ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING .OF PROPOSED NEW CENTER FOR ST. MARGARET'S CHURCH IN BUZZARDS BAY
The ANCHOR fall Riv@U'o Mass., Thursday April 18, 1968 PRIce IOc Vol. 12 N@. 16 © 1968 The Ancho'r $4.00 per Year 0
MSrgjr!.
sc'ope of proposed usage. During the academic' school year the classroom section will be used daily !for CCD classes of approx imately 30 students each and during the evening by church and community groups of varying sizes from 30 to 400. CYO athletic functions will use the multi-purpose room
lyn, of which he is an alumnus. From 1917 to 1923, the jubilarian served as an assistant to his brother Rev. William K. Dwyer, then pastor at Our Lady of Sorrows Church, Corona. An other brother, Rev. Robert Dwyer, was stationed in the New York Archdiocese. Father Daniel also served at St. Agnes, Blessed Sacrament and St. Francis of Assisi, Brooklyn. In 1923, Msgr. Dwyer was ap pointed pastor of OUI' Lady of the MagnUicat Church in Ocean
Beach, L. r. Later that year he organized 35 families into the parish of St. Martin, Bethpage,
@~ DioceS~51 Sch~~I~
. The first phase of the an nual· Catholic Charities Ap peal, now' in its 26th year of ·service to the community,
A Fall River native stads @n Thursday, April 25. Rt. :Dlev, Msgr. Daniel A. Dwyer, iQ3stor emeritus of St. Barthol omcw's Church, Elmhurst, L. r. first came to the Long Island vorish as a curate in 1914. Monsignor Dwyer was 01' caaincd on April 25, 1908 in St, John's Seminary, Brooklyn. Hc holds an honorary LL.D. degl'ce from St. Francis College, Brook-
To
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at
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Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, Superintendent of Schools for the Diocese of Fall River, has been engaged to teach
)l.ey. paklok J. O'Neill.
throughout the year, while dur ing the busy summer tourist per iod the multi-purpose space will serve as a church seating 400 to 500 for Sunday Masses. The ex terior' character is of clean, regional, contemporary design conceived to blend with the existing buildings and yet express the building's educational identity. '
St. Margaret's new Parish Center, has been designed with optimum flexibility to accommodate th e b r 0 a d
interiors of long life, low maln tenance, rich textured and 1._at ural materials such as patterned white pumice block bearin~ walls which support laminated! wood beams carrying red cedar roof decking which will be iill a 'natural finish and exposed thl'oughout the structure. Nonbearing partitions will be demountable type gypsum board covered with vinyl wall fabric arid capable of being taken d(>wllll
The· selected materhll pallet includes brick exterior to blend with the original church with
Turn to Page Eleven
Dwyer 60 Years A Priest
:~is seventh decade of service 1~1 the vineward of the Lord
Heo@
Cape Church Plans
New Parish Center
Ed.D.
at the University of Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind., for the Summer session of 19G8. He will 'teach two courses in educational administration for
gra'duate students working
towards Masters and Doctorate degrees in education. Father O'Neill has previously taught courses in education at the College of the Sacred Hearts in Fall River and Catholic Teachers College in Providence. He conducted an Institute for Principals in Portland Maine in 1966. He has addresed a Con ference of Religious Superiors and a Workshop for New En gland Supervisors on .the tr~in-, , Tur~ .to 'Page "Ilighteem ,'.
L. r.
oJ; Immaculate Heart of Mary,
Brooklyn. In 1943, Msgr. Dwyer
was appointed pastor of St. Bartholomew's. He was named pastor emeritus in 1966. Msgr. Dwyer was elevated in 1950 to the rank of domestic prelate and five years later was named to the Board of Consul tors of the Brooklyn Diocese: Msgr. Dwyer also served as a member of the board of t.rustees of St. John's' Hospital, Elm hurst. In 1961, he was the recipient of the first Franciscan loyalty award presented by St.
Francis College.
A concelebrated Mass of
thanksgiving will be offered in Turn to Page Ten
'.
·From 1928 until 1933, Msgr. Dwyer was pastor of St. Brigid's Church, Westbury, L. I., and for 10 years after that pastor
Dioce~e Prepares
Sta lrt of 26th , Hett'1lrrt Appeal
begins Monday when 625 vol unteer special gift solicitors will make over. 2150 calls to profes sional, traternal, business people' and ind ustrialists. ·The .Special Gift Appeal phase will end May 4. Turn to Page Ten 4" • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
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MSGR. DANIEL A. DWYER
Re~oinmend Centrali%@t1'~on
Of Nilne Parish
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AUBURN (NC)-:-"':'Unification of this city's eight par ish schools and one high school into a single, centralized school system has been urged in ·a report prepared by an outside firm of educational consultants. Unification "is needed for the developlllent schools serving 3,300 students in of a superior progralll and this New York community. for proper and efficient use The report was hailed by of facilities," the report said. Msgr. James D. Cuffney, presi It also urged the schools to im
prove both their curriculum and their staffs., ·The study, completed at the cost of $18,600 by the firm of Englehardt, Ehglehardt and Leggett of New' York, covered in'detail the ..present facilities, '.' financing" 'sta'ffing, program,s . -and· handicaps.: of . the nine
.
dent of the Cayuga County Catholic School Board, and by Father Daniel Brent, associate superintendent of schools in the Rochester diocese. The Cayuga school 'board voted last Spring to hire, the survey firm. "This study is one of the most complete analyses ever made iD TUrn ·to Page Six
2
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April.18, 1968 ".
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..Expresses Trust
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Cardcn~I06Boy!e~'C;(t)'~p'a!r~e:~:"
'KingA's De@th .tto Chrisf's Washington said the outburst of nature which followed the Wasington said the outburst of nature which followed the erucifixion of Christ - when "the earth quaked and the rocks were rent"-had its· modern counterpart in the na tion's capital in the explosion of violence, pillage and arson our legislators has been a griev which followed the "sense ous provocation,", the cardinal said. less, brutal murder of a gen Meaning of !Easter tIe man of God who sought only "If we would convince the to follow in the footsteps of his world that' in this nation' social Master." and .economi~ wrongs can 'and "Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr; will be' made right, we must drew to his side others who prove it~not)n -the stx:eets but yearned like him for. the return'· in . our legislative h·alls. and of ~eason and love 10 place of .. coiJrtsof Jaw,in the forums' of.'. ~elfIshnes~ and hate, ,~nd th:re- ..,' public o~inion,. and .~special1y· In lay hIS strength, Gard1Oal,. in ·the moral.conscience of O'Bo?,le sai~. , . .. '.' America/': ,CardiJial;. t. O'BoYle . ' - ' '''' .. '.' .... B'VI' LDlING F'UND BOOST'. James Fernandes, Grand "HIS enemIes could nev~r.dIS..,' stated: cover how to confront spIrItual As citizens and as Catholics .II.
power which, becaus~ they pledged: to love of neighbor, our Knigh,t of St. John Council, Knights,of Columbus, Attleboro,
could ,not understand It, they duty is clear," he ~aid. "We presents check in the amount of $1000 to the Rev. Raymond
both feared and sought to de- must help to build on the.smokMcCarthy, pastor,' and Lawrence Duffany, fund director
stroy." . ing foundations of suspici.on for St. Mark Parish Attleboro Falls. Annually the Council In a pastoral letter entItled· and hate a .new commumty, . ' . '. ' . "Beyond the Resurrection," the' where all citizens both black --. makes a substantIal donatIOn t-o an area .church and, t;tllS, Washingto!1 cardinal affirmed it and white, canliv~ together in . year, members elected 'to donate to the building fund o'f,
would be a tragic irony if Negro justice and in love. • . the most recently established, pari~h in the Fall River
Americans should no",,, abandon . . "This is * '" * the true meaning . Diocese
the philosophy of nonviolence of Easter in this Year of Our .
"which first brought them hope Lord 1968. For as Christ our' and for which their fallen lead- Redeemer taught us from the er gave his life." pulpit of the cross that· first Cynics, Extremists Good Friday, suffering and '''Violence only begets more death can J:>e endured - e.ven Laymen in EUIlgj~and, violence, and the way of the w~lcomed - If they are: ~mted sword will neither avenge the With the. suprem~ SaCrIfICe ~f in 'Runneng Cho.uch' martyred Dr. King nor restore !he suffermg ~hrIst, because It him to life," Cardinal O'Boyle IS through HI~ d~ath that we e d u cat ion commissions were SOUTHAMPTON (NC)-Cath .stated. learn how to lIve. olic laity in England and Wales hotly contested and amended by "A racial confrontation in this tried for the first time to take 'vote. country, in fact, would be a a serious part in running the The liturgical commission h.ad PrOgjU'(lJmS
cruel betrayal of millions of de Church in this country. the roughest passage. The coun cent, law-abiding Negro citi About 150 of them, designat'ed cil, by 81 v 0 t e s to 30 zens who also want freedom by parishes in the Portsmouth ·amended its resolution dealing from oppression and equality Rt. Rev. Msg'r..Anthony M. diocese, gathered in . this port with the vernacular and' musical of opponunity, but who recog Gomes, assistant director of the city and 'spent the day hotly setting to insert "that steps be nize that it will never be found Catholic Charities Appeal will debating resolutions prepared taken to insure that familiarity - at the end of a street called 'be celebrant of the TV Mass on in advance by their various di with the' Latin Mass be pre · hate. Channel 6 at 8:45, Sunday ocesan c<;>mmissions. served." "It was not· for this that the morning, April 21. Msgr. Gomes . The council was generally ac . The council, by 86 votes to 16. selfless Martin Luther King 'will preach on the Catholic cepted as a success. . passed another amendment tirg.· gave his life." Charities Appeal. Cardinal O'Boyle said the On Thursday morning, April Bishop Derek Worlock,' of ing the English bishops ·...to greatest danger today is from 25, at 8 'o'clock, Rev. Edward. C. Portsmouth stressed that its' secilre fuller participation,)f "cynics and extremists" who Duffy, Special Gifts Director for findings were consultative, nor women and girls in th.e liturgy." might convince people that the New Bedford Area,"will ex juridical, which meant that its ·This referred iIi particular' io "violence . really works, that plain ,the ~variou.s functions of decisions were not binding and allowing women in the sanetu-" . . ' / could be rejected by him. But ary dliring Mass to act 'as altar" only through naked power can . ·servers and as readers. 30 a~encies. . . ' ...., he pr.omised. after the confer the century-'old injustices under the 'Again at 8 on Friday morning, " · which our Negro brothers have May 3, viewers will have an ence to set up a diocese com su~fered be, wiped out and the op'portunity to" learn' more of mittee to review the results. ' Ne~rology' promise of dignity and equaJity.. ,the: CCA when . Rev.' .'John: .'F. . ,. The; bi~hop. Who gave the · be securied.. . , .Hogan, Diocesan" Director of opening and closing .;Jddresses, .... APRIL 2.'7;. .', , "It not so of course. But.·we Television, will, conduct inter . presided .at a panel discu~sion .Rev. F.rancisJ:' Bradley, D. D .• must ·remembei:that the shame , views with Roland A. Lafrance, with fou.r assistants,' a .priest,· a Rector, 1925, Cathedral, Fall . ful .foot-dragging of. many of the 1968 Lay Chairman, John nun, a layman and· a layyVoman. River. Rev. Romeo D. Archambault, Clemens of the New ·Bedford Liturgy Commission Catholic Welfare Bureau, and Resolutions dealing with the .1~49, Pa!,tor, St. Anne, 1'Jew Bedford. Sr. Maureen, R~S.M.,. of the new liturgy, ecumenism and educa Stonehill College students will Nazareth Pre-Vocational Train tion were debated, often heat present "1V,1:y Sister Eileen" Fri ing Center, Fall River; . edly, before being voted on. . . day and Saturday' nights, April Speakers were allowed only 26 and 27 at.8:15 at Stoughton four minutes to' .state their case. High . School :'auditorium. The The 'proposition':(or ecumen-·· producrtion· will initiate Arts ism was accepted as it stood but On' Week 'at . the college;' Other those pu~ by the liturgical and events wiJl include a dance j>ro i3A1:./rIMoRE .. Mary 'gram, a Fre'nch film showing, land's' Gov. Spiro T. Agnew is jazz and folk concerts, art: ex un:der attack from at least· 30 · hibits,. ~nd an opera, "Carmine Catholic priests in Baltjmore's" ~et I.ncr~ase~
Burano." . inner 'city. . TOLEDO (NC)-Lay faculty The criticism was mounted . after the Republican governor members at Central Catholic lectured a group of civil rights high school here will receive' 95 leaders on April 11, accusing per cent of the scale for the them of being unwilling to re city's public schools under a pudiate "black racists." About three-year agreement signed by Msgr. John L. .Harrington, ~al{ the civil rights lea4ers, April 21-St. Paul, Taunton. and Paul most of them Negroes, walked school principal, . St. John the Baptist, Fall out on the governor. O~liourke; president of the new River. The 30 priests signed an open' Toledo Diocesan Teachers' As April 28-0ur Lady of Fati sociation.. statemeftt that called Gov. Ag ma, New Bedford. new's .remarks "intemperate" Upon written 'notice by Feb. St. Michael, Ocean Grove. Q~ffR~Y SUlllVA~ and 'insulting. . 1, salary negotiations can be re . 'Holy· Ghost, Attleboro. Priests who signed' irlcluded opened each year either by the Funeral Bo'!'e May 3-'-St. Vincent Home, Father Henry J. Offer. S.S.J.. ,administration· or the associa . Fall River, 550. Locust..Street 'tion. director of. the archdiocesan ur Fall Riv-:r, Mass.; ban commission' and pastor of' Teachers who -complete three IUE ANCHOR'
St. Peter CI~ver Church, 'and years at the school .will 'acquire '6:t2~2391 Second Class Postage ePald at..tall· Rivel, . Fa~her Jos,e-ph Connolly, presi .. tenur~, after which they can be . Mass. Published' every. Thursday at: 410 • i dent' of the National Liturgical dismissed only tor cause or be Rose.-E. SulUvau
Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass.' 02722 : y the catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall . Copference and pastor' of' St. cause ·of major changE:S in the Jelfre~ E. SallivaD
River. Subscription price lIy mall. postpaN . Kath~rine ,of Sien~. Church. . _. school's operatio!l. $4.00 per rear. . .. ,.. .,. .
Debate Res,olutions·
SANTIAGO (NC)-','I put my trust in the youth of my coun try," Raul Cardinal Silva Hen riquez, S.D.B., of Santiago told readers of El Mercurio here. Asked about repeated outburst by youth demanding change, he added: "We are going through very special times, of rapid evolution and radical change. Yet funda mental values stay, and are perhaps more clearly defined. What youth rejects is the at tempt to hold such values upon outmoded structures.'" He' conceded that beCause of reaction and impatienbe, "youth 'is not'entirely free ft<nn the danger of 'excess and 'error/' . Cardinal Silva has ag~eed to contribute his ideas to a.forum series sponsored by tli~'.fonser vative . Chilean daily. ,., "I admire and I trust· Chilean youth, particularly in its zeal to sincerely share its responsibil ity for guiding the country and the Church toward loftier goals," he said. "But because each generation, while redefining and redoing this history, cannot really cre ate it out of nothing,. 1 advise these youths to ponder in depth the bonds that unite succeeding generations, and the need to discover the fundamental values of the true national tradition."
Mass Ordo:.
Wales Take Hand'
CCA Olm CIiil~Ifil~~~ 6
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FRIDAY-Ea s t e r Friday. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; Sequence; Creed. SATURDAY-Easter Saturday. I Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; Sequence; Creed. SUNDAY-Low Sunday and Octave Day of Easter. I Class. White. MONDAY-SS. Soter and. Caius, Popes, Martyrs. III Class, Red. Mass Proper;. Glory; Preface of Easter. TUESDAY-Mass of P,receeding Sunday. IV Class. White. Or (' St. George, Martyr.' Red. Glory; Preface of Eakter. WEDNESDAY - St.' Fidelis of Sjgmaringen, Martyr. 1t~ Class. Red. Mass Proper;. Glory; Preface,of Easter. .THURSDAY - St. Mark; Evan gelist...n" Class. Red~ Mass Proper; Glory; Creedi Pref ace of Apostles.. . :".
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Diocesan Council of Catholic
Women M-eet May 4 at Stang
The Fall River Diocesan Council of Oatholic Women will hold its 15th annual . eonventlOn Saturday, May 4, at Bishop Stang High School, North Dart~outh..The th~me of iNle conventiOn WIll be Know Ghrist, Love Christ, Live C~rist!" and the host district ~lll .be. New Bedford. PrIncIpal ~peake~ for th~ afternoon seSSiOn wlll be Everatt S. Allen, assistant editor of I/:he New Bedford Standard'l'imes: His sUbjec~ ~,ill be "A ~ue~tlOn of MoralIty. BIshop Connoll~ will be guest of honor and WIll celebrate a 1100n M.ass in the school auditol'1um.Mlss Kathleen C. Roche of Jrew B~dford,. Diocesan president, w~ll presld~ at the morning buslI~ess seSSIOn. from 10 to 11. Se~vmg as chaIrman at a precedIng coffee hour from 9:15 rOO 9:45 will be Miss Helen Mc~oy of New Bedford. Five Workshops Fr?m 11 to 11:45 there will be fIve worksh.ops: .. 1. ~onfraternlt~ ~f ChristIan Doctrine: Mrs. ArlstJdes A. Andrade of Taunton and Rev. Jor;;eph L. Powers of Attleboro. 2. Family Affairs Commis sion: Mrs. Vincent A: Coady of Somerset and Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes of Fall River. 3. Church Community Com mission: Mrs. Nestor Robidou of Falmouth and Rev. Peter N. Graziano of Fall River. 4. Community Affairs Com mission: Miss Margaret M. Lahey of Fall River; Organiza tion Services Commission: Miss Adrienne Lemieux of Taunton; 1nternal Affairs Commission: Mrs. George Whalen of North ,Attleboro. 5. Youth Commission: Miss Kathleen T. Flannery of Taun ton -and Rev. Walter A. Sullfvan of Cathedral Camp in East Freetown. A group of nurses from the Diocesan Council of Catholic Nurses, with Miss Helen E. Shove of Taunton as president, will handle a frist aid station. Mrs. Adrien Piette of South At tleboro will be auditor and Mrs. John J. Mullaney of Attleboro will be parliamentarian for the convention. Mrs. Michael J. McMahon of Fall River and Miss Lemieux will serve as co chairmen of registration, which will be held .from 9:15 to 9:45.
Says Schools Need Immediate Help HARRISBURG (NC) - The Philadelphia archdiocesan su perintendent of schools told a bearing of a Pennsylvania Leg islature committee here that the state's non-public schools need immediate state aid,. not prom ises of long-range' Solutions to financial problems. Msgr. EdwardT. Hughes told the House basic education com mittee that immediate action must be taken "before the word 'crisis' is replaced by the word 'catastrophe.' "The increasing costs of edu eation, particularly in the cur rent school year, have so bur dened our people, and in turn their parishes, that we can no l<>nger solve all our problems," Msgr. Hughes stated. "We have DOW reaclied our limit."
Scholarship Aid MILWAUKEE (NC) - Mar quette University has received a $180,000 gift to provide col lege expenses for four years for 20 Negro students. The gift was made by an anonymous donor in memory of the late Malcom K. Whyte, Milwaukee lawyer and civic leader, ,who 4ied in 1967.
THE ANCHORThurs., April 18, 1968
C\\ll~!eg~s A!I'W"c!rnge CO~Op r?[j"@~rJ'(QWu1.
Luncheon chairman is Mrs. Elmer Paul of New Bedford. J1eservations are to be made with her by Friday, April 26. Luncheon will be served at 12:45, following Mass. Msgr. Thomas F. Walsh of Attleboro Diocesan moderator will be i~ charge of Mass ar~ rangements and Rev. James F. Lyons of Osterville, will handle music. Lay chairman of the Mass is Mrs. Emmett P. Almond of North Dartmouth. Judge of elections is Mrs. James W Leith of New Bedf<>rd. Hospitality chairman is Mrs. Charles M. Landry of Seekonk and guest chairman is Miss Lahey Msgr. John J. Hayes, the con vention host moderator and Msgr. Walsh will addre~s the convention. The president's message will be delivered by Miss Roche.
A musical interlude will be
rendered by the Bishop Stang
Glee Club.
Mrs. John J. Maloney of Wareham, Diocesan vice-presi dent for the New Bedford dis tricot, is convention chairman and will welcome the members and Mrs. Paul, New Bedford district president, will also ex tend her greetings.
COQ'8firm With B@~~o$m NJ~w BEIRUT (NC)-Peter Cardi nal Meouchi, Maronite-rite Pa triach of Antioch, has announced WOMAN OF SORROWS: Mrs. Martin- Luther King, that the Maronites have re seen here during services in Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist turned to the ancient practice Church for her late husband~ has drawn the sympathy and of having priests confer the sac rament of Confirmation at the admiration of millions for her dignity and charity in time same time as Baptism. of trial. NC Photo. . Until the mid-19th century, the Maronites baptized and con firmed infants at the same time. Then, under some pressure, they took up the Latin-rite practice of Europe. Proposa~ Indudes More Participation
o the l' Eastern Catholic By Principals ~n Ceremony
churches maintained the original tradition as did the Orthodox LOUISVILLE (NC) - Use of An example of increased par Church. Vatican Council II an "enriched" marriage cere- ticipation by the 'bride and urged all Eastern Catholic rites mony is being studied here by groom in the ceremony, he said, to adhere to their early litur officials of the Louisville arch- would be having them bring gical practices. diocese. the Offertory gifts of bread and The Eastern churches con Msgr~ J. William McKune, wine to the altar. He said they sider Confirmation an "exten chairmain of the marriage 11t- might also compose their own sion" or "fulfillment" of Bap tism, although two separate urgy study committee, said the Prayer of the Faithful and lead "enriched" marriage rite might the congregation in its recita sacNlments. The thought has al tion. ways been that the grace of the include: Having both, the bride and Msgr. McKune said an at sacrament is· there when the tempt is also being made to person is ready for it. . . groom and their parents in the have people approach the ComWithin .the Diocese of Fall bridal entrance rite. Limiting. attendance at the munion rail "not in any special River, two parishes are of the wedding ceremony to family or!ier or sequence," as happens Maronite Rite and now form when bridesmaids, ushers and Part of the Mitronite' Diocese of and close friends. More participation by bride parents go first. the U. S., St. Anthony of the Vatican Council II's ConstituDesert, Fall River, and Our and groom .in the ceremony. Blessing the groom, as well tion on the Liturgy recommend~ Lady .of Purgatory, New Bed as the bride, at the end of Mass. revision of the marriage rite so ford. Including the groom and tl].at it "more clearly expresses both sets of parents in the en- the grace of the sacrament and Asks Rome Meeting trance rite would make it "more the duties of the spouses." of a family affair," Msgr. McOf Church Leaders Kune said. SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-An AnLEBORO'S Compose Own Prayer episcopal bishop has proposed
'Enriched' Wedding Rite
that the leaders of all Christian faiths meet at the Vatican this Summer to .deal with mankind's four major problems-war, pov erty, racism and unbridled tech nology. Bishop C. Kilmer Myers of California asked for a merger of the scheduled Summer meet ings ol the Lambeth Conference of Anglican bishops and the World Council of Churches. He urged that the two groups meet at the Vatican-instead of the planned sites of London for the Anglicans and Uppsala, Sweden for the WCe-and confer with Pope Paul VI and bishops of the Roman Catholic Church. Bishop Myers said he was ffi,()ved to make, his proposal after hearing again the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., "I have a dream," first spoken by the civil-rights leader at the . :Washington m,arcb. il!. ~963.
