maryland's 100-year-old The Raleigh diocese includes all
North Can;.lina. tated among the religious com- abortion law and put its regu munities doing parish work in lation into the hands of the the Diocese. At present the Sen- medical profession passed the ators from religious' communi- House of Delegates by im 86 ties are Father Felician Plichta, to 47 vote. Mainten~nce Supplies O.F.M. Conv., and Father CoThe bill permits a doctor op lumba Moran, SS,CC, ,eniting in ,an accredited hospi SWEEPERS - SOAPS' tal to perform' an abortion to The Bishop has en'couraged, a preserve the physical or mental DISINFECTANTS study of pension plans 'that health of the mother, to prevent, ", ·F'I,RE EXTINGUISH~RS would involve lay.personnel of, birth of a deformed' or retarded diocesa,~ ail~ parish facil,itieii." child,'and to en'd some' pl'egnan,. , The, Bisholl has ma~li! liQme ad-, ,CieS,caused by. rape. ju.st.~ents)n.ass'essmt;ntson, pa,t- : : ,UnClet: 'the~,pt:esel1t law;, abor.,.. ,':J886. P~~CHA~E.STIUET:' ,ishes, tflking 'into account ,the ,tiOll' .is, pei"mitted ,~'hen' two growth "o(~ubU~I:i!l'n '~~riShes,ah~ ; :I?hysicians a~r~~" it' itnec~ssar~.• ' ,~' :'.NE~:~ED,F.OA~ " , .. , ' • , t~~,.d~.c\i~," i.ll.'so,me:,~!: l.he', ei'y'" :1..0\' "s!!~l,Ire' .t}le.,.s:ai"ty'? ,Of ..~, .. ',,' "'993...3786' . - ' , . '. . <.-., -"-,,,.,,'" • '. ) .•.•• - •
IFlying Doctor' Serves Africa Mission / Vietnam Veteran
licensed Pilots
Wife
Woth
SenQte Ideas
SCHOOL
.
,
,:DAHILL .CO'. '
:. ;. : ...~:.. ;~ ~:'.'; ..::.~~~~..!f..i-+,::
:J; .....''+}
!h"f1.~> ':~$~,.- ',; :-;: ...
. :.; ':~." '~;~\ t~.9~~r~,:: : ':-:. \~.:.- ~;. '~. '!.
... '
::
:,co..:
~..
~
., I
~
~
\
~OOOC~lOOO~lJOCClCGGOOCMIMNMlOOOOOOCM»OCl~COOI~
'.
,',
Church~en Study
THE ANCHOR
Thu.rs., April 11, 1968
Racial Problems
N.ew Je.rsey
In
NEWARK (NC) -"The ..
Church .cannot tell otheJi."S
11
Support
Bi~hop'5
Equa~sty
Plea
MINEOLA (NC)-The Cath olic Interracial Council of Long Island has voted "overwhelm ing support" of Rockville Cen tre's Bishop Walter P. Kellen berg's call for equality in housing, employment and edu cation.
what to do until it faces the problem within its own com
munity," a Methodist .Bishop has told Essex Count~ clergy men of all faiths in an a~ess ment of the racial problems be setting Newark and other New Jersey communities, Bishop Kellenberg issued Zl Bishop Prince A. Taylor and pastoral letter-"A Call to COl1 Catholic Auxiliary Bishop John science"-in which he said it i9 J. Dougherty of Newark dis "essential that every man be cussed the race problem in light given equal opportunity for of the report of the. Govemor's eJQP]oyment and job advance Commission on Civil Disorder. ment, and equal educatton for Cooperative Solution himself and for his children." Bishop Taylor stressed it is Declaring these to be "funda the duty of the church to be mental moral issues facing the come knowledgeable about the people of Long Islanp," the report, to read it carefully. council said: "We give this "Action without information is' statement by Bishop Kellenberg irresponsible," he declared, as our overwhelming sUPPOt't." he noted the church must face BENEMERENTI MEDAJ~: Father James Vizzaro, S.J., second f.rom left, received the .John J. Clarke, council up till the fact that it has par president, said the eounciB ticipated in maintaining the Benemerenti Medal at a dinner in Washington, -on' the occa,sion O'f. his retirement as di "deemed it necessary to reit status quo. He noted that when rector of the Washington office of the National Catholic Rural Life Association. Con ~he commissionen; pel'sonally gratulating him are, left to right, Msgr. ~dward W. O'Rourke, executive director of the erate its support of the bishop's statement co >I' • because of our toured the riot area and "asked N.t.R.L.C.; Bishop Henry J.. Soenneker of O.wensboro, Ky., rural life advisor of the increasing concern over con the people what the impact of. t.he church was in their lives, all department of social action; and Msgr.. Luigi L. Ligutti, Vatican observer to the U.N. tinued discriminatory practicelC but a £~w marked the church Food and . Agl'iculture Organization and former' executive dirootor of N.C.R.L.C. NC Photo in these' areas." <Df£." In a 'policy statement, the Bishop :Dougherty said if the council declared the "bash: problem "is to be solved, it will cause of racial unrest lies in only be through the involve the almost complete lack oR ment of the total community: any meaningful contact between government, industry, labor the races. Today there are few unions, churches, schools, peo whites 'who can say they really ple living in the suburbs." know Negroes. This ignorance the Holy See to the United WASHINGTON (NC)-Father purpose, and, above all, genu of each other is caused almost Don't Have Time ine love for the poor." James L .. Vizzard, S.J., retiring Nations Food and Agriculture l'xc]usively by patterns of seg Organization, priests and Prot The attack on t\1e problems Washington director of the Na Father Vizzard will leave regation in housing which re estant clergymen and members tional Catholic Rural Life Con must be two-fold, he asserted, Washington to ·work in Califor suited in segregated schools 3mll first meeting the needs which ference, received the papal of Congress. nia, Nevada, Arizona and Utah, a segregated society," Msgr. George G. Higgins, di the coming Summer presents Benemerenti medal hel'e in rec the region of the Jesuits' Cali ognition of his work for t~e and then planning long-range rector, social action department, As a step in breakin.!( these fornia province. rural poor of the United States U. S. ,C a tho 1 i c Conference, programs to overcome the root patterns, the council recom and throughout the world. praised Fat'her Vizzard's "com causes of the problem. mended passage of open hous "There is an urgen t need of The presentation at a dinner bination of scholarship, political ing ordinances in all towns OK:! Four Cleveland Nuns immediate programs to enable in the Cosmos Club was attend know-how, grea't tenacity of Long Island. "Only when there us to have time to work toward Quit as Religious ed by Bishop Henry J. Soen is no place left for the white the ultimate goal." neker of Owensboro, Ky., man to run will the problem CLEVELAND (NC) Four Bishop Taylor referred to the NCRLC president; Msgr. Luigi Schedule Workshop be solved," it said. nuns, one the prineipal of a need for time to work out solu Ligutti, permanent observer for O~ Sex Education 1,100 student girls' Catholic tions. "We cannot undo the high school, have separately WASHINGTON (NC)-Father evils of 300 years in one Sum withdrawn from the Sisters' of James T. McHugh, director' of mer, he .emphasized. "This ill· Prelate Advocall'es
Notre Dame here. in Ohio. the family life bureau, ·U. S. not going to be a case of a It was the largest departure Open Housing ILaws
Catholic Conference, will direct quick antidote and then they since 1966 when 10 Sisters of a worksh'op on Sex Education, J. fESER, Prop. JEFFERSON CITY (NC) Jived happily ever after." Notre Dame were released from to be held at Catholic Univer Bishop . Joseph M. Marling, However, a Newark priest RESIDENTIAL their vows to move to Pueblo, active in. innel'-city work, who C.PP.S., of Jefferson City has sity 'of America here, June 17 INDUSTRIAL 28. ' , CoIQ., to form an experimental was one. of six reactors to the .urged Catholics of the diocese COMMERCIAL community. ·The Sisters of Not're to campaign "openly and fear presentations made by the Bish Purpose of the workshop is to Dame is the largest order of 2531 Cedar St., New Bedford ops, remarked. that comments - lessly" for area open housing prepare a, basic core of people, nuns based in the Cleveland 993·3222 laws. especially teachers and parish about needing time to solve the Diocese. In a' pastoral letter urging personnel,. to supplement the problems overlook the fact that open housing law support, the work of the home in a complete we don't h,lVe the time." program of education' in sexu-. "It would be great if we did Missouri prelate asked: "Who fails to see that to con ality. It will provide these per have it to keep order, but q (> • demn a large segment of our sons with background informa the people • .... have the im people to the cruel segregation tion, give them opportunity to pression that nothing has been evaluate some of the basic ma done,"said Father Joseph Stulb. that· closed housing entails is to sin gravely against 'charity, terials,and engage them in an "Many are ready to riot again justice and the vel'y finest in in-depth analysis of a curricu if only to call attention to stincts of our nature? Who may lum guide which reaches every themselves," he opined. "The deny that to perpetuate such an grade level. black community despairs that the .white community has or evil in this enlightened age will Lecturers and consultants bring malediction upon us? will change its attitude." will include Father· John L, . "For !jurely," he answered, Rev.. William Fox, associate Thomas, S.J., of the Combridge PER ANNUM Chl'ist is brother to the eolored general' secretary of the New Center fOl' Social Studies; Dr. Jel'sey . Council of Churches, in the identical sense that he is and Mt·s. Joseph Bird, co-au PAID yo, brother to .the :other children scored the commission for fail thors of "The Freedom of Sex of men." ing to note the contribution thpt ual . Love"; Dr. Ann F. Lucas, SHARE CERTIfICATES
a divided church - white and chairman of the psychology de black - made· to the el'isis. H~ Plan Fa-II Opening pal'tment, Farleigh Dickinson Deposits Welcomed! in Multiples of cl'iticized the church for main Universit~, Teaneek, N. J.; and Of Joint Semill1ary $200.00 up to $30,OOO-on Single and Joint Accounts
taining silence during public Father Walter Imbiorski, direc controversies which were listed CHICAGO (NC)-A graduate Up to $60,OOO-for Cornorations
tor of the Cana program in the as proximate causes of the riot school of theology for semina Chicago' 'at'chdiocese, DIVIDENDS PAID 4 TIMES A YEAR
ing. rians ft'om three Religious or ders will open in a former hotel February, MC1V, August and November
Another Catholic
here in the Fall. ELECTRICAL All Depos'its In!oured in Full
The school, to be known as Contractors agazine 0 S
the Catholic Theological Union, DAYTON (NC)-Mary Today, will be operated by the Pas a magazine founded in 1901, de sionists, Franciscans and Ser voted to' information about the vites in, the fOI-mer Aragon Blessed 'Mother'and her role in Hotel near the University of the Church, has issued its final Chicago. , . edition. ' About 100 students ;ue ex It is one of 11 Catholic maga pected to enter thl' school ,this zines which have ceased pubJi year. Area seminari<es ourrent-· cation in .the past )'eal' because ly being used by the· threfl .of .1088 :~l circulation. The rnaf-. orders are 'af Teutopolis; JIL, 944 .St, .., . Main d.ff.ice:'.... Winthrop :ral,ln.ton . azine had a reoont eirculauOll Lake Bluff, in.,' and St. 'Meiri':' N e . B df d . • '-""B'~a,;ch Office: 1400 'Fa'il R.iver Ave.,- Seekonk L. w_'_ _ e ~;;.r _'_....;' ~J - .. H-........................••••••••••••.•• ~ , ~ aooU~:11;51>O .. · ... ".;..,.. -,; ". . ,.~.lncl •.,,, ." '-'. -'.' .' .: - ."
usce
.