3
He noted that there is a feel
ing among some liturgists that
the ceremony should be simpli fied and attendance kept at a minimum in order "to minimize the pomp * ¢ * in order to bring out more cleal'ly the religious significance of the marriage rite."
FAIRHAVEN
LUMBER
COMPANY
CINCINNATI (NC) - Xavier University and Our Lady of Cincinnati College here com pleted a cooperative plan' un der which students of each school may enroll in certain classes at the other. The plan will be tried as an experiment for the 1968-69 aca demic year, beginning next September. Officials of both schools ex pressed hope the arrangement would lead to a general pooling of academic resources by all area institutions of higher learning. These include Mount St. Jo seph College; Mount St. Mary and St. Gregory Seminaries, the University of Cincinnati, He brew Union college and Villa Madonna College, and possibly the extension of Miami Univer sity at Hamilton and Middle town. In announcing the plan, Father Paul L. O'Connor, S.J., president of Xavier, and Sister Mary Honora Kroger, president of Our Lady of Cincinnati, em phasized no merger and no steps toward a merger were envisioned. "The identity, au tonomy, and independence of each institution are in no way impaired by this agreement," their joint statement said.
Name Lay Darector Of Ohio Conference COLUMBUS (NC)-Theodore N. Staudt, a prominent Ohio lay man, has been named executive director of the Ohio Catholic Conference here. Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati chairman of the Conference, an~ nounc~d the appointment. Staudt has been active in Church work for many years and received the Thomas More award for exceptional service to the lay apostolate given by the National Council of Catholic Men in 1967.
Hopes For Peace LOUVAIN (NC)-At a cere mony in which the Catholic Uni versity of Louvain conferred an honorary doctorate on U Thant, the secretary general of the United Nations, Leo Cardinal Suenens of Malines-Brussels, the chancelor of the university, ex pressed the wish that the present hopes for peace in Vietnam would be r~alized. ~
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lutheran rJ1eologian Desc·~~lbes Ecumelmocal Sessions in Rl.Os~ia,
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. April 18, 1968
Asks Re~igiou_s Superiors Strive
To Make 'Vocations Attll'active
MILWAUKEE (NC) -.'Reli gious superiors should strive to make vocations more attractive
to young people by eliminating an authoritarian atmosphere, assuring them personal identity and democracy, and developing more relevant roles and duties,
a psychologist said here. Anthony Kuchan, professor of psychology at Marquette Uni versity, said such steps are nec essary to satisfy the basic needs of youth for personal identity, security; mastery and' self~ esteem. Kuchan spoke at a communi cations seminar for vocation di rectors sponsored by the St. Bernardine Guild of Milwaukee. The third annual event of this type attracted about 200 reli gious order representatives from 20 states. The speaker gave participants a psychological explanation of why religious orders have not been more attractive. He described several "forces" which have been responsible for drawing youth away from reli gious vocations and gave sug gestions on how the situation might be improved. Kuchan said religious supe riors must ask the~selves how they and others in key positions ean create a sense' of personal jd'entity among their candidates. "In other words, how can I help him find that divine spark
which is his own to allow him
to establish a true identity?" 'he
asked. ' Kuchan proposed other ques tions which religious superiors should consider: 'Most Burning Problems'
"How can I develop a trust in an eternal capacity for wis dom and choose to move away from authoritarianism? "How do I democratize this., organization of mine? How do I allow eaGh person to have his or her say so that the commu nity is as much his or hers ,as any others? "What must I do 'to dig out the most 'burning, relevant problems of men at the present time C C 01< to root out those things which' endanger the order?" Kuchan said religious supe riors can help solve these ques ,DIRECTOR: Fr. Thomas tions by recognizing' that de J. Casey, S.J., has been spite changes in society the named executive director of basic needs of young people tend to remain the same over the Catholic Hospital Asso ,ciation" headquartered in St. the years. He said establishing one's LQuis, Mo., succeeding Fr. sense of personal identity is John J. Flanagan, /S.J. who prerequisite to coming into will continue with C.H.A. as meaningful contact, with other a consultant. NC Photo. persons. When this identity be comes established, generally in late adolescence" youth is able to engage iJ true, non·manipu lativ~ love of,. his fellows; Kuchan said;
NCC President Warns Nation
Faces 'Domestic Pearl Harbor'
help guide local church people
NEW YORK (NC)-The Na along lines, of constructive ac
tional Council of Churches pres tion to meet tensions where they
ident said here a nationwide, oooperative church progJ'am is may develo!y.
- Included in the 29-piece study being designed to attack root ,problems of racial injustice and packets is a basic new booklet, the growing crisis in the cities. "Crisis in Am e l' i c a: Hope Warning that, the nation faces through Action," which cites is a . "domestic Pearl HarbOl'," Dr; sues, facts and "myths" for studY', and suggests action Ifnes for' Arthur S. Fleming said 34 Prot estant, Orthodox and Anglican churches and their communities denominations in' the council to follow. Suggested action lines include are calling on their constituent, (1) opening up job opportunities churches to institute an emer gency study and action program for non-whites on church staffs, (2) investing church funds in among their members. "We hope," he said, "that this enterprises where racial justice program' will reach the hearts is -practiced, (3) opening up and minds of all concerned Summer camps to interracial living through special scholar' Christians and that it will be fore long take on the dimensions ships and other provisions, (4) helping to break down neighbor-, of a new crusade." In broad outline, he !laid, task hood or community barriers ta
force groups in the council and open housing, and numereus others. member churches have put to
gether a new basic body of
New Nursing School
study' materials, keyed to the race issue and designed to take
Opens in Vietnam the place of current curricula QUI NHON (NC)-The Soci
over the next three months be ety of Catholic Medical Mission
fore summ~r. aries, popularly knowil as the
Suggest Action Medical Missionary Sisters of Member denominations have Philadelphia, 'Pa., have opened urged these materials form the their new nursing school here~ basis for study of the problem Starting with 16 students th1s ,of youths and adults and to year, the school willbtiild up its numbers in the future w1'th classes of 30 girls. For the' first Rename Consultor class 32 Vietnamese girls took the examination. Educational Of Congregation requirements for the course are WASHINGTON (NC) - Very set by the Vietnamese govern Rev. Thomas R. Gallagher, O.P., ment at a primary school certi of this city has been reappointed ficate level and a minimum of a consultor of the' Sacred Con two years of high school. The gregation for Religious and girls range in age from 19 to Secular Institutes, according to 23. word received here from Rome. Recognized as a training nurs In accord with provisions of ing ,school by the government, the recent Apostolic Constitu the school will 'follow the gov-' tion "Regimini Ecclesiae uni-, ernment curriculum. Instl'Uction
versae," he - has been named to , will be in the Vietnamese lan
a, new term of five years.
guage. The Ministry of Healta
Father Gallagher, a secl'etary 'and Social Affairs, is supplying
at the Apostolic Delegation in one trained Vietnamese nurse
the United States, is also 'a con as a teacher. The Sisters wili
sultor to the Commission for the also teach the student nurses.
Recodification of' Canon Law, Graduates of the school will be
artd was a peritus at the Second, able tQ work in any public or
Vatican Council. private hospital in Viet'nain.
bublin Equc:-lizes Clergy Salaries-
DUBLIN (NC) -,The, Dublin archdiocese haS introduced a plan to equalize the salaries of the clergy of the archdiocese. The plan will redistribute sur plus money frqm wealthier par ~hes to poorer ones: The salary equalization plan calls' for the establishment Jf a common fund from which as sistance will be given to priests whose income is judged to be insufficient for an adequate liv ing standard. ' A spokesman for the archdio cese denied a report published by a Dublin newspaper which gave, as the minimum proposed incomes for pastors and ~urates, $5,760' and $2,880 respectively. The 'spokesman said that these figures were m'uch in excess of the actual figures. The archdiocese also plans to enroll all eligible archdiocesan c.lergy in the Voluntary Health insul'ance program.
PHILADELPHIA(NC )-Four major questions analyzed at the six-day ecumenical consultation held in the Soviet Union by' the World Council of Churches (WCC) in ~arch were reported on here by a prominent Luther an theologian who participated in the sessions. De~cribing the sessions upon his return was, Dr. William H. Lazareth, professor of system atic ,theology and dean of Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia, an institution of . the Lutheran Church in America. ' Thirty-five theologians, eCon omists and sociologists from' Protestant, Orthodox, and Ro man <::atholic communions' at tended the, consultation. The sessions were held at the 14th century monastery of St: Ser gius at Zagorsk. , Analyze Questions AccordIng to Dr. Lazareth, who was one of five theologians from the United States, the four major questions analyzed by the participants were: Who speaks for the Church? ,What is the unique contribu;. tion of the Church toward the solution of controversial public issues? ' How should Christians relate )0 the social and technological J'evolutions of our time? How will the Church's ean for more Christian" involvement 'in divisive secular struggles af fect the simultaneous quest for more church unity? Social Ethics Regarding the" issue of" who may speak for the church, Dr. Lazareth reported, the consulta-, tion participants reaffirmed "the right and responsibility of
Drop Law Program At Paris Institute' PARIS (NC)-The bishop di,. rectors of tlie Catholic Institute of Paris have decided to sup press the Institute's 'program leading to a licentiate in law at the end of this school year. " . The licentiate is the diploma granted at the end of the first four years of university studies. !t is the equivalent of the mas fer's degree in the United States.
The institute will, however, Continue it program of teaching
on the problems of law consid~ ered in 'the light of Christian
thought, according to the bish ops' statement. The bishops also gave a renewed expression of confidence to Msgr. Pierre Haubtmann, the rector of the institute. The bisl:lOPS' decision is part of a reform plan for the Cath olic Institute. The plan has been in operation for two years. Its goal· is to avoid having the Catholic Institute compete sys tematically with the state uni versities. in all secular studies.
" Transform School ST. NAZIANZ (NC) - The
Salvatorian Fathers here' in
Wisconsin will transform the
St. Nazianz Minor Seminary
into a nondenominational school
for boys interested in 'social ser
vice this Fall.
.,
a variety of forms of Christialll social witness to the world." The consultation, in dealiDl with methods of Christian so cial ethics, rejected both ·lega'" ism and libertinism and pro posed instead an alternative> method. of "dialectical interac> tion," the theologian explained" The proposed 'method, he saiclip "affirms that Christians cann~ do without a certain framework of basic principles of humalll. existence as working criteria with which to assess the diffe.... ent situations in' which thew. lind themselves." .. I "Attempts were also made "t@' clarify some of the meanings oR' the ambiguous term 'revolutioJif' and to begin to provide som() ,ethical guidelines for Christianll involved in one of the variou" forms of revolutionary ferment at work throughout the world, he said.
Drug Addict Rehab Project in Jersey Union City (NC)-A progrMll for the rehabilitation of dJ'UfZ addicts is being inau~tated iii Hudson County under the ~. pervision of Father Melvi~ ,Madden, O.:F.M. Conv., who hat) had long experience workinl With addicts. The project head-l quarters will be centered in ... abandoned Job Corps center Jiii jersey City. FeuI' centers for screeniJll and seleCting candidates will ,be> established throughout thtl county,' one being located at S,,"' Michael's Center here which til 'conducted by the Passionie& Fathers. 'Dubbed "Telos," a GreelK word meaning end, the program is being funded by the federal Office of Economic Opportunity and the New Jersey Department f)f Community Affairs. Core c« the program will be an addict to-addict approach, with seven former addicts working undell' the supervision of Father Mad-' den and three lay assistants.
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A WAR D: Bernard G. Theroux of 29 Conant St., Fall River, a member: of St. ;Anne's Parish, has been named a Knight 'of the Order ~f Academic Palms by the ;French Embassy, in recogni tion of efforts to preserve French' 'culture in the United States. :
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Bishop of Miami Sees I~Vfestment
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Job 'rogram
MIAMI (NC)-Lack of in mot i vat ion and training are responsible for file ever-increasing numbers ~ntive,
IlJf unemployable youth, Bishop F. Carroll of Miami I!!elieves. He has cited youth unemploy i!ftent as one of the most serious ~roblems in every urbanized ~rea of Florida. Speaking before the state's ltegislative subcommittee on b 0 u sin g and unemployment: Bishop Carroll noted that as many' as 40 per cent of males between the ages of 16 and 22 in the ghetto are "looking for, Ie1nployment or have given up." DelIJrived Youth Bishop Carroll told legislators ftlat the first step toward a rem 0dy "must be in the direction of incentive and for this age groUI) this means job opportunities. r&ince government has become one of the largest sources of @mployment it is natural that. fihe community would look to €he government for leadership' in this matter. ' ; "Government agencies ac': • ,}tinted' for over 10' per' cent '" * * Of the jobs in Dade Counfy m' January 1968," the prelate aaid. "If ghetto youth could get just a ·portion of' these jobs---':a substantial contribution to the il'.uture would be made." The Bishop also recommend-' reid programs at the state level: 8Uggesting an apprentice pro~ tJram for economically and, so cially deprived youth so that they nlight be prepared to move Into the merit system of state
~leman
~ployment.
Future Invesiment -:I'he' legislature can help further," the Bishop asset·ted, "'by studying the possibility of offering some sort of tax incen ave to business and industry to help these institutions to assist in the ghettos. These are invest ments in the future that will. do more than anything else to re duce the welfare rolls of the Fears to come and improve the £rense of personal dignity to llarge numbers of citizens of our mate," he added. Bishop Carroll also pointed GUt that the le~islature caill make it possible for the State Employment Agency to'inCI'ease ,its staff in order to improve its &el'vices of special recruitment, eounseling, "and the all-impor tant follow-up in the employ anent of disadvaptaged youth. Productive Society "The March 1968 Florida In iIIustdal Commission report in dicates that the jobmobile per 90nnel saw 400 applicants.:- 200 applications were taken and 100 were referred to jobs," he con tinued. "But how many of these IaCtually achieved employment and why the others did not ooem eligible or why, they did!. Dot choose to seek further tlB most important. "The existing staff, because of ilze, cannot be expected to undertake the necessary follow up and counseling that coulcll ~I'n many of these otherwise un:' employable kids into productive members of society," the Florida See Ordinary declared, urging III &1eexamination of vocational em 'ployment toward assisting local! ..uthorities to establish new @hethods of attracting' and trailJl<o 'ing the dropout for useful eRlF> ,Dloyment.
Join Federation TOLEDO (NC)-Tbe reorgQ$:> llled priests' senate of the To~ 11Io diocese has' approved joifto. ing the National FederatiOil Qj Pdests' COWleils,
Transfer of Work Area for 83 Year Old New Bedford Iloly Name Parishioner By Patri'Cia Francis John J. Flanagan, whose candy has been devoured by thousands of parishioners of churches s~tteredl from Fall River to Taun ton to Provincetown and beyond, has retired. His retirement marks the e!1d~except f or supplying his sons--of a wholesale candy career that began back in 1910 when penny candy was the biggest seller in stock.
Last week, the leprechaun~ ish Mr. Flanagan, 8'3, closed out his books, said goodby to his longtime customers and sti,lrted planning a flower garden. He will maintain accounts with two candy factories on be half of his sons Daniel and
James, who operate candy con cessions at area fairs during the Summers. The rest of the business ;s over. Now he starts a new career, following the instmctions of Mrs. Flanagan - the former Annie V. O'Donnell of New Bed ford-who wants a flower gar den. Sitting in the living room of
their home at 194 Austin Street, New Bedford, the Flanagans talked nostalgically about how it all began 58 years ago. "Actually, the story began be
fore that, when young John F,ianagan moved to New Bed foi'd from: Lawrence with' hi!; family. . He was graduated from '4th Grade at St. Mary's School, he recalls, "and 'then put into the mill," 'The first step toward' his
candy career was when he went to work in a grocery store op erated by Peter Fatulli in New Bedford. Soon after, the two de
cided to package imported olive oil and tea and John FlanagaR went on the road as a salesman. That was in 1908. In his travels, he discovered the'traditional "sweet tooth" of the American public and two years 'later, he and" FatulU went into partnership as candy wholesalers. In 1920, Flanagan went into business for himself. "I couldn't have done it with~ out her," he says, nodding toward Mrs. Flanagan. , Mrs. Flanagan, a member I)f the Class of 1911 at Holy Fam ily High School, is confinedtc a wheel gllair now, but she still has a zing that many a woman half her age would envy. The Flanagans, married in Mrs. Flanagan's "always" church, Holy Name, on J'une 4, 1914, have conducted the business to gether through the years. As their sons gN~W up, Daniel Qnd James began conducting fund raising carnivals foil' various churches in Greater New Bedford. Flanagan - supplied! candy concessions always weM part of the scenery. Mr. Flanagan, Il member ~ the Holy Name Society and too St, Vincent de Paul Society G'l Holy Name parish, was alwaya on hand "when there was work to be done. 1 did what I could." When he started out, Mr. Flanagan recalJls, people boug~ "mostly penny eandy. TheIi@ were candy bars at the time. but very few. We sold mOlll9 penny candy than anything.'" Prices were different, too.
''Today,'' he says, OlYOt!l eaIiil buy a cheap box of candy fO(j' IJ9 cents Ii pound, Those choeo= tates used fo 8elll 10ft 2@ oentiJ It pound. Back thea, elhoeo!latei W'eI@ oold III bulk llnd retallel'li~. wholesalers - pacited 'the. jIi) what Mr& F'laaagaJl' Jeealb Iill!l OIibeautiful boxa Wifll, ~ .... ~ and big bowo.'" When fanq boxes 8tat'W • ~ the wQU eM! all 1hhlgll ~ ~hion, Mr. Flmr}Qgata di8~ <)f ~ . . In It . . UMck~ lIM,'
.
JOHN. J. FLANAGAN of New Bedford "The Kn.ights of ColumbWl were having a bazaar and they came and cleaned me out. Solli every box,too." In between selling candy and keeping accounts, the Flanagans raised a family of foul' children, three sons and a daughter. Mr. Flanagan is proud of the fact "all the youngsters got lUll education." John, now with Hughes Air craft in California, is III gradu ate of Holy Cross; Daniel grad uated from Seton Hall and now is a parole officer; Jim attended SMTIand Bridgewater and now is employed at SMTI, and their daughter Mary, now Mrs. Clar ence Silvia of Connecticut, is III registered nurse, "People ared't fltankfull enough for what they have," Mr. Flanagan' thinks, "they al ways want more than they'vo got. We've never been greedy, and thank God, we've managed! 00 get along."
'Bishop H, S. Medeiros Celebrates Jail Mass BROWNSVILLE (NC)-Bish op Humberto S. Medeiros of the four county Brownsville diocese said Mass on Easter Sunday ioo the diocesan cathedll'al and fa the' countr jail. The first - the ~ A.M. vigi1l and Mass--was held at BroWn& ville'. Immaculate Conceptiom jlaii at Edinburg. cathedraL The second was helli
m the HidQIIO Coont.\r jai!l ail Edhlb~
Casey-Sexton" ••• CleGltseN •• 8
Inc.
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tAUNToN, MAIL
.....22.....
1ft addition to their own chil
dren,
their 15 grandchildren and their two great-grandchil dren, Mr. Flanagan appears proudest of other peoples' sons and! daughters for whom he and his wife were Confirmation gOdparents. "We were sponsors of a class at Holy Name," he says bounc ily. . You get the impr~ssion from his tone that it was the best class ever confirmed there. Times have changed since the Flanagans were married, since they built their home and since they started in. the candy busi ness. But changes don't fluster the unquenohable John Flanagan. He not only takes them in stride, he likes them. "I think its wonderful what people can do today," he says. ''Think of things like televi sion." Then he got back to hiB flower-garden- to-be.
"Got to get a spade, a hoe anell
Ii rake," he muttered. "The boys take them and forget to bring them back." Got to get some grass seed and some flower seed, too, he added. Mrs. Flanagan looked at her husband and smiled. "We've had a good life," she aaid. "We get along."
I
5
THE ANCHOR Thurs., April 18, 1968
----------_.
--
.
Study to I~clude Priest Celibacy DETROIT (NC) - A major study on the life of priests be ing made by the bishops of the United States wlil include the question of celibacy, according to a joint announcement from the office of Archbishop Joh... F. Dearden of Detroit and the officers of the National Associa tion for Pastoral Renewal (NAPR). . NAPR is an organization of priests and IllY persons formed primarily to promote the idea that celibacy should be optional
-not mandatory-for Catholic priests. Last December its offi cers cabled Pope Paul VI ask ing him to permit ."further dis cussion" of clerical celibacy anell to "make it possible for those men who honorably wish to leave the priesthood to do Sl) with dignity." NAPR has' frequently charged! the U. S. bishops with refusing to discuss the celibacy issue.
The National Conference of Catholic Bishops (NCCB), at itD annual meeting in Washington, D. C., last Fall, reaffirmed the value of celi,bacy and declared!
it would be "irresponsible om oUr part to hold out any hope that this discipline will be changed. Such expectation ia without foundation," the bish ops .added. The NCCB then announced a detailed program' for the study on the life and ministry etl
priests, under the Bishops' Com: mittee on Pastoral Research and Practices headed by John Car dinal Krol ofPhildalphia.
Resigns Pastorate
To Become Editor BRIDGEPORT (NC)-Fathe;r Francis E. Fenton has resigne~ as pastor of Blessed Sacramen~ parish here to take an editorilrl position with a national maga zine affiliated with the John Birch Society. Bishop Walter W. Curtis ~ Bridgeport granted Father Fen
ton's request that he be allowetl
a year's leave of absence from
the diocese to· become associate editor of Review of the Newa in Belmont, Mass. Bishop Walter W. Curtis also requested that the leave of ab sence be extended if circum stances permit at the conclusiolla' of the one-year period. Bishop Curtis said the extension might be granted at that time "subjec& to review in light of the cir cumstances of the diocese ami of yourself at the time the re quest is made."
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6,'
THE ,River-Thurs. April .18, 1968 . ANCHOR-Diocese . of Fall -.' . .
Seek :Extensio,n Of, French Aid) To Schools
"
lnjlamma:tory ,Predictions
PAR IS' (NC) TIie French government has de 'eided to submit to parliame~ a bill "seeking to extendand
The recent riots in many of the cities of the nation remind us only too cruelly that it can happen here. And all sorts 'of thinking and, plans and provisions must be' made to head off what could be repeats this Summer. At the same time, there is such a thing as provoking trouble, and the news media especially had better police themselves very carefully to see that their predictions of what could happen do not provoke what might happen.
-
to modify in certain points t~ law on aid to private educationJ'J The law, called the Debre L~ after former Premier Michel De- bre, provides varying amountl!l of state aid to Catholic schools. coupled with different degrees 011 A national news magazine only this week came out state control over the schools. J~ with a story that was tit,led-"The Second Sacking of Wash general, the greater is the' ait\, ington." Surely that is either a misplaced flight of imagina I the greater the control. tive writing or an infla'mmatory and irre.sponsible piece of Under the Debre Law, 'fo_ plans are available to priva~ head writing. It is true that there was riotiI!g in some mainly Catholic, schools. areas of Washington but the unhappy activity in a cpm·' They can remain without statlS parative handful of blocks, considering the size of the city,' control and without direct iltaWi could hardly by any flexing, of the imagination be called a aid, but even in this case the7, "sacking of Washington." 'rhis is, precisely the ,careless' receive additional indirect helD type, of writing that can give ris,e to rea,ctions and increase from the'state through increased financial grants to parents 011 tension and hostility between the races. school children.' The pare. This is a 'time for calm appraisal~ for pushing 'ahead tum this money over to tlifI schools. on programs that will assure the Negro of his rightful Government Control place, in America, for setting up lines' of' communication At the other extreme, alll' that will have people talking to one another in sincerity school has the option of becom and not writing misleadingarlicles or' projecting dire fu . ~ng part of the public school ture disasters. Preparation must be made in the event of system, with all expenses., paid and complete control by the , these, but there is no need to suggest to already frustrated state. people' what others half except them to do. It might occur Continued from Page One a centralized system, better A third choice, known as • to these to fulfill the expectations. And that, America the United States of a group into utilization of buildings and fa":' "contact of association," gives ean ill afford. of Catholic. schools," Msgr. cilities and improved ~~ans of the government COntrol over' Cuffney stated. "It may well be · broader financial support. teaching ,methods and class the forerunner' of similar pro-. The report also said:. schedules. Religious instructiOli fessional studies elsewhere, es , .The sc,hool system should is given during school hours. pecially in view of the financial have freedom in appointment' Teachers are named by the state difficulties Catholic education and placement of staff beyond and by schooL authorities from It has been estimated _that cubic foot of water con faces." the jurisdiction of religious a government list. -tains nearly two hundred times as many living organisms Quality J>rogram orders; . T.he state pays teachers' sala'J'oa as the same amount of earth. There is an almost inex A key contention in the 188 .The curriculum should be 'ies, which are virtually the same geared to the needs of the s t u - · ' . -haustible ,supply of untapped' food resources in the sea page report was:" "The institu · dents with freedom for 'progra,m as those paid to P40lic school tion of a quaUty. independent . teachers. Local governments and 'on the sea bottom. Add to this, the mineral deposits on sChool program for the city of greater than that must pay .operating expenses iii ,the sea bottom that have likewise never been' worked~ What Auburn' should' be of· consider": ,development now permitted by the diocese; . "
, Satisfactory salary scale an'd the same way they do' those oil
, is', to become of all, this?, . ' , .,,'" 'able value to bOth Catholics and high ievel of certification must public schools. ' ·nori-Catholics. . mark lay teacher recruitment. Under a contract'of associatio~ ,Amid his many other duties;a~d:,'espeeially' hi his "To' COntinue' the' existing ap the state pays all or part of the "tireless search for peace,' the Secretary General 'of tlle ·proach of atfempting to do 'Make Deeisions expenses for salaries and schooi , United 'Nations has fourid time ·to, ask t,lrat body ,to get 'much for' many under severe Development of a preschool' .operation, proportionate to t~ busy organizing some world action on regulating the, use financial restrictions, with lim program should be considered. number of classes following the ,ited staff and ,minimum facili Religious education programs public school program and the 'of the sea bottom's largely unexplored rich"e!?, so that ties combined with a variety of a scramble might - some day be avoided a,mong nations. · controls and diversity of goals, for Catholic children in the :number of teaohers certified ao city's public schools must be de- cording to public school require U Tharit, has presented to that world ~ody a report pre w'ould eventually result' in a 'veloped as a unified project ex'- ·ments. mediocre school program and pared by the Economic and Social Council aI;ld stressing · tending across parish lines. 'Simple Contract' limited. contributions' to society. the need to draw up some long-range' plan involving the as "Selectivity" must be exerSince the government assumes a whole." , oceans of the world and their use. The exploration that The report. acknowledged that cised. to 'reduce present student· all costs for associated classes. is called for needs such huge financial and technologi~al the problems it found in the enrollment in order to allow associated schools may no longer program development and im~:" charge tuition' fees. But they' resourceslhat only the larger nations, can 'be their pro.. Auburn Catholic schools were " prove the caliber of teachers. '. may require a small fee for elec": exactly like those in most cities: · viders; at the same time, the interests of, the smaller na "The Catholic schools are at tive classes in religion, taught ,fin~nces, teachers, equipment, tions 'must 'be safeguarded. . ' a place in time where they can: by a cpaplain, and for th~' up curriculum. . ,still.make decisions rather than keep of the school c1lapeI.· ': But it suggested ,that the Here is a ~atter in which tJ:1'e one-w.'or1d concept mu~t schools' individual and collec have decisions forced upon them;' ,The fourth choice, called ,put forward or else a huge source of food' will ,be--either tive needs called' for establish- The pQssibili.ty of providing the' "simple contract," is available neglected: or will be exploited by" the nations able 'to' in ·ment of a "school system which best in, education to a selective 'only to elementary schools. This , wouid 'develop a' unique curric -group ,of ."students would be a provides that the sta~e pays haD . vest vast amounts, of. money for .• ;research , . . .. 'and. exploitation. . , '. . oulum, o'rieni~d'for the college- · rewarding effort for the Church the ·salaries of teachers. Local and . ~~:ve ,significarit effect governments may pay i:,ther' op:. This is the type of .proj~t ,tiuii the: United· Nations ,bound studtmV' .. , .'.. : · uPon the. city of ,Auburn," the ,erating expenses. ' : 'Bro8der S~pp~ri would do 'well· to ·work 'on. 'It -looks ·ahead decadeS and p~r repo~t s~i~. :: . _.' '. _ 'School'authorities name' teach This ~uld be. do~¢, it. sug haps .even longer. But it is preeiseiy ,this .kirid M thinking EQua' ·~ta.ndarcls ,erf! with ·theapproval of the gested, only if there were sub . and planning that must be, considered;. even in the mist stantial Father. Brent' 'said centraliza- government, ':which- has onlY changes in courses, se of pressing present p~ojec'tS -th~tcali·{or~immedia~econ'cepn ,lecfiori arid: utilizatiori'-of Per tion : of .Auburn's Catholic: limIted control .over, CUJ,"riculUla ' and' solution: ., . . ', ' ... ,. '.;,: " ':' ..':. : sonne~, ~rgapization of. sch~ols schools might.- enable'them to ,and. financial administratiOll.' · accomplish collectively some' of. .The law;, recently' called'. 'bl· h"'.· " , the, things which elude them, in- "pacification law" by Premi~ · P,U ,IS '.~ewspaper . dividually. He said, for example. ,Georges Pompidou, was 'original , For South 'Seas' that it would facilitate' the' best ly passed in' December of 1951 ,. . . ,. possible utilization of. staff ,for a nine-year period. The gov . MADANG (NC)-:A' newspaper ,members and the attainment of ernment wants to renew it f . 'in both 'Pidgin English and s1lm- equally high standards for all another nine years, with those dard English for ,Christians of ,'pupil!!.. But he also warned of modifications suggested by e» · theS9uth Seas is nearing publi- possible "dangers" of centrali- perience. . cation here in New Guinea. . zationo Commissioned by.17 Catholic "Probably' the greatest dandFFIC'AL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll R~VER bishops of Papua; New Guinea ger is the very real threat that . Hartford See P'lans Published weekly by The Catholic .Press of the Diocese of Fall River · and 'the Solomon Islands, it will loyalty. to the school may dissi Rese~rch (»roject taken a, general, Christian direc- . pate as it becomes less identi 410 Highland Avenue HARTFORD (NC) - A re tion rather than a pur-ely Catho- .. fied with a single parish," search project on the personal lie one, in the hope that other· Father Brent said, He indicated Fall River, Moss. 02722 675·7151 growth and commitment of! Christian groups in the South the schools might lose the fi Pacific will eventually join in c nancial and voluntary support priests and organizational ef~ P-UBLISHER fectiveness in the Hartford its operation.. . of some parishioners. ' archdiocese has been approved Most Rev.., .romes L. Connolly, D.D., PhD. Father Francis Mihalic, S,V.Do" "On balance, centralization by Archbishop Henry J. O'Brien. w.ho is' in charge of the project, 'has the' weightier case," Father The study, to be carried oui chose this New Guinea coastal Brent staid. "In the years ahea:l; GENE~AL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER over the next 12 months, will be city as the site for publishing particularly if Catholic schools Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John ,P. Driscoll directed by Douglas T. Hall and bec~use it is a hub -for Cathoare to draw support from licism, with excellent plane consources other' than the Sunday Benjamin Schneider of Yale MANAGINq EDITOR nections with the growing New collection basket" centralization University's department of a400 Hugh J. Golden ministrative sciencea. Guinea highlands region. is a nec,essity;'"
School Centralization
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THE ANCHOR"-Diocese of Fa4f River-Thurs. Apt'it 18, 1968
For'Rearing of C'hil~re.1:i "
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Mother General of Glenmary Sisters
Discusses Religious Vows
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Despite the phenomenal popularity which his books
!lave enjoyed in the United States, Father Louis Evely has remained little known. Generally, book jackets carry more or less factual biographical material about authors, but i'n Father Evely's case . there The school is located in the has been a blank. An excep country, in a tranquil atmo tion occurs with the'publica sphere. The boys in it range be tion of his TrainIng Children tween seven and 18.
ST. LOUIS (NC).....;. Religious love more like Christ through who live by the counsels of the' ·counsels." poverty, chastity and obedience Must Be Different not only give witness to the In living the counsel of pov~ beauty of eternal values but also experience true freedom , erty, for example, the Religious in doing so, Sister Mary Joseph, must be "different from the ilor Maturity (Newman Press There is a complete divorce mother general of the Glenmary rich.. different from the middle $4.25). On its jacket, we . read between school buildings and! Sisters, told Jesuit scholastics class, different from the poor "' a t Father residences. The latter are not at Bellarmine House of Studies, ... Cl '" different so that we can serve all men," she said. Evely is "pro dormitories, but much more st. Louis University. Turning to the subject of cel .. fessor and di like homes. In' each a family She emphasized that Religious !OOCtor of. Col like atmosphere is sought. must be "different" Qecause of ibacy imd chastity, Sister Mary . lege Cardinal
The educationM method is the living counsels, which are Joseph blamed news media for ..Mercier· n ear·
based on t~tee principles. "First, "$Omething above. and .beyond.; making these appear to be the we ,.propo)leto show our pupils. Christian virtue.'" And, she main reason' for .departures ," .... ~aterloo Bel-
I' .glum," where
'that happiness does not depend::.: "added, "since we are different, from religious'· life' and' .the ), .be is "develop- .
,on mbney, gadgets, or luxurious . . ,so is our witness 'arid commit .priesthood. l'. tog moc;lern ed surroundings,". but .on developed ment." Denying that celibacy anell ncational metb personal resol,li"ces; secondly, SHRINE OFFICIAL: Fa chastity are the cause of aU ~s which al "We· • '" try to foster' great ther John J. Nicola of the Sister Mary Joseph was problems in religious life, she ......w the students
warmth and .confidence be-, elected mother general by the also said it would be incorrect -... maximum of Chicago' Archdiocese is the 19 GIenmary S·IS t ers remalmn . . g tween olir st,udents. . and our . . to say that they cause no ktitiative." The difficult ques selves"; thirdly, "We appeal to new assistant director of the in the order in ·September. Last problem. tlOh of authority and obedience our pupils' generosity in all National Shrine of the Im-. SUIrlmer, a l~rge number of the Sister Mary Joseph acknowl .. is very sensitily treated: ' ~ .... circumstances." maculate Conception in the.' Glenmary Sisters were released edged that "in religious life the t , . , The child' requires authority Stresses Freedom nation's captial, Washing1;on~.. from th~ir v.o~1!! ,and fo'rmed,a . .vow with which most of us find i'.· and really wants it, but it'must This school stresses fi-ee.dom, NC Photo. lay communlt.y' to continue difficulty is obedience." But she ,. i be an authority wisely and' creand everything about it is cal work in the Appalachia areas. also noted that "the vow, if I3tively wielded, with a view ~ I culated to qualify the boys ~ be . '." . .•. '''We are to 'be' and 'work' as really lived, make us truly IaSsisting the chlld to' develop .. ge~uinely !ree :meri: ~re~~m, .Directs. Formahon 'poor,' chaste, obedient, chosen ,free hutnan beings. There can wward in~ependence' ahd' re of course, IS bought ap,d mam- . p' • ones who are in the world but be no freedom if there· is n<l> "1' Sponsibility. . ., ." . tllined l?nly' at ;l price, .an~.. one.· I.. arlS, ounclS not of it. Our willingness to be respect for authority. There can ·.... 1 Surprising Colllinents •. must continue to deserve it. -If CAMDEN (NC) - B iSh 0 P such a person and the manner be no freedom unless it is ,,,.,' 'In the chapter of' religious the school succeeds';, as J't seems' George H. Guilfoyle of Ca~den of our poverty, chastity and guided by rules which are :-··training 'are comments' w'hich:' to, in this" re!fi'lrd, it is a. re-" haS directed establishmen~ of obedience and the style ofHv Jt1Eiant not· only as' safeguards " !.'lOme will find surprish'lg: 'The' . '.inarkab~e ~nstiti.ttion..· .,' '. 'p~i-ish councils' in, .each of. the ing them make our witness dif but also as aids to maturation." .' .. primary place Father' Evely,·.:, ,Few of us, ~an'sel)~ our. chil-" diocese's 129 parishes before: the' erent." . gives not to formal .instr.uetion , dren to such aschocll, Jor its end of 19Q8. : . "If We are noLdifferent,'" she Fatima Seminar .' "ond not to· example, I)'ut to name is. not ,Iegi.on. Bljt from '" A parish council is an .advis ·continued, "if we do not want ,:what, in fact, the parents are. Father Evely s oo?k we can ory group recommended by a to be different, the world does WASHINGTON (NC)-Twen This cannot be faked, nor.can· draw a sound phIlosophy for decree of the Second' Vatican. not need us, the world does not ty-eight U. S. dioceses have no .. ifhe child be fooled about it. It the rearing of our child~en .and Council. No general formula want us. However, since being ti.fied the Blue Army of Our is by what they are. th~t parents a .large number.. of ~r.actical for the·body is given in the de different is not ·the goal but Lady of Fatima headquarters "reveal, God to theIr li~tle 'ones pomts to put to I~m~dIate use. cree but Bishop Guilfoyle. said only the means, in being differ here they will send representa Intennectuai s Lafe.. and create an envIronment it implies "communication and ent from other Christians we tives to the army's international ~here they breathe sacredness." . Fat~er Ignace Lepp's The Art coordination between all seg must constantly strive to in priests' seminar at Fatima, POl1' In this respect as in all others, of. Bemg an In.tell~~ual (Mac . ments of the people of God." : crease oUlr potential to be, to tugal, from July 14 to 28. "'you can make of your children mdlan. $3.95) IS wrItten from ' only what you make of your-. the point of view of a psychol/Selves." ..agist ~nd a psychotherapist. Parents' Role '.. ,Aft~r discussing what it means Father Evely advocates.· that. ;, to be an intelle,etual, especially paren ts not teach their. children in the contemporary context, bow to pray until the children· the book discusses many as themselves ask them to. If par pects of the intellectual's life, ents pray from conviction and from the physical through the aeed thclr children will be spiri'tual: It is recommended dra~n to do so. . .. that, intellectuals avoid cocktail Two chapters, one on studY· parties, go to formal dinners ne Ilabits and the other on rea~ing. more. than once a week,. and eat . indicate to parents w,hat ~ey raw tomatoes. " .... ean do to facUltate and amplify ". . • ", 'iMle child's. formal schoolinL{~ : Pope PGul ReCCH~es . . Father Evely recommends, in.. 'J . .•• ' tile first connection that parapanese I grlms . ents draw up a syst~m for chil-" VATICAN CITY (NC) - A dren to follow in doing home- pilgrimage of Japanese Catho . ~ork, and that they do aIr they lies and Protestants who are !tan to provide an atmosphere praying for Christian uni~y at conducive to study. Lourdes, Fatima and the ,Holy The chapter on reading sug- Land were given a warm wel gests the types of books to be come at the Vatican by Pope put in children's hands. It· is Paul VI in a speCial audien~e. ... . ,;"'gratifying to"obs·erve·thaC'the·'·· The: 45 JapaneSe included 26·" ·, .. ··Suthor depx:ecate$' what is,1 but.. , Protestant laymen' and:' .!leven slick mediocrity and'tlrge'$,·the'; ministers traveling 6il"·a·pil-·.. · '", tmiquc' value of true"Works of·'grimage· organized" by' the "Jap ,'" a r t . ' ' " anese Corde let 0pera' Fo'uhda t'... . Trabquil Atmospl1e're" ' " tiOll', a Christian uriity organi '. '{' . His' Cardinal Merci'er' school, .. zation founded ·by· J~suit Father , . OS he describes it, makes" one' TakQji Ohtsuki. To his 'visitors, , I want to observe' it for oneself: the Pope' said: . .. . '. . . "We warmly encourage' your' Double feature performance at stated purposes of contributing a budget price. Bake while yOIl Canadian Ukrainians to the advancement of Christian broil ••. with your choice of eye unity and to the realization of Schedule Congress level baking or ;;uper fast Microray peace in the world by your EDMONTON (NC)-The bish prayer and good works. For as broiling. ops of Canada are expected to the recent Vatican council attend the Canadian' Ukrainian stated: "The holy task of recon NOW Regularly Catholic Congress to be held ciling all Christians in the unity here June '29-July 1. of the one and only church of ONLY $399.95 Christ transcends human ener The National Eparchial Coun ell of the Brotherhood of gies and' abilities.' "We therefore place our hope Ukrainian Catholics (BUC), the League of Ukrainian Catholic entirely in the prayer' of Christ :Women, and the Ukrainian for the Church, in the. love of ~atholic Youth Organization the· Father for us and in the power of the Holy Spirit. And will participate in the congress, lilt which problems of religious hope does not disappoint be cause the .. charity of God is ~nd social life will be discussed. Dr. Meletius Snihurovych, poured. forth in our hearts by 155 NORTH MAIN STREET - PHONE OS 5-7811 bead of the BUC, is in charge of the Holy Spirit who has been preparations for the meeting. given to u.s."
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall .R.ver-Thurs. April .18, ·1968
Progrum
bi Spirit of R'eass~ssment Columnist Restyl,es Hair
Fails
BAYONNE (lNC)-A-releasedo time religious education pro gram w-ill be abandoned by tho Catholic churches of this New: Jersey city after one year. Father Paul J. Nolan of St,; Vincent's church said the pr·o gram; which became a subject of controversy when it was adopted by the Bayonne Board of Education, had not signifi cantly increased the number o:f! students .attending . religion classes. The program came into exist' ence.Jasf Fall after the board oil educ'ation adopted a resolution maki'ng it possible. The resolu tion'specifically designated twCl> Catholic high schools as sites for released-time classes. Mter protests from the Jew ish Community Council and' other groups,. the released-time program was expanded to pro vide' for students of other reli gions. There is no indication whether other churches will continue 'with the released-time . program.