.Fr. Vizzard Gets Benemerenti Medal Work for IFhlltfol lP:oor R.ecognized
Norris H. Tripp SHEET METAL
i······.. · 3%NEW HIGHER
····~····························~
i
RATE OF
INTEREST
QUARTERll..
M
F Id
ON PAID-UP
~~~.. . Taunton
~Kq."Q,~co-operative ~QiJnty
~,
~.
.bank
Str~et,
,2
THE ANCHOR-Diocese 01 Fall Ri~~r-Thurs. Apr. 11, 1968
JO,urrt)@~a$ts' Opinions
On V@~~e
Differ_ of' Bishops Synod
By Msgr. George G. Higgins Two American journ~lists who have covered the Rome 1beat, off and on, for several years-Father Francis X.' Murphy, C.SS.R., and Gary MacE 0 in-have just published an interesting account of the Synod of Bishops which was, held in Rome in 1967 (Syn od '67: A New Sound in what they manege to teU us Rome, Bruce Publishing Co. about themselves in their sep-, Milwaukee). Written in the, arate and widely.divergent as
S~~in S~ntences MAnmn (NC) - Sz~en per-' sons, incIl:':'~lg a Cathollc priest, have bc:)n sentenced to prison terms and fined, by Madrid's Court of r .:':lic Order on charges Olf havin.::r participated in an anti-Fran::::> meeting in Barce lona in lS~G, On trial were Father Francis eo Paula Botey, and 10 laymen, who were accused of attending
priest- and Laymen
an "illegal meeting." The meet ing was advertised as a "Day of Repression" and criticized what it called the repressive activities of the government of Gen. Fran cisco Franco. Father Botey, who admitted during the trial that he at tended the meeting at Barcelona University's law school, was sen ten~ to a year in jail ~d fined
about '$214. Three of ,the laylDell received similar sentences &lid fines, while ~ others drew six-month jail terms aDd four were absolved.' Father Batey testified duriDtl the trial that he deliberately at 1ended the meeting to protest "against the ftPress1on" he bad said he had seen "of -certain see- menta of &be Spanish clergy.
familiar Xavier Rynne style. it, Sessments of the Synod. is something of a tour de force, How two men who disagree given the seso fundamentally about the uecy, w: h i c h pros and cons of the Synod ever enveloped the managed to work as a tandem $ y nod a 1 in the writing of the history of proceedings. The the synodal proceedings is, to authors h a v e put it as mildly as possible, a tried to give perplexing mystery.' on account "as They tell us that for aU that a c cur ate as 'lies ,between their separate possible under evaluations Df the Synod they the conditions are jointly accountable, but that of time and cir"the internal logic" of their in c:umstance." For dividual viewpoints and "the my own part I , dialectic of the situation" led think they deserve better than them to attribute exclusive re a ~as~ing grade. '. They do, ~lOt sponsibil~ty for the Prelude to ~lalln to h,a,:,e. wrlt~en anythmg "a priest and for the Postscript like,8"cIefmltIve hlstory of the 'i, to a layman. ' .', " SYl}o1.;,I,>Ut they h.ave proyid~d" Far' art 1IllS wlth a useful mtenm sumP mabr'" of 'the -proceedings, 'and" I take it that this is a polite ~r ~i;i;' w~ cin) be'grateful. ", ,,' way of saying that when they ", Perplexing Mystery' " '" got around to summing up their To,,this ,reader,' however, ,what' '" impressions of the Synod, they the ,authors' tell us about the" found, that they' wer~ so . ho~e, .. lessly far apart 111 theIr thmkmg lSynod, . ls, less mterestmg than,.. : that the division of labor so i cryptically, .described in the .. above quotations appeared to be the only, possible ,way of sal vaging the ·operation. That'll fair enough. It isn't at all surprising that one of the authors (Father Murphy) should have concluded that, on balance, the Synod was' "truly a contribution to the Church~s aggiornamento" and that the other (Mr. MacEoin) ~\.: .8hol!Jd have concluded, contra rlwise;- that 'it was, seriously - lacking in "credibility and rele ,vance" and was thus, on biI-' ance, a huge disappointment. lR.ationaJize Differences " Such . differences· of opinion on 'the' part' of experienced ,jourpali!lts covering the same everit-and using the very same 'source~ of information..,....are not ' ' to be' Vf~np:ered at.,' '.,' , " , On the" other hand, I am :Dot, " very .. ,happy, about the curious,-, way in which the authors have,, rationalized their differencea. Th~y tell' Us that one evaluatioo Df ~he. Synod (Father Murphy's) w~ ~ritteo from the viewpoint of "the institutional Church" and the other (Mr. MacEoin's) "from, that of conteinporar.,
A
!.
.,.
.
I
r
man~ind."
SPECIAL DELEGATE: Marches Ghilio Sac.chetti, 42, has been named by PO'pe Paul' VI to succeed Count Enrico \ Galeazzi as special delegate of the Pontfical Commission for the state of Vatican City. He is wearing the now out moded costume of a Gentle man of Cape and Sword. NC PI;loto..
Or again, in Mr. MacEoin'. 'words: "A priest professionally involved in the institution will , tend to lean in one direction; 11, layman whose professional su{' - viva! rests on his sensitivity to world opinion, in the other." Now Bear This This strikes me as being • slightly threadbare and hope lessly pre-Conciliar dichotomy. I know of 'a Dumber of priests (and so do the authors; I as sume) who, rightly~or wrongly. are just as critical of the Synod as Mr. MacEoin is. I also know of a number III laymen (and so do the authocs. I ,must assume again) 'who, rightly or wrongly, are just as sanguine about the results of the Synod as Father Murphy is. , So, what's, all this doctrinaire I. stuff about priests necessarily looking at things (myopically?) through the allegedly unen lightened eyes of, "contempo rary mankind"? Tell it to the Marineal'
THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH SEND YOUR GIFT TO 'I'll, RighI Reverend Edward T.,O'Meara Natlotud Director 366 Fifth A venue Naw York, New York 10001 '
"
The'Righi Rnerend RII~ T. CIItIII4Jiw .' 368 North MiJln S". FaIl MIISIiIduueIuOl7» .
OR DliJceSlUl DlTmor,
, ,.AME
ADDRESS
RJ_.
.~.~
ZIP .
THE ANCHOR
Prelate Supports I
Catholic Schools, Opposes Racism
rv~
Thurs., April. 11, 1968
13
I
Houston Priests Get Pay Raise
NEWARK (NC) -Arch
bishop Thomas A Boland of Newark touched on. racism, Catholic education and abor tion in his annual message to the Archdiocesan CouncH of catholic Men at its CQnvention here. Noting that BOrne people ad vocate closing Catholic schools to concentrate on adult educa tion, Archbishop Boland said: "I believe we mU9t give as much time as is possible to adult edu cation but not that we should ignore our chlIdren." "If we close our schools," he soid, "there may 00 no one to attend the adult courses iJn !future years." He deplored the absence of religion in the education of many people and said that w.hile 0 ohild may be receiving o good academic background under such circumstances, he is not being trained in his will or his morals. 'Jt.hortion Is Murder' Archbishop Boland, noting ~hot the question of relaxing @bortion laws is before the state LeF,islature, recalled that he lralNi opollen to the men about ~ot Dubject a year earlier and repeated what he had said then, "abortion is murder." Should the state legislate more liberally in this field, he said, it would go outside its sphere "and we would have no . right to follow it." He indicated, however, that the Church would not oppose the establishment of a legisla tive commission to study the abortion law. Discussing racism, he called it "a malignant growth in our society" and announced his support for a peaceful interra cial walk through the streets of Newark's ghetto. Spokesmen lor L2.ity Archbishop Boland also urged the men to turn their council into a real spokesman for the laity. He ruled out the possibil ity of a voice for the laity to tally independent flrom the hierarehy, declaring that this is not the st'ructure cd the Church. "H we want to build a struc ture," the archbishop said, "we get an architect to give us a uniform plan. Christ is the ar ehitect of the Chureh. We are its workmen." He then urged the men tID take the steps which would make the ACCM "a' spokesman for the people, II real council." Delegates adopted four res0 lutions endorsing catholic echools, condemning racism lin every form, advocating reten tion and expansion of the state's I!IChool bus law and opposing relaxation of the abortioD statute.
Stresses Increased Food Production
HEATHER CUTTHNG
Sacred Hearts Junior High School Student Is' .Licenseod Amateur Radio Operator
HOUSTON (NC) BishOJ!! John L. Morkovsky announceCl a pay raise for priests of thE Galveston-Houston diocese and said a new retirement poliCW will go into effect Jan. 1 1970. Under the old pay scale, as sistants received a base salary of '112.50, plus $30 car allow ance and $12.50 insurance pre mium, for a: total salary of $155 a month. Pastors received a total' monthly salary of $217.50. The new salary reale will allow for increased pay based on the number of yearo priests have been ordained. Assistants who have been c? dained less than 10 years wiill receive a total monthly salary of $200. The figures will ~ $225 for those ordained moro than 10 years. Pastors with 25 years in t100 priesthood will receive m monthly total of $275. ThoSQ with more than 25 years will receive $300. The retirement policy ca1lJfl for optional retirement at age 65 and mandlltory retirement at 70. However, elderly pries1& who are "able and willing m37 be assigned to other priestly work than the pastorate," Bisb op Morkovsky stated. The bishop said the changes are "in accordance with the rec ommendations of the Senate 0/1 Priests," and follow consulta tion with diocesan consultom.
Holly and Heather Cutting, 532 Walnut Street, Fall! River, share a transistor ra dio. With some teenage sisters, this might cause trouble, but not with this pair. Heather Jets Holly take the transistor: She settles for pop music from Johannesburg, South Africa-via her shortwave set. "'They have real good music,» she says. Blonde 14 year old Heather learned the In:. calls," said Mr. Cutting. llooking for new members. ternational Morse Code, a distance "It's just for teens," she says. "The electric light company fig basic requirement for ama ures I can run this rig 16 hours =.rhey're more fun to talk to." teur radio operators, when a day for only' $2.90 a month." Once she has her general 11 she was seven, but it's only in the past year that she's really worked at the complicated hobby. Her father, Dick Cutting, l:l construction superintendent by profession, has been l'l radio "ham" for 30 years by avocation. An awesome battery of receiv ers and transmitters fills a room of the Walnut street house, and when Heather displayed real in terest in them, she had iii wi))" ing teacher close at hand. Heather's an eighth grader at Sacred Hearts Junior High School on Prospect Street in Fall River, and she admits that she does as much homework as IIhe can at sOOool, to have eve nings free for her hobby. She at tends radio classes nightly, then hurries bome to spend as much as three hours at ber sel '"I'm llicensed for two frequencies right DOW," she ex plained. '"I can talk o:n six and two meters." Translated, that means she can contact amateul'lil --in this part of the United States, but may not ta]k to· oversea!l operators until she earns 1Il ·general license." '"I'm 'Working for my license DOW," she said. "'".!rohe examina tion '!JIm be in 00 days." Even the license that Heather now holds, however, is umusual for one of her age. When she gets ber general license, she Will be among itB Y01lllllgest holders. and probably the youngceBt 8h\ licensee in the stlllte. '"'.rhere are 11,426 lI'8dto ama teurs iD Massacbuatts," I18id her father., "aInd cm'!Iy 409 aJre
NEW DELHI (NC)-The vat ican recognizes the need to m ,crease food production ·as a most serious problem facing the developing countries, and m deed the' world as a whole," Elizabeth Reid, II member of the • Vatican delegation to the United ean delegation to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). Speaking at the UNCTAD meeting here in India, MilS Reid said: "'The right to food .18 01117 another aspect 01 *be mosi eaered of all buman rigbt.s, the right to life, and it is tb1s par ticular aspect of the problem of development that places the heaviest and most serious bur den em the comlcieDee of man.- . kiDd.
WCllInen."
wm
CoDtaet lFather
.A. real benefit to
~
Cutting family from Bellltber'll general lieense wID be iba1 1Ibe'll be able tID reach bel' fathe!' • blB car short wave mctic wheD he is OlD. hIfl freqUeDt bwliness tripal flIIII&y from home. ~ • lot cbeapeJ? tII.aD :IiDDC
Heather hopes to make a ca reer of radio technology. Right now she is able "most of the time" to repair her set if some thing goes awry, and she'a building a small transmitting station for an upcoming science fair' at Sacred Hearts. '"It'll broadcast about 200 feet," she said.
Sometimes, Of couJrSe, grem pop \ill. Like the time 'Heather got a phone can from a boy in Swansea. "Hey, did ;,oU know you're coming m on eiYclnnel 2 on our TV," be said. 011 another occasion Heather picked ~ her father's transmis sion OIl ber electric pitar speaker. Most of the time however, things go smoothly. During her nightly radio' sessions, Heather picks up signals J!rom other amateurs and" has some sched uled "appointments" vis the mll' w.ays with· friends hi otheJl' mties. When she picks up 5 llllew eontact, she confirms it with II brightly-colored postcard bear ing her name and station 0011 !etters in psychedelic pink Wld yellow. Collecting such postcards 111 2 sub-hobby for radio amateul'll and Holly has a oozzling eollec tion on the walls of her radio room. She bas Mganized the Sou the a II t ern Massachu Ilett8 Teenage RadM Net aocll ill lins
I
BEFORE YOU
. cense she plans to join Iil group that relays messages from Viet Nam servicemen to their fam ilies. other Bobbies Badia is by no means Heath ers only hobby. Shl~ and her sister Holly, a freshman at Em manuel College, have an im pressive collection of sharp shooting trophies, mostly gar nered at Fall River Rod and Gun Club meets. "I began shoot ing when I was six, and had my "Own gun when I ,,'as seven," eaid Heather. Other interests are mathemat ics and music. Heat.her picked lIP guitar playing on her own and' belOngs to a folk group which plans its first public ap pearance after Easter. . In short, she's one. teen who'D never be found wondering what to de next.
OLDSMOBILE, OIdsmobile-lPeugot-Rencnft fJ1 Middle Street, Fairhaven
DEBROSS OIL
co.
Heating Oils
and Burners
365 NORTH FRONT STREET
NEW BEDFORD 992-5534 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
fnioy Dining IN THE
LARIVIERE'S
Pharmacy
JOLLY WHALER -AND-
SPOUTER INN
Prescriptions called for and delivered LOFT
RESTAURANTS
CHOCOLA'rES
Always Free. Parking
600 Cottage St. 994-1439 New Bedford
New Bedford Hotel
:"Save With Safety"
BUy-tRy
PARK
MOTORS
Reach ImpassePIITSBURGH (NC)-A state->
level meeting between Cat~
olic officials and the Nationl1'1!
Association for the Advance
ment of Colored People on fur
thering racial integration iB
Catholic schools reached m
seeming stalemate here bn
Pennsylvania when the school\
men cited lack of funds as !ll
major obstacle to NAACP ',pro=
posals.
at
NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET
CO-OPERATIVE BANK
115 WILLIAM ST.
NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
.\
..
..
~.,>O! ~I.· ;·fTHEANCH0R-~Di~Of·.FaItRiv""':"Thurl~ Apr. 11# 1~6I' f
. :: -...:;.....
~
~
- .
Catholic .Charities Appeal Special 'Gifts Appeal- Apri/22-May4
House to House Appeal,-May 5-May 15
.r--:
.' J,
.
~.'--"
~.:'
.
!.
F:
i~''''
.~
'.
;.
".f.' .~ ;:.
i,:.;,.
,I i .• I
"',
"
.j,I,.
",I'j.,
Sttl6dernt· at Nazll:lIll"s1?1h lHlltilrrD flTea«:lhe$:' a Sell'mcll'll
:' .
.,,
.. .-
.
t:>:
J'
.
00'
, , "
0
. ••••.... tCl····.· •
:..... .
t
.'
. .'
~
'
,_
..,.~ it •... _
~
-rIlls Message":. ...
o
"
.._
foI'o~;ng i~d~;duals
. .cI Business Concerns .. Tile , Diocese of Fall.·RiYer . ' . -' . / .
~
•
•.•• " ' .
~ . . ., ' ) ' ,-
""
. '
'..< ,:.••.• ;.:'
,,'.':" ~1
: ,.'
"
".
.
",
::.
.... ,.
,'w!,"
•.
.
:
.
'.' "
'...
TIM!.
.
IsBands
:. .
THE EXTERMINATOR CO.
•.
.'.
..
',:'.':: -; .
"
•
. 5TERUNG 8EVERAGES~ ~·NC.
.
FAll RIVER ELECTRIC UGHT CO.
RATE
YELlOW CAl COMPANY·
MAsoN FURNITURE SHOWROOMS
II. A.. McWHIRRCOMPANY,
DURO FINISHING CORP•
MacKENDE. AND WINSLOW. INC.
TOM EUISON
.
..
ANN DALE PRODUCTs, INC.
.
".,'
GLOBE MANUFACTURING CO.
:.,FaIIRiver
CUT
.•. ;
I
I
~
IIASS ·RIVER SAVIN~S BANK
ALLEN'S
::
a'lJollarMo"'(F!:iii ::~68"~':"
...•.u
. .J:::~p-~.~C~ and
.
Sponsored by-· tbe
-
"':Ne"sPc.per~u~litity ;~r'Qo~ors~f:$25"OO o,'Mo,; ..~"
'.~
~
.
•
.j , "-: .. : : ' : )
,-
''';',',~'AlLeast' .
0.,· CharitY
.. ·When ;He': ~~Y$/.~8$u$ltelf Ha"~.SQme.,,o(My.Lunch~8:·:
"
.
~
QIUAUTY MEN'S APftJAIlIBI.
FRANK X.
New'~Bedford
..
PAUl. G. ClEARY & CO.. INC.
PERRO~
GEORGE C)'HARA CHEVROLEI'i .. . . INC.
SOBiLOfF .BRotHERS ~
'. .
.'
.....
.'. . .....
;~:i;'1ifltt~ _';J~.:~Ti:
1,
;,~
. 4.,
.
,,,,<.;,.t.·: • ;;
.,
,.. -+~
YOUTH CARES FOR AGE: Retired Sisters are tenderly.cared for at M·t. St. Mary Convent, Fall .River. Left, Sister Agnes M'aureen, senior· infirmaria'n, points out magazine article to Sister Mary Lig~~ri, inw,heel.. •
Cqrdinal Roy Raps Apathy MEXICO CITY (NC)~Mau JOice Cardinal Roy· of Quebee, _ a :visit here as ehairman of the .Pontifical Commission for World' .Justice and Peace, said Christian teachings condemn violence in solving social prob lems, but also condemn '!the· false prudence that lacks the eourage to make needed re forms." The prelate, who has .been touring Latin America for sev eral weeks, said he was 1m pressed by the number of Cath olic organizations and institu tutions already applying Pope Paul VI's encyclical, The De velopment of Peoples, in their J'espective countries.
'
chair, while Sister Mary Agnes looks on. Center, Sister Agnes Maureea wheels Sis.terMary Jer~me anQ.r.ight, Sister JohnCatberine bringg'dri_ to Sister Mary, 'Ursula.· Both infirm'arians are licensed practical nurses. .
" .
'"
I
•
• • t.·
Comes KindIY'!ci,.··.Sis:le,.s· .'0/ Mercy" . A·I Fall 'River Co·nvent· By
Patricia McGowan.