By Mary 'finley Daly 'Tis a day of reassessment and surprise. Politici'ans are reassessing their positions in the run-do-not-walk race for high office; financial specialists reassess the state of the economy anc;l vagaries of the stock market;-psychologists and sociologists are l'eassess ing the youth of the country rying. to her friendly neighbor in their rebellion against hood beauty parlor and its Mr. Charles. conformity: Many Catholics skillful Unfamiliar. with the jargon of
who at first firmly resisted the trade, I nonchalantly asked changes in the Church liturgy for the Ginny-suggested "tip, h a ve .g 0 n e · 'frost or streak"-and hoped for through a period the best. IDf reassessment Followed a complicated pro so that "swing cedure. "Now we'll take it ing M a.s s e s" down," said Mr. Charles. In my with their gui naivete, I thought· this meant. tar accompan taking hair down tfrom rollers. iment are at "Down," I found, has many con naoting more lIlotiations. In this case,' as I attention, peo-. learned afterwards; "We too1t · pIe driv,ing for it down seven shades." There miles to attend, was a showercap arrangement, content to accept the SRO a crochet hook and a pecking ~standing room only) dictum. process, an "Ouch!" ordeal but h pl. WI R • Even fashion designeJrs are with the assurance I was "takC a ams, ....un ecelve doing their best to reassess the ing ,it ·beautifully." Danforth Grants trend of new styles, Will the "Taking it?" What waS I . "midi-" catch on, especially.' ta,·kg? Once committed, the .. 'W~HINGT6N ~'NC)-Seven IWII SEDER SERVICE: As part of their 'Holy· Week'00...' 'N .. . h· J " ' d .. with ~ young? Can we belt exPerience was like. plunging .ewman cap ams an one women in once again after. the off a high diving- board -"- shut servance, women at St. Mary's Church!, New ~Bedfo~, t?l$e Newman nun were among re eomfori of shifts. a·nd sheaths? your eyes, say a·' prayer and part in Seder service as held by Jewisl). familiE;Js. F,iom left, . cipitmts of'42:'Danforth' campus' Will the 'gals go fortuffles arid hope you'll surface; And ·if· Mrs. Ernest B. Lizotte ; Rev. Michael McPartland, eu,rate miniStry grants awarded·· tbhl bows? worse beea'me worst,·theie was" . . ." . R d J G d by'the 'Danforth Founda:' '-' . en ron. .., ..." .; .... ~'o' St I.·OUI·S· This I'S the fl'rst In households,· too, come alw,ays .\ the· . wig emporium at'S,t.Mary's; M.t's... ,aymo.n ... nJ ' ; . periodic :s~lls of reassess~ent'" where for $9.95 and up mistakes' ~ ~ ~ year' such' grants· have 'been particularly . i,n the Sp~ing. Such a spell came to our house .. up ,pending : ·1·" with the onset of Spring clean ..~inal set and .,.comb-out. . ing, started with the most . ....:. By MARILYN RODERICK . . Sister Thomas Aquin Foley, · WOW! ,-~. ~. O.P., University of New Mexloathed task, efficient rear For better or worse,.1 was lrangement of the big kitchen tipped, frosted. or streaked ico, 'Albuquerque, N. M.; Father eloset. . (never knew which) but at . .. Clarence F. Dye, 'State 'UniveI' "Help me take all these dishes least I was·."done"-and almost sity of New York, Buffalo, N. Y.; down from the top shelf?" I afraid to go home. Well, baseball' may well 'be answer I just received from Father John'D. Hickey, Univer called to Ginny from atop' the "Do something to your hair?" man's natiopal pastim~ but the one of my fashion-conscious..... sity of Virginia, Char6ttesville, stepladder. the Head of the House glanced female of the species prefers friends, and this is the. answer Va.; Father William F. McGee, Dutifully, she placed piles of · up from his newspaper "Looks indoor activities. In fact, at last many wo~en (myself included) Michigan Technological Univer;' plates, cups,' saucers, ·glasses on different. Looks great!" count, over thirtY million womwould give to t~e above ques- sity, Houghton,· Mich. the kitchen table, as intent, I I breathed more easily. If en'in the United States have tion.· .' .' Also Father :James E. Love thought, as myself on the reas nobody else liked it-so what? ,declared sewing to be their ·There's an enormous satisfac- joy.. Wisconsin '·State 'Univer sessment. . After the initial shoCk, . ~ach maiJi h«;>bby and pastime. This tion in taking a few yards of s~ty;, Eau' Claire; Wis.; Father Ever Think Of family member gave approval astonishing figmaterial, some tissue paper p~·t- Sergio F. -Negro; Fresno State· '·Ev~r think of doing some to ~he old' mouse with the.new ure certainly tern pieces .and your own crea- Col!ege,. Fresno,Calif.;Father 1lhing about your hair, Mom?" mane. accounts for'the tivity and emerging (.many Tho!Jlas' W.. Phelan, Rensselaer Ginny asked suddenly. I nearly Yes, even at our house 'tis a rise. of sewing houTs later) with a dress worthy Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N. Y., fell off the ladder. ~ay of reassessment, and sur- 'schools, .fabric of many compliments.· . and' Father William A. Wei'lnin.,; "Doing something" about hair! prise. stor~s and pat": This dress· could be. a Ricci ger, 'WisconsinState Universit)l, Is there a woman alive who tern centers in design or a Dior creation. Both Superior, Wis.' all parts of this. of these designers> alon-g withD~nforth eampus ministrY hasn't thought of drastic hirsute 'Prelate Offers M'· a'ss revision? Most. of us, tJlOugh, nation. 0 nee such names as Galanos, Lanvin, grants· are .'made' to persons thought, of. as a Fabiani,· Saint· Laurent,' arid dedicated to the profession 'of after youthful experimentation, For Mex.ican-America·ns plod along in pretty much the homemaking art many many ·more design origithe' campus ministry on the hairstyle we've worn for years. EL PASO (t'lC).,....BishoRSid- . .indulged in only n'al patterns: These eostabit basis of profession'al compe (Picture accompanying this col- ney M. Metzge'r of El Paso· of by those' Who more than the average (a de- tenc'e, intellectual promise arid umn attest to that fact.) fered Mass for residents. of tlie could not afford signers coat pattern averages religious commitment. Candi "Any suggestions? Cut, curl, city's predominantly Mexican:- off-the-rack garments, sewing about $3.00 and a dress pattern dates are allowed an academie restyle?" American southside area, to ask has become a status .hobby. about $2.50) but this is a mere year of graduate study in til . "Restyle, of course," Ginny.'s divine aid in their efforts to Women with leisure time are pittance compared to what you university or theological school assessment come' through loud gain better. housing' and em taking private or group lessons would pay if you bought one of of their choice. and clear.. "And. ho.w~s .about.3 ployment. and even those of us who have these originals already made up. ti,p, a frost or streak?" . . In his sermon, the Texas prel busy schedules have managed to . So become a fabric "nut," the -- We finished the kitchen. closet ate urged thos.e in attendance 10 squeeze in time for instructions. pursuer of something unusual Home Masses
with no more coiffure conver-" "take up the arms of prayer, In fact, one of the leading womand different in textiles and WORCESTER. (NC)-General . sation. Never one to oversell, not of war," as they strive f(Jr. en's 'magazines called ours "The whip up an origiJ:)al that shows permission for' celebration of Ginny believes in. dropping. a· ,p~tter living conditic~ms. Great Sew~ciety." , the.world how clever you are. Mass in hOmes of the Worcester' kernel of, thought and allowing More than 1,000 persons at What caused this fantastic indiocese' on' iU1Y day' at· any time. it to germinate natubilly-':"'not'~ . tended the Mass,. offered. at a ~rease in the number of women has been' given' ·by Bishop bad technique for a woman. -.portable altar on a vacant lot who sew for· themselves, .their Name Jesuit Director nard J.- '·Flanagan. by the area's familes :and their homes? Cost, A frank,., appraising look ih ' sQ'rrounded the mirror next 'morning re- crOwded tenements. Among of course, plays an- important Of .Hospital Association
called Robert Burns: . . 'those present were EI Paso role, for the price of. a garment ST. LOUIS (NC)-The board
01. .' a SYSTEMATIC "Oh wad· sonle power the gif-tie youth worker Abelardo Del- decreases sharply when you cut of trustees of the Catholic Hos
• 10 year SAVINGS pital Association has announced gie us gado, who had just completed out all the middlemen and over To see ourselves as other see a 40-day fast for better housing head cost that goes into getting 1;he appointment of Father MONTHLY DEPOSITS us!" in the area, and U. S. Congress- a garment from the pattern Tho!Jlas J. Casey, S.J., as the 01. a INVESTMENT new executive director 'of the To Mr. Charles man Richard White. stage to your charge account. • 10 year SAVINGS In home sewing you are ,the association. And sent this reassessor sem'NOTICE ACCOUNTS His duties will include the . middleman, the cutter, the 'a. REGULAR East, German Catholics presser; the alterationist, 'and execution of all policies and pro year SAVINGS grams relating to the 900 health . ·Designate .Conn. Dean the final 'Salesjprl. There is a Help World's Needy care facilities which are mem
huge difference ~een the Minn t ' College BERLIN (-NC) - The first coSt of' material, a pattern, and bers of the' association, and the
ST. JOSEPH (NC) Dr. Catholic collection in East Ger- the ·other notions that are need- . administration of the services
· Stanley .Idzerda, acad¢mic dean' · many fOr the world's needy was· ed to complete' a garment and offered by the national office·
undertaken simultaneously with the'· same quality garment off here. · of Wesleyan UniverSity, Mid '. :Ba~kBy Mail
dletown;' Conn., has· been ap-' the annual .coliection for the the .'racks of one· of ,the better Father Casey - who holds a pointed president of St. '. Bene-' same purpoSe in.. WestGerJ:riai'!Y. stores. master's degree in hospital ad
, We· Pay·,.:rhe Postage diet's College for women, con The funds donated by· com ministration, from the Univer , Cost Not Reason :." yARMOUJit"S~.~P:PIN~ PLAZA. ducted by the Benedictine nuns munist-ruled East Germany's oddly enough· though, cost is sity .of Chicago-succeeds Father : here in Minnesota. He will. slic Catholics .will be devoted to':as John J: Flanagan, S.J., who has·. • SOUTH YARMOUTH • HYANNIS not "the answer that you'll. re ceed oit' July 1 Sister Mary sistirig in' relief of· famine and ceive when you ask many been appointed consultant to • DENNiS PORT' .• OSmiVILLE Grell, who served as president 'hunger inc India, Vietnam and wQmen why they sew. "For the the' CHA board .of . trustees and for the "last five yea1'!l.;· .". . . Allf.cri.a. :sh~~~ enjoyment of.it," was. the member.· institution,s. h .'..., .., '
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'Woman's Role "Must Be Seen in Relation to OtherslW ' ~. Grail Movement Chairman Says
By Joseph and M'arilyn Roderick
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 18, 1968
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WASHlNGTON (NC) _ A ·She mu,t be eeen tn rel.U. . German Catholic laywoman, to others," she added. chairman of the International Dr. Luecker extended this Catholic Women's Grlllil Moveidea to apply to the concept of ment, said here she does not partnership - from the work think women should be priests. ing relationship within a good Dr. Maria Luecker, now in marriage to the necessity for the U. S. on a lecture tour armen's and women's groups in 1... ranged by the National Council the Church to coordinate their C l' W ., t aIOOted. Balled and burlapped ; of atho lC omen, IS In er- efforts. ., .. 1aywomen f 0 r means that the plants are up- !in.to bloom with its amazing es t e d'In t rammg il h k SUddenness and the tall swaywork in developing countries. th ' sooted with elr so , t en pac - ing branches of the bushes that 'd ed ,in burlap until they are sold. Dr. Luecker, of Bonn, sal l 'U have been allowed to follow h . "1 d t b h ow as "hl's method has the dual benes e IS g a <t e ere n , ... of keeping the root structure their own form remind me of l 'In the Ch urc h , • fit aay person a -!apanese bnISb painting. wlw!n there is so much tll,at the of the plant intact while p~ T.l\e daffodils add their sun}aity can and will do. COVINGTON (NC) - Bish09 tecting it with a covering which . RI'chard H. Ackerman of Cov u to t . sl'line color to the landscape and In an interview she said to 11 a ows.. ge necessary IlU' Spr,ing , . b11ings beauty 'and p r o m - . . da'" man I'S "at the turning l'ngton has announced the drop IMld water. 'f • I S wo· ping of all first grades in aU Caution needed ise even to our small piece of point in her existence." Because parish schools ill the diocese land. of questions surrounding autoWhen buying plants you Dream Bel.... mation, the population explo- next Fall. ' -"ould keep in mind that man" r el t 'd h " 0 > , , , Yesterday I noticed the bright sion, interdependence and idenThe Kentucky pr a e sal e have been shipped considerable reached the conclusion, after tity crises, woman can no long h ts f th f barb distances. As a result they have pink s 00 0 e rhu orc- h several meetl'ngs with provin er be considered in er been subJ'ected to a number of ing their war through t h e d ry L own k cl'al supen'ors and the diocesan t comfortable vacuum, Dr. uecGbuses "'!'~,i~ ,have ~1;'U'lanel"tly, earth and I ,can almost aste er said. ",' " b o a r d of education; that it damaged' or set them baole i8 'the' sweet pungent flavor of the would ~ impossible to provide. aome manner. ' ,' , " r ",' : fj~t! rhubarb pie which wi11 ,. .an' adequ'ate 'staff' _ Religious' I pref~,~~..buy ~Hed ,~qd,b!J~"',' : ~r;~ce ourt~ble. The sage that Proposes' Salar.y, " , 'and" lay':':':'" 'toinairitain l eight lapped I:i~~es ~r~m a ~a~ ~w-.", ,h,l¥l, ,',bee.n" ,sllv.ery· th.roug~t~e , . gr!1de s cif 'elementary edUCation:" er, whe~, t~e,parem.ye~,f?be".l~p~,Wln~er JS puttmg.. l!',. Its ' . . , • Scalefprlea,cher~',", Bishop",Ackerin~n. ~oted 'the plants is:P.l!?~e, likely,to"apP:';l}a~~,,~~~~ryg·g~een and se.n~l,ng out , HUMAN. R,IGHTS: .The " , DAYTON (NC)..,.,..TheUniver~ four major communities of • satisf~~,~ryJ~ev~l-. ," ,', , .. :~~!'~, shOots along the ~Ck poor, oppressed and, under-, ShYlOf ,Dayton Federati?nlof Sisters teaching 'in the diocese If YO~,I"nJ!it b..,. ,at ,~; ,6£ . ,~<r~., " ", . ... , .' privil~g~ 1!,l'e th~ object Qf ,T-eaehers" AFL~CIO, has ISSUed ha-ve said it will be necessary the nu~t:QUIl,. outlets ,fer"Wtr- ," ,.'We ve ,got to start thinking, th r itudeof men of good "~a statement here proposing, afot them"to' withd.'raw ,a tobil of den g~, ,not in the nY~~, 'about planting some peas,". Joe .e so IC . new salary scale for UD faculty '31 iiuns. from full time class categOf')1'" ~~ ,the ~ollowing, in. "aDDOWlcE:d this evening and wlll durmg 1968 - Human me~bers,Wlbo"it said, ,aFe,great- room du~y, and there is shGrt mind: (1) Look over the ,p~t, . quite without, warning Spring Rights. Year, commemorat- 1,. upderpaid. 'age of qualified lay teachers ~ earefully. .'for .signs -of .severe ,planting:time bas arrived; Each. ing the 1948 'UN Declaration· According 'to the'statement, replace them. He said the dio pruning \ and freshly eut wood day'I diScover a new little plant on HumanRights~ NC Pll(~to. UD ranks 33rdamong 38 Ohio hopes to retain the lay (this is • good indicatieR that breaking through the dormant colleges. in faculty compensateachers it now employs bf'
ihere has been a good <leal of ground aocl I must admit that tieR- aDd 46th among the 50 raising their salary to' 95 per
damage done to the plant en :Chis smaD lPOrtion of garden Mayor Forms Race largest Catholic institutions of cent of that paid b)' the local
route 01' that the plant was in- gives ~ a great deal of pleasure higher learning in the U.S. public schools.
iected in some way). -but I stiUhave my little <lIream Relations Committee The new union of faculty nte bishop. said a four-part
(2) Check the ban fl»' fWDl- tucked away for difficult days. NEW 0 RLE A N S (NC)- members,wmeh has not yet program recommended by the
Dess (if the soil within t~ baH The days when everything Mayor Victor H. Schiro has aa- called for an election to give it board of education will be
0If burlap is loose it indicates goes wrong from the firs!!; monounced appointment of a 28- official bargaining status, asked adopted throughout the diocese.
that the plant bas been thrown ment of awakening to the last member New Orleans Human adoPtion of the' following salary It calls for:
wound in transit and that the sigh at night. The days when Relations committee with Msgr. scale: professw, $1&,000 to Dropping, all first grades dur
original ,soil bas been sh~en' news blaring out of' the 'TV' 'Arthur T. Screen as chairman. $21,000; associate prOfesSor, ing' the 1968-69 school year;
away fro,Dl. the roots hanmng' makes you 'doubt the ability of The cOmmittee is'composed.of $13,000 to $17,506; assistant pto- pooling of resources of the re
the root.,structure. (3} Check "the' human' race 'to survive" its 14 Negroes, and 14 white :per: fessor, $U,OOO' to $14,000; 'and . Ugious committees,and, the as
n ~ m:u stem for cracking. or "'. despair. The days when" s<!J)s. Six Negroe~ and six white instructor~ '$9;000 "to $11,000. In signing of S~sters to all parishes
bhstermg,. a sign of exc~~ll'Ve'" 'ever'yone' 'you meet seems too persons were nominated by the aii<lltion, th~ union asked for on an equita~le basis; payin,g of
dryness. ,(4) Check for: wlther- , "muoh in" a tUsh to enjoy the ci,ty,'" voters in .sbe district~ ill 'animal inctementS 'raiiging from all teachers, lay and. Religious,
l ing leaves .or ,need.les,l (5) Check: . ,'ev"~'r'y' day pleasures '0'"ll"f'e' an'ii'lha l ' , "$550 to $1',000'.. " ,,',,: . , . , '" from .. , J. ~... ~ recent city'wid~: election.. '. , . " a ce~t,ral, ftpldhitowhich • 'b the gen,e-ral, condition and shape, I" denilmds 'upon your tim~: a n d ' . ''', 'the various parishes con~n ute ' irf the p l a n t . ' : , .. "" "'","" . . , ' The other ,16 me~bers were ""'. accordiri,g,to ilnequi~able pian~ Follo~N these suggestiQIls, is.'" ~:~~y ~IJ1 mOre than." you ,<;an. , . no~ina.te?b1·v~~i~us civi~ or-" : ~,i,nci nnah. ~91chetrS , .', .and str~ngthening, of, the Con-
BO gUlltMtee ,that you ,!ir'l'U ,be ""',' '''''. ' ,gamzations: The'rra~or Bald he 'Ge Sal I fraternity of Chr.is.tian ,Doctrine
lIUccess(W. ,in picking" : Ollt a, ~ ~ at .~se tImes th~t ~ can. ,will ask,' .for .~~un~11 appl'oval ',' t , :CI~y ,n,crea,se; . program, ,to ~rve ttJ~ religious
healthy ,plant" but at, least ;YOU'" J~~n,,:ly ~lk of g~t.lfig, aW/lY, of all ai>pointees,: ' ," . CINCINNATI , (NC) - Sls~rs ,education needs, of children en will be 01:1., to ,good start. Try to ~~ It all .in the Mal1l'e woods " , . "" . and, lay t~acherS i.n the ~lemen- ,rolled in .Catholic and pul,llie,
give the plant, Ii reasonable ~",on an", Jsland. cut off, from , 'tary and high schools of the schools.
ehance ~. succ~ by keeping communications., It's times like scare you, this is'a very easy Cincinnati archdiocese will re its soil ball intact when it is these when dreams and faith are recipe. ceive salary increases next
planted. Be careful removing all we have. ' . 2) Place the graham crackers SePtemb~r. . .
<the burlap and dig a generous Any type of cheese goes over in a blender and spin for crumbs. T~~ Sisters wIll receive an
hole so that the ball will not big at our house but this tasty, If you do not have a blender addlb?nal $10.0, and lay teach
,\ctIVt::. thOUClhthtl.l be cramped in its new location. easy-to-make cheese pie could place them in a plastic bag and ers WIll get flV~ per cent more
In the klteheD easily beeome the favorite even roll fi~e with a roling pin. than the salanes adopted. last olSClplln€ b
'in an anti-cheese abode. The Melt the margarine and mix Fall. More than 1,500 Sisters
five words that tell the story 01 the One of ~y pupils bid me gaoo- reCipe comes from Mrs. Edward with the' crumbs.' Mold up the and appr~ximately 2,000 lay
contemporary Franciscan Action Arm, bye an~ told me that ~he Woytaszek of Holy Trinity . teachers. Will be affected. was going to move' to 11 dairy. Church in. Fall River' sides and bottom of a nine inch The Increases were recom farm in' ~ulton~ N.Y. We opened CHEESE PilE' plate. Set aside. (Do not bake.) mended by the finance comm,U tet us tell you how you the atlas that was in the class3) Have your cream cheese tee of the archdiocesan board can serve. Write for fREE l'Oom and disCovered that Fulton. Crust out of the refrigerator ahead of of education and approved by literature at no obligation. was quite far up into the Rorth20 graham crackers time and allow to soften in a Archbishop Karl J. Alter. Sis o 'IIEK 0 BROTHEl ern part of the state; in fact very ¥4 pound margarine large bowl . . Add the sugar ters teaching in the archdiocFaltler Aldan, O.F.M,CAP.
elose to the Canadian border. I Cheese Filling beaten eggs and vanilla and beat esan schools received an in told Jo~nne that I truly envied 1 '[ pound cream cheese until very smooth. Pour into the' crease of $200 a year, from $1,500 ber the chance to live on a farm, % cup stlgar unbaked crumb crust and bake to $1,700, last September..The
far away from the hectic city 2 'beaten eggs • in an 325 oven for one hour new' increase, effective next AdR
life and all the worries and cares 1 teaspoon vanilla or until the top of the pie cracks. Fall. will bring their salary to that go with it. Sour Cream Topping 4) Remove and let cool about $1,800..
A pastoral existence has al1 'cup sour cream 10 minutes.
ways been my dream, some 2 Tablespoons sugar .••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
place ~here you have a great 1 teaspoon vanilla' 5) Mix together the sour r-' deal of'room to raise your own Fruit Topping cream, sugar, and vanilla and . 1 smooth over the cheese filling. vegetables and fruit and per1 fan of pie .cherries or c.an Bake another. 5 minutes and let haps even have some animals, of P}tted chernes or blueberl'les ' ·cool. Refrige.rate pie when cool. at least' for effect. Any book that or even frozen strawberries tells of, a return to nature finds ' coul\l be, used. 6)' For the, topping, drain the a plac~ on my reading list and 2''1' cornstarch fresh water, cherries .or other" as lon~ as there's still' land for 2 :;.rablespoons of confection-' f·ruit you'r~' using but" reserve, aale in:j Maine. New Hampshire'" er's:' sugar liquid and put in a saucepan and Vermont, I feel that my (It canned pie cherries or blue- with the confectioner's' sugar 4Iream :ean stin be spun. ., berries are used the cornstarch and cornstarch. Heat'liquid and .653 ·Washington Street, Fairhaven Likei1all dreamers, Mwever. I. and \confectloner's suger are not stir until jelled. When it is find mhelf more often than net .nec~essary as the fruits are cool add the' drained fruit and ,994-5058 laced with the cold reolityof the Sweet and thick enough.' . spread over the top of Ute pie ~ . .-odd realJ¥ live in, so I l1lusi 1) Don't let the above format 01' serve separately,' ~I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
dener to part with his money. You' can buy just about everything you need now at nurseries department s-tores, 'iscount houses, food chain,s and you name it. A great make the best of It and enjoy many of the Shlllbs are 8Gld the small portion of nBltur~ to as B & B, balled and bur- be . found outside my kitchen L..~ped and many are sold bare- the door. As I'm writing this column -'V forsythia has suddenly come
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THE ANCHORThurs., April 18,' 1968
Coalition Urges C@lroglr.eSS
OU1l
Act
~©'\?®Il~Y
WASHINGTON (NC) Operation _ Connection, a month-old civil rights coal ition of religious bodies, has asked Congress to remain in session until it passes legislation which will meet the needs of the nation's poor. The group, which' held an emergency meeting hel'e. after the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, also donated ~3,000 to aid the striking sanUation work ers in Memphis, and began ex ploring other ways of aid~ng them in their drive fOl' uniOn recogni tion, It also pledged its support of the Poor People's March on Washington, which Dr. King was to have led, and asked for '~massive financial support" of the Martin Luther King Jr. In ter.religious Memorial Fund, es tablished to aid the work of the Southern, Christian Leadership Conference and the American Foundation on Non.-Violence, both headed by the, slain civil rights leader. Operation Connection was <established in New York early in March for the purpose f)f raising $10 million for commu nity' organization in black ghet tos of the nation. ·It is supported by several Catholic bishops, 20 white and . black Protestant,C'hui'ches, the 'National Co~ncil of. Churches, the Rabbinical Assembly and the Amedcan Jewish Committee. Meets Needs Adequately In telegra'ms 1;0 Pl'esident Lyndon B. Johnson and Con-, gl'essional leaders, the coalition asked for "legislation that will meet adequately the critical needs for jobs, housing, health, poverty funds, together wi,th' <elimination of the' crippling so cial welfare amendments~" The' amendments will freeze federal Aid to Families of Dependent Children payments on July l. "We ask Congress to remain in, session . until this legislation is 'passed," they said. Congress is driving,to end t.he current session bttfore the po litical conventions begin in 'late' July, ' ,Co-chairmen of Operation Connection are Bishop John E. Hines, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, and the Rev, Albert Cleage, a militant black leader from Detroit. Catholic bishop John J,' Wright of Pittsburgh and Rabbi Abraham Heschel of the Jewish Theological Seminary in New Yclrk are vice-chairmen. Bishop Wright is cha~rman of the social actiOi1'.dep~r.tment of the' Na tional Conference of Catholic
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I~sue~';b:ire~tives ' For" Home, ,Masses ,-SAGINAW (NC) ~Dh'ectives governing celebration of home and neighborhood Masses in -the Saginaw diocese have been is sued by Bishop Stephen S, WozniCki at the request of the Priests' Senate. The rules were approved by the diocesan litur gical commission. General permission' has been given for Mass in pl'ivate homes on the occasiO!.l of the. enthrone ment of the Sacred Heart, and in nUl'sing homes', and homes for the aged. Specific permission may be quested for each. home Mass and fbI' Mass in connection with Conf;'aternity of Chl:istian Doc trine classes, with' Va,tican . Council II discussion ,group : meetings, and' for shut-ins.