~When thou wast younger, thou didst· gird thyself anddidst walk' where thou Frouldst. But 'when thou' shalt be old, thou shalt stretch forth thy hands,· arid another shall gird thee and lead thee whither thou wouldst not." In its description of the almost universal lot of age, this is one of the most poignant'passages in Scriptur~. But age comes kindly f~r Sisters. . Although they are not ex rians are licensed practical eery confiding to a chance empt· from its physical and nurses who received their train fellow-customer her discovery Hos mental ravages, they need I' n g a to ur L a d y 0 f F a t'ma I of a bargain in frozen food, "I
" ,
:~~t"plic;
Newspaper .. .Wins Press Awards;
.NEW ORLEANS (NC) -The eJarion Herald,. ·archdiocesa. ·newspaper, won eight awards iii the annual competition of the . N~W. Or)eans .Press Club. ~ competition included daily and ; weekly newspapers, wire serV ices' and television stations. . Millard F. Everett, editor, won first place in two categories - editorial and best religioW!l story, This marks the first time in five years of competition that the Clarion has taken the top award for best religious story. Staff members of the paper also took three second and three third place awards.
pital in the Providence Diocese. live alone, you know, and 1 get not fear being forsaken by friends or being left alone, the "When I entered religion, I three big servings from a pack hoped to be an infirmarian," age--and only 29 cents." last of a fanu'ly.· 'J.'he faml'ly . N that is a religious community said SIster Agnes Maureen. "I 0 Sister lives alone. cherishes its older members and whas alwdays drawn to work for : - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , provision is made for Sisters to t e age . pass their last years surrounded "Some people think we haven't by tender care. got a nursing apostolate," she But, he added, Latin Ameri Among havens for older added, "but we need nurses des earn; still have to assume fully Sisters is the infirmary at Mt. perately, Right now we have their responsibility in working St. Mary Convent,· Fall River. nine' Sisters taking' care of in towards economic .balance and:· "The Sisters who' have spent firmaries in our province," .' • just social order, 80 every cit most of their religious life in Among . Sisters now at the izen can promote his own wel the Fail River. Diocese come Mount infirmary are Sister fare in a climate of freedom here for their laBtyears,'" ex and common good. . pliliried, Sister Agnes .Maureen, ,Mary . Agnes, who .celebrated her diamond. jubilee. last De The cardinal added at e· pretB8 '. R.S.M:,·· senior iniirmarian at ceJl)b,er and most of wbose r~li eonference in the headquarten the Mount: Her domain pro gious life, was spent in New .f the Mexican Social Secreta- vides .eh~rf!11~ccQmmodations. Bedford and ·North Attleboro riat that national efforts for de- for 10 Sisters. Each has her own· schools;. and' Sister Mary. Li '\"elopment do not eliminate the room and"the're is II kitchenette .gu()ri who· f9r . 49 y.ear!l taught aeed ~for"fol'eign'aid;'" ." .. ''''where 'those' ablE! lobe up and sixth graders at st. Patrick's The Pontifieal commisSion, e~ut . ~n enjoy their meals School, Fall River. Cardinal Roy indicated,' ill en ~gether.·.., ' , HShe looks out her window at .aged in persuading rich coun The ~nfirmary.is but II few St. Patrick's," said Sister Agnes tries to devote at least one per stepis from the Mount chapel, Maureen, "and she says, 'There's eent of their groSs national wher.~. the, retired Sisters spend home.'" product to assist poor eountries. hours a day in prayer for com munity members still in the The Sisters are welcoming active !lPostolate. Also claiming the arrival of Spring and warm time for Sisters whose eyesight days, said the infirmarian, It permits are needlework ana. means they can enjoy their erooheting projects. sunporch, sit in the Mount's ZENITH • ACOUSTICON • UNEX garden and go for occasional Always DraWlll BOSTON (NC) Richard • BIOLOGICAU • YITAMIIIS car rides, "Of course they have Cheerful and dedicated, Sister Cardinal Cushing notified the many visitors," she said, "Other priests' lIeIlate of the Boston Agnes Maureen, who has I Deen C~tt at the infirmary six years; is 'Sisters in the house come to archdiocese of plans 10 adopt "Project Equality," a program aided by Sister John .Catherine, see them and so do Sisters from the convents where they for IRENE R. SHEA, PROP.
designed to use purchasing who has served the aged Sisters power of church institutions to two years. A laywoman takes merly lived." Prompt, Free Delivery in fALL RIVER, SOMERSET, TIVERTON & VICI.HITY
Yes, age comes kindly for make firms supplying goods and the night shift in the infirmary, FALL RIVII·
(CORNER OF PINE ST.) 101 ROCK ST. 8elVices wipe out diICrimina ensuring the Sisters round the Sisters, Not Hke the old lady overheard in a downtown gro clock care. Both· Sister infirma ..,. birislM Pl'actice&
Archdiocese Adopts Project Equality
615-7829
; .'
.~
6
THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFon River-Thurs. Apr. 11, 1968
ICampus Comediansl
CathoJi~ ll]wnDv~J"SityP<D"©~®!ii~©J'~
IPlanL@U'Bffil AmeFicon "~1]~®®O
WASHINGTON (NC) A jJroup of pr-ofessors from Cath sHe University of America hope
n~w technical ·instituteat the University of Gu~W'.a caul,I, Ecuador, may m.ark the <JPening of :an international ed v.cation :brid,getoLatin America. The institute will be inaugur ated early this. month 'a.s 11 ·co @1)eI'ativeventure by the Center lor Educational Research fa Quito,Ecuador,and the Center lor Community Developmenhmd /Servioe :at Catholic University bere. It has the support 01 Va kanofficials, Ecuadorianbis..'l S
~tholic
BC ·to :Recruit
ops, 'and l~aders of .several South American governments. 'The Washington center com ·.pr.ises -ll group of professors mostly members of the .C.U. :llchool of ·ed ucation-who· :are specialists ineclUcation:forde 'Velopment. Di:rector of the pro ject is Dr.. ..Jose A . .Baquero, WM has been commuting b~ 'meen W.ashin:gtonand his na ·ti ve Ecuador d.ming the -cmr.ent school year.. "This is not 'an Ecuadorian project, it is an internatienal projed, :a reseal'clFaction pro gram between North 'and .South America," Dr. :Baquero 'said ·here.
«rN:e had to start ·somewh.ere. 'The natu:r.al pl:aoe 10 begin w,as St~1!ent5 ·-the :Qlace !Where weaould ;get the .most .facilities.Thisproject, CHESTNUT 'HILL (NC) .iesuit-eper-ated Boston 'College God willing, if 'successful, ,will bere has made available :$100, .move throughout Latin Amer GtOO fora talent .search -progr1m\ ica. We .already have contracts to recruit Negro stJ:.dents frem with interestedJ.eaders in "Sao disadv.an tagedurbanarea.s ·.of Paulo, BT.azil, Bogota" Colombia, tlhecountry, :mainly in Greater and Lima, Peru. Boston. . Msgr. Eugene Kevane, :direc Father Michael P. Walsh, 'S.J.. tor of the Center for Community president, caUed for support off Development .andServlee,daim iIIe '''entirestudent body, fac ed iB number 'of Latin American Illlty ;and administration of EQs Church .and :go:vernment :officialS Qon College" to make the .~m :have ·expressed interest in 'the cram .a success. . project:and a 'belid it may :be . Since the program was :starte..J! 'come ,a model of 'assistance ·to IJeveral weeks .ago, some :50 ~ ,'lI3derde:ve.loped £O.untries. lltIicatiopshave beenrecei<velll He said ArcnbishGp 'Romolo from students in ghetto .areas .Carooni, .apostolic' nuncio 10 lot' -entrance ·in next 'Septem. ~1'.u. told him heilOllSiders the :W<ll freshman -class. . pmject of great importance .and There 'have ;a1w~y's beellU Ilegro students enrolled at B4ts 'M~S :a similhlr ·institute :will ton College, oUicials said, ~t be established at the Pontifical their Dumber .is ~ot .~own 00 University in Lima. . 0tberhigh-ranking church aYSe race .is not shown 8ll1. applications. The 'College·;acceptll ·men who <have endorsed .the project include Msgr.Luigi Li .attdents of all .faiths. gutti, the Holy See's Permanent N~t September,Negro :lrtl!ll Gbserver at the Food and Agri 1. •nts with the necessa:r.:y ~uaU :6eations :will be admitted !n8 culture Organization of the '1I!lual, while. ·:some :25 'will :.ge United Nations, and Archbishop admitted under ,the talent Ceasar Antonio :Mosquera .fif <4IeQI'Chprogr.am. 'The number .is G.uay,aquil, president :of the:Ec being limited for thego.od .af ,iliad-orlan Bishops' Conference. the young Negroes whowiUbe ~pted, 'oUiciaI :said.
Neg:ro
R~!:J'lJ~stforBir'.h 'ControJ 1nlcrmation ;lndBGSYlrncrGti(:C@~e;{
GOLDEN JUBILEE: Sis Rose Alma Reid, C.S.C. (Sj<;te1' M. Flora) will mark herg-olden i ll'bilee of religious professjon on Sunday, April 21 at Sacred Heart Convent, New Bedford. A Mass of thanksgi'~rjng will be offered at 11::30 S.u:nchw morning at Sacred Head Church and a reception will be held in the parish hall IT,om.2 .to 4 th~t ,afternoon. Friends and for mer pupils are invited .t01,l;~ tend.
ter
DAYTON (NC)-.A Univer sity of Dayton chaplain said he suspected "campuscomediami" for 1;b~ conJroversyaroused 'b,Y a request for availability of birth cort;t!'ol information 'and materials {In campus by theuni versity s.t·udent c.ongress. Father Urban Rupp, :S:M" universi~y co-chaplain, wrote in the chaplain 's bulletin the . 'al most unanimous aeti.on '{}f.the student gf}vernment ,gro.up ·w.as ".an idio~:yncratic caper in the . natureo! Ii ttle childrenpl~ying house." He indi.cated he fo.uud i.t :dif fi.cult to .take the Pf:oposa1 :seri omlY'. ' '"Now of CO.Urse, I ·co.wd 'be 'taking ;this ;all -wrong;" be said.
S:o.. Curolin:a :Bishop A-s'ksP:e:ttce $up.por.t
'''Perhaps it was intended 00 bn serious. In .that case, I woUld be tempted to thinktheeme;r 'gency is not jus.t immediate it .is really one generation too late." 'This was taken 'asa reference student efforts to :pwih through the resolution !orbirth control as an "emergency''' -mea
:to
:sure. '
That failed" but ,a 'few days la:ter the student ·congressvo.~ 29 :to'l to seek.a change in .\llJll :versUy Wlicy .that 'w.ould -per mit .the introduc.tionof birth 1::Ontrol sel"Yiees in .thestudem :health center for ,married :eQUo ~les .and .'Ulose 'llQOD . . _
~arried.·
Whonare'yo.u:happ~t7Happlnll3s
CHARLESTON (NC)- Bish
Instanc.e, hums with ~pplness.when..sh.8.bath~
·op E'rnest .L.· Unterkoefier ,of
Charleston :has called :for "the ·full ,support .ofall Americans" of President. Lyndon ·lB. John .son's efforts to secure peace in ·Vietnam. T.be South <Carolina Bishop sa'id that the' P.resident's -peace ini tiati yes demonstr.ate "tha.t he .is :a ;>arson who -has '.ever b.een conscious of the grave responsi bility .01 :his ,ofillce .and that his judgements have been measured ~y the ;critical . t hreats ,to ,the .sec.uri~y .and "fre.e ,action ,of.the United .States." 'I
11.0$ In giving.