Heart Appeal
Coniinued from Page One A special brochure delivered to these solicitors proclaims t.he theme of the Appeal. "At least a dollar more in "68"wi11 be the "appeal" to all who contributed in 1967. The Catholic Charities Appeal, among some of its ser vices, includes 900 beds for the elderly, more than a million dol lar annual payroll, and 7,800 persons helped annually through the Catholic Welfare Agencies. Also, over 16,000 teen agel'S are provided activities in the CYO centers._ Eight million dollars was spent in construction in the last 15 years. Care is given to thousands of sick, blind, deaf, retarded, homeless and needy-both chil dren and adults. Thirty agencies provided services through the annual Catholic Charities Ap peal. Lay Chairman Roland A. La !france of Westport said today at the start of phase one-Special Gifts Appeal-of the 1968 Cath olic Chal'ities Appeal: "I appeal to all the spccial gift solicitors to make their calls early. Please make returns to ONE OF THE THIRTY AGENCIES OF 1'HE CCA:-Father Conly, SS.,CC. distr~butes your local headquarters. One solicitor told me that the suc .HolY Com~1Union to Cuban refugees and Puerto Ricans who atte~d the Regina Pacis cess of the Special Gifts solicita Cell'ter, New Bedfol:d, and thus are benefa'ctors of the Catholic Charities Appeal scheel-, tion will set the barometer for phase two of the Appeal - the uled jor May 5-15 in the Diocese. house to house calls beginning May 5.. He continued: "Business, fra ternal, professional and industry groups have been good to the Charities Appeal. In behaH of the 30 cOl)1munity services which benefit from contributions, I WASHINGTON (NC) - The w()n praise for his work among ,what :we are told was an indi earnestly' ,urge them to continue vidual snipel' in Memphis. They rioting and looting' that broke. Negro ~'outh here said HKing's their generosity and when pos ha've been presellt'.jn the leaders' out here and in scores of 'cities .death' didn't really cause this sible, to increase 'at least a dol of gangs that have caused the across the nation following the stuff. Oh, probably some. un lal' more in 68.' II assassination of the Rev. Martin derstood who King was an~ damage here and elsewhere. Luther King,' Jr., in Memphis what was going on, but a lot They',can continue to be pres have raised many questions and of the guys out there in the ent, it is ,frightening to think, in pn'lvided hardly any answers. streets didn't." those, who have tasted a little If and when calm is generally He thought that Congress power, and those who would restored, the question will still should "appropriate billions of· act in retaliation. It has been remain: What can.be expected dollars to Negroes for housing, demonstrated that ~a very few WORCESTER (NC) - 'Co-cd this Summer, which has not schools and jobs.", J1e thought cando a great deal of damage fever' has' hit the up-to-now all yet arrived? It has been more "a billion dollars- would only to a great ,many. women St. Vincent Hospi tal than '~hot" enough already, bl,lt ,begin to solve ~the pr?blem." One ray' of hope is that' more school of nursing and medical not ~eatherwise. . Few Do Great Damage and more people may be coming technology program. Men st.u There 'seem to be few here to see that rioting is senseless dents may enroll. Recklessness alid irresponsi Mrs. Mary'T. Darcey, hospital w'ho say the rioting and lootingbility run through the entire and will solve nothing. Another have anythipg to do with civil story of recent 'days. They were is'that it will be seen that open public relations director has rights. It is frequently said that certainly present in the act of housing can ,help to break up announced: there would have been trouble "Since so many men have the ghettoes that have spawned sooner or later this 'Stihlmer, the rioting and looting of recent shown an interest in these fields, and that the senseless killing of days. St. Vincent Hospital wishes to Dr. King only brought on dis , Something many will long re make the community aware that 'turbances sooner than expected. member here were the tremen its facilities are available to Now it is asked,' is what was dous traffic jams created by male students who wish to cnter feared might happen still to LIMA (NC)'-Juan Cardinal white workers in the city flee the freshman class in Septem , corne? Landazuri : Ricketts, O.F.M., of ing to the suburbs to beat the ,ber." St. Vincent's, in its 75th Doubts have been' expressed Lima has rejected a raise in the curfew-and to escape trouble. year, is the second largest hos here that enactment of civil ~vernment subsidy Pel'll gives pi,tal in New England-Massa rights legislation will of itself chusetts General Hospital, Bos traditionally to the head of this p'repare,s Document prevent more distul'bances here historic see. ton,is larger. and elsewhere. . Worcester's two Catholic Men's ,In a letter' to Sen. Miguel' On Mixed Marriage National Need Dammed of the senate's budget. PARIS (NC)-A joint -work- colleges, ,Holy Cross and As On the 'fi"rst day th~t .Co"ngress c()mmittee; the cardinal said that, iilg committee, set up by the, sumption, are studying the pos met' after trouble broke out he was "moved by lihe' present· p'ermanimt council' of . the sibility of going co:"ed. here, .some southe'rn ,Congress economic conditions of the counFrench bishops and the. offices meri wal'l1cd agaiilst passing try," which is in the, midst of a of the Reformed and Lutheran legislation in an' atmosphere' of fiscal e r i s i s . ' Churches of France, put. the "I'ecrimjnation;retrfbution, and "This is an e.ica'rnple for all' finishing :touches on a docll~ remorse," or as a soH of "black ment on "A Common Pastoral malF' . payment to, kee'p cities Peru,'" Sen. Dammcrt ~aid in a Approach ro the Families of from' being looted alld bUl:ned. press conference. 'In August, 1967, Cardinal LanMixed Maniages" at its first . , The Washington Post observed editorially that these arguments dazlll'i. stopped work, on a costly' meeting here. ' Prepared by experts, the· doc-_ 'were "part of an alarming ef new shrine to ~t. Rose of Lil'!1a ' umentwill be published soo~: fort to frighten Congress, into. and. directed that the funds inIn France, where 82 out, qf inactiv.it.y," but that. "they have ~ stead be used for construction' ' • every 100 people have "~een no more validity than the argu-' of a social center. For Your baptized Catholics, Protestants ment· that Congress must now are very much in the minority, hasten to pass the bill in, expia totaling, between 800,000' arid tion for the shocking murdel' 'in one million in a population of Memphis." . The national need, ELECTRICAL Continued from Page One 50 million. for the bill, "was clear long be Contractors fore the tragic events of last observance of Msgr, Dwyer's' weekend began," it pointed out. jubilee, April 25 at 7 P.M. The One young Negro who. has, principal celebrant will be Bishop John J. Boardman, Aux iliary Bishop of'Brooklyn, who Evolving Worship will also preach. Other ce'le-' LOUISVILLE, (oNC) - Some brants will be' Msgr.' James W. 10;000 are expected to attend a Asip, Msgr. Thomas F. Lit'tle, thl'ee-day Congress on Evolving Rev. Francis J. Murphy, Rev,' Worship' to be held. here in Fi'ancis J. McGee, Rev. Francis Kentucky April 28 to 30 uildei: J. Evans, Rev.. Francis P. Kil :944 C9unty Sf. coyne, 'Rev. Luis P. Mal'tinez, t.he sponsorship of the Louis New Bedford ville Archdioceo o . S.J., and Rev. 'George Tennant.
Riots Pose ProbleJr's~ Offer, No Answers
Gang leaders Reckless, Irresponsible,
Nursing School Going Co-ed
Cardinal: Rejects Subsidy Ra ise
T.he Best
Car
Prie'st 60 Years
Penn. AFL·CIO Backs Nonpublc School Aid
THE ANCHORThurs., April 18, 1968
Bened ictilrne !' sks Church ~~U'o@rrn
PITTSBURGH (NC)-The 2,000 delegates to the Penn sylvania AFL-CIO conven tion here called upon the state to provide some public aid to nonpublic school students. A resolution approved with few dissenting votes said "the Pennsylvania AFL-CIO is de voted to the concept that state and church ,or nonpublic insti tutions be separated. "Yet," it continued, "we are constraincd to acknowledge that in providing essential services for young and old alike, it be comes necessary to utilize the facilities of nonpublic or ehuI'ch-organized institutions. "This convention recognizes the need to provide'" ,) (, educa tional services for all children of school age regardless of where such instruction is made available, providing, however, that the use of public funds shall not be in the direct sup: port of such nonpublic or parochial school capitalization, building maintenance, religious hlstl'uction and other )lon-judg ment free curriC\lla," the reso lution said. A bill which would call on the state to help subsidize edu cation in secular subjects of children in nonpubilc schools is currently before the state Legislature.
Set Sex Lecture At St.' Joseph's The parish council educationul committee of St. Joseph's Church, Fall River, will spon sor a public lecture on the pa l'ental approach to sex educa tion at 7:30 Sunday night, April 28 in the sc~ol hall. :PI'csellting the lecturc will be Emile Mohlcr, M.D., hematol -ogist at Newport Navul Hospi tal, and his wife, Mrs. M"rgaret Mohler, R.N., M.S. 'l'heir aim will be to place sex knowledge in proper perspective and to assist adults in communicating effectively wilh children in this area. Georgetown Medical School Dr. Mohler is a graduate of Loyola College and Georgetown School of Medicine. His wife is a graduate of Mt. St. Agnes Col lege, Baltimore, and holds a maske's degree in nUI'sing from the University of Mal·yland. She has taught pediatric nurs ing, growth and development, and has worked with handi capped children as a public health nurse.
Pl~AN MERGER: A May wedding will merge the San Francisco families of Mrs. Eileen White, 45, a widow, and Fireman Frank McHugh, 48, a widower. Mrs. White has nine children, McHugh has eight. They range from 10 to 21 years. NC Photo.
Asks National Examination of Conscience Baltimore See to Implement Civil 'Program BALTIMORE (NC)-The re port· of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders should serve "as a point of de parture for a nationwide exam ination of conscience," accord ing to Lawr.ence Cardinal She.,. han of Baltimore. . Cardinal Shehan, upholding the repOl:t's charge of "white· racism," has called for speedy implementation of its recom mendations in a pastoral letjer on "the sufferings and humil iation that al:e being experi enced both by ow' courtry and by our Church." Focus on \\'ar Discussing the nation's racial problems he cited archdiocesan efforts "to do its part," but noted' that with the "modern devclopment of centralized pow el' at the highest level, all ef forts arc . bound to fall short without the Jeadership al~d fi nancialsupport of the federal government. "National action," he contin-' ued, "is paJiicularly necessary in the fields of employment, ed- , ucation, the reform of the wel fare system and housing." The ,Maryland Cardinal feels pl'eoccupation with the Vietnam wal' has prevented such a na tional effort but said that the nation "has been heartened by President Johnson's decision to reduce substantially. the scope of bombing aguinst North Viet nam."
Confusion and Ang'uish He also. noted that President Johnson's' withdrawal from the' prl1sidential ,race gave "incI'eased force to the sincel'ity" of his latest pence bid. "The means must be, found to accede to the plea of our ' Holy Fathel' for a cessation of, hostilities' and for the establishment of peace," C<trdinal Shehan stressed. "Uitimately, a withdrawal of American troops must be brought about. The temptation to seck victory in still further escalation' must give way to unparalleled efforts' to reach a prompt and reasonable. understanding."
Tax Exemption
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. TRJj;NTON (NC)-The possi bility that the New Jersey Legislalul'e will. reexamine the policy of exempting religious and educational facilitics from re~l estatc taxes has been raised here,
Turning to the "present suf ferings" of the, Church, the Cardiilal noted the increasing number of priests and Religious leaving its services and the di minishing number of vocations to the prjesthood and Religious life. "Particularly are, we dis turbed," he said, "by the con fusion, the doubts, the anguish, that are being suffered by a S'eeming~y growing fiu,mber of our people." Supreme Teacher Such confusion, he maintail1 ~d. has arisen both beCause some people have "gone too far" in reinterpreting Catholic teachings and because others' never fully comprehended the ol'iginal doctrines. "To put an end to conf~sion," declared "it seems well to re affirm, first that the $econd Vatican Council, while it made explicit the doctrine of coilegi ality of .the episcopate, gave ap-
proval to the principle of reli gious freedom, gave approval to the ecumenical movement, and dealt explicitly with the role of the Church in the face of such problems as war and· poverty, yet. made no changes whatever in the doctrines of faith or in the p~inciples of morality; and, second, that the supreme ordina'ry teaching au thority within the Church is the :Pope, who has certainly made it clear that there has been no change in doctrines of faith and morals." Doctrine Guidelines
Cape Cod Center
SAIGON (NC)-Reports from Catholic parishes in the Saigon archdiocese show 150 parishion ers killed during the Commu nist offensive and its aftermath, Two parish priests were killed by shell fire at night. Father Joachim Nguyen dinh Quyen, 58, was killed in his parish on Feb. 7ny a mortar. Father Dominic Vu boi Quynh, 67, was killed on March 10. He had gone out to warn his peo ple to take shelter in trenches, and was hit on his way back to his own. An eldcl'ly Sister, of the all Vietnamese Lovers of the Cross, was also '. killed. Seriously wounded pai'ishioners numbered 111, slightly wounded, 168.
Continued from Page One and moved in a short period of time ailowing the Parish Center to be tailored to variances in building usage or class sizes. The building plan provides for eight classrooms, a library, a multi-purPose robm with plat form, an office, rest' rooms, kitchen, boiler room, and storage rooms.. Each classroom will be, com-' plete with chalk and tackboards, teach~rs' storage cabinets ,and work counter. An. classroom floors are to be carpeted and (he, multi-purpose room covered with sheet cork flooting. ' . Unique fcatlll'es of'the design <\l;e the flexible plallning con-' cept, allowing the addition of fOUl' extra classrooms at a mini mum cost and effect on the 'basic building; the central open air meditation-teaching court, pro viding a landscaped interior view from the corridors, library and lobby; plus the adjoining stepped lobby teaching loggia, allowing for open informal dis c.ussion and teaching groups. . In totality the design is pre': dicated upon accommodating the pastor's',desire to provide a func tional and adaptable building capable of servicing .the varied activities of the parish with a minimum initial budget and low Jnaintenance upkeep costs.
T):le Cardinal announced that in order to "forestall confusion" in the Baltimore archdiocese he will prepare guidelines '''based on the Church's clear doctrine" to be followed by all priests and teachers' of religion.
Catholics Killed In Tet Offensive
WH ITE1S
LOUISVILLE (NC)-A Negro Benedictine priest, ,active in interracial affairs on the na tional scene, urged the Church to act on urban crises at a dioc esan level. 'Father . Bernardin Patterson, O.S.B., prior of St. Maul'S priory, South Union, Ky., was inler viewed here after attending a strategy meeting in Chicago on what the Catholic Church can do in light of the report of the riot commission. Father Patterson elaborated on his theories involving total diocesan participation in the areas of poverty and race rela tions. A first step has been made, he said, because "Christians admit they have sinned because the» haven't. solved the problem." He sai.d he feels the Church has the responsibility to educate the white community to lhe problems, especially suburban ites. In answel' to a question re garding the coming Summel1' months in major urban areas, Father Paterson said he feels the outcome will depend largely upon action later this month by national meetings of the majoli' religions, including the Catho lic bishops in St. Louis.
Priest Must Keep Catechist Role NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Say ing that pastors must be cate chists, an official of the Nationan Center of the Confraternity oj Christian Doctrine warned l;I priest group here not to re linquish "this integral role" orl their priesthood. "The vocation of the priest m intimately related to the estab lishment, the building up, and the directing of the Christian community," said Father Frank Murphy, assistant director of the CCO lwtional office in Washing ton, D,C. Father Murphy spoke at a day of renewal for priests of the New Orleans archdiocese. He said the role of priests re quires them "not only to an nounce the Gospel, but to form communities that have heard the Gospel, and to direct them to the service of God.
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,THE 1-.: :-"
"'~-Diocese of
Fall River-Thurs. April 18, 1968
If:b@tfD~iVD~Ragh~~Cc~miftD©·n· O:~f®f?~ H@p~ \,'~n ~@~~, Crg$D~ By Msgr. George G. Higgins My colleague Father John McCarbhy and I were priv -:-iIeged to take part in the Civil Rights march in Memphis on April 8, the day be£ore Dr. Martin Luther King's funeral in Atlanta. Television,radio and newspaper coverage of the Memphis march wa,s so extensive ,th~t there would They needed him and, char":
be no point in tryIng to re- acteristically, he heeded their
-anguished plea for help even create in this brief column though he must have known
Frustration
the atmosphere of non-violent, but grimly' determined militan«:y that' made it such a memorable event; nor would there be any point in trying to' determine what it all meant, for the future. Indeed one almost desp::irs, at this stage of the game, of being a'ble tq" say , ' anything ,Jrleanipgful-.l~t,~lone ' " , anything, ,priginal-,-on a~y ,~Ii7,
that, in coming back to Mem
The following letter could 'have been written by any mis
,phis for a second demonstration,
sionary for it reveals the cross common to every missionary,
he was putting his own life in
frustl'llltion. Actually, it was written by a missionary in Africa after jeopardy. making the rounds of his villages on a bicycle and seeing nothing
, His courage and sense of ded but poverty, ignorance, suffering, ingratitude.
ication .will be forever held in
highest honor.
He writes: "Yo~ enter your hut at night. The heat is terrifie,
Negro-Labor CoaliU"n '
but 'you ha,rdly notice it. Your heart is heavy with what your
But if' it wasn't surprising
eyes have seen during the day. You have done your best, but
that Dr. King came to the aid
that was far from enough. You hope you will be able to do more
of some of the poorest of his,
the' next time around.
own people in Memphis, it did
come as a surprise to some and can be regarded, I think, as "The howl of the hyena keeps you awake. Your thoughts don't
~i,tentative sign of genuine, hope give yoU: ,rest eitper. You' be'gin' your nigllt prayers. 'You 'catcb ,,for, "the future-that' organized ,'SISTER" ,~R, y" GRE'GORY , ,thinking about a faster means• of' ,,' '. .., ,' YQurself transportation ,~abQr, however belatedly;' a1so', , , .. , . ' . . . . ,~ "You, fight that ,thought 'as a distraction. YOU' teil' God you are pect of.;,*tl,e frighten}ng,'l!il,cia,~: ,ndlied to·the cause! ," ", " . : 'sorry . . . . . With';a largell,suppJy",o£ metilCirles you could lielp " , ,.' crisis pr~~pitated ~y Jlle ,~?4':"" ' i ! l'Union' men," Mr. J., Edwin' ,lIe""g'~",,' '~re people ••. If you only had a jeep :" .. :'. Agaiif you 'tell' dog ass~~Ination of D,r., King: ,Stanfield"reports' in, h,is eX,cel- l • ,,' ' , ," yourself that you are suppOsed to be saying' your rnght" prayers
on the porch of a}VI~!Dph~~.h~~~t· lent stUQY of ,th,e" MelllI;>his aDd 'not thinking 'abo,l.\t. sucb trivial things as ;;eepS medicine
room. ,, -, strike, "readily acknowledge . , So . , . . ' . O~.~ poss!ble' HoPe':;' , ' . .'''t~a~, if it were not· for'the' ·ST.-MARY-QF-THE-WOOBS .'~ ,. •• mehow you can',t convin~ your!ieH'. ~ •• ' . : ':', ' Still and:, all, rineis driven, Negro ministers and the unity (NC)--8isterMary' Gregory has. ......
almost lii"spite of .himseit, to, ,of,the Negro"community behind, been appointed president, of· st. look for 'signs Of meaning a'ndor "them; the -sanitation' workers Mary-of-the..:Woods>, College for' '~Y~ ask God 'to be_ understanding :with yo~'. y~ k'nQ~ ~e ~s. Y~
feel' better; 'but Mt mUCh. TOmorrow' be' another. day' Gf ~rushope, no' 'matter hGW faini,' 'wouldn't have the chance of a women, ,conductedbytbe Sis wherever' he can find them 'un so'owball in. hell.' ,. . ters of Providence here in ,trations, 'in whicb you' will again uncover more and Ilreater miser
ies than 'you can relieve '• •••.The 'lOQd gets 'heavier .: •• heavier '. ,
'the midst of the gloom 'that 'has' , '~'On the other hand, the union Indiana'. enshrouded this country since ' 'provided the sort of 'know-how Mother Mary Pius, chairman •••• he'avier." the tragic murder of Dr. King. (and money) that seems to be of the college board of directors,
For my own part, I think I necessary these days to come to . said Sister Mary Gregory, assist
The above was not written for yOW' sympathy. The missionaries discerned at least one such sign grips with a not-so-simple issue ant to the president and direc don't want your pity; they only want your help. It is spiritual during our brief visit to Mem- around which to rally liberal tor of Asian studies at the col ~ce that they need as well as material. Money alone won't . phis, namely, the beginnings 2lt and minority-group forces." lege for the past year, succeeds least of a new coalition between ("In Memphis: More Than A -Sister Marie Perpetua, S.P., relieve loneliness anc;l homesickn~ ingratitude and frustrations. But the spiritual power of your self-denials will win for the
the civil rights movement and Garbage Strike," by J. Edwin 'named to the faculty of Immac missionarlils God's strengthening grace without which they will
some of the more et.tlightened StanfilHd, Southern Regional ulata Junior College, Washing segm~nts of the Amencan labor, Council, 5 Forsythe Street, Atton, D. C. Both appointments not persevere. The material power provided by your monetary
sacrifices will encourage the missionaries with (lOncrete proof
mo·::men.t... la~ta 3, Ga.) ,are effectivtl J~ly 1. .T he cnsts Whl~ .brought ,:Or.", Mr. Stanfield· ,suggests that, A native of Cleveland, Sister that others care enough about 'their 'brothers to deny themselves•
That is why everyone should sacrifice' every day-EVERY DAY!
Kmg to .'~emphls 10' the: first'" 'lliboi-'s belated, but effective' Mary Gregory, 40, was gradu 'bless you. ' ,
plac.e-~,ragJ.call~ led to' hl~ ~ as-', , support of what started, as ated from ,St. ,Mary-of-the . God ,.l sassIn~tIon ~n h1s second ~l:stt:-,. "ti' largely ,Negro-oriented cause Woods in", 1949 and sharily
I,: ',' was, ,In ,maJor part",a. ~nSIS, m"'seems, at first glance",anyw'ay, 'l'~tor",'~l'cf~, joined ,Sisters' tJl
SALVATION AND SERVICE are the Work of The Society for'
the fl,eldo.f labo.r r-elatums·"",·: .. ,,'to be an example.,of the '-,ind of, ·d·' Th taU k f ttl: '" uVl ,e~<:e. ", , the Propagation of, the' Faith:'Please' elit out this' cohimn' iind ~nd '
. e s~u,J. ~ wor, ers I) e, "'labOr-Civil- Rights 'coalition that' '. l ' .' . toUr offering, to . Right 'Reverend 'Edward' T~ O'Meara, National
elty of MemphIS, almost .all, "11,,, is ·needed. to get at the root' "" " ' " DIreCtOrl' 366 'Fiftll' Avenue; New..-York, N:Y. '100(11;' 'or directly
wh.om are 1\legroes,w:ent aut, on. 'cautes of the racial crisis in the ' to, St~dy to your .local Diocesan, Director. Rt. Rev. Msgr: Raymond T. Con
strike 13$t, February, Gver, .the., "'United States; I :think: he is,', ,., ",I !'lost fundamental of,~U ,-labor "'tight-or at least I hope he is.,.,C 00 " ~na~ces . '" Sidine. 368 ,. 'North .Main Street, ·Fall·: Rivel', Massach.usetts 02726. JSs~es, nam~~ the Issue ()f Ha~ington's Ho ,BROO~YN ,(NC)-;-Archbish;';'
. . . ' , '. "pe" " , QP Bryan J. ~cEntegart of .
Union recogmtlon. R~actionary RefuSal : ~ Slgnlflcan~ly - en~u?h, 'ev~n BrOQklyn announced the first' .~~~=;=;;=~;;=;;==;;:::=;~:;o,
The sanHation workers' were . s~ch . a raihcal .soc,al reformer formation of a'special committee al
also concerned, of course. about as Michael Ha.rrl~gton seem~ to on financing Cathoilic' education
wages, hours and working con- a~ee that thIS 18 ~ot an idle to study the "grave financial
ditions, but, in the final analysis, o.r Illusory hope. Unhk~ so many problems" facing the see's high
it was the city's adamant and bber?l refo~ers and so many school system.
in~dibly reactionary refusal of .hlS associates on. the, more Tb£! .25-member commi99ion
to recognize their union which radIcal Left, Mr. Harnngton has. d of '13 1 0
t d . d f th 1 b IS rna e u p , aymen, 1 forced them to go out on strike no espaue 0 e a or . ts B th nd S· t . . . movement. pnes ,a ro er a. a IS er. Dr. KIng ~~m~ to. Mem~hls at . '. , . The laity incl4de bl!sinessmen,
the workers, ,InVItatIOn to dram- '; He wntes. 'The unions, ha,ve' 'bankers educators and WGmen
, , atize the justice of their cause . 10deed organized a decreasing active 'in community affairs.
and to rally the Negro comrpu- ,Percentage of the labor force. Parents faculty and principals
nity behind them. He did so, at Yet, in tez:rns of ~umbers; th~y involved with the schools ,are
the cost ~f his life, because he ?re,. an~ wl!l remam, the largest also represented.
was conv1Oced that the time had m~htution 10 the country comArchbishop McEntegart said
CONTACT MANAGER - UNCOlN PARK eome for the Civil Rights move- mltted to domestic social re- the " estimated deficit for the
ment to tum its attention to the form. current school year for the 10
999-6984 636-2744 ~o~omic root causes of racial S~~ondlY, and mU~h more diocesan high sChools in Brook-
Justice. . pOSItively, the Sev~nhes cO?ld lyn and Queens will be a rec Me~phls was to have been see a. ,:,st growth 10 collect~ve ord $1.6 million. The committee ElllJlllllllmlmllllUlIIIlIllumlHHllIlIlIlUlIIlHtnUlHlIllUIllHUlIlIlWlIlIUllllIUlIlIlIHlII1I1tI1111111UIIIIIIIIIIIII the fust step in his so-called barg~In1Og amongg~ouPS w~1Ch will advise the archbishop as to
Poo~ ~eople's Campaign a ~re~ously hav:e reSisted unlon- how the diocese can finance the
prellm~nary local skirmish, if l~tIon * * * ,So perhaps there the schools and is to submit a
,"ou Will, before he moved on Will be a new labor move- report by July 1 to Washington to launch his ment co * * , . highly publicized campaign at I hope and pray that, Mr.
e( BRISTOL ~OIJNTl' the national level. Harrington's cautious optimism Interfaith Meeting
Courage, Dedication about the possibility of forging SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-A It wasn't too surprising, of an effective coalition of the conference for clergy and .lay 9O-DAY NOTICE eourse, . that Dr. King should American labor movement with men on Christian-Jewish rela- , TIME
have agreed to throw the full the poor generally and with, tionships .~ili bC held at Seton • ' OPEN·
, ,,·7(). .eight :of his enormous iilflu- ',Negroes' will 'prove" 'to· be well Hall 'University's :Student' Center .ACCOUNT ," ",' , ence a,nd prestige, behind the founded. Tuesday. April' 23 i under Catbioi' Interest Compounded striking: sanitation workers, of : If'it does" the garbage strike olic, ,Protestant and Jewish aus . Quarterlr Memphis. in Memphis will, have .been ,8 piceS.Discussions' will center They were his people-des~ major turning point in Ameri Offices . . . on the presen~.status and future perately poot Negroes fighting can SoCial history, and Dr. Kirtg, prospects of Christian-Jewisb against almost impossible, odds G()(i rest l)is, noble soul, will relations, and "ew: ,chidlenges to, NORTH ATTlEBORO , .MANSFIElO , ATTlEBORO FAlLS tor elem~ntary.economic justice. . Dot have died in valo. Christian-Jewish understanding. IIIWUIHIIiulJIIItIuWUUllltiiIWWllWlJHUJilIIIIIIIIIIUiwillulBtuIUlllliililtllIUWWIUIIIUIIU""UIUIIIIIIIIIII
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Parishes Provide Clothing, Shelter During Disorder
Superior Court H'ears Housing Bmas AplP~a I
BALTIMORE (NC) - The response of Catholic parishes and institutions here during early April's disorders was
WASHINGTON (NC) Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court heard two hours of oral argument on the pros
both immediate and widespread. and cons of selling homes to Negroes in a case that has Within an hour of the outbreak drawn the support of two car of strife in the inner city, Asso dinals, two archbishops and 18 ciated Catholic Charities made its staff and services available bishops. The case hinges on whether to Civil Defense authorities and or not the Alfred H. Mayer parishes in the city began to an Company of St. Louis is com swer calls for aid. pelled by an 1866 law to sell Before the city returned to calm, nearly every parish in homes in its new Paddock and around Baltimore had made Woods subdivision to Negroes. some effort to relieve the prob Lawyers for the developer lems created by the disorders. say that since Congress should legislate regarding sale of in Parishes, schools and convents dividual houses and that since served as refugee centers and Congress has not spoken on the also as distribution centers for issue, the case is outside the food and clothing. Parishes from outside the city-some as court's jurisdiction. In response, Negro bail far away as Annapolis and bondsman Joseph Lee Jones Frederick'-- collected food and brought up an obscure 1866 clothing and sent them into the law stating that "all citizens of inner city to be distributed. NAMED: Msgr. Maurice the United States shall have the Father J. Francis Stafford, J. Dingman,' chancellor of same right, in every state and director of Associated Catholic Charities, said .the system of the diocese of Davenport, territory, as is enjoyed by white thereof to inherit, pur refugee depots was in operation has ~een named by Pope Paul citizens chase, 'lease, sell, hold and con a few hours after the distur VI to be bishop, of Des vey real and personal property." bances began. Nine Catholic Moines. NC Photo. Joining Jones in· his plea churches were among' the 19 werl~' U. S, Solicitor General centers open to those' made Edwin Griswold, Lawrence Car homeless by the disorders.· dinal Shehan of Baltimore and The widespread ,burning of Patrick Cardinal O'Boyle of homes and tenements - such as Washington, Archbishop Robert occurred in Detroit last Sum mer-never mat~rialized here. QlUCAGO., (NC)_Spurrep by E. Lucey of San Antonio and Business '" property 'was almost '. the.., eivi~ disorders that swept. Coadjutor Archbishop John :1:. Maguire :of New' York, and 18 the exclu'Sive target of the fire dozens of A,merican cities in the . "bishops., bombings: The persons left "1a~e""of the m.ur,qer of Neiro The late Archbishop Paul J. homeless were primarily' those civil rights leader, Dr. ,MartiJ:l Hallinan of Atlanta also, had who lived above stores that Luther King, .the President's were burned. Advisory Commission on Civ.il entered an amicus curiae brief on behalf of Joiles. Food M~jor Need Disorders announced that it will Since many inner city grocery reconvene this Spring. stores were among those burned Illinois Gov. Otto Kernel', out in the disorders, food was chairman of the committee, said the major need of residents of the group will meet to review the area. One church distrib recommendations made in its WASHlING110N. (NC)-Aux uted 200 loaves of bread in, 20 massive report. According to iliary Bishop Joseph L. Bernar minutes. Governor Kerner, most of the din, adininistrator of the arch No cases of vandalism or de committee's recommendations diocese of Atlanta, has' been struction to church property have not been :~mplemented. were reported throughout the In another move dictated by' elected general secretary of the city, and no incidents of har the death of Dr. King, civil United States Catholic Confer ence by' the USCC Administra assment of clergymen occurred. rights leaders have postponed One priest who toured much of the ,scheduled April 22 Poor tive Board.' The announcement was made here by Archbishop the city while looting and van ,people's March in Washington. dalism was taking place empha John F. Dearden of Detroit, sized that attacks were directed Planned now for the middle president of the USCC and the against property and not. against of May, the march will come to National Conference of Catholic people. the, nation's capital. through. Bishops. Throughout the disturbances, Memphis, Tenn;" wbere. DI'. King Iii his capaeit;V as general priests, nuns and staff members was murdered April 4. His wid secretary of the U. S. Catholic from local community action ow hI expected to take part, in '.Conference, Bishop Bernardin the march. ' centers toured the streets calm will also serve as general sec:' ing residents and looking for' retary of the NCCB. sick and elderly shut-ins who Bishop Bernardin's appoint would be unable to help them- . ment has been authorized by selves if trouble broke out in ' the Holy See, and is effective their neighborhood. They found immediately. However, since he VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope area young people and residents Paul VI .has sent a' message ex- . was elected administrator of who agreed to bring the shut- ; pressing deep grie~, on hearing . the Atlanta archdiocese, follow ins food and other aid. the news, of the assasi.nation of : ing the ,death of Archbishop Paul' J. Hallinan, the date of his Dr. Martin Luther King., arriVal In Washington has not A telegram drafted' by Am yet been determined. 'I D leto Cardinal Cicognani, Papal Bishop Bernardin will assume m y Secretary of State, and sent ,to some of the duties of 'the gen SAGINAW (NC)-The Sagi Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, eral' secretary immediately, but naw Diocese is establishing a ,Unite(i, States, , stated: will'continue to serve as admin department to deal with finan istrator of the Atlanta 3rehdio cial support and other matters "The Holy Father is pro . I' foundly grieved to learn of the cese until a successor to Arch mvo vmg parishes in the city's untimely death of the Rev. bishop Hallinan takes office. inner city area. Th S . Martin Luther King in such Bishop Bernardin by this ap e agmaw Priests' Senate· tradic and deplorable' circum pointment becomes the fifth will set up a committee to or ...
ganize and serve as board of di stances and expresses heartfelt general secretary of the U. S. rectors for the new department. sympathy and,' while praying bishops' secretariat. He succeeds This committee will have full that the .virtues' of justice and Bishop Paul F. Tanner, who powers ot, appOintment, policy brotherly love, for which the was named bishop of St. Augus and fin'ancing. They will be as Rev. Mr. King labored, may be tine, Fla~, in February this year, . ' . . sisted by professionally trained everywhere respected, His Ho sociological personnel arid a liness implores from' Almighty full-time lay executive secre God comforting divjne. graces tary. upon the bereaved family and The decision to establish an .friends. of the decea~d.. Please inner .city city department- convey the expression of my SLAB BRIDGE ROAD which will result in the entire own condolences to ~e· fam'ny , . ASSONET, MASS. 02702 diocese accepting responsibility in their sorrow." . Tel., 644·5556 for the inner city apostolateArchbishop Raimondi transBOILERS RETUBED was made following a report to mitted the Pope's message to TUBES REPLACED the diocesan consultors on the the widow of the Rev. Martin '" ..... ' 24 1II0UR SERVICE fi nancial situation at several 'I.:ti'ther King, and adued an ex-' FULL INSURANCE COVERAGE inner cit! padshe~, in~agi,~a~....p,r~Jis.~l?~ ~,' 11~ o~~~y~~a:th~ ,.wifiif;......w-."...~-_
Riot :Commmssi'on To Recol1lvene
Bishop Bernardin
usee
Secretary
Message Express'es P'onfi'iff's Sympathy
Saginaw Establishes COt ' ept. nner
TR I CITY
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~l
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., April 18, 1968
13
See Establishes Res@utrte Be In k To Amd Poor BALTIMORE (NC)-The Baltimore archdiocesan fi nance comm,ittee has approv ed the establishment of an
NEW ASSIGNMENT: Msgr. Dominic Conway, rec tor of the Irish College in Rome who served as the Holy See's Economic Affairs Com mission secretary before his more recent assignment as papal envoy to Nigeria, is the new secretary general of the Vat i can Congregation for the Propag,ation of the Faith.
Discuss'Student Self-Government NOTRE DAIVlE (NC) A committee of the University of Notre Dame board of trustees will meet with, faculty, admins trative and student groups Sat urday, April 27 to discuss stu dent self-government and other measures 'passed by a General assembly of students in early February. Father Theodore M. Hes burgh, C.S.C., university presi dent, in a letter to the student body and faculty. said other subjects to be discussed will in clude whether women visitors should be permitted in stu~ dents' dormitory rooms. These matters involve "phil osophical questions that go to the heart of the university's or:' ganization, character and gov ernlmce," Fat her Hesburgh wrote. He indicated the matter is being referred to ~. trustess' committee "since' we are con cerned here with matters of ul timate governance of the uni versity and ultimate policy of which they are the final au thority."
. Increases Rate PORTLAND (NC)- A sub scription price increase from 10 cents to 15 cents per copy and from $4 to $5 per year has been announced by the Church World, official publication of the Portland diocese.
Organization Resource Bank designed to help the poor help themselves. Charles G. Tildon announced that the bank would be estab lished in response to a request from the archdiocesan Urban Commission of which he is chairman. The program will provide di rect grants and technical assist ance to organizations made up of inner-city residents striving to develop self-help programs. The Baltimore archdiocese will make $100,000 available to fund the. Resource Bank. The bank will also aid organizationn in securing funds from other sources. "It has been the American way of life for 'people to organ ize in order to safeguard their rights and interests and to bring about changes which would im prove their lives," Tildon said. Significant Purpose "Poor people. do not have the resources to maintain these kinds of organizations. They lack funds to rent office space and even for equipment, tele phones,· secretarial help, and salaried directors." "One significant purpose of the bank is to demonstrate that if resources are provided, the poor can develop organizations ~hich will assist in alleviating some of the conditions which cl;'eate and maintain poverty," he said. . How many of these grass roots groups will be aided and ' which will be included has not yet been determined, but the commission will begin immedi ately to ,review requests from potential recipients. Eligible groups' might include neighborhood improvement as sociatioJl\S, citizens planning councils, commiJnity relations bodies or groups which seek W improve welfare, health, or ree reation conditions.
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Ecumenism Stin Forgi'i1g, .A~~ad
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" River-Thurs. April 13, 'r1J6S'
High "$ch'oof' "St~d~rit* '.: ~nf~cipdte r.
ST. LQUIS ,(NC)-A.rchbishoP l()hn.' .i;·)Car\)~fry 'doeiI1ot be .. 'lieve tile eCumenical movement " iii. the United States is 'in any way at a "standstilL" The ecumenical movement has -, Wednesday, April 24 is circled on teen calendars all uncovered differences ,among , ever the Diocese. It's the date of the annual College Day
Christians but it has also un sPonsored by the Diocesan School Office, slated this year
covered bonds, and "these bonds are tremendous," declared the to take place at Cassidy' High in Taunt.on. Juniors of the
new archbishop of St. Louis, 14 Diocesan' hilt h s~ plus '
who is chairman of the U. S. Taunton area public' school lum. A health services assistant Bishops' Committee on Ecumen course will be offered in con students, will meet with rep;. junction with Diman Regional ical and Interreligious Affairs. Among the "bonds" he listed resentatives of New England Technical Vocational High and "the existence of God, Sacred , eolleges, junior college!?, IlUrs- oth'er new offerings' 'will be . Scripture, in many' instances ing schools and busin,ess' "educourses in consumer economics,' the divinity of Christ, the Holy eation institutes 'from 2 to 4 college shorthand, and elemen Sp.irit" the ,sactame~tal system:' ~ednesday afternoon. . ,',~' tary Portuguese." R eli g i o' n ' , • '. ~ ".~ \ • l. •~ . .,.. . ,,' These things, 'he said in an in Prevost High School ,in Fall, . ~urSes will,be reorjented and a' . , terview, "give us' much to think River rece~tly e~jQ)'ed a French' "'new· history ~Ihinar Will be ".' about, to work on together], o.f 'Club sponsored "Soiree Fran av:ailable. ~urse, there is the whole field caise." The pJ:pgram included ,New : Prevost Maple Leaf of human rights, the wlwle speeches, songs, a . play: and' it editors~ ,will number four. Each : field of inner-city work ian<!l presentation of nonQrsi ,aII'ip tlditor, will be responsib~ for '.. : soci~logical questions." French. one edition per month Of the Dialogue A Gym Jambore~ oCcupied weekly p.aper, th'i.ls . ,cutting ELECTRONICS CLUB: Members of Electronics Club girls at Mt. St. Mary Academy, down on the streSs _and strain He stressed the importanCe of F-all River, just ,before v:acation. on one editor producing a paper at. Bishop Connolly High School, Fall 'River, are ~rom left dialogue in developing under Ten students represente,d each every seven days. . Stephen Blain, James Benevides, Michael J. M-otta, Roger standing among churches' but elass and participated in ba~ket!?tudent Te4;Icher day. will._ McAleve~., said the aim was not to cr~ate ' ball, relay races. and a faculty- take pla'Ce Tuesday, April ',30 at -a combined form of religipn." lItudent badm~nton ma!ch" (Eac ,CaSllidy.. Students" will lead As an example he pointe{l to !. ulty won.)
.' classes and -will make their an discussions on Mary. ''There , And, the Mou'nt Fr~nch 'CI~b nual discovery that-· all '-i/l not was a time," he said, "you ebuld L plans a BosWq, kip Tuesday" roses on, the. teach_er:~, side ,of never talk to Protestants about April 23. They'll take pH at 9, - '~he d~sk. "Prepa~ng ~la!!ses. ap.d Our of Providence Congregation Our Lady; you wouldn't n)en returning about 5; and, they'll trying to get knowledge across tion it. Now you talk and they 1 be accompanied by Sister Mary to students adds up to a full Finds Difficulties in 'Renewal listen; they don't agree: of '1: Adele. working schedule" for teachers, PROVIDENCE (NC) -A 13 with heart overflowing with . course: \..... I :,' Easter's over, but a P5~~m~ sum~ ,u.p Cassidy's newspaper, year-old diocesan community of regret. "Or o.ll-, the Holy .Father, "the I about the all-impor:tant',:'~aster"«"~~ <.P;lOts. '.' , , ' ,'., p.apacy,· ".t,he primacy of '::the . ." nuns' here" haS 'anrlOunced plans Together w~ trIed" fu , the, pope and the rest _ they 'just Bunny produced by, ~~tatil}' I , . ~lso .'at Cassidy" seniors Eliz disband' in June due to the na,me of. ,pbd.:, N()w. may .!'~'. discuss .'these things freely i.and I: students at S1. Joshph's tPrep,'r' ';aPfjtW::E;affan and Mary Berube to "difficulties'! 'encounteted in at bless us I,n;:w h,a t eyEi!" 1les,bef~~e .. pJ;"ayerfuI1'y. It is an entirely ' ./: Fall' River, is cute - a~a ;"w6'~h'" ha,ve"J?e.en chosen by the facul tt:inpts toward reli~iousrenewal. us," he saId..' ~ ~'new ·atmosphere."· I' quoting: ',~, ' ,-- , ty" ,as'~";Outstanding ,Teenagers , 'rhe, Congregation ,of Our Sister,~ Nancy.. said it was _. , , . , 'HelPs Puellula, sweet et shy' ,~ ~?f' A~erica," They'll participate La-dy , of' FrovidEmce, founded "with regret" that-. the decisi9n . . , Heard her parvus frater cry;' '10 . a state. cont:st sponsore? by by Bishop Russell J, McVinney to disband was 'made She Asked .whether a bishop s Stella inquit, "If you'iie good the, ,~~tstandmg ~m~mc~ns of Providence in' 1955, current added '!:We have come to -the ~ob ~s, "l).~'~d,er" these days than Atque do the res you' 'should; , ,;Fou~~~.t!on" .fro.m. ~hlch ~m- Ill' has 23 professed Sisters, four conclusi~·~."'\tha£,"it "would In t,h~ 'p'~s,t., Archbishop Car Si you smile and dry youi' eyes, , 'ne~ ,w~ll:?~?,g~es,~ .to, a natIon:i\l novices and two postulants., longer be ~,beneficfal for uS to,: berr~ ~al~:. ~'Undoubtedly t~ere , Tu will have a big surprise; c: :, cont~t-. wlilc!i ~."':I~! : select ~o According to Sister Nancy, co'ntiilue" 'as' Religious.'" are . ~~ll:>: p!oblems, but there Bestiolam you will' see ' . , '~ns for countrywIde, recogm , are also many great helps too." mother general, the majority of 'rl)emother, general not~ the '"",;" . .' . Romping laete neath 'our:tree, tlOn., the nuns will return to lay life nuns" '!desire, 'to serve the . ~ a~ all ,for this ~hann~ WIth Bringing ad each girl '~nd boy 'Sch~l!\rship' ,~o~{)rs but a few have applied for Church and the diocese 'in'what th~ pnests and sharmg WIth the Easter eggs, quae they.enjoy." membership' in other' Religious ever' capacity our seclIlar 'status ~Ity,:',; be ~aid. "At the ~me Parvus frater nunc was" gay; . Scholarsl)ip':hcii1ori(~t:C assidy communities. , " . opens up to us." , tl!Oe ~~e. ~I~hop has the ~nal Die smiled throughout'..the day. , have gone to :Linda:'Glilllmette, The 'diocese announced ,ihe, , . . , respqnslbllit;r. There has to be , Get it, you Latinists?: : '. .: 'grants froin UMass' and Em- Sisters ,of Mercy will t8k~' over:,' . '. " : ..'"... .' a.n' end Of· consultation some , ~anliel; ,~atli'y' :'Deianey arid the:t=>rovidEmcerllns' ~ovitiate' c~c h~c;I ... le Liturgical, ~~e or other. , College Bowl Maureeh E:enny', scholarships to in Portsmouth and: will' underh. 'C'" ' "And I ,have found, too, ,that Jesus-Mary Academy' girls Union HOspital School of Nurstake staffing of St~ _Ma.rgaret's " . ors I p , ongr~ss_, ,wt"en priests are co~s~lted, went down in defeat to a four ing; Diane Quigley, Emmanuel; Home a residence for women LOUISVILLE, (NC)'-Theolo- .. 1Il9re or less they are satIsfIed if man Prevost team in the annual, Donna Col~, U}'dllsS;Jane Baran, ,forme~lY' staffed by, the dis~ ~ ,glans, .ecIlicato·rs a~d "la)"~en ' a decision i,s made, because they i, College Bowl program sponsored Emma~u~l, Shar0J;!, - ~~~Mann, ,'banding group.' . " , ' .,: . will. di~cuss changes' takj.ng have had a chance to express by the two schools. Also at Pre It was 'announ'ced' ar- :, place in the Church at' a 'cOn- . themselves." Stonehi!-l, ~thyq~ldnck,Bos,", " ;, '.' ," " , ", " ." ." ," vost, the annual Career Day ton Umverslty. ,,;. :', 'j.l'8nge~ents'for,:the 'con't~~ued '. gre~, <?n.:e.v~l~mg :Wl;)~~h,~p.:he~e program sponsored by the Na-, At P~vost, Robert, ~~a~~, .opet:atl(~n 'of..- the .com~,umty's : AprIl 28, to· 30; .:'fhe' ~~~m!=" IS Welcome Moves j tional Honor Society proved has receIved .:,sch~la~h;,ipl!- ~rpD.l,.r' Car~r.- ;Day,.: ~ursery :a~' be!ng . sponsored bY', the : '~o~i~vllle ,: profitable, featuring films, talks Be and St6n~hIll" ~n<!l',,:'P~ul ";, made . '~ ," archdiocese.'" NEW YORK (NC) - Clergy !. and discussion seSl!.ions. Lizotte from BC~·., . , . :'~::', ';" '. ' " . Confiietiiiir Eddies" FatheJ; Roberj; W. H~~~a, staff and Laymen Concerned About 1\'11. S1. Mary students are Vietnam, a national interreli Also at Prevost, 'the: sChool: is The' decision to 'disband 'was member'of the Liturgical' Con preparing their program,s ,.,for ., proud of its showing at. the re- . ,gious peace organization, in' a . . cent regional scien~' fair, made by the nuns in 'conjul'icference, WashiQgton, ,D, 0., ~lnext year with above-average statement issued here welcomed tion with' Bishop McVinn'ey umnist and author,,will'deliver ~ :t=>,-:esi4ent Lyndon B. Johnson's h interest several, new' courses were s t udents won the highest ~ . , . ". ' " " th k t dd' l'Th' percentage, of p~izes of ,any par- " ,who,. 10 comm~nh?g,o~, the ~ne eyno e ,a ress--·on e· reCent. moves toward have been add~d to t~ecurricuticipating school, and two boys n~t,I~ce~ent~.cltrd. the confhc~-. Mentality. of Change." He will " were chosen to oontin'ue to the b~g, edd~eg. ~~Ctll~g ~~~, ~li,:" also address· the: closing' session r -...........- - - - - - - - -..