You're 'ha1?J)lest when you :sIva yourself to ttle ,peop/e',¥iho 'needyou most. •••.A .mother, for
StYE
:and:dresses'·her:b8!?y. 'A.goodnurl8'tllways:haa
Itime for.:a ,smlla.1iood 'father.s -wh(,tle ~tthelr work. '" '•.• The .b.est lsor.t'.of51I'lin.s .lnvoLv.e.s :mor.. than writing ·checks--,.etlll, 'how better can you TO help .the children now who.need you over.seasf A Boysand:slrls who ar.e btl~,,~ltper1J.Jjeaf·muta ••
SOME 11Ifi\PPINESS
'CHILD
orp~'your~oneyglfts,larg~-and •.mell,
will'feed:them,·teach them, cur. them,::givethem 8 chance In life•••• Want:llo..be happier·thi' . Easter7 ·Glve 80mehllpplness 00" child. ''(ou~1I be happy, tool . :1)
In 'Erumathale, :south India, ':8 yo.ung 'Indian girl.lnrtnilriing to..be:a .sister"Of,the Imltatlon1lf 'i8iAPPI~ESS Christ will :learn, :amof!Sotherttllnp, ,how Jo IS care' for .,orphans. Hertl:alning costs $300 all , A • told '($1'2;50 a monttl,:$150.00-a ~ar),ca_small SISTER 'Investment 'for. Sister:S lifetime ,of .service. Like 'to :be .her' sponsorf Her name Is Sister .Suzamma, ;and she will write to you.
Sevan·year-o!d Clara .Va/ookkaran, ,an :orphan In Kottamthy, 'Indla, .needs :lMtryttling Iitt/a (SIr" 'need. $10 :.wlll:P8Y her '8)(~nslJ;lJm~,",th:by· If'OOD cm(lOth"we'Uaend..YOU harpho.to.
i.IHAPPINESS ciS
II :\ \1
,I ,I
,~
II
GO 'HAPPlH!.U Br.!lht8n :the. heart ·jjfa .blfnd cbO,y ·In<the ~QII~. ,II stdp~(whe(8'Samson.IIved),':$S glv.8S·hlm .shl)fl. "CLOTH'" !i$lS ':ClQth~'l$l1 iJuncm lor !tIyesri
ij '\
I;" I ,I '1
glory of 'His !.Resurrection may 'be reborn man~
:amiring hopes and :CleSires _ ~ce:
In
.~
'HAPPY EASTER
•
THE 'OFFICERS, DIRiEc1r~ AND STAFf
PATRIARCH: 'The ·newily ,elected head of the Sy,riac', ,Oatholic Church, Patriarch H>enys Antoine Hayek of An ~och, was enthroned recent 1w in Beirut, Lebanon. In this post hesucceds the late .P-a kiarch, Ignace Cardinal Ta,p lPouni NC Photo. .
fPteue
~"'"'
"'-
.
....,
_-~...".~-------_
"ratum:COUpclR
;wlth.·YQUI' ,M1tllltr ,offerlol
"""""_
~--------_
,IHI 'CATffauo .• IAR 'IAe' .IL'ARI A•• aJUATIOJI
'il1Jf11l
FIRST
mFff@-BANK
.-Ji1lim~~OF NEW BEDFORD
..
....
.MSGR.JOHtHI. NOlAN, Natfonal1Jooreta" Wl'ltel'CATHOLlo NEAn·1!t\aT WIL"ARII
Aesoo.
SSO MadlBOnAvllnuo*Now Yor~·N.Y.'10011
'T~phon~
21i/YUhon'ij·5840
\
Trappists Elect Youngest Abbot At Gethsenloni GETHSEMANI (NC) The youngest abbot in the history of the monastery of Our Lady of Gethsemani was formally blessed (March
~l)
by
Archbishop Thomas J. McDon~ ough 0:£ Louisville. Father M. Flavian Burns O.C.S.O., 36, il> the seventh ab~ bot in the 120-year history of the monastery. He was elected by members of the community Inst January to succeed Abbot M. James Fox, O.C.S.O. Father Flavian described bis position as en "administrator," whose main job il) "service to others" within the community. He said his most important function it3 to hold pl.'ivate spiritual conversations with other monks and to handle the lillM)nastery's relations with the ~:Atside world. Thci'<? are some 120 monks at
~ethsemani abbey, a decline
from past years. Abbot Burns
c:Crlbllltes the decline at least in
p::rt to the attitude of the times.
Y:iJCl1 was "foJ'JJlcrly accepted
without question is now being
<I~e;.;tioned," he observed.
<Dontemplation, ;Prayer Changes have been made, the IHurElY is now in English and 2Jc strict vow of silence has TiK"en relaxed somewhat. On an experimental basis the monks are allowed to use brief oral instructions instead of sign language as in the past. Despite the lack of radio or 1clevision, Abbot Burns said' the monks keep in contact, through newspllpers, with events in today's world. "The main thing ill to know what is going on in the Church. and. what effects our fellow hu mans," accord:ing to the abbot. The life of a monk involves ·contemplation and prayer rather than speaking up - 11 more spiritual turn," according kI Abbot BU'l'ns. A native of Jersey City, N. J.,. he is a graduate of Henry SfIyder public high sehool there.
Protests- Campaign
Ag,ams.t Relig.ion
NEW YORK (NC) - A new wave of terror against aU churcltgpers is now in effect in Albania, an exile from that, country has declored in a- letter of protest sent to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights· and~ to UN Secretary General U Thani. The protest, bl" Dr. Rexhep. KI'asniqi, president of the' Free' Albania Committee which has its headquarters here, said that. Albanial following a l\f41oist eommunillt guideline, has shut down every, cltul'ch and mosque and has made any_kind of pub lIc worship impossible. Thill campaign, Dr. Krasniqi .tated, is a violation of! the UN Charter, the Universal Declara tion of Human Rights, and of' Albania's own communist con stitutional guarantee of freedom of conscience for all.
San Antonro Priests Form Association SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Forty ene diocesan and religious com munities priests of the' San An tonio archdiocese formed a priests' association bere. The priests ohose' a six-member tem pora]')", steering committee. One of the fiTst formal actions G!f the allsociatron was to. inform Archbishop: Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio of the group'/; for mation. There' are' approximately 441 priests in the San Antonio arcl1 tiiocese:
Mother Church of Nation'8 Port,lglleS'e ,P,-epares fOI- Cenl'ellilial Celebration
THE
ANCHO~-
Thurs., April 11, 1968
17
Dy Pat..'i.da F r-u n::is
Parishioner::; d St. John the Baptist Church in Nc,,' Bedford are getting rendy for a momentoils event-the 100th anniversary of the fO~1l1dil1g of the oldest Portuguese parish in the nation. The cen~en;]ial celebration wi II not take place until 1971, but many things have to be done in preparation within the. next three years. One major project is reno vating the church ih;elf. To pay for the massive job, pt:;r ishioners have inaugur~tec. a Centennial Fund Drive to
raise money for painting ~he church, do extensive electrical work and buy a r..ew organ. Estimated cost (}f the re.;,>3ir5 is $150,000. Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. Silvia, pastor, is honorary dr:ve chair man and Frank S. Jason is gen eral chairman. Other committee members include Richard GiJI1 salves and Jesse V. Santos Jr., division chairmen; JQseph S. Vera, special gifts chairman; Richard L. Lopes, treasurer; George Radcliffe, director; Louis S. Silva, assistant director; Mrs. Mary Lucy Soares, office con trols, and Miss Luey E. Dias, list supervisor. Members of the Campaign Ex ecutive Committee also include Frank M. Martin, a::ld Joseph C. Motta. The history of St. John's and the history of the Portuguese people in America. arc closely' intertwined. It was at the end of the 18th Century that settlers began com ing from the· Azores to the United States. TheJ' were rela tively few in number ;:nd as II result almost lost their national identity. Near I?food However, by 1840, the trickle of Azoreans was beginning to turn into .a near :Oood of im migrants, who settled in New Bedford, then a whaling and fishing center. By 1865, many Portuguese families called New Bedford home. They lacked just one thing-a church of their own and a priest who spoke' their language and understood their customs and traditions. Their first priest-Rev. Joao' Ignacio de Azevedo-anived in 1869 and on Sept. 10, 1871, St. John's parish was canonically established. There· were approximately 1, 000 Portuguese of Azorean de scent living in New Bedford at the time, and the)T detel'mined to. build their own. church. A lot: was purchased for $3,OD8, ~. con~ siderable amount in those days, and. soon ground: WQS' broken. for the' new house of God. However, Father de .Aze"edo. was a mission' pl:iest, Vl~ho~mo:ved throughout the are~. aC:minister ing to his counblymen. As a re sult, a new parish was establish ed in Boston and he became its .first pastor. Expandoll.
Construction .of St. John's WillS continued by Rev. Antonio de Mattos Freitas, a native or Cal lteta, St.. George, Azores. Fa ther Freitas also was responsible for the construction of a rec tory. When he reUred because of ill health and returned to~ the AzoreS', he' was' succeeded by Rev. Antonio G. de Silva Neves, who was to serve St. John's dur ing. the greatest expansion Gf'the city's Portuguese colony. . The first church, located where a section of Morse- Twi&t Drill now stands, soon ~ outgrown by its congregation .and a drive began for a:> new and larger church. Father Neves, who served 8~j, pastor for almost 25 years, saw: the "new" church at County and Wing Streets almost coop]eted.. However, ill health also forced bill retirement. Next pastor was the Rev. Manuel A. da Silva, wt!() oom.-
.;'
PREPARING FOR CENTENNIAL: In charge of fumd drive for hundredth anniversary of St. John Baptist Church, New Bedford, are, from left, George Radcl!ffe, drive execu tive director; Frank Jailon, general chairman. .
Continued fro:;n· Page Three the late Tobias and Ann Lynch ]Burke, Mr. Burke was born in Newport, Tipperary, Ireland, and his speech bears witness to the \\o-it and lilt of his birth pl;:ce. He is married te Catb erine Lowney Burke and the couple lives next to the Chan cery. DI1'. Davia Costa Dr. Costa, son of David CosU! and Julia Rodrigues, is the hus band of Louella Somerday and! f;;ther of five children. A dent ist in Ne'J Bedford, he is active ir. ceo and in St. Vincent ~e P:ml work on a parochial and al"(?::l level. He has: been zealoU!J ir- many important phases ~ perish aetivity in Immaculate Conception Parish in New Bed forC:. He was recipient of the Diocesan Marian Award in De cember. itpJ:"lin 15 TIle awards ,Jill be presenteCl at St. Mary's Cathedral, Fa]] River, on lI.londay evening, April 15, at 8 P.M. At toot t.im€ there will be the investi t.ure of two lI.-i:'onsignori, the. awarding of Papal Knight 03' SZ. Gregory honors to nine ~§-' oeesan laymen, and the Pro, EecIesia et Ponti£lce award kJ m::other Pierre Marie, adminis tl"ato:? of St. Anne's Hospital IE Fall River~
Join Federation I'IALEIGH (NC)-Forty ()(f thfl. 'matewide Raleigh diocese's 14~ :tlriests have formed the North iCaFolina Priests Associatioi!l which will affiliate with a Em ticmal federation DOW beiJl~ formed"
pleted construction of t.he present °brought him back the next dzy." church and rectory in. three Since those days of his.chiM years. The church which now bood, Msgr. Silvia observe&-::l serves the parish was solemnly Turn to Page Eighteen blessed an4 dedicated t.o the worship, of God by the late Bish op Feehan. Through the years, the par ishioners of St. John's have proved their dedication t.o their cliurch. Now they are renewinr; their dedication. Msgr. Silvia notes that. before the small St. John's Church was built, the city's Portuguese col .' ony attended Mass at St. Law rence Church. Later they moved into what today is Crowell's brt Store, Landmark' Today, the 11I.:"nificent st. John's is a landmark in New Bedford, befitti'ng its position as Mother Church of the Portu,.. guese in the- UnFted States. . MSgr. Silvia, a native of Pall River, served at St.. Peter's Church. in Pro:vincetown for 2'7 Easter
years. His. only other assi@1 ment? St. John the B-aptirt Church. Ordained to the priesthood or.: Dec. .20, 1919, St. J:ohn's was the new priest's first assignment. He remained at the' cRurch un til No~ember 1924, when he was transferred to Ptovinceto~. On Oct. 2', 195.1, Msgr. Silvia "returned!' to St. John's as pzs tor, a post he· still' fulfills with zeal and energy. His assignmetl.t to St. Jobn'fl FROM THE OFRCEIIS AND PERSONf\.JB. Of parish in 1919 was not ~1:sgr. Sin via's "introduotion" to the New Bedford parish. As a young boy, the p2stc: recalls his £athers weekly trips from Fall River to. New Bedford "to. bring back a priest.... Four Families There were few Portuguese IN NEW BEDFORD families. in Fall River in those days, he says. "When my father SOUTH BANK-Cove St. at Iodney French Boulevard
arrived in Fan River, there were WEST BANK-Kempton Street at Mill Stre'!t
iust four Portuguese families in LUND'S CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave. r.ear' Lund's Comer
the city. Gradually, others set tled there. DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave.
"My father used to drive over NORTH BANK-Acushnet Av•. at Coffin Ave.
in a horse and buggy to bring Il CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts.
priest back tc Fall River to ll3y Mass. He used to stay overnight at. our hOuse a:ld JlG' ~tbeI;'
May the Joy and P,omis.e 01uplift your spirit and gladden
your hean
qk.J'M~ERCHANTS
C/'Ia1iotuLe BANK
-
18
Tti~
ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Apr. 1'1, 1969
Dio'ce$clm
~j[ll.Ilde[l'j)fl'5
CatecheticsWeek Set at Stonehill
Join Nal-gonGI
Some 400 priests, religious and laymen are expected to at tend a catechetics institute b be held Monday, Aug. 5 through Saturday, Aug. 10 at Stonehill College.. Sister Mary Francille, C.S.J.. theology professor at Regis Col lege,' will direct the institute and speakers will include Rev. Frederick Moriarty, S.J., Rev. Cha~les E. Cook, Rev. James F. Hawker, Sister Florence -Mi chels, O.L.V.M., Gerard Potte~ bauoi and Mrs. Helen Jacobs. .With the theme "Making Alll Things New," institute sessiono will discuss Scripture, catechet ical techniques, use of films with adolescents, other visual! aids, parent education, team teaching and creative dramatics. Further information is avail able from Stonehill College, North Easton 02356.
M'culrraurru@ @U' A$~@ssinatBon
Of Dr. M@ri'in luther KilnS! Diocesan schools shared i~ national mourning at the of Dr. Martin Luther King with special Masses or prayers offered in every school. At Cassidy High in Taunton Rev. John, Moore, chaplain, celebrated a Mass for the repose of the soul (l)f the Negro leader and rently hplds first place in the Notre Dame math league: study 'periods were spent in Girls at Sacred Hearts Aca tlie chapel by students in a demy, Fairhaven, have been ,
~8sassination
vigil for peace.' Christi,an Youth Movement members at Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River, heard the "New Folk," a group of singing Holy Cross seminarians. Their appearance ,was arranged under t~e direction of Mofher John Scarry, JR.J.M. ,Also at JMA, it's French Week. The observance- began Sunday when French Club members
Jeanne Phenix, Yvette' Berthiaume and Susan Cournoyer took .part in a play sponsored by the Prevost French Club; "Les Fem. mes Parlent Trop." Throughout the week, too, there have ·been several skits p'repared by members. ' or effort at Prevost was , MaJ .....e Sunday program Whl'ch l'n..... -luded, I'n addI'tI'on to the play, ... ~veral talk's by promI'n'ent ..... I .... re·nch cI'tI'zens, a French song-' '" ~t and a, motion picture.
working on a project to bring
Easter cheer to patients at St.
Luke's ,Hospital, New Bedford. Under supervision of Sister Ju lie Louise, SS.CC. they've ~een making tray favors, including decorative placemats and napkin holders for adults and flowered Jollipops, "chicky surprises" and bunny hats for childern.
Science' Fair 'Winners
Cha rities Appea I
Holy Family had, four win BASKETBALL PLAYERS: On basketball team at ners at the annual New Bedford Continued from Page Three Science fair, In the senior division, Connolly High, Fall River, are, from left, Tim Duffy, Tom Community Fund Campaign; James Berry and John Thomas Kroger, John Long, Joe Kelly, Greg Sullivan, Mike Manning. president, Board' of Managers of the New Bedford school were of Boston Dispensary; and vice cited fo~ earth science and phy- the Diocesan cheerleading tour-' will combine' with the seniors president of U.S.O. sics proJects, respectively while t tl h ld t F h Z th ' . b He has been the recipient of in the junior division both Pa- namen recen y e a ee an .Lor e occasIOn, SInce oth tricia Downey and Sharon.Smola High, but sports aren't all that cl:;tsses of the academy are small, . honorary degrees from Holy matter at the TauntoJl girls' due to the fact that the high Cross ,College, Tufts University, were for work in the sc h 001. Break f ast, lunc h an d schooI IS . being phased out. . ld recognized f b Suffolk University, Bradford fle 0 iology. . . M" formal dinner' p}.ace settmgs The Junipero Club of Holy Durfee College of Technology any students won honors at . h M h . I I I were recently on display at the Family High recently sponsored of Fall Rivet, and Lowell Tech t e. assac RegIOn . S F' usetts h school library and members of a talk on drug addiction for jun- nological Institute. Clence alr, eld in Fall Rlver. . They included Christine Four- the Mothers' Auxiliary were on iors and seniors. The' talk was ,Bishop to AddJ;ess Meeting UN French Club nier, ,Dominican Academy and hand to answer etiquette ques- given by two brothers, one' an Most Rev. James L. Connolly, At Coyle the French Club, di- Diane Desmarais, Mt. St; Mary tions from the students. ex-addict, the other director of Bishop of Fall River, will speak Ilected by Brother Hugh McCabe, ,Academy, both Fall 'River. Both And the Coyle Fathers' Club Marathon House, ,a .center for to the priests, parish trustees, IOeCently' elected officers. After . girls were recogiIized by the held its annual Father-Son Com.,. .treatment of addicts located in chairmen of the Catholic Chari 8le votes .were tallied, however, Southeastern District of the Mas- munion breakfast at the school, Coventry, R.Io , ties' Appeal and the ,invited !lays our man at Coyle, it looked sachuse~ts Dental Society. • with Robert Cahill of"the Rhode ,',CongratuIcitions go to Joseph gue9ts of the 111 diocesan .. if ~embers were voting for. ,Debra Lay,' Dominican Aca- Island Food and Drug Commis':' Abraham of St. Anthony High parishes. • UN ,delegation. The president's. demy, received a savings bond sion as guest :speaker. He dis- for meriting runner-up position Roland A. Lafrance, 1968 Ap liPot wa~ captured, he reports, from 'the Bristol South Distriet : cussed harmful effects of various iil the st'ate finals of the annual' peal lay chairman, will also ad ..,. a Polish fellow: Cbarles Ozug. Medical Auxiliary'," arid Michael drugs. . American: 'Legion ol'atorical con- dress the 800 expected to attend .lames O'Brien, a true' Irishman,' Zito, Bishop' Feehan High,' At~· 'The ,Catholic Students' ,Mis- test. ' the opening meeting of the won, the vice-presidential spot, tleboro, was awarde'd 'a' .'plaque' sion' CrUsade 'at Stang .H~gh ,has In club:~ews at,~HA, the Sen campaign for funds for' the 30 while the treasurer!s" job 'was by' the Women's Auxil1a:r:y to the taken' as' a, special project this ,ior, Science Club will conduct agencies of the Catholic Chad ~warded to Jorge Matesanz, -a Mass. Veterinary ASsn. month 'of April the collection of a' farewell meeting for seniors ties . Appeal. ' ~~dent of Spanisl:l extraction." Winners in the :division' of donated medical supplies ,and this ~month and.' members will O,nly Paul Bor9ue, the secretary, 'ea'rlh'science Were John Dias eyeglasses for deprived' Peoples', visit encephalitis clinic' 'in ~anaged' to make the scene for Thomas 'Burk~ anc:i'Robei-tClou~ of the world,. Supplies collec:ted Freetown' in May. The Stamp ,', France'., tier, Feehah'MicIlael Cote Pre:;' "ill:be forwarded' to the Cathi- ' ,a.nd Coin .Club'is planning a pub , At Bishop .Stang ,iil North vost;' and ,Elizabeth Lavoi~; Do- olic Missions Medi'cal Bureau for, . lie, exhibition of members' col-, Dartmouth the' math team, led minican. shipment., . iections in May imd the Chess by high scorer Lawrence :l3yrnes, Awards in math and engineer,'Upco~ing at S~A' Fairhaven' Club has undergone reorganiza-, placed secon~;in a reeentBqs- ing went to Carol Vasconcellos is the aruiual senior prom, which tion election of officers, in flon public schools math meet. Mt. St. Mary;, Madeleine Delisl~' wilL be held in the Colonial cluding Edward Norman, presi WYman The. Stang team, paced by the 'and Vivian Blais, and Michael R60m of White's restaurant in dent; Daniel Brule, vice-presi-. 3-6592 eo-?sIstent goo.d work of George Zito, Feehan; Genevieve Pappas Westport from 8 to midnight dent;, Diane Lizotte, secretary.' Oliver and EIleen Keavy, cur- and Debra Lay, Dominican; Joan Frid'ay night, May 24. Juniors ;TuniorProm CHARLES' F. VARGAS
Basile, Feehan; ,Amato Polselli, The Holy Family Junior Prom Prevost; and Sharon' Woycie- Board, .of· Tru' stees' ,is'slated for Frida.y night, April 254 'ROCKDALE AVENUE,
chowski, Mt. St. Mary, were 26' at Kennedy Center. The prom' NEW BEDFORD~ MASS.