state science fai.r. ", . gIo~s life" these" ~ay:~ . ,a.!1d on the subject "Li~rgy,:and' the Bishop to, KeYl1lot~, ,. .'. " . praIsed the' nuns for ,"their"g~J:.l.':"" Social:' Missi,()Q. pf;,Christians." Newmarl..'" CongreS$' ....; :,' WI,CII~.sSl,drtY::' :~~t'.o~'·}~~;'dsem?rs, erosity a,nd' se1f::elf,ace,riienl}'i' ",' Other-,-speak1'!Ts' include Father " '.' . . 'pa IClpa e 10 a pro uctIon "F ' t· ...., , """I'i'~<ild':> ' , ; , ,;..' , I '. . WASHINGP.'O~ (NC)::-:Q!~hop:". of ~he':opera"f'Cai'mina:,Burana" " or some Imen~W':,~: ,~~~","'; Ger~~?:,S. Sloy:an, lect~rer, au 'i J'~hn ~, WrIg~t of pdtsburgh ," at ,Stonehill College Saturda ' we h.a~e postPone~:t;J:he.h~\1r :(,~.tb,~r•. a~d, former c?alrmanof :WIll gIve the 'k~ynote ':address 'MaY' 4: " ' .... ,,: y, of deCISIOn. Now we ,£eel Wlt1t, '. tl,ie: relIgIOUS educatI()n depart ; at the 1968,:•.Na~!p'nal ~e~vm,an, ".' S1. JosephPtep' studerits'par.. all our. hearts th~t GOd wants ~ent of the Catholic University " Congress to· be held at Rutgers . 't·· 't d '. "'" t· " us to dIsband. ThIS we do now of America' Sister Marie Fran .'. . ... IClpa e ~n a ....aP IS~"ceremony 'th d' t b d . t. ' .. 273 CENTRAL AVI;. Umverslty, 'New' Brunswick, at 'Bles'SedSacramenr' Church WI un IS ur e conSCIence, ye CIS Kenoyer of the SIsters of ,.,," N, J., Aug. 26-30. ,recently. Denise Beaudoin of Loretto, psychology professor at 992,-6216 "Search for Christian Iden- the Prep school was godmother Spain Files Charges
Wesbster College, Web s t e r illtty" is the theme of the Con- to little Michelle Cecile Beau Groves, Mo" and Robert E. gress, which will be attended doin ' Against Magazine
Rambusch, New York artist, NEW BEDFORD by student le,aders from New• designer, and consultant on li VITORIA (NC) - Twice in man centers throughout the New Prevost C)l}e' ,week' the magazine Esti turgical visial forms. country, Newman chaplains and This "ear's sophomores are bali,t, publ.I.·shed, by the Bene ' S IS " • t ers engage d in N ewman antildpating graduation from '. dict~ne Fathers at. the Basque :!l1I1I1IJIIIIIIIH"III'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'11111111111111I111111'IIIIIIIIIIIIIII/IIII/IIII/II/II/II/IIIIIIUIIIUUlUIUII/IIIII~ :'Work. . the '!new Prevost" in, 1970. . Shripe' of Our Lady here,. has ~ . YES - WE HAVE . ~ Speakers will include Father G'rouridbreaking for expansion been penalized by the Spanish E_==_' :John Reedy, C.S.C., editor, of the present school will take "gQvernment tor failure to com Ave Maria magazine; Mrs. Eu place, -hopefully ,this Summer : ply with the 'nation's press laws. == == !ene McCarthy, author ot and the new facilities will be . 'A "civil 'indictment" has been ~ ~ Trends in Morality;" Dr. Fred ready for occupancy in January filed against the magazine's ed 0rick Keener of Columbia Uni of 1970. itor, Father Fidencio Barrado, . 7 Ibs. and up versity; Father Al1thony Pado And also on the Prevost news O.S.B., for failing to report a WHILE THEY LAST vano, professor of dogmatic front: novice debaters will change of address for his pub<theology, Immaculate Concep 1ravel to Cassidy for a tourney Hshing house. A week,ago the :.,S, '= = = =_~ tion.Seminary, Darlingtoii;'.N.J:; .. Saturday,:A~ril,?7; 'l!~d upcom goVernmEmt fiied another in- '. iIlnd Dr. Ed'mund' Burke of the' i9g. at the. boy~' schpol is a poll dictmeJitagainst Estihaliz for Boston 'College"scnool' of' sociilr 'to determin«F presid'ential pref printing. an~article on',peace and -,,,~ U"'''~N~~ARF, FAlllHA~EN· Tei: 997~9358 :s¥ork . , erenc~ among students.' .. .., pacifism. ' ' .f,llllllllllllllillliilllllinlllllllillllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllll1Il11l1l1l1nlllllllllllllllllnlll~
':,Annual: College Day' Aprir'24 ,'.:' "-At Cassidy 'High, Taunton' .
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 18, 1968
15
Ch'arities Office Gives Mixed Support to Housing-, Legislation WASHINGTON (NC) , A statement of fJupport, mixed with eriticism, came from the National Conference of Catho lic Charities for the Housing i1md Urban Development Act of 1968 now being considered by 18 Senate sUbcommittee. Msgr. Lawrence J. Corcoran, NCCC secretary, in a statement submitted for 'the hearing rec ord on the act (Senate bill 3029), to the housing and urban development subcommittee of the Senate Banking and Cur J'ency Committee, said it be
eomes "more apparent each housed for decades," Magr. Cor 3rear that the housing problems eoran stated. are among the most important "We support the increase in the low-rent public housing in facing the nation." The NCCC criticism centered eluded in the housing and urban around the contention that the development bill of 1968 (5. measure does not offer suffi 3029), but only as a minimum cient low-rent pu6lic housing figure," he continued. for the poor in the proposed I "Rather than the goal of legislation. '15,000 units in 1969, specified Deteriorating, Dilapidated ,by President Johnson in his "Our primary concern in message to Congress on housing housing programs assisted by and cities, we think that the public monies must be for the program should be doubled, be poor-those who, to the shame ginning with 150,000 in fiscal 1969, Only with this more am of the nation, have been ill
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bitious approach can the prob lem be met with any sense of urgency," Msgr. Corcoran stated. He said the 1960 census re port shows 2.6 million occupied' housing units, 24 per cent of "all such units then in existence, were deteriorating, dilapidated Qr lacking some or all plumbing facili ties." The monsignor emphasized that the U. S. Riot Commission report cites inadequate housing as one of the three most in tensely felt causes of the riot ing.
The NCCC statement reite... ated support of the rent supple ment and model cities programs, but again urged that both be enlarged. The statements said the NCCC applauded the appli cation to provide both home ownership and rental housing in the proposed legislation. It also said "5. 3209 wisely authorizes the provision of budget, debt management and related counseling services to assist a person to meet the re sponsibility of home owl\e.... ship."
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Apostolic' Administrator Hopeful For Church . i'n Czechoslovakia
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 18, 1968
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,Cardirll@! Suenens Sees Church tCrisis; .No Danger of Sclliism OAKLAND (NC)-There is crisis in the Church, but no laanger of schism, Leo Cardinal lJuenens of Malines-Brussels. Belgium, said in an interview litere in California. , The cardinal, one of the lead @Dg fi·gures of the Second Vati tPo Council, added that the ~eatest needs in the Church t'O
(JJay are a sense of humor and
{faith, in that order.
iilg on in other pa~ts of the world?
Cardinal: This is my fifth
brief visit. to the United States,
so most of my contact has come
through newspaper stories and'
magazine articles. This hardly qualifies me as an expert on American affairs. But it seems that America is a. place full of initiative and ideas.
Sends Own Ideas
Cardinal Suenens, who gave series of lectures in the San· IrranciscoBay area in late Feb (Wary, also praised U.S. con ~ibutions to Church rene.wal. Following are- the cardinal's ~swers to interview' questions: 'Q. Cardinal Suehens.· there' lb. a great deal of talk about 61 current crisis in the Church lltld even danger of schism in lilOme countries like Holland and (!he United States. Do you agree?
. Where America was once ~'on tent to publish translations of books and articles printed else whe<re. America now ·is sending its own doctrinal and pastoral ideas out to the world and other countries are doing the trans lating. My hope is tha,t there should be a distinctive Amel'ican con tribution in the 'field in which so !few are working-in the field of the methodology of the apos tolafe. I am interested in the lead ership training center which will be set up in the Oaklaild diocese at Holy Names College next Summer. Such a pilot project can be very important. We too. easily take for granted that we know "how" to bring' the Gospel to every creature. Q. In Toronto last Summer, you said that the Catholic Church was headed toward Vati can III. What' did you mean by that?
,.
e.
9l
Generation Gaca .Cardinal: Certainly·thet·e is, a tlrisis in the Church, but 1. see. a danger of disobedience. Jto( schism. We have a problem in 4Jhe Church because development ~r' evolution is occurring so tap: DdlY. . ':' . Where the generation gap was 0flce a 25-year period; it is now _bou.t five years. 'Iihat makes it' @ifficult to speak.to every men ~lity.The basic human problems Glre the same, but the Church is eequired to give answers 'which'
IMn be applied to every genet'8
Ilion.
The difficulty is further, in _eased by the variety of prob &ems throughout the world altd Gbe rapidity with which they o.ccome matters of internatiOflal liiscussion. We have to recognize the ne lIiessity of development, but we ~so have to establish a conti liluity with the past. I believe in ' the Holy Spirit of yeste1r'day, to ~ay and tomorrow, _but some . people believe only in the Holy $pirit of today. Christianity is Ill<lnsense if there is no conti liwity with the past. Q. From you'r observations, is -'e Church in the United States
~ping pace with renewal go
AUXILIARY: Msgr. Tim~ othy J. Harrington, director of Catholic Charities of th~ Worcester- diocese, has been named by Pope Paul VI to be auxiliary bishop to Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of Worcester. NC Photo.
PRAGUE (NC) - The' man' Pope Paul VI has put ~n 'charge of this archdiocese during the exile of Jose.f Cardinal Beran' looked out upon the newly free city and spoke of Spring - a 'second Spring for the Church in Czechos~ovakia. "We are liviT)g through days of great hope for the future," said Bishop Frantisek Tomasek, tbe apostolic administrator of Prague. . "It is Spring, and Spring for the' Church. It is a season of hope," he' said, as he talked of 1,500 priests who will now be returning to parish work, of seminary candidates being al lowed to study again, of n'ew freedom for the Church's press, and of other changes. ' . With a sweeping gesture, he turned to the splendid vista
The Parish Parade
NEW POST: Bishop Jo-' seph L. Bernardin, a native · of 'Columbia; S.C., has been elected to the post of Gen 'eral Secretary of the U.S. ·Catholic Conference, Wash ington. Now apostolic admin istrator of the archdiocese of Atlanta, since the death of Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan, Bishop Bernardin ear 1 i e r Council Limitations
servoo as chancellor to four Cardinal: I meant t>hat the bishops Cif Charleston. Vatican n did not give the final I
beneath his window high in the citadel. Branches of the' bleak trees' nearby were cO!Ding alive with green. Although a mist still clung to the city below, it was in retreat before the burn ing eye of the sun, and Prague's 1)abled. towers stood proud above it. The blue hills of Bohemia beckoned in' the dis tance. "For the past 20 years life has been hard and bitter for the Church,. but now that is changed," Bishop Tomasek .went on. "I am convinced that step by step we will have a better life." Would Cardinal Beran return to Prague? The cardinal had been released from confinement by the Czechoslovak govern ment three years ago and al lowed to go to Rome.
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answer on every question. All the possibilities 'were not ex hausted. The council had some limitations. For example, 'some documents were poorly prepared. Also,' the JOLIET (NC) - "God must attempt to please the greatest truly be number one" in the life possible majority weakened of a bishop, according to Bishop some 'of the final pronounce Ernest J. Primeau of Man-' ments. Thirdly the theology of chester, N. H., who gave the the' council was too Latin or homily at the consecration of Western and not enough Ori Auxiliary Bishop Raymond J; ent1\!. Vatican I I accomplished a Vonesh of Joliet. great deal, but we have to re Principal consecrator at the member that every council has ceremonies in the cathedral of had its limitations.
St. Raymond Nonnatus was John Cardinal Cody of Chicago; Q. Do you" see the need, then, for another ecumenical council Co-consecrators were Bishop. in the near future? ' Romeo R. Blanchette of Joliet Cardinal: No, I don't think so. and Bishop Cletus F. O'Donnell Much of what could be expected of Madison, Wis. .Bishop'pr'imeau tOld the more through a council can be accom plished now through the Synod than 1,500 attending the cere of Bishops. It is much easier for monies that "in the life of the 200 bishops to work together bishop his people must have second place. than it is for 3,000. "in order to serve God wen . Q. How would you assess the ' first meeting of the Synod of we must be in communication with Him, that we may know Bishops held last Octoberf His will," be said. Better Communication "Third in the bi.!!hop's trium Cardinal: It was a good first virate," Bishop Primeau said, 161 step. I think the most positive "the bish~p himself." thing accomplished was the He warned that "sclerosis caD strong recommendation made by occur in the spiritual life." the Synod. for the formation of · "The ever increasing demands an international commission of made upon the bishop leave theologians to assist the Pope him precious little time for the and the universal Church. intellectual and spiritual pur But I would like to see some suits he must have if he is to give intelligent and effective changes in the modus operandi of future synods. First of all, leadership to those whom be serves," he said. there should be better communi NA bishop must adamantly cation beforehand 90 that the na tional conferences of bishops free himself from the constant demands of administration long would have ample time to con sider the items on the agenda. enough to replenish his intet.:. lectual and spiritual life - for Many o! the ideas and sugges tions should be· reviewed and without this power he will be a'dull and ineffective iDBtru ~esOlved. ahead.·of time. . ment of God's plan." Then at the actual meeting of, the synod there would be more opportunity for dialogue and dis cussion instead of simply listen SAIOON (NC) - Pope Paul ing to monologues. Hopefull,y VI has sent a donatloft of $20, there will be some changes in OOOi bis second of that amount procedures because the Pope in recent weeks, for the relief has asked ~ of us to send of war victims in Soutll V~ ideas for improving the ,synod. naIL
God Number One In Bishop's Life
0
. New Donation
OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, OSTERVILLE . Our Lady of the Assumption
Guild will sponsor its annual' Penny Sale Friday, April 19th. at 8:00 P.M. in the Osterville Elementary School. The public' is cordially invited. The audi;' torium will be open at 7:30 P.M. Gifts for the sale may be de' .liv,ered to committee members, rectory any time or at the' school on April 18th. between 2 and 4 P.M. HOLY NAME. FALL RIVER The second in a series of Christian Living programs wiJl be held at· 8 Tuesday night, April 23 in the school hall. It will consist of a film· and group discussion on Freedom and een sorship. Contemporary music will. ac company the 8:30 Mass Sunday morning, April 21. The parish council will meet at '7:30 tonight in the rectory. All parishioners are welcome. The Women.'s Guild is spon soring a dessert-card par:ty at '7:30.Thursday night, April 25 ip the school hall. Tickets are available from, board members. A Spring dance and buffet will take·' place tomorrow at White's restaurant. Tickets
from Stan Mikolazyk, chairman; at the rectory; and from all Holy Name Society members. ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER . A paper drive will be con ducted Saturday, April 20 by seventh graders. Pickups may be arranged by telephoning Joseph O'Keefe at 672-5331.
Asserts Church Falls in Cities
OUR LADY OF VICTORY.
CENTERVILLE
This month's meeting of the Women's Gl.\ild was highlighted by an illustrated "Holy Land Tour" conducted by Col. 'Wil liam M. Law. . A. nominating committeee is. preparing a slate of officers for election, at the May meeting. Members were hostes'sses for election at the May meeting. ' Members were hostesses .for· ' the district council at .a Mass and dinner last night. OUR LADY OF ANGELS. FALL RIVER Children of Mary will sponsor a penny sale Friday, April 26. Holy Rosary Sodality will at tend a Communion breakfa!lt following 8 o'clock Mass Sun. day morning, April 28. The Holy Name Society has scheduled its Communion break fast to follow 8 o'clock MaslJ Sunday morning, April 21. 'Speaker will be Thomas Alecrim of Citizens for Citizens. The Council of Catholic Women plans a chamarita and dance from 8 to midnight Saturday night, April 27. ST. PATRICK. FALL RIVER The annual Guildola spon
sored by the Women's Guild!
will be held on Thursday night,
April 25 in the parish hall.
Mrs. Joseph Richards and!
.Mrs. Robert - Regan, co-chair
men, have announced that arti
cles may be brought to the
school on Wednesday, April 24.-
Among the plans for the
futur~ is a rummage sale and! ali are asked to start collecting items now.
ST. JEAN BAPTISTE,
BALTIMORE (NC)-The rec FALL RIVER
tor of' St. Mary's Seminary
A ham and basket whist will! here told an Episcopal congre take place at '7:30 ,Saturday gation' here that the Catholic night, April 20 in the churcb Churh has failed to meet the hall. Mrs. Matthew Labeckio .problems of the cities. chairman, announces that some Speaking at the Epis9pal ca tickets will be available at the thedral of the Incarnation, cIoor. Father. William J. Lee, S.S., dis cussed the findings of the Ur ban Parish Study of the Balti . ST. JOHN BAPTIST, more archdiocese. He said tha¢ CENTRAL VILLAGE Mrs. Jeanne Bibeau, chairmlmo the Church must make a greater bas announced that the Ladies impact Oft the city. Guild will repeat the rummage Father· Lee was ll1lSistant ell rector of the study, which coy sale from 9 to 1 Saturday mOfD4 ered 52 Catholic parishes in an lng, April 20 in the parish halL area containing '71 per cent of Baltimore's ,population. He' said thestud7 showed the need Nto established a closer relationship of the Chureh to the wb,*, INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. eomplex of. civn well being."
Housing, Father Lee said, ii
H WILLIAM STREEr one of tbe most aerlous of Bal NEW lEDFORD, MASS. timQre's problems, but adde4is "'The problem of Musial lit 00& 998-5153 997-9167 • . Presbyterian problem 01' • PRSONM SERVICE Baptist PI'ObIeat.," • AI • __
DONAT BOISVERT
.
~~
THE ANCKOR-
Prelate Foresees Possible Closing
Of ~ew Orleans Catholic Schools
Thurs., April 18, 1968
17
CleE'gym~1TI1 $~ield1
NEW ORLEANS (NC) - Fi mands of the public school offi cials, it will also support the nancial problems have forced Stu~~nts the closing of five New Orleans program of citizens in CF;F, stat ing that non-public schools, in archdiocesan schools and others RIO DE JANEIRO (NC)-A may close if financial assistance cluding Catholic schools, long Rio de Janeira auxiliary bishof) have performed a public service is not forthcoming, Archbishop and 14 priests formed a thin Philip M. Hannan said here. in education. human wall here in an effort Noting that the law respects The archbishop made the to shield 3,000 students emerg~ comment after reading a state all hospitals because they per ing from a memorial Mass ~ ment favoring tuition grants to form a public service in provid Candelaria church from a sabel' children in non-public schools. ing health care, the arehbishop attack by cavalry and mounted At a press conference, he said: said it is also the opinion of the police. "As costs increase, '¥e will find archdiocese that it should ex Bishop Jose Lopes de Castrt0 it impossi,ble to keep the schools pect respect for all schools Pinto and the priests formed which perform a public service. open." the shield after cavalrymen in Archbishop Hannan took is "The Catholic schools do not jured 25 students in an earliew" sue with a recent announcement expect support for relil~ious ed clash. The attack, which openecll by the Orleans· (civil) parish ucation nor would they expect when saber-swinging cavalryo school board publicly opposing it; th~y wish only some com men galloped their horses UJjl' tuition grants. He noted that the pensation for the education in the church's steps, followecll New Orleans archdiocese - in secular subjects provi.ded for morning . memorial Mass fO'if response to an appeal by the the students as a public service," Edson Luis de Lima Souto, 31l\ Orleans parish school board Archbishop Hannan stated. 18-yeal'-0Id student killed b:?1, endorsed the sales tax increase Partner With St'lte police during a demonstratiolO for teachers' salaries in 1966 seeking improvement of lin... "We cannot believe tI:1at the and the $50 million bond issue versity dining facilities. for public school construction public school officials are not' concerned with the rights in our earlier this year. Following the morning ineD-> democratic society of the par The archbishop said this sup dent, police, soldiers and tanlul port was given even though a ents and children who do not moved into the vicinity of thtJ attend public schools." heavier tax burden was im church. When the evening MaS8l Archbishop Hannan said the ADDITIONAL POSITION: Archbishop J. Cooke of ended, Bishop Castro Pinto led posed on all citizens, especially archdiocese does 11I0t fear inter New York, left, in addition to his responsibilities in the the students from the church those persons already support • ference from the state of Lou ing parochial schools. towards a line of horsemCll> . archdiocese and in his two-millon member Military Ordi isiana as a result of the pay waiting with drawn sabers. of the Catholic Near East Welfare nariate, is president Provide Publie Service ment of tuition supplements to Just before the two group§, Association, whose national secretary is Msgr. John G. "We supported these measures students. as necessary for the welfare of Nolan, right. In his first visit to the office, Archbishop collided, the bishop stepped fo';" "Schools, hospitals and other ward with· arms outstretche~ the public schools which serve institutions have. always been COOke reviewed the aid given to Catholic Churches in the After a brief consultation be-> a vital public service," he said. subject to state laws and in . 1wef!n cavalry officers and Ul€l "That eHort by our Catholics is spection," he said. "The Church Middle, Near a:nd Far East. NC Photo. bishop, the mounted line parte"" also very substantial; we have has long served as a partner and the students filtere4 40,000 students in our schools in with the state in many enter":. through. . Orleans parish and about an prises, including education, and equal number in the rest of the we shall feel at honle in fur Student disorders have .be"", archdiocese. The s e Catholic thering that cooperation." going. on on a. large scale hel'f). schools perform a public service Archbishop Hannan said the since the death of Lima Sout«!\, by providing education to cit archdiocese is planning a thor Canied to the legislative ~ izens of Louisiana. ough review of its administra sembly in the center of the cU~ obedience, and could not be ex SOUTH HOLLAND (NC) "We believe that every per tive organization, including es pected to exercise independent his 'body was the focal point f01' Father Thaddeus O'Brien, asso 60n in this community deserves tablishment of an archdiocesan ciate superintendent of schools judgment. a long 2nd bitter student vi~ the concern and support of board of education, oj: which the of the Chicago archdiocese, is every other person," Archbish majority will be laity. He' said sued a statement regarding the
op Hannan continued. "There membership of the board will strike of 15 lay teachers at Eliz
fore, I must personally confess be announced in the near future. abeth Seton High School here.
to being surprised by the an The statement noted that the
nouncement by the Ol"1eans institution "is a. private high
parish school board that it pub school owned and operated by
licly would oppose a program of the Sisters of Charity of Cincin
G~in state aid to children in nOI1 nati. The teachers on strike are
NEWARK (NC)-A new sal public schools." employees of this. private insti
ary schedule for teachers in Democratic Right tution, not of the archdiocese of
Newark Archdiocesan regional Chicago. .