will last from 8 to 11 and will Continued 'from Page Seventeen cited,' Chemistry winners included' have "Carousel" as its theme. broad 'smile on his face-"many Jane Arruda, Anne Lewis, DeWASHINGTON (NC) - The Mlisic will be by the Escorts. other families' have arrived from ni Michaud, Elizabeth St. board' of trustees of the CathoAnd the Holy Family debate se P<lrtugua1." A man d, Di,ane Lamontagne, lic University of America in team tied for first place in the , Our Lady of Mt. Carmel par-, Christine Fournier, Dominican; Washington, D. C., will meet Narry League with' Cassidy. A ~h was detached from St. John's Anne Sullivan and Pamela Can- Sunday, April 21 in St. Louis playoff 'will be held. As of now as the Portuguese population dee, Feehan; Marilyn Riley and to consider a wide range of rec- Cassidy's ,debate reco~d is 12 grew. Then Our Lady of the ,Ann-Marie . Charrette, Sacred ommended changes resulting wins out of 14 debates. jrnmaculate Conception parish Hearts" Fall River; Irene Caron,' from a year-long study of the was erected to care for families Cassidy; Marilyn Bentley, Mt. pontifical university by a com .i. Portuguese descent living in mitteee headed by Dr. Carroll
Hochwalt. ~e North End of New Bedford. St. Mary. In the field of physics, Alan Today, St. John the Baptist White, Prevost; Michelle Paquet, The meeting will be held in
ehurch has "about 4,000 parish America's' Economy King' SHA Fall River; JamesReid Jrconjunction witl:l the, Spring
ioners. Our numbers started Prevost; Mary Soan;s" Jane Mc: meeting ,of the National Confer Fnr the Best .Deal Come To dropping about seven years ago," Donald and Martba Nugent, ¥t. ence of Catholic Bishops. :,asgr. Silvia explains. He feels St. Mary. The 'trustees are expected 10 , INC. part of the drop in membership Representatives' from Diocesan name a new 30-man board, meet ' 768 BROADWAY is due to a .number of families schools to the Mass. State Sci- . with, faculty representatives for RAYNHAM, MASS on, Rt. 131 moving outside the parish })oun ence Fair will include Michael the first time in,' histoi-y, and . CHARLES J. DUMAIS. Pres. darles. Intermarriages with oth :lito; Amato Polselli, Debra Lay, discuss the search for a new er nationalities account for still Madeleine Delisle; Jane' Arruda,' university rector to ',replace more 'losses. ' . Anne Lewis. ,', Father .J~dhn P. Whalen ,~ho ~III11I11I1I11I1I11I1I1I1I11I1I1HIUIIIIIII"lIIlilllllllllllfllHlIilttmmIllIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllnIlIllIllHIIIIIIIIIJ111~ , .However" the Mother Church Denise Michaud, Alan White was naine last October to a WEEKEND SPECIAL § ef the ,Portuguese is not fading' Michelle' 'Paquet, Elizabeth St: one-year term as acting rector. E E § away. Amand,Sharon Woyciechowski. E == , A new school was built in New Projector f;957. "It is expensive," Msgr. St. Anthony High in New Bed Silvia admits, "but I felt we ford is rejoicing over' acquisi § § needed it." IE 7 Ibs. and up == tion of a movie, projector as a, , Parish !>rganizations are active gi·ft, from the alumni association. ' ,Est. 1897 WHILE THEY LAST and individual parishioners are Presentation to principal Sister' willjng ,to give' of their time Lucille Champagne was made Bi,;~clers and effort to, keep the parish 'by Mrs. Josephine Lafleur, as == 2343 Purchase Street' Perking. .sociation president. New Bedford 'Now they are getting read7 UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN Tet 997.93511 Cassidy-Coyle' cheerleaders 996-5~1 Jor a 100th anniversary. captured third pillce. v9Phy iil ~RnIlJIIIJIIllilllilllin"iIlIlHlIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIlllllmIlHlmnIUHJIIlfllJllIIIIUIllIllIUIIII"1I11111IIUIIIIIII~
an
; I:
',SAVE MONEY ON
YOUR OILHEAT!
•
Centennial·
eatt
To' Study Changes
·RAMBLER
Broadway Rambler
"'fIIltk .".,,11
.~~
HEATING OIL
Sturtevant 6'
~
Supplies
I
Hook,
_.
I
LIVE, JUMBO ,79c lb.
Maclean's"
!
I ;;
Westport Real Doric-Horse:
lHE ANCHOR-DIoeIee ., ,..
".r • I." AJu. n. ...
Case, Somerset Favorites In Narry Diamond League Case High of Swansea and Somerset are pre-season ehoices in this season's Narragansett League baseball race but the club th8lt will bear watching is Westport. TIne dark horse Villagers may have a few surprises for Narry foes. Another small area school a respectable 8-6 record. that potentially has a shot with Only one member of that at a league championship is squad, Calvin Hopkinson, will Norton of the Tri-Valley not be playing for the Villagers Conference. Coach Ed Bibeau has most of last Deason's Central Village regulars in the fold ready to challenge the
perennial
favori'1:es If 0 T
Narry honors.
&1i1, at Norton, (C 0 a c h Peter
m[l .. ~ek has
G3ven returning ~nnen for ~theY cham ii~~JWhip bid. Peter Weo~port
Bartek
tmIshed. the 196'1 eampaign ill ~ place in tbe NalT7 loop
this Spring. With the rest of the club ready to go, - watch Jlor Westport to make its presence lmown.
Among fuose returning' are
Paul Eastwood an!! Russ Picard,
two of the better performers in
the circuit a year ago. Eastwood led the team in hitting with a
highly respectable .360 average,
pitched and played the infield. Picard, like Eastwood 15 also versatile. An outfielder by trade, he also takes his turn on the mound for Coach Bibeau's nine. Carl Zajac and Jeff Hague round out Bibeau's four-man pitching staff.
},
Norton Bids for Tri-Valley Crown 'jfOO
task
handling
of
the
~tJ of this quartet will fall G!£l ~e shoulders of either Ron ~JmOi"\) or Manny Cabral, both
but,' in thin sc:holastic: year of . athletic: surprises, it may not be as big as some thinllt.
-~)
.PASSION PLAY: Today Christians hold the Solemn Observance of the Lord's Supper"
A second place finisher in It is commemorated ina PMsion Play at Prevost High School, Fall River, by David Pois. experienced receivers. ConnOl'll son as Christ, Paul Martel, left,. 8$ St. John. and Paul Bou&quet as St. Peter. excel1B not only defensively, 1967, the Norton Lancers have their sights on the Tri-Valley but likewise with the bat. He Conference crown. The club's' bit at a .333· clip last Spring;' John Souza and Mike Andras,' one-two hitters last' campaign . "th better than .300 hitters' have departed from the Norton ' · qaln will be out to join the baseball scene,' but, the team'. one-two pitching punch is re I league leaders in batting prow ess. They should put a 'wallop turning. Juniors Ken Allen,' a left-hander who had a perfect WASHINGTON (NC)·.....:. Pift his experience in the neig~l>or ruary, 1966, because theJ in Westport's oHensive attaCK. 7-0 record last Spring, and' 'Art Dominican priests-each "doing hood .is invaluable in helping wanted to get closer to the If Coach Bibeau's boys can du plicate their :Performances of 'a Bouchard will be relied upon bis own thing"-are living ·in. an both prisoners and parolees. He "agony of the world." While nol . :Jellr ago Offensively and biB heavily to bring the league 'flag apartment in the inner ~. cd said the insight he gains into" eliminating the academic life. to Norton. Coach Bartek alSo Washington. ""here they come from. ancl. h~w they felt that living in the inl'leJ' big four comes through on ·tb'e hopes to get some help in ·the , The five run the gamut from they view life aids him In mv,. city would be as important .• mound, Westport may realize a the pitching. department· from a professor of moral theology, at ing them intelligent advice and learning experience as academic long awaited Narry champion Fred Rego, Bill Gorczyca 'and the Don)inican House ofStucUeII 8ssis~nC:e, study. '. Eip dream. Admittedly, "if" Ie Steve Nichols. " , . . to a prison chaplain a1 the Di&-. 'Father .Willi am Kane is ·the·' • bie word in ~~rt's_tuture, NeighborhOocl:ll[aa'.. ; . trict of Columbia Jail... "I"bey.. "neighborhood man" of the' , .', .. ! ~ • have in common1heiy addresa. A Pr~ceton .graduate.. ~itl1. apartment. He·works with min and a desire to understand and doctorates from Harvard. aJ>4 isters in· the area in .establishing: , With~on-Le,ague ~estts· alleviate the problems ~ livlnc OxfC!rd, Father Albert Brode,r youth programs and fightina' I Other' returnees incl~ Cap develop rapidly·, defensively" if in' poor Urban' community, ick teaches Constitutional LalV, for better' housing and fail' ., tain Mike Wynnn, Greg Croff, they are to regain the league's' . Father TbomasHea~ ·ttie: at the catholic University Law rent laws. His motive is to give; BOb Adams, Tim McEndy .and divisional crown - whic'b flbey· moral theology professor aDd. School. the, people in the community aD ' Paul Hassie. Wynn. a senior, lost to HoWston last Spring ..... ·· author of a reCent bOOk;.·'"ID, awareness of their own dignity.· Be and Father Heath started will be starting his third season and gain a shot at .the Trl Faee of An~sh;" is 0Il ..1be to affirm the fact that it is a' the apartment project in Feb-' ill left field with Cruffstarting V~ey Conference ebampion bOard. of .direCtors of the Pe0 place to live." his second campaign in center. ship. Many area clubs open ple's Center, a house soon to be They will be joIned by Wynn's their campaign this week with. opened for the rehabilitation' brother Ricky in right fie'd. non-league games highlighting of alcoholics. He also meets. MEXICO CITY (NC)-Mex 01- a SYSTEMATIC' .. . The infield win be anchored the action. League competition wi·th ,~culties of Wasbingtcm icc City'S Jose Cardinal Garibi • 10 year SAViNGS by Adams at second base and will commence, for the most seminaries to discuss policy Rivera urged bankers meeting making and apostolic activity. Hassle at short. . Newcomers part, next week. MONTHLY DEPOSITS at the National Bankers' Con
Mother Nature has done her Richy Silvia and' George Mac 01a INVESTMENT Legal Aid Office vention in Guadalajara to "com
Arthur are presently battling it job this Spring. Baseball coaches • 10 'year SAVINGS Father Joseph Cooney, a bat usury and work closely out for the third base job and throughout -the diocese admit NOTICE ACCOUNTS with the government to pro Lorrie Adams, also a first-year that this is the best Spring they lawye~ who has worked 011 mote the social welfare of all 01 II REGULAR man, appears to have the inside have had to prepare flbeir voter registration in the South • 10 Jflar SAVINGS charges in many a year. Weather and took an active part in dvil the Mexican people." track on first base... McEndy, who has' been the cannot be blamed for a slow rights activities such lIS . . . , Lancers' starting' catcher since start this time around. All are ~lma march, is DOW admin~ eagerly awaiting 'the umpires tering a legal aid office in the " " his Freshman year, is starting neighborhood of the Domini first call to "play ball." hIs third campaign. behiJ:}d the cans' apartment. Volunteer law Pai'nt and Wallpaper plate. Bartek expects McEndy students from the Catholic Uni-' Bank 8y Man . I
Dupont Paint to hold the inexperienced in versity of Ameiica assist him
field together. We Pay The Postage . cor. Middle St.
m this program. . The Lancers' will have to im 422 Acush. Ave. . A third member of the group,
• YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZA prove upon their hitting and DUSSELDORF (NC) - The Fat her Raymond MalonSOl1, ~... New Bedford' .North Rhine-Westphalia state • SOUTH VARMOUTH . 4» HYANNIS serves as the Catholic chapiain • PARKING· 'parliament ·has approved a • DENNIS PORT • OSTtRVILLE' at· the D. C. jail. A late voca change in the state's school sys Rear of Store tion, Father Malonson has been
tem that probably will mean ordained only two years.
the end of many denominational · Father Malonsoll. feels' U1at "
OTTAWA (NC)-The Catho- schools.
Hc bishops of Canada have es By an overwhelming major tablished a 12-member Fiscal ity the parliament voted to Affairs Council' composed of change the state constitution and E~lnPMENT. Now Many Wear
clergy, Religious and laymen establish the nondenominational who will advise the Church on Christian school, in which reli Wood, Metal Desks and Chairs
financlal matters. gious training is given by Cath Among the areas which are olic and Protestant instructors' With More Comfort "JUST GiVE ME A CHANe!: TO QUOle" receiving ini~ial attention of the in the same school, as the pat To overcome discomfort when dentures sllp, sllde or loosen. Just committee is the question of tern for state-supported schools sprinkle a llttle FASTEETH on your 187 SHAWMUT STREET • NEW BEDFORD, MASS. whether the Church should be from the fifth through the nint! · plates. FASTEEl'H holds dentures firmer. You eat better. feel more subject to government taxation grades. P,O, Box 2062 Hervey L. Levesque comfortable. FASTEETH Is alkaline and if so what form of taxation · -won't sour. Helps check plate odor. In the past the state has sup Dentures that fit are lIlSSentlai to would be equitable to churches, ported Illeparate Catholic. and Telephone 993·1264 · health. See your dentist regularly. government and other tax Pro tell tan t denominational Get FASTEETB at all drUB counten. D-.tc:l--'-'-4 payen. Khoola.
Dom.inicGlIs· Ren.t .ApGrt~~rit 'in 'Inner -Ci·ti::·: Want t~ 'Get Closer to Ago'ny
of' the
Worl~'·.
~
I
.Ope,....U;p
Co..
a
.ood
Criticizes Usury'.::
5 50
5 00
CENTER
New School System In German State
4 50 . Bass River Savings Bank
IJ . 4iiii
Canadian P'relate's Establish Council
LEVESQILIE'S ,OFFla
FALSE TEETH
.._._._.... . ._, ,_,_,_'_'_11_0_._'.-
....
..
20
Urges Hospitals
THE ANCHOR Thurs., April 11, 1968
PhySDCO@Ui)
Re,~ogni%e Unio~s
l1JJ U'ges
CLEVELAND (NC) - AI lay men's group here has asked the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospitals' to declare its willing ness to recognize labor unions as collective bargaining agents for hospitals employes.
litUB'gy C~@[filges ~n Last RStes . RED BANK (NC) A physician called for revision of the liturgical $orm of the Anointing of the
~atholic
'lNle request came in a letter :from William, A. caldwell. chainnan of the €levellllnd Conference of Laymen, to Sister ~ry Collette of Hamilton, Ohio, president of the Ohio Conference of Catholic Hospl tala, during a one-day meeting here of, the Ohio Hospital Asso ciation convention. The laymen's group said such a statement would "promote the human dignity of hospital em ployes in real and immediate ways, serve the common good of our communities and in crease the understanding· of Catholic teaching by all the citi zens of Ohio." The letter pointed out that the National Catholic Hospital Association 1 a s t November called on Catholic hospitals "ti» be guided by the social teach ings of the Church and to deal with unions that employecf> choose."
Sick cluring a discussion on "The Chaplain's Role With the Dying Patient" at Riverview Hospital here in New Jersey. Dr. George J. Sheehan, an alumnus of Manhattan College and a founder of Christian Brothers Academy in nearby lLincroft, was one of three apeakers at the symposium co aponsored by the hospital and Ute 1 Red· Bank Council of . \il':hurches. Citing "obvious failures" by both physician and clergyman iin helping the dying patient and bis family, Dr. Sheehan sug gested members of the family Ghare in· a ceremony which would "exchange feelings of llove and hope between them ElDd . the dying person." Dr. ~heehan observed that while "inadequacy in the face of death has been in the past apparent. to the Protestant criergyman, it 'is now also felt Discuss ~.iot Report by Catholic priests." On Catholic Hour They find;· he ,said; "the La~t NEW YORK (NC) - Begin . Sacrament in its present form ning Sunday, April 14, the !Ii a consolation only to those Catholic Hour will present over with the strong faith of. a Breton the NBC· network a three-part iiteasant-a kind of faith they series, "The Climate of Change: ...e. seeing less and l~ss.",Evolution or Revolution?". fo Appropriate Theology cusing on three areas of social He also said while the devel and religioUs concern today; POSTER CHILD LEADS WAY: Joey BeIge, 8; of Syraeuse, N.Y., leads the· way .pment of a Common Christian .today. itervice "parlakirtg of the same down a White House l!ttairway in the company of.the Fi~st :t-ady,·Mrs.Lyndon B. Johnson ~gr. Rop~rt Fox, cOordina o:fthe Vice-President. Joey:·is this year's poster child of .and Mrs. Muriel Humphrey, wife llodividual, family· and commu~ tor of Spanish community 00 Il.ity significance as Bap~i8ai . the. National Association for Retarded Children. H~ is· thesQn ofMt. and Mrs. Robert · lion in the' New York arclidio -.dMarriage," would be a giant Beige, ·members·Of St.' Vincent de Paul parish in. Syracuse, whos-e ot-her'five children SlH' ·eese, will discuss "The Riot *p 'in ·heiping people to a ·bappy death; ,iit 'would. remain round their Uttle broth~r .wil1h· the: love and care to h~lp him live.a full and happy· life. ¢ommissi~. ·;Report: A· Chris ,tiati Respo.nse," April 14; Msgr. IDol' theologians to present- a rel 'Ivan D. Illich of the Intereu! .qwant lmd acceptable image of -tural Center ,01. Language and mail in this 'time and this place, D ·oe u men tat 1 on, Cuer ilnd to develop an appropriate Davaca, Mexf~o, .'win be inter "eology of death, heaven ~nd viewed Aprjl 21; and Father bell in order to make a signifi-' . Francois Houtart, Belgian 00 HARISBlJRq (NC)--:Coadju- is being made to see ho)Vtbe : to coordinate and channel our sant change in our life style, / ciologist, will be interviewed tor Bishop. Joseph . T., Daley, diocese can.· best use its re-· efforts in ,the field."· .!lOd ther.efore in our approach . vicar general- of the Harrisburg sources to alleviate poverty Bishop Daley said it is· "im- . Apiil 28. to death." . The National Council of Cath ' ·perative ,that' all our people Other panelists· were the Rev. diocese, called· on the nearly problems. He also·', said: "We· contem- '. knoW' and understand the prob' . oUc Men, producer of the Oath Seorge Fitzgeraid, a' Presbyte 50,000 Catholics in the .area to aan minister ·and ·chaplain at .. "acquaint" th~mselves" with 10- . ·plate· the early ·establishment of ·Iem of, ·racism and the funda-' "oUe Hour, reconu:nendseheck Princeton' Hospiital, arid Mn;. calracfal and poverty problems. \a·· diocesan,· human relations. 'mental moral injustices which ·ing local 'newspaper programa In a letter· read at aU Masses, ''commission ·to serve' as· a liaison ·are at. the root of the deplorable .for broadca9t time. in particu Ruth Snyder, a:' nurse of the ·Rar areas. ,Bishop'Dl;IleT said ·that a study with ,all ,people Collcerned and conditions in our own area," lIiverview Hospital staff.·
Penn., See Studies
.
Poverty.
P·rogram
:.
"I Am The RestUlJ!Tecti<o>D"
Ai 1)(J[YQf}GfDVIJJ£)9 lJ!1 ~TJPJiiD~
EE@J~lJ®f:f
FALL RIVER