The tuition grant progran high schools has been reached "For the past two .weeks,
advocated by the state chapfer with representatives of the Father Robert Reicher, chap
of Citizens for Educational Newark Al'chdiocesan Teachers lain of the (archdiocesan) Cath
Organization. Fl'eedom (CEF). olic Council on Working Life,
"CEF is concerned with the The schedule calls for teach and an experienced labor medi
democratic right of every citi ers to receive 90 per cent of the ator, has been attempting to ne
average salary paid to public zen to choose the school of his gotiate a settlement. of this dis
choice as long as that school school teachers in the county pute which has been interrupt
provides quality education," where they teach. Part of the Archbishop Hannan stated. agreement calls for teacners to ing the education of the school's
He said that just as the arch seek a master's degree or its students."
Nuns~ Vote Pointless'
equivalent. diocese supported the just deThe teachers went on strike
With some variations, the after failing to reach agreement
starting scale for teachers with bachelor's degrees will be about with the Chicago archdiocesan
headed by
$5,700, with increments"of abOut mediating team Father Reicher over issues in
$300 up to maximums that will ST. PAUL (NC)-A 17-mem volving recognition by the
be illl the neigh borhood of • HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS bel' board of education has been school administration of the
$9,000 to $9,500. formed for the St. Paul and Elizabeth Seton chapter, Arch
Increments will also be given • PERSONAL LOANS Minneapolis archdiocese. diocesan Teachers' Federation,
for college' work beyond the Coadjutor Archbishop Leo C. as the teachers' bargaining
bachelor-degree level. • VACATION LOANS -agent. .
Byl'l1e will be an ex-officio mem ber of the board, whtch is com The federation' has a mem ONE STOP COMPLETE 8ANKING SERVICE AT ANY posed of 12 lay men and women, bership of 130-less than one
two priests, two nuns and a per' cent· of lay teachers in Chi
OF OUR 6 HANDY BArIIKS Brother. cago 'archidocesan high- schools.
Father Raymond A. Luckett, PITTSBURGH (NC) - The 'Elizabeth Seton is staffed by
-DRIVE-IN SERVICE Al ALL BANKS superintendent of education, board of directors of the Pitts 21 Sisters and 31 lay teachers,
said the board will be concerned burgh diocesan Catholic Youth 21 of whom are members of the
WITH SIX CONVENIENTILY LOCATED BANKS with policy affecting Catholic Organization have endorsed a federation. The Seton adminis
new set of by-laws, making the tration is refusing to recognize
education in the archdiocese, the federation unless it agrees
the future development of Cath CYO a community-centered or olic schools and kindred prob ganization incorporated under to allow the Sisters to vote in
lems. Father Luckett said the state charter. an election 1.0 determine repre
board, which was appointed, The board of nine has total sentation.
A spokesman for the teachers'
also will be asked to devfse a control of the CYO wit~ Father system by which future" board Michael P. Williams, formerly union said that giving Sisters 11 vote is pointless. He said the CYO director, acting as execu members will be elected. IN NEW BEDFORD ti,!,e director. nu~s are bound .by a vow of
"'The by-laws give the CYO SOUTH IANIK-Cove St. at Rodney Fr~nch Boulevard
new direction, new goals and III WEST lANK-Kempton Street at Mill Street MUNHALL (NC)-Some 1,100 new. autonomy," Father Williams TRENTON (NC) - A resolu LUND'S CORNER BANK-Acushnet Ave. near lund's Come¥ delegates aloe expected to attend stated. He said the "new" CYO will . tion providing for a nine-mem the First National Youth Con DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near Rockdale Ave. strive "to educate youth to ber commission to study possi ference sponsored by the 510 NORTH 8ANlK-Acushnet Ave. at CoHin Ave. 'llak Catholic Federation of community needs and social ble revision of the state's laws
awareness and this is the service on abortion has cleared the New
CENTER BANK-Purchase and William 515. America in Washington on we win pl·ovide." Jersey Legislature. April 17 and 18.
·Brazil
Negotiation "Try Fails
'Archdiocesan School Official Issues Statement on Teacher Strike
Teachers in Newark p'ay nncli'eCllse
SAVE DOllARS with the MERCHANTS IIIEconomy"
Archdiocese Forms
Education Board
- AUto loan Plan
Pittsburglh Updates Structure of eya
qlu}J~ERCHANTS
ClYoiiJHuie BANK
Youth Conference
Study Change'
18
THE: ANCHORThurs., April' 18, 1968
Thrree Exp®rts 1lJ'i1 C@i'echetra(C$
Ali W Orl"k~~@[]» WASHINGTON (NC) Three internationally known e~perts in catechetics will be lecturers and consultants at
'i
~he 'ninth annual Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD) Workshop, to be held at the Catholic UniversIty of America, lime 17-28. ' ,Leading a staff of 12 priest, nun and lay experts will be. Bishop G. Emmett Carter ,of London, ,Ont.; Father Alfonso M. Nebreda of Sophia Univer-' sity, Tokyo director of the East. AsH'in Pastoral Institute; and Father Frans J. Van De Peel, S.J.; 'of the Higher Institute of Catechetics, Nijmegen. Holland. -Announcement of the insti tute was made jointly here by Father Joseph B. Collins, S.S., administrative assistant at the CCD National Center, and Father John S. Russell of Syra cuse, chairman of the National Conference of Diocesan Direc tors of CCD. , It is the first workshop to' be co_sponsored by the national c~nter and the diocesan diJ:ec tors. ' . Registration in the workshop -=.on CCD Leadership Training i~ the Ch~mging Church will be open only to top administrative arid supervisory personnel on both diocesan and parish levels, according to Father Collins. Share ExperiencC'ii ,"It has long been felt that the people who run the Confrater nily throughout the country should get together to share experiences and gain new in sights and practical know-how. .This has been made all the more imperative in the light of ne,w developments ·in the behav ioral sciences and in the Church," he stated. It is an indication of the ma turity of CCD throughout the country that it can provide a graduate program for its expe rienced personnel," Father Col lins added. Father Russell said the over all aim of the workshop is to assist the higher echelon CCD members become more effective trainers' cjf leaders at all levels. "The first week's sessions will be devoted to the principles of .leadership through group dy namics, sensi~ivity training, and pedagogical' anthropology;" he , he stated. "Training' during the second week will· concentrate en pastoral catechetics with aPplication to ,the CCD.'" In- ' depth sessions will be handled by experienced moderators. "The entire period will be conducted in an environment of a liturgically oriented' commu nity,_ experience," Father Rus sell said.
Leaders to DiscllIss Parish Councils
,,Three ',Sisters at Sacred Heart Home Represent 160 Years of Service' By Patricia Francis Sunday an extraordinary event was celebrated in New Bedford---the observance of a total of 160 years in the religious life of three Sisters of Charity of Sacred Heart Home. , Senior of the trio was Sister StQ. Archelaus, a native of St. Joseph, in Beauce County, Canada,who is marking the 60th anniversary of he'r profession. The other two nuns are golden jubilarians, Mother ' Mary~Vinney, superior of the home, and Sister Ste. So phronie. The gala occasion' was marked by a Mass at Sa cred Heart Church, celebrated by Rev. Edmond Trembley, chaplain of the home, who also preached the sermon. Then the three were guests of honor at a banquet at Gaudette's Pavilion in Acushnet and a reception that followed at Sacred Heart Home. Next Monday, Sister Ste. Ar chelaus and Sister Ste. Sophro nie will leave New Bedford for' the last time. They are going to the Mother House of ,the or 'der in Quebec, wher~ they will remain. " 'Sister Mary-Vianney will join her two sisters in religion . in Quebec in May for another celebration there: It is scheduled for May 25. Then, after visiting relatives in Canada, she' will return to her duties in New Bedford. Last week, sittfng around a desk in' the office at Sacred Heart Home, the three tiny nuns talked about lheir more than half centuries of dedica tion to the service of God's peo ple. "If anybody, had told me when I entered the order that I'd be celebrating 50 years," Mother Superior said" "I wouldn't have believed it. But when you are happy, time passes quickly. It must be 'long when you are unhappy." Vivacious and with keen senses of humor, the three Sis':' ters of Charity look and act fa,r younger than they have to' be. However, ,they still aren't giv ing away their ages. "People always give us 10 or 15 years younger than we are," Sister Mary-Vianney said con tentedly. She is quite happy to have the situation stay that way. Sister Ste. Archelaus, who en-' tered the.order in 1906 and was professed 60 years ago, was the 7th in a family of 10 children. After serving in schools in Canada, she was transferred to ' Mt. St. Joseph School in Fall River, where she was kinder garten teacher for 27 years. She' thinks that· was onereasoh for' staying young~he 'had to be young to keep up with her young charges. . ' ,For, the last 20.years, she has cared' for elderly ladies at Sa'cred Heart Home who are, 'she says, in a way "like .. children, themselves." Sister Mary-Vianney was born in St. Ours, Richelieu' County, Q~ebec, the 5th child in a fam-
ilYS~~ :::~ved
to Fall River with
her family when she was 10 WASHINGTON (NC)-Presl ,and returned to' Canada when dents of national and diocesan she entered religious life in lay associations will meet here 1916. April 25-27 to discuss the devel After 30 years as a school opment of parish councils. teacher in Canada, Sister was The conference of 'organiza assigned to Mt. St. Joseph tion presidents is sponsored by School in Fall River in 1953. the National Council of Catholic She remained there eight years, six of them as superior, and was Men, Martin H. Work, execu transferred to Sacred Heart tive secretary of NCCM, said. 'Invitations have been sent to Home in 1961. A brother, Lucien Dufault, several hundred, presidents, he added, as well as to key persons lives at 151 Eighteenth Street in , 'around the U. S: who, have Fall River. • Sister, 'Ste. Sophronie was taken a leadership role in the forming of parish councils. born in White Rock, R. 1:, a '. ',Topics under discussion at the town "so small, we, didn't have conference will include the pur a church. I was baptized at linpose and goals of a parish, the maculate Conception Churcll·jn Westerly." role of women in parish coun Eighth ,in a family of 10, Sis-' cils, and aims and composition ter also entered the.> order in" of the parish council.
Professors .Form Faculty Union DAYTON (NC)-A group of professors at the University of Dayton have organized an au tonomous faculty union to work for "just tenure policy and ~ub stantial salary increases. The American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, granted a charter to University of Dayton Local 1850 early in March, but the fact was not made known until the local called a press conference and sent a statement of objectives to Father Ray mond A. Roesch, S.M., univer 'sity president. Father Roesch is currently in Europe. The press conference was cOlJ.ducted by Willam D. Kelly, vice-president of the new local. The president, Eulalio Baltazar, is on a leave of absence from the university and is currently teaching at a seminary in Rochester, N. Y. The local did not divulge its present strength. But 25 profes sors signed the charter and a spokesman claimed the union represents "'a substantial num ber" ot faculty members. "When we have a third of the . non-Religious faculty we will contact the National Labor Re lations Board immediately" to arrange for a bargaining elec tion-, he said. . Excluding members 'of the Society of Mary, the University of Dayton has a fulltime fac ulty staff of 275.
Leftist NewslP~~er 1R(!I~s
P'olDsh Regome
BERLIN (NC) - Amid the continuing purge of ranking JUBILARIANS: Celebrating jubilees at the Sacred government officials in Poland, Heart Home, New Bedford, are St. St. Sophronie, 50 years; a pro-government Catholic Sr. Marie Vianney, superior, 50 years; St. St. Archelaus, 60, newspaper criticized the ruling years. Statue of foundress forms 'background of the picture. communist coalition for not al lowing the people more voice i in government, and called for "I haven't regretted a min 1916 and after serving in Can greater democracy in Poland's Sister Ste. Sophronie socialist system. ada, she, too, went to Mt. St. ute," Joseph School. She was there, added~ The newspaper, Slowo Pows Asked how she entered the zechne, censured the commu 12 years before being assigned religious when there wasn't to Sacred Heart Home, where, nist-dominated National Unity for the last 28 years, she has even a church in her small Front as the 23rd high govern town, the latter· almost-5-foot ment official lost his post fol cared for elderly men. 'She is, the last 'surviving nun grinned. lowing student demands for re "I had a cousin there. Some member of her family. forms and more freedom. The The three nuns radiate a times we would go to see her paper is published by Pax, a serenity that is infectious. To and it gave me the feeling to pro-government association of them, all is well as long as life go in, too." Polish Catholics. With Sunday's excitement is' in, the hands of the Lord. Latest officials to be dis , They do admit, however" that over, the three anniversary cel missed are Wilhelm Billig, gov some of the changes' in the ebrants now are looking for ernment. minister for the use of church today are difficult to ac- . ward to their next "party" in nuclear energy, and Daniel cept. ,. , Quebec. Kacs, chairman of the office for For that feast,members 'of state reserves. Most' of the "For us, it is hard," said Sister MarY-Vianney. . their families Will join them; purged officials have been Jews. Sister', Ste. Archelaus - will 'Polish Jews - 'called "Zionist ~'The young"'~J:les won;! mi~d. have a reunion with 'her two elements" 'by the communist re S9 muc~" .but, "W,e weren't, . surviving 'brothers,' Achille gime ....:.. have beenblaineci for brought, up' ~ha.t ~ay."._. ' , Vachon, who 'lives 'in Ville Ste~, helping to stir the' student uri':' ' :.She ,.l!dds. qu>ic~ly,. thQugh,. Marie, and 'Willie Vachon;: rest. ., ~at "we'.vealways been happy.",' , ' whose home is in' St. ,Joseph.. , " .' Mother"Superior will, see her. four living Sisters, Miss Bea . ~>, .~'el trice Dufault of ·Montreal, Mrs. . ContiJ:lued from Page One Orner Bessette of Lavaltrie, Mrs. Where A Thiboutot of St.. ing of Catholic' School adminis- Anthony trators. '" ' Georges Windsor and Mrs. Os Father O'Neill has been in car Paradis of Kingsey,Falls. Washington this, week ' repre- . Sister Ste. Sophronie will " Means A senting the Nation~l Catholic share their families~ Looking forward, 160 years Educational Association at meet ings with the U. S. 9ffice of would be an eternity, even for
Education regarding the imple tliree. Looking backwards, how
mentation' of the new Educa 'ever, the 'time has passed quick
tional Personnel Development ly for the nuns who have stayed , Act which provides for' tpe fur healthy and happy in God's
ther training of experienced service.
teachers.' , ,
Fa'ther O'Nel'll recel'ved' hl'S
F'r- P.-,J
0''.....
-II.
GOOD NAME GREAT DEAL
GEO. 'O'HARA
doctorate degree in: 'edu~atiCiill~1 :
administration from Boston Col';
lege in - 196~." His, dissertation.
was a" study . of the ,pr.inci-.
pals, of ~ath6lic 'element,ary ..
sch'ools' in 'New' England: '
He holds memberships in the
National Education Association,
American ,Association' of School
A.dministrators, National.society'
'for the, Study' of Education, Phi '
Delta Kappa, .. and' National' Catholic .. Educa'tional ' Association.;·' , . 'I !
CHEVROLET
famoUs for
NEW BEDFORD
QUALITY, and
iOOl .Kings Hwy.
SERYI,(~I
Ope,! Eve.nings
"
I'
From Sandwich to New Bedford:
Statistics Reveal
S~rC!ad
In Boy-Pupil Enrollment By PETER BARTEK
Norton High Coach
The Capeway Conference - of all schoolboy athletic leagues within the diocesan territorial lines-,probably has the best balance of all insofar as boy enrollment is con cerned in the upper three classes, a study of school statistics reveals. The dissatisfaction of some coaches, and also fold, is about five times as some athletic directors with large, that is in boy enrollment, as Bishop Feehan High in Attle the present composition of boro. The Crimson Whalers'
the Bristol County and Narra gansett leagues wall first re vealed in this column a fort night ago. At just about the same time we reported the "quiet whisper ings," Director Z. Walter Jan iak of New Bedford Voca tional issued a Peter call for a meet ing of school Bartek officials to discuss better align ment and league balance, there by removing an obvious unfair advantage some secondary schools hold over their annual competitors. Probably the best example of size differential in indicated by the fact that New Bedford High, returning to the Bristol County
three upper classes include ap proximately 1,232 while the di ocesan regional in the northern section of the Bristol County, has approximately 267. boys~ Somerset an the Narragansett circuit has more than three times as many boys to draw from in basketball and baseball as parochial Holy Family High in New Bedford. Here the com parison is approximately 363 to 111. Somerset, in the football league, has twice as many boy~ in the Sophomore, Junior and ' Senior classes as Old Rochester which, with a 180 male-pupil enrollment, is returning to the Narry competition because few-, er league opponents have as wide a spread as in the Cape way Conference. Little St. An thony's parish high in New Bed ford, hoping to join the Narry hoop league,' has only 87 boys.
I
~ f 1tl(
<,"'
t
1
1
So IP AUl
4,
Figures Show'Competitiol1l Imb«lIance
"
'··1
,
With approximately 397 boys' registered in the three upper classes, Lawrence High of Fal mouth is the largest in the Capeway Conference w h i 1 e Bourne is at the other extreme with 244, or, roughly one-third less drawing power. Dennis - Yarmouth regional .ranks second to Lawrence High in 'the Capeway competition with 340 boys, four more than Dartmouth with 336. Fairhaven, which left the Bristol County loop iri favor of the Capeway, has about 305 boys--one fourth the size of New Bedford and one-third the size of Durfee of Fall River. ' Martha's Vineyard is far and away the, biggest of the four members of the Cape & Islaads Ll!ague with approximately 134 boys a~ against 84 at Province town' High, the second largest., Nantucket, with only three less boys than P,.town, 81, is only
half the size of Martha's Vine yard. Sandwich, the other C & I member, has the smallest boy enrollment-50--0f any of the 35 high schools 10cateQ. within the diocesan limits. These seldom reported com parisons - many times quickly glossed over by the more for midable in /each competition are noted here because of the particular interest which this column apparently aroused ;n all sections of the diocese t'llvo weeks ago. "How many boys actually are there in - - -?" and "how many students are there at - - -?", we ' have been, repetitiously asked dur.ing the past two weeks. Hence, to satisfy the interest of all, th,e following is an accurate approximation ,of the thr~e class boy enrollment in each of the 35 schools this weekly news paper serves:
Area 'Schools Range Frcm 50 to 1.232 ,', Sandwich Nantucket Provincetown St Anthony's-NB Chatham Holy Family-NB Bristol Aggies Martha's Vineyard
Approx. Total Boys School Three Enroll· Classes ment 50 219 81 214 84 294 87 24,0 92 273 III 358 132 191 134 395
,Brothers to Enjoy Equal Voting Rights HUDSON (NC) - Capuchin priests and Brothers of the New York-New England province will reconvene their provincial chapter here. For the first time in 200 years~ the Brothers will have equal voting rights with priests. The chapter is the province's 'law-making body and meets every three years. The chapter which met last July at Garrison, N. Y., called for a complete sur vey of the work and spiritual Ufe of the Capuchins in the Ught of Vatican Council IL
Approx'. Total Boys School Three Enroll Classes ment Westport Norton rJauset Regional Old Rochester Prevost-FR Seekonk Wareham Oliver Ames-No. Easton Bourne Diman Vocational-FR Bishop Feehan-Attle. Mansfield
Dighton-Rehoboth
North Attleboro
Case-Swarisea
Fairhaven
, Dartmouth Dennis-Yarmouth Somerset ,,~ishop Sta"g--Dart. Lliwrence--FalmoLith N. B. Vocational
139 145 174 180 187 216 222 241 244 265 267 272 273 293 304 3llS 336 340 363 397 397 406 Msgr. Coyi~Tauirton 420 Taunton '494 Barnstable I 495 Attleborp 688 Durfee....:..o'R 1070 Nllw Bedford l232
495 707 623 970 286 668 800 736 766 350
774 694 789 830 758 623 1049 957 990 lOllS 1100 845 ' 540 1526
1266
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, BOYS COMPETE BECAUSE. ADULTS DONATE; Ou~ Lady. of the Assumption of New Bedfordmet\ SS. Peter' and Paul's quintet, of Fall ;River, iii the Diocesan CYQ, Bas ketball Finals because the youth of the Diocese is one of the 30 agencies aided by the annual Catholic Charities Appeal scheduled for May 5-15.
Christian Brother Defends . . ,.
WASHINGTON (NC) - A .spoke before some 800 persons Christian Brother' had a word at the annual military Mass and , for distraught 'parents, relatives Communion ' breakfast· at St.
John's High School here, 'largest
and others worried about to day's bewildering younger gen:.; military high school in the , nation. eration. The word-don't! Brother Grimes Said despite Brother Vincent Grimes~ F .S.C., the difficulties of parents to ' head of the psychology depart cope with such things as in ment at La Salle College, Phila and-out 'movements, communi delphia, asserted that, in gener cations gaps, establishments, he al, he has found present y~ung has found today's youngsters sters much better equipped. may "have their heads in space" mentally, physically and mor . but their "feet are firmly on the ally to cope with problems than ground." those of generations past. He said the most important One of the few Religious ll years of life, are the. four years censed in Pennsylvania to prac of high school- "when a boy tice psychology, Brother Grimes, comes into high school as a a veteran in handling problems freshman, you talk to him like which beset famili~s and, youth a child, but when he's a senior you talk t9 him like a man be cause he is on tbe threshold of Lent,en Preachers manhood." . B~RLIN (NP)-Two laymen, , Brother Grimes said high ,a physician and a teacher, and school students today are better , a housewife gave Lenten Sun educated than ~hose of previo\lS day sermons in a West Berlin generations, mastering subjec~s Catholic church, in experimental which a few years back were lWrvi~ approved by Alfred ,taught only in colleges. , . Cardinal Bengsch of Berlin. He ~aid parents too often are
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over-protective--"today they'll see their son with a baseball bat in biS hands, tomorrow ;;\ rifle; today they'll debate about lend ing him the family car, ,tomor row Uncle Sam will have him flying a jet plane." , Brother Grimes said the prin cipal goal is to get some hap piness out of this life. He 'said youngsters should strive for a middle ground between the under-achievers-"students who can do better but only give you just enough to get by-and the over-achievers - "students who aim at scholastic marks over their head and too often end up in straight-j::ckets."
(O~~f~£ t;S ~(1)NS ONE' STOP
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. April 18, 1968
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